A Look Back
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Jerry Person
Our story this week begins over 250 years ago in a small iron foundry
in Italy where workmen poured molten metal into wooden molds.
When the metal in the molds cooled down it was pounded into a
100-pound masterpiece of Christ’s Last Supper.
Over the years the handwrought iron plaque found its way to a church
in Frankfurt-on-the-Main in Germany where it proudly hung on its wall.
Meanwhile, a small band of 14 people met in the old Ocean View
schoolhouse at Edinger Avenue and Beach Boulevard on Dec. 29, 1895 to
form their own church. The First Church of Christ continued to meet for
the next 10 years at several locations until Jan. 1, 1905 when the group
found a permanent home inside a bicycle shop at 6th Street and Walnut
Avenue.
Layfett C. Haulman became its first minister and his daughter became
the church’s first organist. As the months went by, the little
congregation began to grow and the bicycle shop location became too
crowded, so in 1906 they moved to larger quarters in an upstairs room at
201 Main St.
Haulman continued to minister to his flock until 1907 when J.R. Jolly
took over and the church was relocated across Main Street in a bank
building.
Meanwhile, across the Atlantic, the iron masterpiece was darkening
with age and of being illuminated by 100 years of candles.
In Huntington Beach, the congregation purchased a corner lot at 8th
Street and Orange Avenue on May 20, 1908. The congregation built its new
church and Tyron L. Young became its minister. Young served from March 8,
1909 until 1914, a series of ministers would later proudly serve the
congregation.
When Otto D. Lee became its pastor on Sept. 8, 1914, the little plaque
in far-off Germany was seeing the opening days of World War I.
When the war ended, the iron masterpiece was still intact. E.J. Harlow
became minister on Aug. 24, 1919 after having taken over for three other
pastors since Lee had headed the church. On Sept. of 1922, James G. Hurst
would begin his 31 years of ministry.
During this time the plaque in Germany began to see its darkest days
as Hitler began his iron rule of terror on Germany’s churches.
During World War II, the metal masterpiece saw its home church
destroyed by bombing.
After the war ended, workmen unearthed the plaque in the ruins of the
bombed-out church and from there it was sent to Berlin.
It was there that Garden Grove importer B.A. Fisher acquired it and
brought it over to America.
Two members of Hurst’s congregation, Conrad and Pearl Worthy, acquired
the plaque from Fisher and they donated it to their church in 1956. But
first it had to be cleaned and refinished before it could grace the
inside of the church.
Thomas Graham of Santa Ana spent weeks cleaning and buffing the iron
surface and little by little our timeworn plaque began to show its
original beauty.
A bronze coating was added and our masterpiece took on a new third
dimensional look.
Today our 250-year-old masterpiece sits in the First Christian Church
(the church’s new name) on Main Street above the welcome desk in the
Narthex, said Arline Howard of Huntington Beach.
The iron plaque of the Last Supper is still giving a new generation
the thrill of seeing a genuine work of art by artisans of so long ago.
* 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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