A LOOK BACK -- Jerry Person
This week we’ll look at a man who in his lifetime accomplished much, from
working for a famous director in Hollywood, to working as a rough and
tumble seaman aboard a freighter, to being president of our Chamber of
Commerce.
While talking to Ann Minnie of the chamber, I was able to piece together
the life story of world adventurer Berrell Ries.
Berrell Roberts Ries was born July 29, 1900, in Merchantville, N.J.
His father was a town merchant, his mother a registered nurse.
Shortly after Ries’ birth the family moved to Philadelphia, where his
mother ran a boarding house.
The family then moved to Elkton, Md., where his mother operated a hotel
for 10 years.
When he was 13, he traveled alone by train to live with his grandmother
in Altadena. The two moved to Highland Park where Berrell graduated from
grammar school. He enrolled at Glendale High School, which he attended
for one year.
He quit school to work in Hollywood as a switchboard operator for the
Lasky Motion Picture Co., which later became Paramount Studios. While
there he befriended some of early stars like Blanche Sweet, William
Farnum and character actor Lucian Littlefield.
Ries went to work for Cecil B. DeMille but was fired for mixing up De
Mille’s calls. Ries next went to work behind the cameras as an assistant
cameraman.
Still in his teens, Ries and a friend thought it would be great fun to
see the world by working on a freighter.
While in Jamaica, Ries took the place of a sick seaman and guided a
freighter through the Panama Canal.
When World War I broke out Ries was living in Los Angeles, working in the
accounting department for the Santa Fe Railroad. He attended night school
at Polytechnic High to get his high school diploma.
He also took courses in automobile engineering at Frank Wiggins Trade
School. He later worked in the parts department at Don Lee Cadillac in
Los Angeles and then for Fageal Truck Co.
Ries married Marian Tower in 1925 at the Church of the Angels in Los
Angeles.
In 1931 they moved to Huntington Beach where Berrell opened an auto parts
store on 5th Street.
By 1933 he moved the store to 412 Walnut Ave., but for nearly 30 years he
owned the Huntington Beach Auto Supply at 210 Main St.
Minnie remembers Berrell shopping at her father’s market when she was
growing up.
Berrell and Marian had two children, Allen and Barbara. They lived at 925
10th St.
In 1953 Ries was elected president of the Huntington Beach Chamber of
Commerce.
He was a past master of the Masonic Lodge. He loved to hunt and fish in
later years, and was active in basketball, track and tennis.
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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