Corona del Mar: 1940 & Today

Picture of Tom Heffernan

Tom Heffernan

Photo credit: Sherman Library

1940 Aerial View of CdM that shows Avocado, Acacia, Begonia, Carnation, and part of Dahlia Ave. With the Big Blue House now gone (can you find it in this photo?), a dozen structures from this 80 year old photo remain today. ​

Let’s take a look at each of the 12 remaining buildings, starting at the north end of Avocado. There are 2 surviving homes on Avocado, both built in 1931.  

604 Avocado is a unique, storybook style 2 bed / 2 bath two story home that sold in 2015 for $1.5M.  518 Avocado has a distinctive look and is listed as a 2 bed / 1 bath, 1000 sq ft home.  Here is a close-up of them from the aerial view and what they look like today:

604 Avocado, Corona del Mar, CA (2015) Photo: MLS

Acacia Avenue has several surviving homes.  We’ll start out by PCH with 708 Acacia Ave. which is somewhat hidden as a back house today but it retains its original look from 1924 and is quietly one of the 10 oldest remaining homes in CdM. 

708 Acacia Ave., Corona Del Mar, CA (2019) Photo by Ron Yeo

Across the street and down a block, 615 Acacia Ave. was the only house on the odd side of the 600 block of Acacia when it was built in 1940. It maintains its distinctive look today with a large 2nd story dormer and curved arch over the front door entry.

615 Acacia Ave., Corona Del Mar, CA (2018)

Another block down is 503 Acacia Ave. which was also built in 1940 and retains a very original look today with its cedar shake roof and board and batten siding.

503 Acacia Ave., Corona Del Mar, CA (2020) Photo by CdM Historical Society

Across the street from 503 Acacia are 2 homes that were once part of the same lot –500 Acacia Ave. & 2320 2nd Ave.  The original owner of the land, the Hayward family who lived in Pasadena, bought that lot and also the lot for 502 Acacia in 1925. In 1934, they built a house at 500 Acacia and then carved up the 2 lots so that their friends in Pasadena, the Clarks, could build a house next door at 2320 2nd in 1936. The lot for the house at 2320 also encompasses a good portion of what would have been the back of the lot at 502 Acacia.

2320 2nd Ave., Corona Del Mar, CA (2020) Photo by CdM Historical Society

Joining 708 Acacia on the list of the 10 oldest surviving homes in Corona Del Mar is 419 Acacia Ave.  Also built in 1924, it has had very few owners in its 96 years. The Johnson & Harmer families from San Dimas shared ownership of the house from 1927 to 1960 after buying it from Clara Middleton. They sold it to Andrew Campbell, a lifelong resident of San Marino and it remains in the Campbell Family today.

A few lots down from 419 Acacia (the lot extends down the hill to Waterfront), 2201 Waterfront Drive was one of many CdM lots that Newport Beach took possession of for unpaid taxes during the 1930s. Harry Welsh, a drafting engineer for an oil company bought the lot from the city in 1938 and the house was built the following year.  The Welshes would live there for over 30 years.

There are two more pre-1940 survivors on beautiful Pacific Drive which offers some of the best views in Corona Del Mar.

2235 Pacific Drive was built in 1936 and maintains a spectacular view from its position overlooking the bay. The back of the house seems to have a more original look but there appear to be original details and exposed beam ceilings throughout. The 3 BR / 3 BA / 1600 sq ft home sold for $2.45M in 2003 and has been listed as a rental for $15K/mo in the past few years.

2223 Pacific Drive is tucked away below street level on Pacific but still has a very big view for such a small cottage (1 BR / 1 BA / 650sq ft).  Built in 1922, it is one of the 5 oldest surviving homes in CDM and maintains an original look today.

The final surviving structure that we have identified from this 1940 aerial photo is the Sherman Library Adobe House. It was designed and built by Lawrence and Pauline Lushbaugh in 1940. The small, fired-adobe house is now an exhibit room used to highlight some of the Sherman Library’s special collections. To learn more, please visit their website at thesherman.org.

CdM’s First Grocery Store

Picture of Tom Heffernan

Tom Heffernan

Did you know there used to be a grocery store on Fernleaf, one house in from Ocean Blvd? While reviewing this great photo from the Sherman Library of the Kerckhoff Marine Lab and the Hole House sitting above it, we noticed a sign for a grocery store on Fernleaf.

The Grocery store's sign can be seen in the distance in this photo. (Credit: Sherman Library)

One of our Facebook group members, Virginia Thomas Fickes, whose family home at Goldenrod & Bayview was one of the first homes in CdM, filled us in on the story.

“I was born in 1946, so I was just a young child towards the end of when the small grocery store was there,” said Virginia. “I remember it was on the alley. There were special glass squares for the front window. My dad used to speak of the grocery store. The growing small community needed the grocery store on Fernleaf before there were markets on the Coast Highway. Later on in the 1950’s, the Coast Super Market came to town on Marigold.”

The grocery store was located in the lower level of this house at 209 Fernleaf – the glass square front window was still there in these 2011 Google Streetview images.

The building that housed the grocery store – with its glass squares for the front window – was still there in 2011 per Google Street View but by 2014 it had been torn down.  

The original house was torn down and replaced with this structure in 2014.

Perhaps someday, some of us will be able to wow the ‘youngsters’ of 2060 with tales of how there used to be a grocery store in the Flower Streets between Iris & Jasmine along PCH before it became drug store row.

Tiki in Corona del Mar

Picture of Tom Heffernan

Tom Heffernan

Inspired by Chris Jepsen’s presentation on OC Tiki at the Orange Community Historical Society Annual Dinner, I thought I’d look for some information on the history of tiki establishments in Corona del Mar.  

There were a lot of tiki places that came up in the search but the one that caught my eye was the Jamaica Inn, which also had Christian’s Hut, a classic tiki restaurant inside of it.  It was located just down the street from me at the corner of Avocado and PCH where there is now a rather sterile looking medical office complex.  It likely extended over to the office building that has Shape Up in it, as well.  The difference between the two is rather stark.
Coast Business Center located at 2121 E. Pacific Coast Highway today
According to one postcard, the 100 room hotel “captured and carefully reproduced the romantic atmosphere of the beautiful tropical island for which it is named.”   A 1962 Sports Illustrated article mentioned the hotel and said that rooms were priced from $14-20/night in the peak season.  
Interior shot of the Jamaica Inn

​Inside the hotel was Christian’s Hut, a classic tiki restaurant known for its Polynesian dishes.   They also had another location in Balboa Bay.  The Balboa location was originally built on Catalina Island during the filming of Mutiny on the Bounty to serve the cast and crew and moved to Balboa after filming.  The bar was named after Clark Gable’s character in the movie.  

In searching around, I also noticed that Trader Island was listed at the same address as Jamaica Inn in the 1960’s.

Does anyone remember going to Christian’s, Trader Island, or staying at The Jamaica Inn?  Or how about other Tiki bars in CdM?  Don the Beachcomber?