A new year rife with war
- Share via
JERRY PERSON
With 2004 upon us and as the past year fades into memory, we should
reflect upon what happened and how Huntington Beach residents
celebrated the New Year’s holiday.
If there were ever a New Year’s to celebrate it would be the one
in 1946. World War II had ended, rationing was nearly over and our
servicemen were returning home to friends and family.
But not everyone from Huntington Beach who served in the military
was able to return home for the holidays, and had to celebrate the
coming year in some far-off place.
This week we are going to see how we in Huntington Beach
celebrated that coming year of 1946.
Huntington Beach serviceman Bud Galvin had to contend with
celebrating his New Year’s Day on far away New Guinea while stationed
in the Army Air Corps at Biak.
Woody Kemp’s wish that year was to be off Saipan and back home
with his family in Huntington Beach.
Also stationed in the Dutch East Indies were Lawrence Mollica,
Jack Jenkins and Elton Barnes, all good Huntington Beach boys.
Bill Pitts and Ernie Lynn were too busy to be able to enjoy the
holiday, as they were kept busy with military duties.
Back in Huntington Beach, Nettie Peebles surprised her daughter,
Nadine, on her 20th birthday by getting up early and baking her an
angel food cake for breakfast.
Main Street businesswoman Eve Druxman celebrated her New Year’s
Eve in Hollywood, in the company of movie actresses Joan Leslie and
Alexis Smith.
Martha White was elected president of the Starlite Club and her
friends will be glad to know that Martha is still driving her car
downtown, but this year had to give up her home on Second Street and
move into a retirement home.
Huntington Beach postal clerk Barnett Medford was preparing for
his upcoming marriage to Marjorie Hanson on Jan. 24. Marjorie
graduated from Huntington High and worked in the Standard Market’s
soda fountain. Barnett was home recovering from being wounded at
D-Day in Normandy.
Longtime resident baker John Eader and his wife Minnie had a lot
to celebrate that year, when their son Howard came home after serving
in the Army in England and France.
Standard Oil Company’s repairman Lawrence Burdick and his wife
Kathryn were able to spend their holiday with their son Frank at home
in Huntington. Frank had been able to obtain a leave from Alaska to
be with his family.
Herb Day had to return to base in Dalhart, Texas, to get his
discharge from the Army Air Corps.
But he was still able to spend 10 days with his wife Millie and
daughter Hollie at their home at 515 1/2 Tenth Street.
Jake Steidinger said “I do” to Betty Jean Cropsey in a double-ring
ceremony on Dec. 29 to be able to spend their first New Year’s Day
together as husband and wife.
Police Chief Don Blossom engaged Hazel Allen to cater a farewell
retirement dinner for police officer Jack Tinsley. Tinsley was a
25-year veteran on our police force and our first police and fire
chief.
William and Margaret Cookerley’s daughter, Frances, attained the
rank of captain in the Army. She would be in charge of arranging camp
shows for the troops in the South Pacific.
As dramatic director, she would act as hostess as formal
receptions and also would act in camp plays and do a little tap
dancing for the GIs.
The Plumlee clan held a family reunion at Lake Park, which
included several members of the family at a buffet-style lunch and
along with Tom and Florence Wyllie and their daughter Judith.
Roy K. Smith and Hazel Ranney helped deliver a nine-pound baby boy
to Jane Ranney Hollen in Smith’s ambulance at the corner of Beach
Boulevard and Lincoln Street on Dec. 30.
Lloyd and Zelpha Dye also became parents on Dec. 30, when their
seven-pound, 12-ounce daughter was born.
Over at the First Baptist church, Rev. Luther A. Arthur joined
Elizabeth McCoy and Carl Kutter in holy matrimony.
Phyllis Laue was honored to become queen of Job’s Daughters in a
ceremony that included Shirley Moore, Barbara Ries, Kathryn Achey,
Ardeth Frederick, Nancy Wilson and Betty McCubbin.
The Blue Star Mothers baked and packaged 100 dozen cookies and
sent them along with a box of apples, a box of grapes and two boxes
of oranges to the wounded boys in the Long Beach Navy Hospital.
Baking those cookies were Pearl Elliott, Myrtle Hermann, May Olsen
and Ruth Paxson.
Vell Duvall and Perry Tunstall spent their day at home and Leland
Pitts spent his New Year’s Day at home waiting for orders to report
for duty.
Shirley Tayloe and Leonard Van den Bergh got engaged in that
wonderful start of 1946.
These events would be repeated throughout Orange County and in
every city and town across America as the echoes of war gently faded
into our history.
Little would they know that many of our sons and daughters would
again leave their hometown in a few years to be serving their country
again, only this time in Korea.
* 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.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.