Where the streets have familial names
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JERRY PERSON
There are still a few residents of Huntington Beach that may not know
several of our streets were named for early families who lived and
worked here.
This week, we will look back at three individuals whose last names
should be familiar to us -- Gothard, Nichols and Heil.
It was on Feb. 24, 1852, that George Gothard was born in Jo
Daviess County, Ill. George attended and received his formal
education in the public schools of that state, and in 1874, when
George was 22 years old, he moved to California to live in Anaheim
and grow grapes.
In 1879, George and his first wife, Elizabeth, moved to the
Wintersburg area, near present-day Gothard Street and Slater Avenue,
and began raising celery. This area was ideal for growing celery, and
they later discovered that they could mine the peat bogs in the area
and sell it to make extra money.
When Elizabeth died, George married Ellen, and the two helped
raise a family of nine children; Bert, Elmer, Joe, George, Agnes,
Mary, Ethel, Betty and Edwin. Huntington Beach resident Arline Howard
told me that the Gothards were a large and important family.
George Gothard also worked for 12 years with the county to develop
roads throughout this area. In the 1930s, he passed away and Ellen
continued to reside on the family farm with her son Edwin until they
sold the property.
Our next subject will be Harry Nichols, and Nichols Street is
where Rainbow Disposal is located today, and which is also located in
the Wintersburg area.
Harry, or “Nick” as he liked to be called, was born on Sept. 27,
1875 in Topeka, Kan., and it was there that he would receive his
basic education and finally graduate from the University of Kansas.
While in Topeka, Nick met Anne Ozelle McAfee, and the two were
married in that city in 1902. Nick entered the wholesale grocery
business as a salesman to earn a living and would afterward become a
life insurance salesman.
In 1913, Nick and Anne moved to California to live in Long Beach
and since at that time Long Beach was experiencing an oil boom of its
own, Nick engaged in the oil brokerage business there for the next 20
years.
In 1933, they moved to Huntington Beach, where he continued in
various oil ventures. Although Nick and Anne had no children, they
had many friends, and on Feb. 16, 1951, one little corner of the
world got a little darker, without the sunshine of his smile.
Our last subject for this week was a true native of Orange County,
born near the present-day streets of Magnolia and Edinger in 1896.
Vernon Heil came from a large family of eight children. He had two
brothers, M.P. and Armond; and five sisters, Flora, Valentine, Ethel,
Viva and Florence.
As Vernon grew older, he would eventually get married, and in time
he and his wife, Ruth, would raise two sons -- Robert and William.
The Heil family grew lima beans on their 200-area ranch located at
16002 Beach Blvd.
It is hard to imagine that where the Bella Terra Shopping Mall
sits today was back then nothing but acres and acres of bean fields.
Vernon became one of the first water conservationists in our
community, and would one day serve as the president of the Orange
County Water District. He also became a director of the Santa Ana
River Water Assn. and president of the Orange County Farm Bureau.
Vernon became a member of the Huntington Beach Rotary Club, which
has over the years produced so many fine individuals. He became an
elder in the First Presbyterian Church in Santa Ana.
For all his 55 years, Vernon lived within a half-mile of where he
was born and I guess that should tell us how great a community we
live in. Sadly, we lost Vernon at an early age on Jan. 27, 1951,
depriving our community of a man who loved and cared for his spot of
paradise as we know as Huntington Beach.
* 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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