Looking back
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Young Chang
We all know about Alvin Pinkley’s drugstore in Costa Mesa. The soda
fountain there was the place to be for the city’s kids, adults and even
politicians.
Newport Beach had it’s own soda fountain. It was on Balboa Peninsula,
close to Newport Harbor High School and even closer to the Balboa Bay
Club.
The Avenue Fountain attracted kids who got off the bus at the adjacent
bus stop after school, celebrities including Humphrey Bogart who needed a
quick something while hanging out at the Bay Club, employees from the
next door Balboa library and workers at a nearby telephone company.
Gay Wassall-Kelly’s father, Jack Wassall, used to hang out there when
he brought his family to vacation in the city in the mid-’40s. He would
talk about fishing with the other men who were there.
“It was just kind of a hangout,” said Wassall-Kelly, a longtime
Newport Beach resident. “It was light and fun to go to and everybody
would walk by.”
Janet Steele, a Costa Mesa resident whose father John Groch took over
The Avenue Fountain in the early 1940s, compares it to a mini Circle K of
yesteryear.
Except one important difference: The humble little store offered a
counter with all kind of ice cream sodas and Cokes.
Steele, whose first job was working behind the counter during her high
school days at Newport Harbor, remembers making ice cream sodas with
scoops of ice cream, squirts of chocolate soda and soda water. Actually,
one soda would require one scoop and one squirt.
She even made the Cokes. Back then, Coca-Cola manufactured Coke syrup
rather than pre-mixed soda. Steele would squirt some very concentrated
Coke syrup into a glass and then fill it up with soda water.
The menu included milkshakes made with old-fashioned milkshake
machines and sandwiches like ham and cheese and tuna salad.
“I was a soda jerk,” Steele said, explaining that’s what fountain
employees were called at the time. “I made a dollar an hour. I think he
overpaid me. He was my father.”
The small store also sold minimal cosmetics including lipstick and
hand cream, toothpaste, liquor, magazines, over-the-counter medicines
like aspirin and pretty much everything you’d find in a drugstore except
prescription drugs.
Groch was a pharmacist, but he had a separate job working for a
pharmaceutical company and so the soda fountain retained it’s name of The
Avenue Fountain. Legally you needed a pharmacy with a pharmacist to be
called a drugstore.
Steele’s mother, 102-year-old Marjorie Groch, ran the store much of
the time and also made sandwiches to sell at the fountain.
Groch sold the store in the late 40s and then bought a drugstore in
Santa Ana, Steele 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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