JERRY PERSON -- A Look Back
For many years, the old West was alive and well in Huntington Beach at
Marion Speer’s Western Trails Museum.
The museum was out in the Liberty Park area of Huntington Beach, inside
Speer’s home at 7862 Speer Ave. The street was named for him.
Speer spent most of his life traveling the Western states and collecting
and cataloging thousands of relics of the frontier days.
Speer was born on a farm in St. Joe, Texas, on Jan. 2, 1885. When he was
4 years old, he found his first treasure -- an American Indian skinning
knife -- while helping his father plow the field. This was the start of
his fabulous collection.
Before Speer came to California, he lived in Colorado. He graduated from
the Colorado School of Mines and was active there in several mining
ventures.
Speer came to Huntington Beach in the early 1920s and became interested,
along with resident Bud Higgins, in the county’s Red Cross projects and
its disaster programs.
Speer and his wife, Rosa, traveled extensively throughout the West,
picking up pieces to add to the collection. In 1931, Speer published a
book, “Western Trails,” about his travels in the old West and the people
he knew. He personally knew Wyatt Earp and other colorful characters.
In September 1937, he built his house on Speer Avenue, in part to house
his collection. When he dedicated the museum, the Chamber of Commerce
gave him a life membership, and Mayor Marcus McCallen presented Speer
with a golden keys to the city.
In 1940, Speer was injured in a car accident and was told by doctors that
he would never work or drive again. He proved them wrong and continued
working full time for Texaco Oil and guiding school children through his
museum.
Residents donated materials to enable Speer to add a second wing to his
museum in August 1941. It was necessary to add a third wing in 1945.
The museum contained collections of old guns, arrowheads, assay scales,
rocks and minerals, early photos, railroad spikes, etc. One relic at the
museum was an American flag made by William Ducher, a Hessian soldier,
and used in the Revolutionary War.
In 1956, Speer made a deal with Walter Knott to have the collection moved
to Knott’s Berry Farm if Knott would build a structure to house his
collection. In return, Speer would continue on as the curator.
Speer stayed at Knott’s until he retired at age 84 on Dec. 31, 1969.
Speer’s wife passed away on April 18, 1971. Later, Speer remarried. He
passed away in Fullerton on Aug. 27, 1978.
The building that once housed his collection is no longer at Knott’s
Berry Farm. I was unsuccessful in contacting Knott’s about the fate of
the thousands of relics that Speer had spent a lifetime collecting.
* 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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