By Mike Heywood
available on Amazon.com
Reviewed by Chris MacDonald
Historian Mike Heywood has a new book out on the Civil War and it tells about
John C. Ord, "The Father of Seal Beach," who's buried in Westminster Memorial
Park.
Ord was born in Orleans, Vermont on July 28, 1842. He worked as a lumberman and
joined Company E of the 9th Vermont Infantry, which was attached to his cousin's
group. (Fort Ord, north of Monterey, where Clint Eastwood, my father and a
million others went through Army Basic Training, was named for John's relative,
Union Gen. E.O.C. Ord).
"John saw action in a sharpshooter brigade and was with the Army of the Potomac
at the conclusion of the war," wrote prolific author Heywood, who lives in
Huntington Beach.
In 1866, Ord came West to San Francisco to seek his fortune. He ended up looking
for gold in Grass Valley and working in the Salinas Valley produce fields before
moving south to Los Alamitos, where he became Justice of the Peace and built a
two-story General Store.
On Feb. 29, 1904, he headed toward the ocean and managed to move his entire
store to what became Seal Beach. Heywood said this was the first building in
town and served as the post office. He was made Postmaster. He purchased several
more lots, became very successful in real estate and was known to locals and
tourists for his unusual collection of live critters--ranging from coyotes to
skunks. His property became one of the area's first attractions--long before
Knott's Berry Farm and Disneyland.
Ord is just one of the fascinating characters featured in his book, "The Civil
War-Orange County's Connections to Chickamauga." The easy-to-read,
well-researched, balanced history not only goes into detail about the epic
battle but tells about others like James Talbert, who served in the Union Army,
and had sons Samuel, who helped develop Fountain Valley, and Thomas, who was an
Orange County Supervisor.
The book, which fairly examines both Union and Confederate Armys, a soldier's
life, weapons, and family connections, looks at Chickamauga, the second
deadliest battle after Gettysburg. It even has a handy index.