WORKING -- Tom Sharp
-- Susan McCormack
HE IS
Pumping gas -- the old fashioned way.
A LIFETIME SPENT PROVIDING GAS
Tom Sharp, 72, began working for Union Oil Company in 1949 as a sales
representative. He said he enjoyed interacting with people so much that
he decided he wanted to run his own gas station. After serving in the Air
Force for four years -- where he continued to do part-time work at gas
stations “for the fun of it” -- Sharp returned to California, married and
made plans for his own business.
Fifty years later, he is still at it. He has owned gas stations in Orange
and Santa Ana and three Newport Beach-area stations. His last remaining
Union station, built in 1958 on Avocado Avenue and Pacific Coast Highway,
still offers full service.
CHANGING WITH THE TIMES
Gas stations in the 1950s used to be “square boxes,” Sharp said, serving
about 30,000 gallons each month. Now, stations have greatly expanded --
in size and in quantity of product, often selling more than 120,000
gallons monthly.
The super-sizing of stations has led to less-personalized service, Sharp
said.
“The customer never sees a human face,” he said.
While employees at Sharp’s full-service station pay more attention to
their customers and their cars -- such as checking under the hood --
Sharp said in the past his employees spent extra time cleaning the cars,
too, sweeping floorboards, dusting dashes and washing windows and tires.
IN IT FOR MORE THAN THE MONEY
Sharp’s nearly half-century-old investment was a smart one. He said he
bought his first gas station in 1955 for about $2,500. Now, he said, the
same business would cost up to $400,000.
Though his Avocado Avenue station will soon celebrate its 40th birthday,
Sharp said he has no plans to throw a party or exploit the accomplishment
as a sales gimmick.
“I’m just not that gregarious a person,” Sharp explained.
Indeed, his son, 42-year-old Tucker, said profits are not what motivate
his father to continue working each morning.
“[The work] gets him up and out of the house,” Tucker said. “We’ve
hounded him for years to quit. He says, ‘What am I going to do?’ It keeps
him young.”
NOT READY TO RETIRE
Sharp said he does enjoy golfing in his free time. But he has no plans of
retiring to get in more tee times. He is still reaping the rewards of a
lifetime of hard work, including the many familiar customers who still
visit the station.
“He’s been there so long that middle-aged men come in and say, ‘I had my
first job working for Tom Sharp, in the summer of ’59 or ‘60,”’ said
Tucker, who managed the station on and off in the early ‘80s and ‘90s.
“That’s always fun,” Tucker continued. “Being on that corner for so many
years, he has folks going in there all the time. Because we’re so close
to John Wayne [Airport], we get a lot of travelers from all over the
world, too.”
And, Sharp has every intention of continuing to stay on that corner.
“As long as my legs will keep me up,” he said.
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