Two friends remembered
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JERRY PERSON
It is said that death comes in threes.
This Memorial Day, two fine people and good friends passed away.
Both were longtime residents of our city and saw it flourish.
Out at the end of Huntington Street, Linda Espitia was well-known
to her neighbors and friends and especially to the neighborhood
children at Halloween. All the kids knew Halloween was fast
approaching when the pumpkins in Linda’s garden were ready to be
turned into jack-o-lanterns. She was known to grow huge pumpkins in
her garden, some of them bigger and heavier than the kids themselves.
At Halloween, one could find Linda in her front yard, decorating
it with homemade figures of witches and goblins.
Last year, she created life-sized figures from the “Wizard of Oz.”
She created Dorothy and her dog Toto, along with the scarecrow, tin
man and lion. From the side of her neatly flowered beds would be the
wicked witch herself.
Linda was born into Huntington Beach’s large Alvarez clan, which
included Andy and Tim, on March 20, 1937. She grew up here when our
city was still relatively small-town America.
As she grew older, her brothers looked out for her, especially
when it came to dating boys. Linda would eventually marry Robert S.
Espitia, and the two would raise their family here with the same high
morals she learned from her family.
Linda passed on May 31, leaving her husband and son, Robert A.
“Bobby” Espitia, to carry on the Halloween tradition she had begun at
their old homestead.
The second friend I lost this Memorial Day was a councilman, as
well as part of Main Street history.
It would be a lucky Friday the 13th on which Huntington Beach
Optometrist Henry Sol Kaufman was born: May 13, 1916 in Worcester, Mass.
Henry entered grammar school there. In 1928, the Kaufman family
left Worcester to settle in New York City, where Henry continued his
education.
The Big Apple must have awed this 12-year-old boy.
His family sent Henry to parochial school with the idea their son
would study for the Rabbinate. But this was not to be. After four
years, Henry changed his mind and began studying optometry at City
College.
After two and a half years, Henry and his family moved to
Pittsburgh, where Henry entered the University of Pittsburgh to
further his studies. To help pay for his education, Henry got a job
as a cloth cutter in a mattress factory.
At this time in American history, the unions were gaining
momentum. Henry helped organize the mattress workers into a union.
Henry was so successful that he was elected its secretary and later
would become its vice president -- positions he would hold for the
next three years.
When he was able to save enough money, Henry came to California to
further his education at optometry school in Los Angeles.
In 1941, Henry graduated and opened his own practice in Long
Beach. He would remain there for the next two years before coming to
Huntington Beach in 1943 to open his long-running and historic
practice.
This was also the year he met his future wife, Muriel Bender, and
they were married not long after that.
In 1944, Henry was president of the Orange County Assn. of
Optometrists. By this time, he had become a popular speaker at civic
luncheons. He put together a program of optical tricks he called
“optical illusions.” He presented this program to members of our
local Lions Club and Rotarians.
By 1945, Henry and Muriel’s son Daniel had been born. In the
coming years, two daughters would join the Kaufman family, Diane and
Deborah.
Muriel once told me that when Henry came into town and opened his
office, Tom Talbert came in one day and asked Henry if he could read
and write. Henry said yes and Tom said, “You’re on the Planning
Commission.”
How times have changed.
Throughout the 1950s and into the 1960s, Dr. Kaufman’s office at
326 Main St. was a fixture.
Henry threw his hat into the political ring and ran for councilman
in the April 1966 election.
After the ballots were counted, Henry came in second after Alvin
Coen and before Jack Green and Ted Bartlett with 3,264 votes.
While on the council he forced the Huntington Beach Company to pay
its share of oil revenue per barrel.
For many mornings I would see Henry having breakfast at Terry’s
Coffee Shop on Main Street. When Henry found time to relax, it would
be out on the golf course, “digging holes with his irons” or playing
a game of tennis.
Henry passed away on May 28, but he will continue to leave his
mark on our town’s rich history.
At the beginning of this column, I mentioned that death seems to
come in threes. The third death is our town, for Huntington Beach has
died just a little with the passing of two of its finest people.
* 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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