ON THE WATER -- A seat behind the bar
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Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- When Bob Seaburn retired from the Los Angeles Police
Department in December 1983, becoming a bartender wasn’t much of a
question.
“My first ex-wife’s father owned a restaurant in Long Beach,” the
52-year-old said Friday as he calmly sliced limes and lemon skins. “So I
helped out.”
Then, a few years later, the Vietnam War veteran came upon Newport
Beach’s American Legion Post 291. He’s been serving drinks in the post’s
bar for the past 12 years or so, he said.
The views from Seaburn’s work place are hard to beat. There’s the
harbor, the harbor and more harbor stretching out just beyond the
continuous front of windows that line the bar.
“It’s a beautiful place, isn’t it,” Seaburn asked, filling maraschino
cherries in the cocktail fruit containers on the counter.
Although you’d expect that he’d not be too busy serving drinks to his
customers during his shift from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Seaburn said it can
get crowded.
“There are busy days and slow days,” he said, adding that the high
death rate of World War II veterans was diminishing his customer base.
“Most people of Desert Storm age are working [during the day,]” he
said. “They’re young enough for that.”
When Seaburn first started working there, a refrigerator for drinks
and some sandwiches for lunch was all he had to offer.
Now, he’s in charge of a full-blown bar and the nearby kitchen
prepares meals ranging from cheeseburgers to lasagna, he said.
As far as the drinks are concerned, vodka -- no brand in particular --
clearly wins as the favorite spirit among Newport Beach’s veterans.
And yes, Seaburn gets to listen to story after story American Legion
members come to share.
“Just like any other bartender,” he said, “it comes with the
territory.”
But the bar never turns rowdy, he added.
“This is much more family,” he said. “This is a club . . . We’ve got
everyone from retired generals to retired privates here. Everybody’s
equal.”
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