Title supplied by cataloger. Port Hueneme is a small beach city in Ventura County, surrounded by the city of Oxnard and the Pacific Ocean. It is believed that the Chumas Indians were the primary inhabitants of this region, which was later discovered by Cabrillo in 1542. Hueneme is a Chumas word ("wene me"), meaning "half-way" or "resting place". On 1876, Thomas Bard constructed a wharf to serve as a port for shipping of foodstuffs and goods grown and produced in this rich agricultural area known as the Gold Coast. By the early 1920s, lemons outstripped lima beans and sugar beets as the number one crop. In 1922, two giant Sunkist lemon-packing plants were built and Sunkist became one of the port village's largest employers. The name was officially changed to Port Hueneme in 1939, and the city was incorporated on March 24, 1948. Port Hueneme is the only deep-water harbor between Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay area, and is the U.S. Port of Entry for California's central coast region. The United States Navy maintains a facility at Port Hueneme, which is the West Coast home of the Construction Battalion famously known as the "Seabees". "The Friendly City By The Sea", as it is known, has a current population of 22,202. Street scene in Hueneme during grain hauling season, circa 1895. Horse drawn wagons filled with grain bags travel in a single-file, merging along Main and Market streets. A livery and feed stable can be seen on the extreme left, and the residence of Dr. O. V. Sessions is visible in the foreground. Dr. Sessions established his practice in California in the late 1880s, and was the only physician in Hueneme at the time. His home and office were located in the center of town, with the home fronting one street and the office fronting the other, and an attractive flower garden in between.
Type
image
Format
1 photographic print :b&w ;21 x 26 cm. Photographic prints
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