In 2023, the population of Santa Monica, California, was almost 90,000. My relatives are among the residents and I recently visited them. While there, I went to Santa Monica Pier for the first time.
Santa Monica got its English name in 1769 when Juan Crespi, a monk in a Spanish expeditionary force, named the area for that saint. But the Indigenous inhabitants of the area, the Tongva, have lived there for thousands of years.
A pedestrian walkway high above the beach offers good views of the pier – at least, it does when it’s not shrouded in fog. Staircases that cross the multi-lane highway make it easy to access the waterfront.
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View of Santa Monica, with the pier in the distance |
Below are some interesting facts about the Santa Monica Pier.
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Sign welcoming people to the pier |
1) The pier is 1,600 feet long and it opened on September 9, 1909. It was originally built to hide a pipeline disposing of sewage into the ocean and was called the Looff Pleasure Pier.
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View of Santa Monica Pier from the beach |
2) Santa Monica Pier is a popular site for fishing. According to one website I used to research these facts, a fishing license isn’t required. At the very end of the pier, there's a platform where people can try and catch sea bass or other fish.
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In the distance, fishing off the end of the pier |
3) The cartoon character Popeye was based on a real sailor named Captain Olaf C. Olsen, who owned a fleet of fishing boats. His efforts to prevent commercial fishing with nets in the 1920s and his charitable contributions of fish to poor families in the Depression years inspired the creation of Popeye.
4) An amusement park opened on June 12, 1916. Located on the section of the pier at the water’s edge, it included a merry-go-round built in 1939, a roller coaster, and a few other attractions. Now named Pacific Park, the Ferris wheel is visible from many places on the pier.
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Entrance to the amusement park |
5) Desi Arnaz performed at La Monica Ballroom, a huge building on the pier. Dance marathons – Depression-era contests that gave cash prizes to couples who could dance the longest, with short breaks to rest – were held there. Academy Award-winning movie They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?, which I saw many years ago, fictionalized those competitions and filmed some scenes at Santa Monica Pier.
6) Another iconic sign announcing the pier was built in 1940. Located closer to the actual pier when completed, it was moved to its present spot about 75 years ago. Yachts no longer dock at the pier but the sign was designated a historic landmark in 2012.
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City-owned Santa Monica sign off of Colorado Avenie |
7) The physical condition of the pier deteriorated over the decades and in the 1970s, the Santa Monica City Council voted to demolish it. However, local residents passed a proposition in 1975 to preserve the pier in perpetuity.
8) After a 1983 hurricane and other storms, the pier was renovated over a period about several years. A new amusement park was also constructed.
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View of Santa Monica Pier and Pacific Park from the ocean end of the pier |
9) A sign announcing the westernmost end of iconic Route 66 is a popular spot for photos. But that isn’t the original sign marking the actual end of the road. The real endpoint is located where Santa Monica Boulevard and Ocean Avenue intersect, a few blocks inland. It’s near the Ghiradelli Chocolate & Ice Cream Shop that opened a few months ago, where I bought some candy.
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The writer standing in front of the newer Route 66 sign |
10) In the multi-Academy Award-winning movie The Sting, when Robert Redford’s character finds Paul Newman’s character working at a carousel, that scene was filmed at the Looff Hippodrome, which was built at the same time as the pier and is now a National Historic Landmark. Many other movies and TV shows also shot scenes at Santa Monica Pier, including The Girl from U.N.C.L.E., The Mod Squad, The Rockford Files, Star Trek: Voyager, 24, and 90210.
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Sign when leaving Santa Monica Pier |
Santa Monica Pier is the last pier on the West Coast that is home to an amusement park. With vendors and artists selling souvenirs; performers entertaining tourists; restaurants to satisfy hunger cravings; an arcade, trapeze school and amusement park offering escape from the daily grind; the opportunity to go fishing; and beautiful views of the ocean and the pier from many great vantage points; when you’re in Santa Monica, a visit to the pier is not to be missed.