For Costa Mesan, a perfect day was spent using his hands
- Share via
Elia Powers
For former Costa Mesa resident Eric Wilbur, a perfect day was one
spent using his hands.
He loved working on cars. Loved building engines, constructing
aircraft parts and reading about futuristic designs. On Sunday
afternoons, after a morning at church, Wilbur enjoyed nothing more
than taking his family out on the Pacific Coast Highway in his black
Cadillac.
The garage was his second holy place. And he spent his days
working in garages and hangars throughout North America.
“He’s one of the few people I know who got to do what he wanted
all of his life,” said Wilbur’s son, Jay, an Irvine resident.
Eric Wilbur died Jan. 30 of a heart attack. He had celebrated his
87th birthday 12 days earlier.
Born in Alberta, Canada, in 1918, Wilbur developed an interest in
aircraft at an early age.
“Airplanes were all the rage back then,” Jay Wilbur said. “He was
always fascinated by technology and anything mechanical.”
Eric Wilbur’s family moved to the United States when he was a
child. He spent most of his youth in Portland, Ore., only 175 miles
from Seattle and the headquarters of Boeing, where Wilbur later would
do work as a contractor.
In college, Wilbur studied thermodynamics and physics, all the
while preparing himself for a career in advanced mechanics. After
graduation, he traveled to California to get his repair license, and
he used his skills while serving in the Army Air Corps during World
War II.
Wilbur had an affinity for Southern California. After marrying his
first wife, Roma Wilbur, in Portland, the couple moved to Los
Angeles. There they raised Jay Wilbur and daughter Dona Martini.
After short stints in Bellflower and Garden Grove, Wilbur moved
the family again in 1958, this time to Costa Mesa. He bought a home
on East Bay Street. Martini said the area was up-and-coming when the
family arrived.
“When we moved in my dad said, “This is my ace in the hole. I’m
not letting this go,’” Martini said.
And he didn’t. The family still has possession of the home, and
Wilbur spent many of his retirement years living there.
Roma Wilbur died in 1965. Wilbur later married his childhood
friend, Joye.
He took advantage of living in Orange County. Martini said her
father liked to drive the family to Disneyland on weekends. Wilbur
often hosted neighborhood parties and was the one to organize
firework displays on the Fourth of July.
Wilbur had friends everywhere, including workout partners and
employees at the 19th Street 24-Hour Fitness, where he was one of the
gym’s first members.
When Wilbur wasn’t socializing, he was by himself in the garage.
He created jewelry, and particularly enjoyed working with wood and
metal.
Throughout his years in Orange County, Wilbur developed a
reputation as an expert in aircraft design and construction. Airport
executives coveted his knowledge of engines and hired him as a
consultant.
He worked with aviation pioneer Eddie Martin at what was then the
Orange County Airport. Wilbur had a host of other jobs working on
aircraft throughout Southern California.
Late in his life, he was invited to Washington, D.C., to donate to
the Smithsonian Institution a World War II training manual on how to
rebuild a B-29 aircraft.
At a memorial service held Friday, friends and family remembered
Wilbur as a man passionate about his family and his projects.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.