Pacific Electric and Osborn
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A LOOK BACK
When I think of the Pacific Electric’s old red cars, I have this
picture of an old- fashioned, rust-colored streetcar sliding along
ribbons of steel with sparks flashing from its overhead cable.
Huntington Beach owes much to those big red cars and to the
Pacific Electric Company that was owned by Henry Huntington.
This week we are going to look at a man who spent 33 years of his
life with that company, and nearly as long as an agent for that
company in Huntington Beach.
It was back in the town of Woodbury, N.J. that a local roofer,
Elias H. Osborn and his wife gave birth to a baby boy in 1873. They
named their little baby Willis Reeves Osborn.
In his youth Willis Osborn received his early education in
Woodbury and later in Cameron, N.J. In 1891 Willis finished high
school to enter the job market as a cashier in a local clothing
store.
Not long after that Osborn took up the wood polishing trade and in
time became quite good at it.
About a year later, on Nov. 8, 1892, Osborn married Bertha Leary
in Camden, N.J.
Longing to be his own boss, Willis opened a general merchandise
store in the southern part of New Jersey. It was in 1912 that Osborn began his long association with the Pacific Electric railway when the
Osborns moved to California to accept a job in the freight department
of that company.
At the time the Osborns came to Southern California, the red car
was a familiar sight throughout Los Angeles and Orange counties
carrying goods and people.
Osborn enjoyed working for the Pacific Electric Company and in
1915 Willis was promoted to company agent and sent to a tiny seaside
beach town called Huntington Beach.
Three years later, in 1918, the Pacific Electric transferred
Osborn to the company’s Long Beach office and made him both cashier
and freight agent.
Osborn had a gift for music and while in Long Beach he would
continue his music education and for several years he was a soloist
in the Long Beach Baptist church and even appeared in several musical
ensembles throughout Long Beach.
Willis would work very hard at his job and the company promoted
him to general agent in 1919. His new territory now included Long
Beach to Newport Beach and of course Huntington Beach and Seal Beach.
He served in that capacity for eight years in the Long Beach office
and in 1927 the company transferred him back to Huntington Beach
where he would remain as city agent for the rest of his life.
Osborn joined the Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce and in 1930
he was elected as president of that organization.
When two former Huntington Beach City Councilmen, Orvil Ray Harris
and James W. Mitchell passed away in August of 1930, Osborn was called upon to pay tribute to their memory at a luncheon held at the
Golden Bear Cafe. During the luncheon, Osborn brought up the subject
of what happened to the Ostrich hide billfold that belonged to J.
Sherman Denny.
Willis Osborn went on to serve as president of the Chamber of
Commerce for two more years (1931 and 1932) at the same time he was
also in charge of the city’s advertising.
It was Osborn who created many of those colorful brochures and
pamphlets that the city mailed out to towns and cities across America
advertising the beauties of our fair city.
When Osborn worked as agent for the Pacific Electric red car line,
the one-way fare from Huntington Beach to Los Angeles was 65 cents
and a round trip cost only $1.10.
The Osborns lived at 811 Frankfort Ave. and from their front door
they could watch the sun rise over the distant snow-capped mountains
and set in the beautiful blue Pacific.
Willis and Bertha had one daughter Viola Christine who married one
of the Vidal boys. If Osborn had lived to Nov. 8, of 1945 he would
have been able to celebrate 33 years with the Pacific Electric Co.
But that was not to be for on April 25, 1945 the man that most
personified the red car’s history in Huntington Beach left us and
though the red cars no longer come into town, it, like Willis Osborn,
will always be a part of Huntington Beach’s rich history.
* 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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