The man was a catch
Elia Powers
John T. Keeler had a reputation for being generous and gregarious.
Corona del Mar neighbors would often drop by his house or drive to
his Balboa Island gas station to get advice or to borrow money, said
Carolyn Keeler, John Keeler’s daughter.
“To this day, I’m sure he’s owed a lot of money,” Carolyn Keeler
said. “That’s the kind of person he was -- very friendly and
compassionate and open with people.”
John Keeler was born in Garden Grove and grew up in Santa Ana.
During World War II, he joined the Army Air Corps and helped develop
curriculum for an officer-training program.
He volunteered for navigation training and eventually became a
B-29 navigator. After the war, John Keeler stayed on as a reservist
and became a lieutenant colonel in what became the Air Force.
“He was always studying navigation and staying up on his friends
in the service,” Carolyn Keeler said.
Shortly after returning from the war, John Keeler bought a Union
76 gas station on Balboa Island with friend and Newport Beach
resident Matt Cox.
John Keeler lived in Corona del Mar, and in 1948, he built one of
the first houses in the 200 block of Jasmine Avenue, where he lived
until 1993.
John Keeler was married and had three children. The family became
a mainstay in the community.
“There were so few people in Newport Beach then, everyone knew
each other,” Carolyn Keeler said. “People would come in to the gas
station and tell my dad stories. He loved to listen.”
In 1953, John Keeler opened another gas station on Bristol Street
in Costa Mesa. Carolyn Keeler said she wove orange and blue ribbons
in her hair to celebrate the opening of that station.
After selling the gas stations, John Keeler worked in a family
business, M.L. Keeler & Son.
He retired in 1973 but remained involved in the community. He was
president of the local Rotary Club and helped out with his son’s Boy
Scout troop.
John Keeler enjoyed the outdoors. He climbed Mt. Whitney twice,
once at 15 and once at 65, his daughter said.
But his true love was fly-fishing. John Keeler couldn’t convince
his two sons to travel with him on trips, but Carolyn Keeler -- the
youngest of the three -- said she was always excited to go. The two
donned fishing hats and vests and walked into the water until their
bodies were nearly submerged.
Carolyn Keeler, who now lives in Boise, Idaho, still remembers one
of her first trips to Idaho with her father when she was 5 years old.
“I got so excited when my dad caught something that I fell into
the stream,” she said. “He had to choose between the fish and me.”
The two took trips together every year. John Keeler went on one of
his last fishing trips at age 90. He died May 10; he was 93.
Carolyn Keeler, who is looking to compile stories about her
father, said one stays fresh in her mind.
“Three years ago, we were sitting on the side of the river, and
out of the blue he said, ‘I liked all of your husbands.’” She’d had
three. He continued, “‘They were all fine men,’” Carolyn said. “He
never judged me. He always accepted my decisions and had faith in
what I could do.”
* THE GOOD OLD DAYS runs Sundays. Do you know of a person, place
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