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The Applebury's
Charles
Leonard Applebury was born on November 19,1897, at his family home
at Garden Grove, California. He was the third of thirteen
children, and the oldest son. Because his father moved often,
Charles grew up on a succession of farms in both California and
Missouri. But the family lived in the Wintersburg area long enough
for Charles to be in the Community Sunday School, organized on
December 12,1904, and to be present when the church was organized
on January 7, 1906. So, for many decades, Charles Applebury was a
historic link with the origins and heritage of the church. But a
short time after the founding of the church, the family moved back
to Missouri, where his father had relatives and farmed for a time,
near Carlton.
When the family moved back to California, it was to Los Alamitos,
where Charles graduated from grammar school. By the time he was
ten, Charles was working full time on the ranch for his father.
During harvest time the work required Mexican laborers, and
Charles became bilingual. When Charles was fourteen, the family
moved to the Victorville area, and he drove a wagon with a team of
horses up through the Cajon Pass. Charles told me he slept under
the wagon in Hesperia overnight, before driving into Victorville
the next morning. He also spoke of catching wild horses in
Hesperia, driving them into the sandy bottom of the Mojave River
to slow them down and lasso them; he later broke the broncos and
rode them. Charles was a farmer and a cowboy in those years, and
was an extra for old Tom Mix movies.
Charles was nineteen and Carol was sixteen when they met. Carol's
brother had ridden with Charles when they caught wild horses. The
first time Carol saw Charles, she used to say, she knew he was the
man she would many. As a young man, Charles was on a train, going
to be inducted into the army, when Armistice, ending World War 1,
was declared. Upon his return, Charles began courting Carol in
earnest, and on April 27, 1920, they were married in Santa Ana. It
was the beginning of 67 years of married life together. They lived
for a while in Victorville, but then moved to the Wintersburg-Huntington
Beach area a few months after their marriage, to the Golden Ranch,
located where McDonnell Douglas is today. Their two daughters were
born there.
Then they moved to a ranch on Springdale, between Bolsa and
Edinger. Their son was born there. Charles also farmed on lands
along Edinger between Golden West and Beach Blvd. The main crop
was dry lima beans, which were threshed in the fall; but he also
grew tomatoes and bell peppers. He belonged to a co-op, located by
the railroad, where the crops were sold. At times he grew sugar
beets, which were taken to the Holly Sugar Plant in Santa Ana.
Charles loved farming, and he thought he was doing good for the
world, by farming, raising crops and feeding people. They always
had their own garden for fresh vegetables, and raised chickens,
turkeys, rabbits, pigs and calves. Charles butchered meat for the
family, and would invite relatives over for Sunday dinner. His
daughters remember the main social occasions being dinners with
relatives, and the church activities, Charles was a great family
man, and he enjoyed the family get-togethers.
The daughters of Charles and Carol Applebury remember always going
to Community Methodist Church, to Sunday School and the church
potlucks. Charles took the whole family to Sunday School and
church every Sunday. Charles and Carol transferred to Community
Church on June 22,1930, and were members for 58 years. During my
time of minis" at Community Church, the ministers called on
Charles and Carol, as honored pioneers of our church, and
accompanied the youth in singing Christmas carols for them, at
their Wilson Street address in Midway City. (Charles had farmed
until he was seventy-nine, and did not want to retire, even then.
But after he retired, they bought the lot on Wilson Street, and
moved their house from Graham Street in Huntington Beach. Charles
also had property on Edinger, across from Huntington Center, where
he had one of the earliest Marie Calendar's Restaurants, #14.) On
November 19, 1987, 1 delivered a giant ninetieth birthday card to
Charles Applebury, signed by hundreds of members of the church and
Sunday School. As a student of the first Community Sunday School
back in 1904, and as a parent devoted to giving his children a
Sunday School education, Charles represents a significant
continuing emphasis on the life of our church - the focus on
Christian education and nurture. |