Stringing together a cross-country life
Herb Ring likes to travel around the world to experience different
cultures, with his most recent trip being to Vietnam. He left the
cold of the East Coast and came to live in the sunny, warm climate of
Newport Beach after his children graduated college.
Though a little older than many who have come to California to
seek new opportunities, Ring was able to do just that. He had a small
shop that strung tennis rackets for all the major tennis
manufacturers, such as Wilson, Head, Dunlop and Prince.
The 70-year-old recently sat down with the Pilot’s Luis Pena and
spoke about his life from East to West.
Where did you grow up?
I grew up in a city called Everett, which is a suburb of Boston,
during the early years of the Great Depression. My father was a
plumber, my mother was a homemaker and I grew up in what you would
call a working class area of mixed culture -- Italian, Scottish and
Irish. Growing up in Boston and being surrounded by all the mementos
of the Revolutionary War and Paul Revere gave you a significant
appreciation of the evolvement of our country and the patriots who
served it.
Because it was during the early years of the Depression, most
cities sponsored outdoor band concerts that were free to the public,
which sort of took the burden and the heaviness of the era off of the
people’s lives.
What kind of childhood did you have?
It was relatively happy in the fact that my father, being a
plumber, was able to find work and as a result we were able to stay
off welfare. Very ordinary. We were a normal family.
I had an older sister and a younger brother. My father worked and
my mother was a homemaker, and we had a very simplistic life, as most
of the families did at those particular times. We were in a
working-class area, so consequently there were no extravagances. It
was middle America.
How did you end up in Newport-Mesa?
After my two kids graduated from college, I decided that I had
enough of the cold weather and putting on snow tires and cold feet,
and felt it was time to go to a warmer climate. A friend from Chicago
suggested the Newport area as being ideal for weather and for growth
opportunities, and we decided to sell my business and move there.
What are your greatest accomplishments in life?
I’m going to be very prosaic and say my greatest accomplishments
are having two very, very successful kids in every right and to have
stable and productive lives, which means free of calling on me for
anything.
If you could re-do one moment or incident in your life, what would
it be?
It would be moving at an early age to California and going into
the real estate business. That would have been in the ‘50s, when the
boom was just starting and the possibilities were endless. Had I come
out here at that time, where the growth was expanding because of all
the veterans who came here after the war, I would have been able to
participate in this growth.
What profession other than yours would you like to have tried?
I would have liked to have tried being a travel tour guide, and I
still would like to do it. I find that it’s an enjoyable way to
interact with people, to see countries and to keep alive and alert as
to what is going on in the world.
What is the greatest lesson you’ve learned in your life?
Acceptance of other people and cultures unlike my own. Tolerance
of people who don’t believe exactly as I do, but have a right to
their own feelings. Well, for one thing, it’s a big wide world that
we live in and to quote a trite phrase, we all should and must get
along. I know that the people of India and the people of Egypt don’t
think and feel the same way as I do, and that doesn’t bother me,
because in relationship I don’t think and feel the same way as they
do.
What do you treasure most?
I’ll have to say, in general, my wife and my kids and my
grandkids. I treasure them because they give me support, they give me
joy, they give me comfort and they give me a sense of being. And the
fact that I live in a great country that I have the freedom to do as
I want, how I want as long as I can afford it.
How did the Great Depression affect you?
How it affected me and most of my friends was the fact that we saw
our parents struggling to get by. Many people were on welfare, and
that was a very hard time for most kids, and it gave us sort of an
idea that not everything was peaches and cream.
What did you like or dislike most about high school?
What I liked most about high school was that it was carefree. It
was a certain time of innocence, where the most important thing in
your mind was whether or not you are going to have a date for the
prom ... What I didn’t like about high school was the fact that there
would be certain cliques of which you were totally out of their
circle, which gave you somewhat of a feeling of self awareness when
you weren’t included in some of these activities of the “in crowd.”
What was it like being a young person and hearing that Pearl
Harbor had been attacked?
I think I was a freshman in high school, maybe a sophomore in high
school. You didn’t grasp it as fully. You just said, ‘Wow what’s
going on?’ And then you went to school and everyone was asking the
same questions: what and how and why? It was a state of pretty much
confusion and apprehension throughout the school.
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