A Look Back -- Jerry Person
Jerry Person
Lawrence of Arabia, Sir Edmund Hillary and Richard Burton.
Those were some of the names I received in answer to the question I
posed to 5th Street businessman and surfer Mike Morgan, when I asked him
who comes to mind when you think of adventurers.
I’ll admit these men were great adventurers, but they cannot hold a
candle to this week’s look back adventurer, Woody Mandeville.
His name may be unfamiliar to most of you, but after reading about
this man’s adventures I hope his name will be included with the names
above.
Woodruff “Woody†Mandeville started his adventurous life in Roswell,
N.M. where he was born in 1910.
He continued his adventure by coming to live in Huntington Beach in
1927, where he attended Huntington Beach High school. He graduated in
1929.
Woody continued his education at Long Beach Junior College and got a
job at Standard Oil Company and began to save up some money. With that
money Woody quit school and work after three months began a trip around
the world. He traveled down the Pacific coast and through the Panama
Canal to the Atlantic Ocean where he then traveled to England. He toured
the English countryside by bicycle before leaving for Marseilles, France.
Now penniless, Woody stowed away on a ship that carried him to Egypt.
While aboard that ship, Woody would celebrate Christmas at sea in
1929.
From Egypt Woody made his way to Shanghai, China in the early months
of 1930. From there he traveled to Japan and Back home to Huntington
Beach.
During this leg of his journey Woody used his last nickel to buy a bar
of soap. But his adventurous spirit overcame him and in 1933 we find
Woody back in Shanghai and planning his next adventure in far away Tibet.
One night in Shanghai our spirited adventurer decided on a lark to find
himself a Tibetan animal and in the guise of being a veterinarian, Woody
went over to a local circus that was playing in town to procure his want.
Unfortunately the circus’ elephant and tiger were well guarded but
Woody was able to abscond with the circus’ llama.
Tying a rope around the animal’s neck Woody jumped into a rickshaw and
with the llama running along side, headed for the local YMCA. Weeks later
Woody and a friend, Gene Rubin, set out for Tibet in search of gold.
They found it but neither wanted to work hard enough to get it out of
the ground and so they joined a hunting party led by Jack Young.
While on that party Woody traded his binoculars to a local Tibetan for
a takin -- a cross between a goat and an antelope -- that they hopped
would bring a big price back home.
But before they reached civilization, the takin died and so did their
hopes of quick wealth.
Woody’s adventures continued in Tibet when he help save a 400-year-old
Lama monastery from fire.
Rubin and Woody constructed a 20-foot boat in which they hoped to
establish a water route from Tibet to Shanghai by way of the Tung and
Yangtze rivers. This feat had never be done before and when it came time
for the two to launch the craft, the town of Tatscenlu in Tibet declared
a holiday. After nine grueling days they came upon a 75-foot waterfall.
Rubin and Woody abandoned the craft and watched as it went over the falls
along with most of their belongings. Continuing on to Shanghai Woody came
into the city wearing a long beard and dressed like a Tibetan chieftain.
He must have been quite a sight.
Woody settled down for a few years in Shanghai, but adventure called
and he and a friend built a 60-foot houseboat to travel in.
But just before their journey was to begin Woody came down with
tuberculosis. He spent four months in a China health spa before coming
back to Huntington Beach.
The disease continued to rack his frail body and Woody went to live in
nearby Olive View sanitarium.
On Feb. 25, 1938 at the tender age of 27, Woody passed away after
leading an adventurous life most of us only dream about.
* 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.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.