Things Perq up for historic bar
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Jenny Marder
To some, Perqs is a seedy, prehistoric dive bar that detracts from
the upscale image that city officials are working to promote
Downtown.
But for Babette Comee, Perqs is a haven, homey and unpretentious,
the essence of Surf City history.
A former brothel, local hangout and home to legendary blues
guitarist Walter Trout, Perqs bar at 117 Main St. is the oldest bar
in Huntington Beach. So old that owners aren’t required to serve food
with alcohol, as they are in every other bar Downtown.
The historic hangout just got a $1.5-million settlement from the
city redevelopment agency, ending nearly a decade of litigation.
Owner Gary Mulligan filed a lawsuit against the city redevelopment
agency in 1984, alleging that the city’s plans for Downtown
redevelopment were stifling business and preventing him from
improving his property.
“They wanted to take our property, buy it real cheap and make it
part of the CIM development,” Mulligan said.
City officials insisted that this was never their intent.
“We had not filed any notice of intent to condemn the property,
and we did not stifle their plans for development,” City Atty.
Jennifer McGrath said.
The redevelopment agency at one time had a partnership with Perqs,
but the partnership dissolved when Main Street properties were
excluded from redevelopment plans, said David Biggs, the city’s
director of economic development. The city felt it was being
facilitative, but Perqs’ owners saw it otherwise.
“That’s what litigation’s all about: Different people have
different perspectives,” Biggs said
Perqs sued the city because it was being prevented from realizing
the full value of its property, said Perqs’ attorney, Ronald
Colesaid.
“We were tied up for about 15 years without enjoying the property
rights that are normally enjoyed by a private property owner,” Cole
said. “The city held a cloud over that property.”
Perqs’ building was built in 1904, and traces of its century-old
heritage remain. Originally dubbed Gospel Swamp after the settlement
itself, Perqs still has the original brick walls and long wooden bar
of its pre-World War I heritage.
In the 1930s and 1940s, the building was the site of a brothel.
Mulligan and co-owner Loren Johnson took over in 1974.
Recently, much of the building has gotten a face-lift and been
upgraded to meet earthquake standards.
At happy hour, Perqs begins filling up with its regular clientele,
a flannel and leather-clad bunch, quick to praise the bartender and
to tease one another. Absent are the designer clothes and pop-culture
crowds that other Downtown bars attract.
“It’s a good, old-fashioned, rock ‘n’ roll place, full of old
hippies and surfers,” Comee said.
The customers are older but diverse, she said, some homeless, some
millionaires, some gay and some straight.
Ceiling beams sport holiday lights and American flags. A dusty
cigarette machine sits in the corner across from a couple empty kegs.
REO Speedwagon blares through the speakers.
“It’s a nice ambience,” Mulligan said. “It’s homey, so all the
locals hang out here. They just think it’s their bar.”
Bartenders know everyone by name and drink. By the time Comee sat
down Monday night, her Miller Genuine Draft was already poured and
waiting for her.
“It’s a cool bar where everyone can just be themselves,” said Don
Crowe, 46. Crowe has been coming to Perqs since the mid-1970s.
For Crowe, Comee and other regulars, losing Perqs wouldn’t just
have meant losing a bar, it would mean losing a tight community, a
home away from home.
“Everyone needs a good saloon,” Crowe said.
* JENNY MARDER covers
City Hall. Reach her at (714) 965-7173.
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