Mason was the last of the Downtown docs
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JERRY PERSON
One of the most important parts of our lives is keeping in good
health. From the day we are born, there is someone looking after our
wellbeing, from our parents, the government and finally our family
doctor.
This week, I’m fulfilling a request from Huntington Beach resident
Laddi R. Frisinger to do a longer column on the last of our town’s
Downtown doctors.
I know we have Downtown doctors and dentists today, but I am
referring to when Huntington Beach was still a small beach town of
approximately 3.2 square miles.
For 46 years, Dr. Bernard Mason practiced medicine from his office
on the corner of 3rd Street and Walnut Avenue.
“Doc” was not a native of Huntington Beach. He was born in New
York on Feb. 20, 1911. His family moved across the river to New
Jersey where Mason received his early education in that state.
After his graduation from high school, he continued his studies at
Penn State where he earned his bachelor’s degree in 1931 and, a year later, his master’s degree. Mason did an 18-month graduate stint at
New York Medical College and at Flower Fifth Avenue Hospital in New
York City.
In 1936, Mason received the title of doctor when he graduated from
Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia. He did his internship
there and at Gorgas Hospital in the U.S. Canal Zone in Panama. While
in Panama, he treated several cases of malaria and the knowledge he
gained would come in handy years later for one of our residents.
Mason left Panama and became a resident surgeon at the Swedish
Hospital in Minneapolis and would attend graduate school in Chicago.
For one year, he was a ship’s surgeon on the Grace Steamship Lines.
In 1939, he opened his practice in Middletown, N.Y., and remained
in practice there for the next three years. When America was plunged
into World War II, Mason joined the U.S. Army where he served in the
Army Air Corps.
In 1943, he coached the backfield on the football team at Brookley
Field in Mobile, Ala., and served as the team’s doctor. He married
and in 1945, he and his wife Elsie became the parents of a son,
Jeffrey.
Mason would remain in the service as a major in the Air Force
after the war ended, and spent the last six months of 1946 in
Australia before leaving the service.
After his discharge from the military in 1946, the family came to
California to live. In no time, they settled in Huntington Beach
where he had a two-story office and apartment constructed at 3rd and
Walnut.
On Oct. 30, 1947, “Doc” opened his office to tend to the medical
needs of our community.
In 1948, he began a 40-year career as physician for Orange Coast
College’s football team. For that dedication, the college named a
field for him and inducted him into its Hall of Fame.
The Masons built their dream house on Main Street, where they
would live for many years.
Longtime resident Ray Walker, a neighbor of the Masons, recalled
when he [Walker] worked for Fluor many years ago. Walker came home
sick one day, and Dr. Mason took a look at him and diagnosed the
symptoms as malaria. I doubt many doctors here in Southern California
would recognize a case of malaria if they saw it.
Walker also told me that Doc charged $3.50 for an office visit,
and $5 if he made a house call.
When Hoag Hospital opened its doors in September 1952, Mason was
one of its original staff physicians. From 1957 to 1958, he served as
chief of staff at the hospital and Walker told me that in one of the
hospital’s hallways are pictures of every chief of staff including
Dr. Mason.
“He was a hell of a nice guy,” Walker told me.
Marianne MacKenzie from the Main Street branch library told me
that the Masons were so supportive of the library’s projects and
could be counted on if needed. Robin Ott, also of the Main Street
library, held the Mason in high regard as a library supporter.
The city honored Mason for his long-term service to his community
by naming him Community Grand Marshal in our 1994 Fourth of July
parade and I watched him as he rode down Main Street that year.
In 1978, Orange Coast College named him their Outstanding Citizen
of the Year.
I learned from Frisinger that you could find Mason on Wednesdays
playing golf at the SeaCliff Country Club, and that she had seen him
on the greens for many years.
As for me, Mason continued to remind me to lay off salt and cut
down on coffee. I have at least followed one of his suggestions, but
I just couldn’t give up popcorn with salt.
I can still see Dr. Mason and his good friend Merritt Nevins
walking together on Main Street on his was to this office nearly
every weekday.
It was on the last day of 1993 that Mason retired and locked his
office for the last time.
Mason lost his wife Elsie about a year ago and I just received
word from Walker that on Jan. 10, we lost a great man, a great friend
and a great doctor. Those whose lives he touched in those 46 years of
dedicated service to the town he loved will sorely miss him.
* 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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