LOOKING BACK
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Young Chang
Sally Somers points to the antique-style chandeliers hanging from the
ceiling. They’re barely swaying back and forth.
When the wind blows and the waves tumble, the floor rocks too. Moments
like these remind visitors to the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum that
they’re standing on a boat.
But the Pride of Newport, which houses the museum, started as a barge.
Towed from San Pedro in 1964, the barge went through two make-overs --
first into a seafood restaurant and then into its current form.
The boat’s delta paddle-wheeler facade was built for its
transformation into the Reuben E. Lee restaurant, which was open from
1964 through 1995, said Somers, a volunteer and board member at the
museum.
A local couple -- Mr. and Mrs. John McIntosh -- owned a steakhouse at
the opposite end of the current museum’s parking lot on East Coast
Highway decades ago. At the end of the business day, the couple would sit
at the tip of the peninsula and relax. The area at the end of the back
bay was a clustering point for fish. The McIntosh’s got inspired to start
a seafood restaurant, Somers said.
John McIntosh’s middle name was Reuben. The couple decided to play off
of “Robert E. Lee,” which old-time paddle-wheelers were often named, and
came up with “Reuben E. Lee.”
In 1995, the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum replaced the restaurant,
moving from its original quarters on Balboa Boulevard. The boat was
renamed “Pride of Newport.”
The museum, which opened in 1986, also has a personal history. Bettina
Bents, a young Newport Beach woman, had urged her parents and community
members to somehow preserve the local nautical heritage and history.
After her death in the mid-’80s, her parents Marcia and William Bents
worked to make their daughter’s dream come true.
Today the museum houses art exhibits, the current one being “Wind,
Water & Light: The Legacy of Rex Brandt.” The lobby holds a collection
detailing the history of Newport Harbor, and facilities upstairs include
a classroom where fifth-graders from the Newport-Mesa School District can
learn about marine life.
“It’s nonstop action,” said Wayne Eggleston, executive director of the
museum. “It’s really an exhilarating place in which to work -- there’s
always something going on all the time.”
There’s another perk to his job -- white-framed storybook windows
overlooking the water, boats and people having nautical fun.
“I probably have one of the best views of Newport Harbor out of my
office,” Eggleston said.
* Do you know of a person, place or event that deserves a historical
Look Back? Let us know. Contact Young Chang by fax at (949) 646-4170;
e-mail at [email protected]; or mail her at c/o Daily Pilot, 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627.
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