A Look Back -- Jerry Person
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Jerry Person
There are times in each ones life that the tribulations seem
unbearable and that life itself has dealt its owner a hand that makes
life seem so unimportant and meaningless.
This week we will look at just such an individual.
It was on June 20, 1918 that a new and important life came into this
world amid the strife of a world war in Europe. A baby boy was born to
Dr. Edgar and Pearl Ewing and they named their new son Charles Gordon
Ewing, but to most of his friends he was simply Gordie.
The family moved to Huntington Beach in the early 1920s just as our
oil boom town was beginning to grow. Young Ewing attended Central
Elementary School (Dwyer School) and went on to graduate from Huntington
Beach High in 1935. Ewing got a job in the composing room of the old
Huntington Beach News under the watchful eye of editor and publisher Jim
Farquhar.
War again came to America and Ewing enlisted in the army in 1942 where
he became a member of the 507th Parachute Infantry Regiment. He saw
action in Holland with the 82nd Airborne Division and in the Ardennes
campaign where he was wounded. When the war ended, his unit was stationed
on the Elbe River and later was an honor guard during the occupation of
Berlin. He then was sent to Japan for two years with the Eleventh
Airborne Division.
War came again into Ewing’s life and he was transferred to Korea in
1950 with the Seventh Infantry Combat. On Christmas of 1950 Ewing’s
division became the last to leave China’s border with the evacuation of
Hungnam.
Next Ewing joined the Third Ranger Company and fought in the spring
offensive of 1951. Now a Master Sergeant, he was stationed in Japan where
his duty as chief maintenance engineer was to design a better rip cord
tester for parachutes. When the 187th Parachute Regiment, Ewing’s unit,
left to go back to Korea he returned there as an operations sergeant.
With the Korean armistice Ewing came home but continued his career in
the military as maintenance chief for the 44th Infantry. He was put in
charge of the division’s helicopters and light aircraft. In late April of
1954 Ewing opened a commercial artist shop called Les Beaux Arts in a
building that had formerly been occupied by Stanley’s Barber Shop and it
was at 308 Walnut Ave.
Two years later Ewing went back to work at the Huntington Beach News
office as a utility man whose duties were to keep the heavy machinery in
working order. During his leisure moments Ewing drew cartoons for his
friends and sometimes dabbled in sign painting. But the storm clouds were
fast approaching in Ewing’s young life. He was now 40 and often times
would discuss with his friends how life just wasn’t worth sticking around
for. He even mentioned to them that if he ever took his own life it would
be in front of a mortuary so they wouldn’t have far to get him. On March
26, 1958 Ewing sat watching the academy awards on television at 9:30 p.m.
and sometime afterward got up and walked over to Smith’s Mortuary in the
600 block of Main Street where he paused and stood. In his hands he held
a sawed-off 12-gauge shotgun that earlier in life he had fashioned
himself. What he had been thinking in those seconds as his finger slowly
touched that shotgun’s hair trigger we’ll never know. At 10:59 p.m. the
Rev. Charles “Chuck” Smith of Calvary Chapel of Costa Mesa found Ewing on
the mortuary’s front porch.
Ewing had lived at 306 Walnut Ave., which ironically had been the
location in 1951 of the Huntington Beach Bible Shop.
* 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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