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Surf Theatre

1925 establishments in California1989 disestablishments in CaliforniaArt Deco architecture in CaliforniaArt Deco cinemas and movie theatersBuildings and structures in Huntington Beach, California
Cinemas and movie theaters in Orange County, CaliforniaCulture of Huntington Beach, CaliforniaDemolished theatres in CaliforniaFormer cinemas in the United StatesSurf cultureTheatres completed in 1925

The Surf Theatre was a movie theater along the Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach, California. It originally opened as Scott's Theatre in 1925 and later operated as the Roxy Theatre beginning in 1937. In 1941, the venue was renamed the Surf Theatre, an identity under which it became notable for its screening of surf films until its closure in the 1980s. The M. Eugene Durfee-designed Art Deco building was demolished in 1989.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Surf Theatre (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Surf Theatre
Pacific Coast Highway, Huntington Beach

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 33.658191229283 ° E -118.00257103811 °
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Shorebreak Hotel

Pacific Coast Highway 500
92648 Huntington Beach
California, United States
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Helme–Worthy Store and Residence
Helme–Worthy Store and Residence

The Helme–Worthy Store and Residence (also known as the Worthy Building and Residence) is the former M.E. Helme House Furnishing Company and Helme–Worthy residence, a home and attached storefront in Huntington Beach, California. It was listed as a historic structure on the National Register of Historic Places on March 31, 1987.Constructed in 1904, the M.E. Helme House Furnishing Company building is adjacent to the 1880s Helme–Worthy residence, both undergoing stabilization and historic preservation. The Helme–Worthy residence was moved 11 miles by mule team by Matthew and Mary Josephine Helme from the rural countryside near 5th and Verano (now Euclid Street) in Santa Ana, California, to its current location in downtown Pacific City, now Huntington Beach, in 1903. The home and business belonged to Matthew E. Helme, one of the founders of Huntington Beach and one of the township's first mayors. Helme was elected to the board of trustees for the City of Huntington Beach (the city council) in 1909, the year the town incorporated, serving until 1917. He served as mayor in 1916.As of 2017, the buildings are still owned by descendants of Matthew E. Helme, who are conducting the historic preservation work. The former M.E. Helme House Furnishing Company is now an antique store, M.E. Helme Antiques, and retains the original business' name on the building. The National Register of Historic Places application describes the significance of the historic place as retaining "their integrity of location, setting, design, workmanship, materials, feeling and association with Huntington Beach's early settlement period. Although the residence is simple in style, it is the oldest house in town. Both provide the only visual picture of early Huntington Beach and its settlement period."The M.E. Helme Furnishing Company and Helme–Worthy residence is one of 122 historic properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Orange County, California.