Three prominent citizens
This week, we are going to look back at three prominent men of Main
Street who helped shape the destiny of our community.
For many years the Security Trust building stood proudly at the
corner of Walnut Avenue and Main Street, where it served the
financial needs of our people. Our first gentleman of Main Street
held the title of bank manager, and his name was William J. Ellery.
Bill Ellery was not an American by birth; he was a subject of the
queen. He was born in 1887 in Redruth, England, where he resided with
his family until 1895.
His family was not part of the elite of English society. Growing
up in England, he learned early in life about the value of being good
and playing straight with people, a trait he would continue
throughout his life.
Arriving in America as an 8-year-old lad, our future bank manager
and his family settled in Silverton, Colo., a small mining camp. His
family left Colorado to settle in Globe, Ariz., and they would
shortly move to Miami, Ariz., with the hope of someday striking it
rich.
Ellery learned the best way of achieving wealth was to buy land,
and while in his 20s he began buying real estate. He also got a job
at the Bank of Miami. In no time, he had worked his way up to become
president of that institution.
During his rise to the top, Bill had gotten married and became the
father of two boys.
In June of 1922, the family moved to Huntington Beach to settle
down. They lived at 1904 Ocean Ave. (Pacific Coast Highway).
He took over the management of the Security Trust and Savings Bank
and became a pillar of our community. He joined the Huntington Beach
Rotary Club and the chamber of commerce.
But his time as a resident here was short, for in October 1923 he
was promoted to the bank’s Long Beach branch as manager.
Taking his place here on Dec. 1, 1923, would be our second
gentleman, F.L. Slusher, a banker from Chickasha, Okla.
Slusher was born in Missouri and moved to Oklahoma as a young man.
He got work as a bank cashier at the First National Bank of Hobart,
Okla., in 1906.
Three years later, with a wife and son, Slusher moved to
Chickasha, where he would become a cashier at the First National Bank
of Chickasha. He remained there for the next 14 years, working his
way up to become manager.
He and his family moved to Huntington Beach in 1923 to assume the
duties of bank manager of the Security Trust & Savings Bank.
Our third Main Street businessman would one day open his grocery
store next door to the bank and would help shape the lives of many of
our early residents.
His name was William L. McKenney and, like Bill Ellery, he was not
born in America.
McKenney was born in Canada, but he moved to South Dakota and
become a prominent farmer. He brought along several pedigreed
Percheron horses and, from this stock, he established a successful
ranching business.
McKenney’s health declined, and he moved to Southern California
and settled in Huntington Beach. McKenney opened a grocery store at
201 Main St., just in time to see the town’s name change from Pacific
City to Huntington Beach.
As the town grew, so did McKenney’s grocery business.
In 1908, he was appointed a member of our town’s grammar school
board. At that time, our grammar school was a one-room school on Main
Street.
For the next 15 years, McKenney worked tirelessly with members of
our community to improve the quality of our children’s education.
McKenney lived with his wife and daughter at 225 11th St. His
daughter would benefit from this hard work, graduating from both our
grammar and high schools, and she later married a prominent Los
Angeles doctor.
In 1918, McKenney and his partner, George Bentley, opened a much
larger market right next to the Security Trust at 206 Main St. A year
later, he converted the store to a cash-and-carry market called the
Grocerteria. Later the same year, he changed the name to Valencia
Market and later to McKenney’s Alpha Beta #5 Market.
In their own small way, these three men of Huntington Beach helped
shape part of our rich heritage, and we are grateful to have had them
here in our city.
* 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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