A Look Back -- Jerry Person
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Jerry Person
First thing this week, I would like to apologize for typing the wrong
birth date last week for, George Arnold. The correct birth date should be
Jan. 21, 1929.
I do have this feeling that somehow it was George’s hand that made me
type 1921 as his last joke on us.
But now for this week’s look back.
In the past Huntington Beach has had its share of cafe-taverns.
Although there were not as many as we have in the Downtown today, we did
have had a number of them owned by some very interesting people. This
week we’re going to look at two brothers who owned the One-O-Seven
cafe-tavern.
To begin our story the cafe was at 107 Main St., hence its name. But
over the years it gets a bit complicated as it was sometimes spelled as
One-O-Seven and One Hundred and Seven cafe and then later it became
Bill’s 107 Club at 119 Main St. with Bill Allen and Bill Gannon.
But we are concerned with its early owners, brothers Ray and John
Dolan. These two are synonymous with its early history.
Ray, the eldest brother, was born on Nov. 19, 1901 in the little
farming town of Hornick in Iowa to Henry and Maggie Dolan.
The Dolan family soon moved to Mapleton, Iowa and then to Sidney, Neb.
When Ray was 18 years old he moved to Omaha to live and stayed there
until 1925.
His next move was to California, where Ray lived in Hollywoodwith his
brother John.
In 1937 Ray moved to Huntington Beach to live with his wife Vel. Ray
started a the little cafe in the Obarr building at 107 Main St. called
the One-O-Seven and he promptly joined our chamber of commerce.
Settling into his new adopted town Ray joined our local Rotary Club in
1940. Art Laubach then became associated with the cafe in the early
1940s. Ray became the treasurer of the Rotary Club in 1945, a duty he
took on with pride.
Ray and Vel lived at 209 Knoxville Ave. in the Downtown and their son
Ray Jr. and his wife Lois lived right behind Ray Sr., at 210 Lincoln Ave.
Some of you might remember Jim Young, one of their bartenders who worked
there in 1958.
Ray retired from the cafe business in 1962 and traveled the world and
enjoyed life.
We’ll now look at Ray’s younger brother John James ‘Johnny’ Dolan who
was born when the family lived in Mapleton on March 8, 1904.
The Dolan family lived the strenuous life of Midwestern farmers and
the Dolan boys worked hard in the fields. In 1914 the family moved to
Sidney where Johnny attended both grammar and high school.
In high school Johnny loved to play football, which is not unusual
except for the fact that Johnny weighed only 140 pounds and he played
right tackle for the team.
His football league played teams from Colorado, Nebraska and Wyoming.
After graduating from high school in 1922 Johnny got his first real job
as a warehouse man in Wyoming’s Teapot Dome oil fields. But Johnny was
looking for something a bit easier on the back and quit that job after
one year.
That was when he moved to Hollywood. It was 1923 and for a few years
he bounced around doing different jobs.
During this time the country was caught up in the aviation fever and
flying a plane was all the rage. Johnny caught that fever and took flying
instructions at Clover Field in Los Angeles. He went on to get his
pilot’s license and for the next 15 years was flying over the Los Angeles
basin.
Johnny joined his brother Ray in Huntington Beach in 1939 where he
went into a partnership with his brother in the cafe business.
When America went to war in 1941 Huntington Beach residents went too.
In 1942 Johnny joined the Civil Pilot Training as an instructor. They
stationed him at Manzanar Field in Manzanar.
Even though he was a civilian he was attached to the army at Mather
Field near Sacramento as a civilian pilot.
He also served as a training instructor in Canada where he trained
cadets to fly in 1944 at Calaero, Ontario under an agreement between our
two countries.
After the war Johnny came back to Huntington Beach and he and his wife
Betty lived at 503 Walnut Ave.
Betty worked as a clerk at Surf Liquor at 420 Pacific Coast
Highway. Johnny was active in the Huntington Beach Lions Club, which
he joined in 1949. He was a member of our Elks Lodge No. 1959 and also
the president of the town’s Windsor Club where the elite meet to eat and
play cards. Johnny gave up flying and took up the game of golf.
These two brothers will forever be a part of the rich, golden history
of Huntington Beach.
* JERRY PERSON is a local historian and longtime Huntington Beach
resident. If you have ideas for future columns, write him at P.O. Box
7182, Huntington Beach, CA 92615.
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