First greeter met the stagecoach
Someone suggested a walk to the old store to watch the stagecoach
come in. It carried passengers from Aliso City (now Lake Forest) to
Laguna Beach. This was the operation of the stagecoach after the
Santa Fe Railway had tracked from Los Angeles to San Diego in 1889.
Prior to this, the Concord Stagecoach made the trip to Santa Ana
about every other day, except in the winter when the trips varied.
During the days of the stagecoach, it was an honor to be the
driver, especially that of the Concord. The stagecoach did not have
springs, but swung in leather straps. The motion was like that of a
teeter-totter and many became seasick.
When you heard the rattle of the rickety stagecoach approaching,
everyone headed for the Isch store and post office at the southeast
corner of what is now Coast Highway and Laguna Avenue.
Old Joe Lucas would be standing there with his bushy hair, holding
his trident and meeting all who arrived on the stagecoach. He would
also be there to bid them farewell when they departed.
Joe Lucas was a character who was loved by all. He was unable to
speak English and made himself understood by his actions. The only
time he spoke English was when he would swear. Joe was Portuguese. He
developed a fear of the ocean after he survived a shipwreck, and
decided to spend his last days in Laguna where he became a recluse
and lived in an old one-room building where the City Hall is now. The
old room had been Laguna’s first schoolhouse.
* This BIT OF HISTORY comes from “The First 100 years in Laguna
Beach 1876 -- 1976†by Merle and Mabel Ramsey. The Coastline Pilot
thanks the Laguna Beach Historical Society for this information and
obtaining permission from the Ramsey family to publish.
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