Capturing Santa Monica: Bill Beebe

A series by the Santa Monica History Museum featuring the photographers and photojournalists who recorded the city's history

Vera-Ellen & Victor Rothschild Marriage License (1954/11/18) by Beebe, BillSanta Monica History Museum

Bill Beebe (b1927) was a preeminent local photojournalist whose 1962 image of John F. Kennedy emerging from the Santa Monica surf was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize.

Baseball at Santa Monica City College (1949/04/01) by Beebe, BillSanta Monica History Museum

Beebe was born in West Los Angeles and moved to Santa Monica as a child.

Saluting Babe Ruth (1948/08/19) by Beebe, BillSanta Monica History Museum

After joining the Navy during high school, he developed an interest in photography and was one of the first to major in the subject at Santa Monica College (then SMCC) in 1946.

Graduation Day at Santa Monica City College (1949/04/26) by Beebe, BillSanta Monica History Museum

After graduating from Santa Monica College, Beebe joined Emerson Gaze’s Pacific Press Photos, a group of photographers who provided images to local news organizations.

NAACP President Frank M. Barnes (1948/12/10) by Beebe, BillSanta Monica History Museum

Beebe then spent ten years working for the Los Angeles Mirror, where he won multiple photojournalism awards.

Parking Ticket Confusion (1948/12/08) by Beebe, BillSanta Monica History Museum

After the Mirror merged with the Los Angeles Times, he stayed on as a staff photographer until 1963.

Douglas Park Casting Pool (1949/06/30) by Beebe, BillSanta Monica History Museum

Beebe moved to the Evening Outlook in the 1960s, where he devoted three decades to capturing Santa Monica notables and happenings.

Patients at the Kabat-Kaiser Institute (1950 circa) by Beebe, BillSanta Monica History Museum

Patients at the Kabat-Kaiser Institute (later known as Kaiser Permanente), a center for those with neurological disorders.

Grunion Hunters in the Surf (1949/03/16) by Beebe, BillSanta Monica History Museum

Beebe was an avid conservationist and edited a regular outdoor column for the Evening Outlook.

Pacific Coast Highway (1940 circa) by Beebe, BillSanta Monica History Museum

Beebe retained the rights to the images he produced while working for the Evening Outlook, and upon the newspaper’s closure in 1998, generously donated his collection of over 100,000 negatives to the Santa Monica History Museum.

Red Moody Trio at the Windermere (1949/03/07) by Beebe, BillSanta Monica History Museum

Beebe’s images are an invaluable resource for the museum and are used on a regular basis by academic researchers, members of the public, and fellow journalists.

Dumping Illicit Slot Machines (1948/08/12) by Beebe, Bill and Gaze, EmersonSanta Monica History Museum

Upon being honored with a lifetime achievement award from the Los Angeles Press Photographers Association in 2000, Beebe said, “My job was my hobby. Didn’t make much money, but I made a lot of friends and had a lot of fun.”

Credits: Story

© Santa Monica History Museum

For more information, visit https://santamonicahistory.org/

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.

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