A look back
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Jerry Person
A couple of weeks past we looked at the election of a town constable
in 1952 and the runoff between Charles Derigo and Clyde Benge.
In that column I related how a dark-horse-write-in candidate by the
name of Bill Jones received from his many friends in town 1061 votes.
This week we’ll look at the life of a man who was so popular to
receive so many write-in votes. It was on Dec. 3, 1886 that William H.
“Bill” Jones first saw the light of day in the small farming community
of Talbert. You might recall that Talbert was the name that Fountain
Valley was known as for many years. Bill spent his youth walking on
ground that one day would be known as Huntington Beach. Yes, there was a
time when there was no Huntington Beach, Pacific City or even one of
those places known as Gospel Swamp. Since the early days of his youth,
Bill enjoyed physical sports and he even took up being a heavyweight
amateur boxer and competed once in the Golden Gloves finals. But Bill
enjoyed being an amateur and would not want to make a career as a
professional boxer.
Bill was always willing to help others.
Bill married a beautiful Huntington Beach girl by the name of Pearl
Swift and from this union came two beautiful girls Margaret and Velma. He
took great pride in raising his two girls to become fine Huntington Beach
ladies. Bill loved horses and not only rode well but also raised many a
noble steed.
For many, many years, no Huntington Beach Fourth of July parade down
Main Street would be complete without seeing big Bill atop his mount
waving at the people. I think Bill loved those parades as much as he did
his horses. He and Pearl lived at 619 8th St. in our Downtown and all the
while extended a helping hand to those in need. Being raised in a farming
town like Talbert, farming was in his blood. You could find him out in
his garden when he had the time. As time went by and his girls grew
older, got married and had children of their own, Bill received five
wonderful grandchildren. Being a native Californian, it was only natural
for Bill to start a local chapter here of the Native Sons of the Golden
West and he even became one of its presidents. He went on to serve as an
Orange County deputy sheriff for many years and when Ben H. Dulaney
vacated the post of town constable Bill was appointed to fill out the
unexpired term. When the term expired in 1950 Bill did not initially run
for the job but waited until after the primaries were over to see who
won.
Although Bill’s name did not appear on the ballot, his friends went to
the polls and wrote his name in 1061 times. In the closing month of 1952
the rains came to Huntington Beach and flooded many of its streets, and
while giving aid to a friend whose car had stalled in the flood waters
Bill suffered a heart attack and left us.
But to the very end, as he had done most of his life, Bill was there
to lend a helping hand to a friend in their time of need.
* JERRY PERSON is a local historian and longtime Huntington Beach
resident. If you have ideas for future columns, write him at P.O. Box
7182, Huntington Beach, CA 92615.
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