Wright’s still doing it right after 72 years
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Jimmy Stroup
H.W. Wright Co., better known as Wright’s, has been buying and
selling the biggest and smallest in hardware needs since it opened
its doors in 1932, making it the oldest surviving business in Costa
Mesa.
Conceived as a salvage and lumberyard by Harry Wright Sr., the
shop was built on the principles that were a part of the era in which
it was started.
“It was a good time for that kind of business because they reused
everything -- nails if they were straight,” said Jeff Wright,
grandson to Harry Sr. and the shop’s current owner.
Wright has owned the shop since he bought out his older brother
and father, Harry Wright Jr., in the mid-1990s, though he hasn’t
spent much time anyplace else since he was a teenager.
“I started working pretty much on a regular basis since I was 14,”
he said. “Worked through high school. More than I went to high
school, probably.”
And in the continuing tradition of minimal changes in ownership,
the store itself has done little in the way of remodeling. Recently,
Wright decided to move the counter to the opposite side of the store,
a change that brought many odd looks from longtime customers.
“People get used to things the way they are, especially around
here,” Wright said.
The store itself has come together as a measure of time and
circumstance, and not so much as part of any plan.
“Really, no one would start a business like this on purpose, from
scratch,” he said. “It’s evolved over the years.”
The diversity of the business is in its products, which vary from
large-scale machinery equipment sales to countless bins littered with
a selection of nuts, bolts, casters and cotter pins that could hardly
be found elsewhere.
“It’s a tricky mixture of driving a forklift and cutting steel ...
and the next minute you’re pulling little screws out for someone at
the counter. You have to be pretty versatile,” Wright said.
But the strange array of items is Wright’s strongest asset, one
that keeps people coming in on special trips long after they’ve moved
out of the area, customers Wright claims are his favorite to deal
with.
“It’s a pretty unique store,” Wright said. “There’s not a lot of
other businesses like this.”
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