Early Ocean Beach: The Cliffside Shack of Captain Abraham Thomas
Ocean Beach’s Earliest Shoreline Resident
By Debbie L. Sklar
Just south of today’s permanently closed Ocean Beach Pier, where the cliffs drop sharply into sand and surf, a small shack once clung to the edge of the coastline. In the late 1800s, this stretch of San Diego shoreline looked nothing like the developed beach community it would later become. It was open coast— windswept, loosely governed, and still taking shape.
Ocean Beach history is full of figures who appear in fragments rather than full biographies: a photograph, a passing reference in an archive, or a story repeated just often enough to survive. One of the earliest documented residents tied to this shoreline was Captain Abraham Thomas.
Thomas is associated with a small shack near what is now the Ocean Beach Pier during the late 19th century, when the area was still largely undeveloped and defined more by sand paths than formal streets or infrastructure.
A caption on an early photographic negative identifies a nearby structure as the “Old Cliff House, Ocean Beach,” noting it burned in 1895 — an early reminder of how temporary many of these coastal buildings were.
According to San Diego coastal planning records and historic context documentation, Thomas’s shack sat at the base of the cliffs and functioned as both a residence and an informal stop for early travelers moving along the shoreline.

‘What the 250th anniversary means today … living under Trump.’ Rag writing contest second entry.
Editordude: This is the first entry in our Rag writing contest, a contest asking writers to express ‘What the nation’s 250 anniversary means today … living under Trump.’ Our panel of judges will determine the winner after the July 4th weekend; the contest runs until then and is open to anyone living in the City or County of San Diego. The winning essay will be awarded $100.00. (All entries will be published anonymously. Applicants should email us the essay to obragblog@gmail.com)
By Danna Givot /
OB Rag Staff Report
The San Diego Community Coalition publishes this email bulletin to keep our members and the general public informed about important Council hearings and other city public meetings.
Editordude: For decades, OBceans and Point Lomans drove past Perry’s Cafe as it stood at the very visible intersection of I-5 and I-8. That ended two years ago. The fabled eatery closed and was demolished. In its stead, something slowly rose up encased in scaffolding and mystery. Here, Rag writer Michael Hernandez breaks it all down.
OB Rag Staff Report
by Dorian Hargrove /
By David Helvarg / 




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