A smoke-filled Thanksgiving
- Share via
JERRY PERSON
Next week, millions across the nation will sit down with their
families to enjoy a hearty Thanksgiving feast. Be it a huge turkey
with all the trimmings or a humble meal made by someone who is
homeless, one thing is certain -- the memories that the occasion
provokes.
Thanksgiving has always been special here in Huntington Beach. For
many longtime residents, one special Thanksgiving will always be
remembered.
The week leading up to Thanksgiving of 1947 began much as it does
today, with people running to the grocery store to stock up for the
day’s feast.
Life in our town included many Main Street merchants decorating
their store windows in autumn colors and awaiting the arrival of that
year’s Santa Claus parade.
It all seemed peaceful now that the war was over and the men were
home again.
Well, maybe to all except Ernie Koppl, an oil tool inventor in
Huntington Beach who had his 1941 Ford stolen while he was in Los
Angeles on Thanksgiving eve.
All along Coast Highway, a dark ribbon of derricks was silhouetted
in the nighttime sky as they stretched northward.
It was a quiet night before the big day when, over at the O.D. Oil
Company’s well 14th Street and Pacific Coast Highway, a small fire
started around 9:50 p.m. In minutes, the fire shot its flames into
the night sky.
Huntington Beach Fire Chief J.K. Sargent and his men rushed to the
scene to find one well ablaze with a second well on the property
catching fire shortly after. Heavy winds were fanning the fire and
spreading the acrid smoke throughout the town.
Huntington Beach Councilman Lee Chamness had our police department
round up every available man to help fight the blazing inferno.
Huntington Beach, more than any beach town, knows what damage
could result when an oil well catches fire and spreads those burning
drops of oil high into the air.
Chamness and fellow Councilman Fred Grable spent that night
directing traffic and aiding our firemen.
One fire truck after another arrived at the burning scene, and
even before the trucks stopped rolling, firemen were unrolling the
hoses and attaching them to hydrants. Throughout the night, water
poured from the hoses as its cooling liquid was spread on the burning
embers.
Several oil storage tanks filled with crude black gold were now
burning furiously and lighted the night sky. The winds continued to
fan the flames now even more.
There would be many empty seats around that year’s dinner tables
as more men were called to fight the blaze.
Steel derricks melted and crashed to the ground. Streetlights near
the blazing inferno began to warp and melt into grotesque shapes.
Their steel anchoring bolts melted onto the nuts holding the poles in
place.
Like the little engine that could, one of those metal streetlights
also refused to give up. Although its body twisted and turned, its
heart never wavered as its light bulb continued to shine.
Water pressure began to fall and city fire trucks were placed in
tandem to boost the water pressure. Lines were laid from 17th Street,
where another fire truck forced water down to the 14th Street fire.
Another fire alarm sounded, this one from the Compton Oil Company
site at Olive Avenue and 18th Street. Members of the Newport Beach
Fire Department answered this blaze.
When the fire was finally out, the owners of the O.D. Oil Company,
the Beloil Company, the Stanton Oil Company and the Wilshire Oil
Company all had damages to their property to the tune of $100,000.
Those who lived through that memorable Thanksgiving will never
forget the smell of smoke and those heroic men who gave up their
Thanksgiving feast to save our town.
As for Ernie Koppl, police recovered his stolen car at 53rd Street
and Western Avenue in Los Angeles without a scratch on it and only
three gallons of gas missing.
* 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.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.