Category: History

The First Circle of the OB Rag – circa 1970

 Staff  September 24, 2009  7 Comments on The First Circle of the OB Rag – circa 1970

The Etiwanda House

The initial circle of the OB Rag newspaper consisted of Frank Gormlie, a local who had grown up in Point Loma, who had surfed in OB in his youth, and a recent graduate of UCSD – the Rag had been Gormlie’s brainchild as he saw it as a handy way to do community organizing in OB; the circle also included Bo Blakey, fresh from the campus battles at UC Berkeley and another graduate with Gormlie of Pt. Loma High; …

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Original OB Rag Memorialized in Plaque On Newport

 Frank Gormlie  September 21, 2009  4 Comments on Original OB Rag Memorialized in Plaque On Newport

OCEAN BEACH, CA. The original OB Rag – that iconic Ocean Beach underground newspaper – and our blog’s namesake-, received an honorable mention in a plaque fastened to the side of the old Bank of Italy building recently. That building, on the northeast corner of Newport and Bacon, has been many things over the years.

Today a corporate coffee shop, an ATM, and a hairstyler is in the building; but yesteryear it was the Bank of Italy.

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Why Honor Organized Labor on Labor Day?

 Source  September 7, 2009  17 Comments on Why Honor Organized Labor on Labor Day?

Labor Day, to most people, is little more than the end of summer. Labor Day commemorates the labor union movement, the demand for an eight hour work day, better working conditions, fair wages and an end to child labor.

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Far Out, Groovy and Outta Sight: Remembering the OB Ranger

 Staff  August 28, 2009  24 Comments on Far Out, Groovy and Outta Sight: Remembering the OB Ranger

OB Ranger and his trusty sidekick Indian (from the CD cover art)
Originally posted August 24, 2009
By OB Rag Staffer

“From out of a cave at the foot of Sunset Cliffs, the thundering hoof beats pound, with a hearty ‘Hi Yo Sylvia, away!’ The OB Ranger rides again.”

The OB Ranger was a radio series that aired on “HIS Radio, FM stereo ninety” in 1971 and 72. It was a spoof of the old “Lone Ranger” radio show, but a lot more fun. Ranger fans tuned in every week to find out what new trouble the OB Ranger would stumble his way into.

He introduced himself with “Far out, groovy and outta sight, I am the OB Ranger!”

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Chalmers Johnson: Three Good Reasons To Liquidate Our Empire

 Source  August 11, 2009  3 Comments on Chalmers Johnson: Three Good Reasons To Liquidate Our Empire

by Chalmers Johnson

However ambitious President Barack Obama’s domestic plans, one unacknowledged issue has the potential to destroy any reform efforts he might launch.

Think of it as the 800-pound gorilla in the American living room: our longstanding reliance on imperialism and militarism in our relations with other countries and the vast, potentially ruinous global empire of bases that goes with it.

The failure to begin to deal with our bloated military establishment and …

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Is the U.S. on the Brink of Fascism?

 Source  August 8, 2009  12 Comments on Is the U.S. on the Brink of Fascism?

By Sara Robinson

All through the dark years of the Bush Administration, progressives watched in horror as Constitutional protections vanished, nativist rhetoric ratcheted up, hate speech turned into intimidation and violence, and the president of the United States seized for himself powers only demanded by history’s worst dictators.

With each new outrage, the small handful of us who’d made ourselves experts on right-wing culture and politics would hear once again from worried readers: Is this it? Have we finally become a fascist state? Are we there yet?

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Che Guevara’s Daughter Recalls Her Revolutionary Father

 Source  July 23, 2009  1 Comment on Che Guevara’s Daughter Recalls Her Revolutionary Father

Aleida Guevara was four and a half when her father left Cuba. Ernesto “Che” Guevara, iconic Argentine guerrilla leader, Marxist theorist and second-in-command of the Cuban revolution, departed the island for Africa in 1965 after falling out of political favor with Fidel Castro.

She saw him only once again, before his execution by the CIA-backed Bolivian government two years later.

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Mission Bay of Yesteryear

 Frank Gormlie  July 10, 2009  6 Comments on Mission Bay of Yesteryear

There’s a growing interest in our neighborhood in historic photographs of our little corner of the world. Check out these aerial shots of Mission Bay and surrounding areas – taken before it was dredged, while it was being dredged, and then later.

Viewing these images gives you knowledge and a historical background to this area. Knowledge is power.

If you’d like to see more, let us know.

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Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness – OB Fireworks

 Jeff Stone  July 5, 2009  8 Comments on Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness – OB Fireworks

Fireworks at the end of the OB Pier are always good for a huge crowd. The beach, the pier, the surrounding blocks, the overlooking hilltops, and the cliffs are packed. It seems like the whole world comes to OB for the fireworks every 4th. And why not? They’re great!

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Who Started the First OB Marshmallow Fight?

 Frank Gormlie  July 4, 2009  32 Comments on Who Started the First OB Marshmallow Fight?

Most locals know about the famous OB Marshmallow Fight that happens after the fireworks each July 4th right at the beach. Two great throngs gather and begin pelting each other with the mushy white gobs. This goes on, with each side advancing or retreating until enough people tire and the event melts away like the last fireworks.

Who did start the first OB marshmallow fight?

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History of Ocean Beach Street Names (ho-hmmm?)

 Frank Gormlie  July 4, 2009  38 Comments on History of Ocean Beach Street Names (ho-hmmm?)

Sunset Cliffs Blvd. was once called DeFoe Street

Originally posted on January 12, 2008

by Frank Gormlie

Always intrigued about the origin of words and idioms, I found interesting the history of Ocean Beach street names.

It is axiomatic in our world that whoever plans out and develops a community gets to name the streets! And the rest of us then get to live with those street titles. Now, of course, who does plan out and develop a community from scratch? Who was responsible for putting together the sub-divisions that make up what is the present community of Ocean Beach?

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Two Views of Ocean Beach’s Early Developers

 Frank Gormlie  July 3, 2009  11 Comments on Two Views of Ocean Beach’s Early Developers

Originally posted June 19, 2008

2 ENTREPRENEURS DEVELOPED TOWN IN THE LATE 1800s

By Joe Tash / UNION-TRIBUNE /June 14, 2008
Long before Dog Beach, the People’s Organic Food Market and The Black became Ocean Beach fixtures, Billy Carlson and D.C. Collier put their stamps on this seaside community. The two entrepreneurs are considered co-founders of Ocean Beach for their pioneering roles during the late 1800s and early 1900s, said Pat James, a businessman and president of the Ocean Beach Historical Society.

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