JERRY PERSON -- A Look Back
I received a call from a First Team Realtor wanting to know if I knew
anything about a piece of property she was offering for sale at 403 10th
St.
After she described the green and white house on the corner of 10th and
Orange Avenue, I knew at once it was the Warner homestead -- the home of
Willis H. Warner, a local businessman, as well as a former city
councilman and supervisor for Orange County.
This week, we’ll take a look at his life story.
Near Aurora, Ill., there flows the waters of the Fox River, and near this
river lies the small hamlet of Millington. In this hamlet on Jan. 18,
1889, Willis H. Warner was born.
His father, Charles Warner, was the telegraph operator and ticket agent
at Millington for the Burlington Railroad. Charles Warner would later
become a city judge for Huntington Beach.
In 1894, the Warner family moved to California and settled in Garden
Grove for a short time. His father farmed several areas in Orange County
until he moved the family to Huntington Beach in 1906.
Charles Warner became a local carpenter and helped to build the homes of
some of our pioneer families, including his own at 403 10th St.
Willis Warner attended school in Garden Grove and in neighboring
communities. In 1906, he and three other students graduated from Las
Bolsa High School. There were all of 17 students in the school.
When the earthquake struck San Francisco in 1906, Willis Warner and
several locals staged a benefit play called “Esmerelda” in the rooms
upstairs in Stewart Hall at 201 Main St. They collected $53 to help those
earthquake victims.
The next year, Warner enrolled at USC to study civil engineering. In
1911, he graduated as a civil engineer.
In 1910, Warner operated the tent city and cafeteria at 11th Street and
Orange Avenue on the old Methodist campground.
In 1911, Warner married 20-year-old Ethel Morrow Crane, the daughter of
Abner J. Crane, a local rancher from the Smeltzer area near present-day
Beach Boulevard and Edinger Avenue.
By 1912, Warner had become the local manager for the San Pedro Lumber Co.
From then to 1925, the couple lived in Westminster.
In 1925, Willis and Ethel moved to Huntington Beach, where Warner
purchased the hardware store at 112 Main St. from Ted Tarbox and Tarbox’s
father-in-law, William T. Newland.
From 1925 to 1953, Warner Hardware was a fixture on Main Street where
locals could buy anything from a couple of nails to small appliances.
Warner sold that hardware store in 1953 to Frank and Thelma Hinshaw.
Ethel Warner passed away on Feb. 12, 1953, in the family home at age 61
after a long illness.
Ethel and Willis Warner had two children -- Alice and Willis Charles. A
few years later, the Hinshaws sold that same hardware store to Paul
Jones.
Not only was Warner a hardwareman, he was also a city councilman in 1934
and mayor of Huntington Beach in 1937 and 1938.
When his term was up as councilman, Warner ran for Orange County
supervisor and was elected and reelected for several terms on the Board
of Supervisors.
A school was named in his honor at 14171 Newland St. in Westminster, as
well as a major street in Orange County -- Warner Avenue.
Willis Warner passed away on Nov 1, 1963. I am indebted to Pam of Willis
H. Warner Intermediate School and Trish Cannady from the Westminster
School District for the assistance they provided for this column.
I do hope whoever buys the old Warner homestead doesn’t tear it down and
build one of those 25-foot eyesores in its place.
* 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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