An Englishman’s American journey
Although 88 years seems like a long time, it’s amazing that a person
could accomplish as much as Newport Beach’s Victor Rumbellow has in
his lifetime.
He was born in England and served in the British Army in World War
II. Since then, he has traveled the world, worked many careers,
married and raised four children.
Rumbellow and his family eventually moved to California, where he
was almost immediately hired on at Paramount Pictures to work the
development of pay-per-view television. Shortly after moving to
Newport Beach in 1966, he and his wife, Olive, began investing in
real estate, including the Newport Channel Inn hotel, which one of
his daughters now oversees.
Rumbellow’s latest passion is the Osher Lifelong Learning
Institute in Irvine, a community organization for retired people who
share a love of learning. Rumbellow helped start and run the
facility.
The Daily Pilot’s Lindsay Sandham recently had a chance to sit
down with Rumbellow as he shared some of his fascinating stories.
You served in World War II. Do you have any good stories from that
time in your life?
One of the funny things about that was we did this push-through in
the German-held territory of Belgium. We went through in the night.
Our division was told, “Don’t travel at night.” The Brigadier said,
“We’re fighting a war here; we’re going to travel at night.”
I was riding in a jeep with my second-in-command, and I went to
sleep. We came to this city called Eindhoven. It has a ring road
around it.
At about 3 o’clock in the morning, he woke me up, and he said, “We
got a problem. You see that vehicle in front? That’s the tail end of
our convoy.”
What had happened was we had taken a wrong turn and we were going
round this ring. So the rest of the army had gone on and we were just
going around Eindhoven.
How did you meet your wife?
At the end of the war, we were in Germany. We finished up the war
in Luneberg. I was in the officer’s club, and we had a dance.
Somebody said to me, “There’s a nurse here that’s just your type.
You’d like to meet her.”
I met her and we got married six months later. She was a nurse in
the British Army. We were married 59 years ago.
After the war, you spent three years working in the
telecommunications business in Malaya [now Malaysia]. Any good
anecdotes from that time?
One day, I was in this little town that was a communications
center, and I got a call from one of my people. He said the telephone
lines had been cut going south.
We were completely isolated; we were cut off by the Communists.
So, I went out to fix the lines, and that was when I got a real
scare, because we took some police with us.
At about four o’clock in the morning, the guards had been out and
they came in, and one of my men thought it was the bandits coming to
attack us. That’s what they did -- they cut the lines, and then when
you went to repair them, they’d shoot you.
After living all over the world, you somehow wound up in
California. How did you end up moving here?
I had a cousin who lived in Santa Monica, so we emigrated. We came
on freighter through the Panama Canal and up the coast. I was very,
very lucky, because I had a wife and 4-year-old son at that time, and
I didn’t have a job or anything, but it was actually sheer luck.
The man who lived next door to my cousin was with Paramount
Pictures. They were just going into what I had just been doing. They
were getting into cable television, and I had been doing cable
television in England.
I was introduced to the chief engineer of this Paramount
subsidiary, and he and I caught on straight away, and he offered for
me to join them. So within 10 days of landing, I was working for
Paramount Pictures, and I stayed with them for seven years.
Then you worked for Douglas Aircraft?
I worked on the shot to the moon. I worked in the Apollo program
as a project engineer, on one of the stages of that rocket that sent
them to the moon. It was one of the stages that pushed them, the
third stage. The first two stages got them into orbit and then we got
them out of orbit and to the moon.
Then I worked on the first Skylab. I was dealing with the
astronauts at that one. I was dealing with NASA.
So, in the late 60s, you were living in Newport Beach and growing
tired of working for Douglas.
Around 1968, I started to get into real estate. I bought our first
duplex in Corona del Mar. Then we bought some apartments. Then we
escalated from that and, in 1972, we bought a motel called the
Newport Channel Inn, which is on Coast Highway in Newport Beach.
We’ve owned it now 32 years, and we own other properties as well.
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