Frank Curran and his yard
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A LOOK BACK
It seems that everywhere you look today in Huntington Beach, there
is some type of construction going on. New housing tracts are
springing up on land that once had oil wells on it, and historic
homes are giving way to three- and four-story cracker boxes.
It doesn’t take long today to erect the prefab wood framing. In
the past, much of that lumber would have been purchased at the Frank
Curran Lumber Co. at the corner of Acacia Avenue and Lake Street.
This week, we’ll look at the man who considered each stick of lumber
a masterpiece.
So who was Frank Curran?
Frank’s father, Daniel, came to this country from Ireland in 1854
and settled in the small town of Dixon, Ill. It was in Dixon that
Frank was born and raised.
Frank’s father had been a general contractor and builder in
Ireland, and when he made Dixon his home, he continued in that
profession. It was in Dixon that Frank received his formal education,
and when Frank graduated from high school, he became a builder and
brick layer, just like his father.
Around 1890, Frank was hired on to help build St. Patrick’s
Catholic Church in the neighboring town of Rochelle, Ill. It was
there that he met a lovely lady by the name of Margaret Delaney.
It was love at first sight for Frank. Little did he know when he
was building St. Patrick’s that shortly thereafter, he would be
inside taking wedding vows with Margaret on Sept. 7, 1892.
Frank continued as a sub-contractor and bricklayer around northern
Illinois. But he wanted a better life for his family. In 1899, he
came west to California to look over building prospects in San
Francisco and in the L.A. areas.
He left our golden state to return home to Illinois, but whether
it was the warmer climate or the building boom going on at the time,
Frank returned to Los Angeles on Christmas Eve of 1900.
In those days, the commercial buildings there were made of brick,
and so Frank’s bricklaying talents were used to good advantage. It
would be interesting to know if any of those buildings that Frank
worked on are still standing today.
Bricklaying in those days was back-breaking work, and Frank began
to look around for something easier to do. He left Los Angeles with
his brother C.P. for Pomona. There they opened a lumber yard and ran
it for three years.
Frank returned to Los Angeles in 1905 when he was hired by the
E.K. Wood Lumber Co. in San Pedro. In five years, he was promoted to
assistant manager and was sent to the company’s L.A. office.
In 1917, he became manager of the whole lumber company. In the
1920s, he made friends with some of the officials, and through them,
he helped many a sub-contractor find a job subdividing towns around
Los Angeles.
Frank moved to Santa Ana in 1935 and bought three lumber yards, in
Santa Ana, in Orange and at Acacia and Lake.
The yard in Huntington Beach had been the San Pedro Lumber Co.
before it was bought by the E.K. Wood Lumber Co. in 1933.
Curtis Archibuld and Wiley Griffiths were at the San Pedro yard,
and Charles Boster and Jack Whitney were at the E.K. Wood yard. All
knew Frank Curran’s good old Irish wit.
Huntington Beach resident Orville Hanson told me that our lumber
yard had one of the largest saws in the area, and the blade was
driven by belts powered by a steam engine. Hanson also told me that
the yard had a sawdust pile bigger than many of buildings on Main
Street and that he and his buddies would come in and play in that
huge pile of sawdust.
Hanson said that Maggie Halicy had a market by the lumber yard.
Frank ran the yards for several years. Howard Hepburn was the
manager.
By the 1950s, Frank Jr. took over the running of the yards with
his brother, Howard. Frank and Margaret had six children.
Frank was a member of our Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce and
a member of our Rotary Club.
Today, the lumber yard is gone, replaced with new homes. For many
of us, the E.K. Wood Lumber Co. was the only lumber yard in
Huntington Beach and many of the homes built after World War II were
built from lumber that was brought down here by train and sold by
Frank Curran’s men.
* 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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