December 06, 2024

Oceanside Post Office to be Designated the Charlesetta Reece Allen Post Office Building

Allen

Charlesetta Reece Allen

Washington, D.C. – Today, Rep. Mike Levin (CA-49) applauded President Joe Biden for signing into law his bill designating the United States Postal Service facility located at 517 Seagaze Drive in Oceanside as the “Charlesetta Reece Allen Post Office Building.”

Rep. Levin’s bill received the support of the Oceanside Mayor Esther Sanchez, the full bipartisan Oceanside City Council, and San Diego County Supervisor Jim Desmond, who represents Oceanside.

Rep. Levin will hold a renaming ceremony in Oceanside in early 2025. Details to come.

“I’m thrilled that the Post Office on Seagaze Drive is now named after Charlesetta Reece Allen. She was one of the first Black leaders in our community and deserves to be recognized and remembered for all she did for the area,” said Rep. Levin. “Ms. Allen was a businesswoman, a minister, founder of the Oceanside Girls Club, and first President of the North County National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). She dedicated her life to uplifting our community and improving the lives of countless residents. This official designation is a testament to her legacy and a reminder of the importance of honoring those who have paved the way for progress. I’m grateful to all my colleagues who ensured this legislation passed with overwhelming bipartisan support, and I look forward to the upcoming dedication ceremony.”

Background on Charlesetta Reece Allen

Charlesetta Reece Allen was born in Texas in 1913 to Thomas and Stella Reece and was the oldest of eight children. She came to Oceanside in the 1930s, where she met and married local resident John Callen Mann. They eventually moved to the eastside neighborhood, or “Eastside,” in Oceanside, and she is believed to be just the third Black woman to live in Oceanside. Charlesetta established the Church of God and Christ in 1941 with her sister and served as the minister of the church.

Charlesetta worked as a cook in the Casa Blanca restaurant in downtown Oceanside before she began to cater food out of her home and eventually opened her own restaurant, the first Black-owned storefront in Oceanside. Her restaurant was a popular social gathering spot for Black residents who arrived during and after World War II.

After her husband John’s death, she later married Reverend Wesley H. Allen who was a pastor of a Black church in Eastside.

In 1965, Charlesetta was installed as the first President of the North County NAACP for Branch #1086. She also founded the Oceanside Girls Club and served as Director of First Girls’ Club. Charlesetta was awarded the San Diego Sojourner Truth Award in 1969.

Charlesetta passed away on September 28, 1983. Although she never had kids, she is survived by many nieces and nephews, some of whom also reside in Oceanside but also across the country.

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