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Peck's Pier and Pavilion

Coordinates: 33°53′53″N 118°25′14″W / 33.89806°N 118.42056°W / 33.89806; -118.42056
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33°53′53″N 118°25′14″W / 33.89806°N 118.42056°W / 33.89806; -118.42056

Peck's Pier was a wooden[1] pier in Manhattan Beach, California, constructed in 1908[2][3] by George H. Peck, for whom it was named. Peck was a wealthy real estate developer who owned a lot of property in the area. The pier was located in the area of  33rd and 34th Street and was the only pier in the area open to African Americans.[3]

Peck's Pier and Pavilion was a "promotional attraction" for dances, parties, picnics, and roller skating. According to the city's website, it was destroyed in a 1913 storm, and the pavilion was destroyed in 1920 due to "timber rot".[3] Another source, however, suggests Peck's Pier was torn down by "a combination of storms and social injustice", the same injustice that also put a stop to Bruce's Beach, a nearby black-owned beach resort, and chased off black residents.[4]

The town's first pier, which was conceived to attract new home buyers, above a "newfangled machine to convert the power of the waves into electricity to light the pier",[4] was built in 1901 (Center Street pier, where Manhattan Beach Pier is now located) on what became Manhattan Beach Boulevard. Another wooden pier on Marine Avenue was also built in 1901.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ {{Cite news   | last = Dillow   | first = Gordon   | title = Pillars of Their Communities: For South Bay's piers, it's a constant cycle of construction, destruction, reconstruction. More than merely walkways, they are a tie to cities' pasts and a vision for their future.   | newspaper = Los Angeles Times   | location =   | pages =   | language =   | publisher =   | date = 1994-12-01   | url =   }}
  2. ^ {{Cite web   | last =   | first =   | authorlink =   | title = Land Use Element   | website =   | publisher = City of Manhattan Beach   | date =   | url = http://www.citymb.info/Modules/ShowDocument.aspx?documentid=3835   | format =   | doi =   | accessdate = 2009-12-02}}
  3. ^ a b c {{Cite web   | last = Murphy     | first = Michelle     | authorlink =     | title = Parks and Recreation Commission Recommends Changing Park Name     | website =     | publisher = The Manhattan Beach Observer     | date = June 2006     | url = http://www.manhattanbeachresidentsassociation.org/the_observer/200606.pdf%0A%C2%A0   | format =     | doi =     | accessdate = 2009-12-01     | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110727060950/http://www.manhattanbeachresidentsassociation.org/the_observer/200606.pdf   | archive-date = 2011-07-27   | url-status = dead   }}
  4. ^ a b {{Cite web   | last = Rasmussen   | first = Cecilia   | authorlink =   | title = CITY SMART: Community Profile: Manhattan Beach   | work = Los Angeles Times   | date = 1996-11-29   | url = https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1996-11-29-me-4139-story.html | format =   | doi =   | access-date = 2009-12-02}}