In June 1962 an excited, pretty incoherent woman, called Long Beach Independent reporter Bob
Wells about a red-eyed dinosaur that had been keeping Signal Hill residents
awake in the wee morning hours by diving for olives in a black swimming pool
filled with Martinis. Intrigued by her story he decided to visit the indicated
area – 21st Street and St. Louis Avenue. There he found Miles Shook,
and his new 28-unit apartment house, the Flintstone. Some elements in the
woman’s story were explained when Wells gazed upon a two-story high mosaic
dinosaur with red mazda eyes that adorned the front of the apartments. In the
patio he found a black-bottomed swimming pool that Shook fondly referred to as
“The tarpit.”
The Flintstones animated sitcom was one of the most
popular programs on television in the 1960s. It entered the ABC broadcast
schedule on September 30, 1960 and continued until April 1, 1966. Though set in the Stone Age it added features
and technologies found in mid-20th-centruy America. Shook decided to take up
the theme.
The one-and two-bedroom apartments were part of Signal
Hill’s plan to turn oil land into productive real estate. But they hadn’t
planned on Shook’s sense of style and way of doing business. The apartments had
the bedrooms on the first floor, from there a cantilevered iron stairway led to
the combination kitchen, bar and hi-fi lounge upstairs. Every apartment had a
built-in electrically cooled beer keg. The apartments were furnished like a
Playboy penthouse, despite Shook’s decorator’s advice – silk
screened drapes (black flint stones on white), Chinese birdcage chairs that
swung on chains from the ceilings, Scandinavian sofas, Danish glass bottles and
early American rugs.
Iron stairway in the Flintstone |
Reporter Wells asked him about a rumor that Shook had
lured six tenants away to the Flintstone from an apartment house on Redondo
Avenue after the landlord at the latter location had imposed a curfew on night
swimming in the pool. “Six?” Shook said. “I got 14 of them.” As Wells turned
through the plastic bird-of paradise plants back to reality, Shook shoved a
flat stone into his hand. It was an invitation to the grand opening of the
Flintstone, featuring a five-piece band.
The Flintstone loomed high beside George Papadakis’
apartments, and Papadakis claimed the noise and partying from the Flintstone
pool was unbearable. At every meeting of the Signal Hill City Council he would
come armed with his “diary” he and his wife kept since the Flintstone opened in
August 1961. The noise was bad enough but it became unbearable after the grand
opening celebration in June 1962. Attempts to get Shook to regulate pool hours
was ignored. Shook’s manager said no one
else in the apartment complex had complained, in fact they liked the idea of
being able to take a swim whatever the time of day.
George Papadakis |
In his diary, Papadakis documented the throbbing of bongo
drums and exuberant shouts of “Hey, bring down another beer.” All this centered
around the heated Flintstone swimming pool – dubbed the “Tar Pit” by its owner
Miles Shook in keeping with the Flintstone motif. The heated pool, near Papadakis’ bedroom, was
open 24 hours, which made sleep impossible. Frustrated, he decided he needed to
get into politics.
In 1962 Papadakis became a member of the city planning
commission and after a large party at the Flintstone on November 10, 1962, he
decided to cash in on his new found power. He convinced police to arrest Gerald
Kling, Wallace Blaylock Jr., and Gerald Nicholas guests at the party.
Kling was arrested as he sat in a chair in the patio and
was charged with using profane language. Nicholson was arrested on a drunk
charge in front of the apartment house. Blaylock, arrested as he stepped from his car
in front of the address, was charged with having a loud muffler on his car and
not having his driver’s license in his possession. They claimed they were
victims of city harassment against the tenants of the Flintstone and its owner,
Miles Shook. During the trial officers admitted to a city policy of “selective
enforcement” in the neighborhood. In January 1963, the three were acquitted of
misdemeanor charges after a two-day jury trial.
Later the three young men sued Paul S. Kemner, the town’s former mayor, Police Chief W.S. Stovall, George Papadakis and three police officers for false imprisonment, assault and battery, malicious prosecution and conspiracy. The suit was for $906,000, however the matter was settled out of court for an undisclosed amount.
Later the three young men sued Paul S. Kemner, the town’s former mayor, Police Chief W.S. Stovall, George Papadakis and three police officers for false imprisonment, assault and battery, malicious prosecution and conspiracy. The suit was for $906,000, however the matter was settled out of court for an undisclosed amount.
Out
of all of this Papadakis was able to finally get a good night’s sleep. In
December 1962 he convinced the City Council to pass a strict anti-noise
ordinance. In 1968, he decided to run
for city council…but that’s another story I will be writing about later.
The Flintstone today - Hillside Manor |
The "Tarpit" is no more |
If any of you remember "The Flintstone" and would like to share memories or pictures, please contact me through my website claudineburnettbooks.com or leave comments below.
Sources:
“$906,000 in damages sought
for arrests.” Press Telegram, 21
November, 1963.
Robeson, George. “3 file
claims of false arrest. " Press Telegram,
9 February 1963.
Robeson, George. “Politics
get sticky up on Signal Hill.” Press
Telegram, 15 March 1968.
Wells, Bob. “This man’s real
Shook.” Press Telegram, 8 June, 1962.
Williams, Sherm. “Splashes in
night irk neighbor in Signal Hill.” Press
Telegram, 18 July, 1962.