A Look Back -- Jerry Person
Jerry Person
One of the most important and underpaid jobs in Huntington Beach or,
for that matter, any local city, is that of city clerk.
It is their tireless duty to provide, at a moment’s notice, any type
of municipal record, which a current council person may require. It has
been my great pleasure to know some of these tireless, hard working
individuals, Alicia Wentworth and Connie Brockway, both past and present
city clerks for Huntington Beach. It is in their hands that the city
government is able to run so smoothly.
This week we’ll are going back a few years to another of Huntington
Beach’s city clerks and look at the life of John Henricksen.
It was in a far away city of Rorvik, Norway that our city clerk was
born in 1899. This tiny infant was given the name of Johan Storm Lund
Henricksen, but we knew him simply as John.
John had two brothers and a sister and in 1904 the whole Henricksen
family left Norway to settle in Duluth, Minn. If any of you have ever
been to Duluth in the winter you know how similar the climate is to
Norway and Sweden.
During this time many Scandinavians were relocating to Minnesota from
Norway, Sweden and Denmark in the late 1800s and into the first half of
the 1900s -- including my grandparents.
Young John attended school in Duluth and the family, as well as most
Norwegians there, attended the Norwegian Lutheran Church and were
confirmed -- as was John.
In 1918, when John was still in high school, he enlisted in the Navy
as America was preparing to go to war.
For the next 18 months he would serve in the frozen waters of the
north Atlantic.
After returning home John continued his education at the University of
Minnesota where he majored in business administration. John was a member
of the Duluth Boat Club in 1920 and was a runner-up in the Olympic game
trials.
He was a good basketball player and his team, the Luther Athletic
Club, won the Minnesota championships for 1920-21.
He next went to work in Brazil for the Phoenix Utility Company of New
York. While there he took a two year course in advanced public utility
accounting.
He remained with that company for the next nine years.
During his employment John traveled to Cuba, Florida and Brazil,
gaining a great deal of knowledge. While in Cuba in 1924 he found himself
in the middle of an uprising. He served as a paymaster, cost and field
accountant and company auditor during this time.
In 1929 in a confidential report to the company John warned of a
coming revolution in Brazil and even named the date of it in the report.
He missed the date, but only 10 days and the amazing part of it was that
he had that information for over a year.
When he left the company John traveled to Northern California where he
mined a placer gold claim.
Two years later he returned to accounting and served as a resident
auditor for the Ebasco Service Co. traveling to such states as Kansas,
Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas.
He spent the next five years in Southern California working with the
Austin Company as auditor.
John’s sister married a Huntington Beach man, Howard Moring, and while
Howard and he were on a bowling trip here, he met Howard’s sister Jewell
Brown. She was from a pioneer Huntington Beach family and the two fell in
love and were married.
In 1947 John was appointed city clerk and controller of the beautiful
beach town of Huntington Beach.
Alicia Wentworth told me that Jewell and John ran a trailer park on
Adams Avenue and Beach Boulevard.
They lived at 618 E. Quincy Adams Ave. in a large two-story home built
around 1900 with their son Jon and stepson Kao Ewing.
Jewell ran a food concession north of the Huntington Beach Pier near
5th Street called Julie’s Restaurant.
John was a member of the Masonic Lodge, a Shriner, a Rotarian and a
member of the Toastmasters.
He retired as city clerk in 1960 and handed the reins over to Paul
Jones.
As you can see, John led a very active life and throughout that life
he managed to play football, basketball, baseball, run track, ice hockey,
rowing and when time permitted, played a little golf.
Alicia said John and Jewell are no longer with us but she still has
some wonderful memories of these two and I have some wonderful memories
of two, very much alive, city clerks. We can be very proud to have these
great people on board to help our City Council and in later years some
future city clerk will look back and admire these three marvelous people.
* 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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