The iceman don’t cometh anymore
As someone who hates to be cold, I have always held that fire was
man’s greatest discovery.
The wheel? I don’t drive anymore, and if you don’t drive, the
wheel doesn’t seem all that significant. Can you sit around a wheel
on a cold night and warm your hands? Or slap a couple of steaks on
the wheel to grill? No. Fire has it all over the wheel.
However, it has occurred to me that there is something right up
there with fire, and that’s the ice cube.
When I first came to Balboa, which we have established was shortly
after the last dinosaur waded into the La Brea tar pits, most people
had ice boxes. This was a primitive version of today’s refrigerator
-- an insulated box with space for a large block of ice that kept the
food cold.
Underneath the ice box was a pan that caught the water as the ice
block slowly melted and, in every household, someone had the
responsibility of regularly emptying the pan so that the kitchen
didn’t become awash in ice water.
Clarence Reed owned the ice house that served most of the area. If
memory serves me, it was on 32nd Street.
Every winter, huge slabs of ice were brought from places like Big
Bear and stored in the ice house. There, they were hacked into
300-pound blocks and loaded into the ice truck that delivered ice to
each household.
An ice tong with four or five teeth was used to break those
300-pound blocks into the correct size to fit into the various ice
boxes. Then the iceman would grab a pair of regular ice tongs and
heave that block onto his shoulder, protected by a piece of leather,
and carry the ice into the house. As you can imagine, you had to be
incredibly strong to be an iceman.
Clarence’s son, Bob Reed, was our local iceman and a hero to all
us little urchins who would gallop after the ice truck, grabbing
slivers of ice whenever the iceman’s back was turned. It wasn’t just
little kids who admired Bob.
The whole town thought he was the best iceman in the area, and so
when someone from Santa Ana claimed that honor, there was nothing to
do but have a contest -- a half-mile run up Balboa Boulevard carrying
a 300-pound block of ice, first man across the line the winner. You
would have thought it was the Kentucky Derby the way people were
betting.
The Santa Ana contingent arrived, and their man was big, but he
was no bigger than Bob Reed. The two contestants stood at the
starting line, their ice tongs ready, the blocks of ice on the ground
next to them. The starter raised his gun -- there was nothing penny
ante about this contest -- and fired.
Both men slung the ice blocks up on their shoulders like they were
pillows and started off. At first, there was no difference between
them, but gradually, Bob moved ahead, and he reached the finish line
a good 10 seconds ahead of Santa Ana’s best. If he’d been a hero
before, he was godlike after that.
My first job was chipping ice at the Green Dragon. For 10 cents an
hour, I wielded an ice pick, and I can tell you, it’s a slow way to
make ice for a drink.
When you reach the ripe old age of 91, you don’t have a lot of
time to waste, and to reach into the refrigerator and pull out some
ice cubes for my evening toddy ... well, I’d say that’s pretty close
to sitting next to a warm fire, and way ahead of any wheel.
So in my book, the ice cube is right up there.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
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