Thursday, December 29, 2011

Remembrances for Two Santa Cruz/Soquel High School Teachers

Santa Cruz, CA
    Here are the remembrances for two former teachers at both Santa Cruz High School and Soquel High School.
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Eugene William HARLAMOFF
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Obituary
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Sunday 25 December 2011 Santa Cruz Sentinel
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1929 - 2011
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Resident of Soquel
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    Eugene, a native and life-long resident of Soquel, passed away in his home on December 8th after a lengthy illness. He was 82 years old.
    His maternal grandparents had come to Santa Cruz County in 1890, and his mother was born in Soquel in 1900. His father was an immigrant from Russia, coming to Soquel in 1926.
    Gene was a very bright and mechanically-minded student; he attended Soquel Elementary, Mission Hill Junior High, and graduated from Santa Cruz High School in 1947. He was a Boy Scout and attained the rank of Eagle Scout. He attended UC Berkeley for two and one-half years. He was a founding member of the UC Hiking Club, made the first winter ascent of a major Sierra Nevada peak, and would trek, often alone, throughout the high Sierras. In 1950, he volunteered for the Army, trained at Fort Ord, and served sixteen months with the Combat Engineers in the Korean War. He was Honorably Discharged in 1953 after 3 years, reaching the rank of Sergeant First Class. He attended San Jose State and graduated with Teacher's and Master's Degrees. It was at San Jose State he met his future wife, Glenna Gitschlag, and married her in 1955.
    His first teaching position was at Santa Cruz High School, but when Soquel High School was built, he transferred and taught there for the rest of his 36-year career. He was a master teacher of science, physics, electronics, math, and driver education. He ran a well-disciplined class and was wont to say that if students didn't meet his expectations, he would "snarl and breathe fire." It apparently worked, for he was so much admired that that many of his students would visit him long after they had graduated and started their own careers.
    Gene, with his father's help, built the home that he, his wife, and children lived in, and it was there he died. He was deeply fond of classical music and always had something playing on his superb audio system. He continued backpacking and hiking long into his retirement. His hobby was touring the United States, with Glenna on board, on his BMW touring bike, camping along the way.
    He is survived by his wife, Glenna, his sister, Barbara McCrary, two sons - Craig (and wife Vivian) and Brian; two daughters - Gail Harlamoff and Laurel Granados; two granddaughters - Paige and April Harlamoff; and two grandsons - Evan and Elias Granados. He is also survived by three nieces - Susan Huff, Ellen Rinde, and Janet Webb; three grandnieces - Katie Webb, Agnes Huff, and Aleksey Huff; and grandnephew - Dennis Webb. He was pre-deceased by his mother and father. All of his surviving family members live in Santa Cruz County.
    There will be no public services. Donations in his name may be made to Cabrillo College Foundation for benefit of student scholarships. Send to California Retired Teachers, 130 Siesta Drive, Aptos, CA 95003. You're invited to visit his memorial Facebook page, and feel free to post photos and/or comments. https://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Eugene-Harlamoff/287315467977980
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James J. SIMPSON
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Obituary
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Monday 25 April 2011 Santa Cruz Sentinel
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    James J. Simpson, long-time Santa Cruz County resident, passed away April 11, 2011. Jim, known as "Coach" to scores of people, died in Aptos at age 84.
    Born in Denver, CO, Jim and his family moved to Fresno in 1943. While in Fresno, Jim attended Fresno Technical High School. At Fresno Tech, Jim excelled at basketball, earning his varsity letter.
    After graduating in 1944, Jim enlisted in the Navy, serving as a radio operator on the submarine, USS Plaice. At the end of the war, Jim returned to California and attended Visalia Junior College, where he played center position on the basketball team which won the championship for the state in 1948. His basketball prowess led to a scholarship at USC, where he received his Bachelor of Science Degree in 1950.
    After receiving his Bachelor of Science Degree, Jim returned to the central valley, teaching there for two years. The prospects of great golfing on the coast lured Jim to Santa Cruz County in 1953, and he took a teaching job at the Live Oak School District. Jim then accepted a position at Santa Cruz High School, teaching history and social studies; while there he coached junior varsity basketball and football.
    When Cabrillo College was established in 1961, Jim became the first basketball coach there. Jim moved from Santa Cruz High to Soquel High School when that school opened in 1962. He was varsity basketball coach there for many years. He retired from teaching in 1981, and pursued a career as a financial planner.
    Jim is survived by his sister, Barbara Weatherson [Bob], his wife of 55 years, Sharon, and his six children, Lisa Armstrong, Mark Simpson [Sue], K.C. Espinoza [Pete], Chris Martin [Jim], Tony Simpson [Brenda], Stephanie Willhoit [Alex], 13 grandchildren and 8 great grandchildren.
    Friends are welcome to attend a celebration in Jim's memory at DeLaveaga Golf Course at 12:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 30. A private ceremony will be held by the family in which and Honor Guard will celebrate Jim's life and service with the U.S. Navy.
    In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations to the Alzheimer's Association , 1777 Capitola Rd, Santa Cruz, CA 95062 or to Hospice of Santa Cruz, 940 Disc Dr., Scotts Valley, CA 95066.
....
    I was a student in Gene Harlamoff's physics class during his first year of teaching at Santa Cruz HS during the 56/57 school year. Since electronics was my hobby at the time, his class was one of my favorites. After graduating from San Jose State I spent three years in the army, which included a 13-month tour in Korea. After I returned from the army I obitained a teaching credential and taught for a year at Bishop Union High School, mainly to be near good fishing and backpacking spots; but I quit after a year of teaching six periods of English, my minor, because none of those teaching in my major field, mathematics, seemed ready to "kick off" any time soon. [The head of the math department at BUHS was Ron Smith, who along with Gene helped found the UCHC (University of California Hiking Club).]
    When I returned to Santa Cruz in 1967 I happened to meet Gene in the Santa Cruz Library parking lot. He told me that Soquel High School needed someone who could teach math and English. I replied, " I can do that."
    Gene sat in on my interview with the late Bob Soderholm, Soquel High School's first principal. At the end of the interview, Bob appologized for having to ask such questions, but queried, "Do you have an urge to wear the same dirty sweatshirt for three weeks?" and "Or not shave for that length of time?"
    Before I could say anything, Gene piped up and said, "No, he's square -- like the rest of us!"
    While I was teaching math and English at Soquel High during the 66/67 school year, I believe Gene told Ron Dameron, principal-in-waiting for Harbor High School, that I was interested in electronics while in his physics class and should be able to teach that subject as well.
    The electronics program at Harbor High was a mirror image of Gene's at Soquel High with the same text, the same test equipment, and the kit of electronic components with one exception -- the instructor was not quite as knowledgeable as Gene. When the test equipment arrived after the start of the school year, some of Gene's 3rd- & 4th-year students helped assemble them along with Jim Berlin (son of KSCO's founder/owner/operator C. Vernon Berlin), several local hams, and "yours truly." When I told former SCHS Chemistry teacher Earl DeVore, who is still an active radio amateur [aka, ham], of the late arrival, he surmised that I had to start teaching a lot of theory.
    Unfortunately, yes. But once the test equipment was built, we began doing what I enjoyed most about electronics: building things such as crystal sets, power supplies, etc. Then the theory returned when we examined how some of the things the students built worked. And, as Gene did in his SCHS physics class, I eventually had the kids build projects. On my last day at Harbor High in June 1971, I also repeated something Gene had done: I showed the kids the slides I had taken while in the army and stationed in Korea.
    He and I rode to several meetings of the Northern California Electronics Instructors, which included high school, junior college, and college electronics instructors. Of course, we talked about backpacking in the Sierras rather than electronics. He had been virtually every place I had been; the only other backpacker I've ever met who had an even wider acquaintance with the Sierras was the late Bob Hope, a retired PG&E manager who for many years took groups from the Presbyterian Church on long backpacks.
    When I told Gene that I was doing a web site on the genealogy of the faculty & staff of Santa Cruz High during the 1950s, he asked if it would include any Soquel High teachers. He was disappointed when I said no, but there is now a small text-only (ie., World Connect) site on some of the Soquel High School teachers c1970. [Links to both sites are below.]
....
    While I didn't know Jim as well as Gene, mainly because I was never in one of his classes or on any of the teams he coached, we both quit teaching in order to enter the financial arena. I can't remember if he was in the teachers investment club/group which I advised from time to time with what some called "gloom & doom" forecasts, but we did talk via phone several times about markets and market gyrations.
    When I started working on genealogy and doing research in the Santa Cruz Sentinel I occasionally ran across articles on the Soquel High Basketball Team. In one game against Santa Clara, his team got the ball in a close game with very little time left and one of his players called a time-out; but because they were out of time-outs, they got a technical instead. Afterward Jim groused to the Sentinel reporter, "We shouldn't even have had the ball in the first place."
    Don't know which basketball coach at Soquel HS holds the record for the most technicals, but Jim certainly wasn't shy about expressing his views.
....
    I may add more to my recollections of Gene and/or Jim; suggest you check back later. Also, I plan to add more genealogy info on both of them to the websites whose links are below. [The World Connect (text-only) sites are more current since they require much less work to update.]
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Links:

W 28 Dec Actual Route: PA VA Hosp - Mountain View - Santa Cruz - Pinto Lake

Th 29 Dec Actual Route: Pinto Lake - Aptos - Capitola - Santa Cruz - Pinto Lake

F 30 Dec Actual Route: Pinto Lake - Santa Cruz - Pinto Lake

Sa 31 Dec Actual Route: Pinto Lake - Aptos - Live Oak - Pinto Lake

Su 1 Jan Actual Route: Pinto Lake - Aptos - Santa Cruz - Pinto Lake

M 2 Jan Actual Route: Pinto Lake - Palo Alto - Santa Cruz

T 3 Jan Actual Route: RV Service Center of Santa Cruz - Aptos - Freedom - Pinto Lake

W 4 Jan Actual Route: Pinto Lake - Santa Cruz - Hitching Post Motel

Th 5 Jan Actual Route: Hitching Post Motel - Campbell - MLK Branch Lib (SJ) - Campbell - Santa Cruz

F 6 Jan Route: Santa Cruz

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Finding Campgrounds:

N.B. I receive nothing from Trailer Life or Woodalls for including links to their free campground lookups.

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Two McCombs Family Obituaries

Palo Alto, CA


Mary Edith McCOMBS
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Obituary
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Monday 23 December 1974 Monterey Peninsula Herald, p. 4
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    Mr. Edith McCombs, 85, of Carmel, died last night at Community Hospital.
    Mrs. McCombs was born in Hutchinson, Kan., on Jan. 21, 1889. She had been a Peninsula resident for 14 years, moving here from Merced, where she was a soloist at the Merced Presbyterian Church.
    Mrs. McCombs was a member of the Carmel Presbyterian Church.
    She had been married to Paul D. McCombs of Carmel, who survives her, for 57 years.
    She is also survived by two daughters, Alic[ia] May Powell of Carmel and Priscilla E. Stafford of Santa Cruz.
    Funeral services will be held tomorrow at 2 p.m. at [the] Farlinger Funeral Home with the Rev. Deane E. Hendricks officiating. Burial will take place at El Carmelo Cemetery [in Pacific Grove].
    Contributions are preferred to the Carmel Presbyterian Church.
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Priscilla Edith McCombs Stafford
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Obituary
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Tuesday 11 November 1975 Santa Cruz Sentinel, p. 22
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Priscilla Stafford Died Sunday
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    Priscilla Edith Stafford, 57, a Santa Cruz area resident for the last seven years, died Sunday in a local convalescent home.
    A native of Bishop, Calif., she was a graduate of Fresno State University and worked as an electrologist in cosmetology for 15 years in Merced, Palo Alto, and Santa Cruz. She was a member of the Presbyterian Church.
    Surviving her is her father, Paul D. McCombs and a sister, Alice Mae Powell, both of Carmel.
    Services will be held Wednesday at the Farlinger Funeral Home in Monterey with the Rev. Monty Burnham of the Carmel Presbyterian Church officiating.
    Interment will be in the El Carmelo Cemetery in Pacific Grove.
....

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Links:

Sa 24 Dec Actual Route: Pinto Lake RV Pk - Santa Cruz - Castroville - Salinas - Laguna Seca RV Pk

Su 25 Dec Actual Route: Laguna Seca RV Pk - Monterey - El Carmelo Cemetery - Corral de Tierra

M 26 Dec Actual Route: Corral de Tierra - Salinas - Santa Cruz - Palo Alto VA Hospital

T 27 Dec Actual Route: Palo Alto VA Hosp - Palo Alto - PA VA Hosp

W 28 Dec Actual Route: PA VA Hosp - Mountain View - Santa Cruz - Pinto Lake

Th 29 Dec Actual Route: Pinto Lake - Aptos - Capitola - Santa Cruz - Pinto Lake

F 30 Dec Route: Pinto Lake - Santa Cruz - Live Oak - Pinto Lake

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Finding Campgrounds:

N.B. I receive nothing from Trailer Life or Woodalls for including links to their free campground lookups.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Clear Lake Sunset and Tau Delta Phi Co-Founder

Clear Lake, CA

    On my way to Fort Bragg to attend a funeral I stopped at the Clear Lake home of a cousin who does not have a computer so that I could tell him about the 2012 Lemmon-Clan Reunion. But before I began searching for his house I stopped at a beach and took this photo from near the Clearlake civic center at a parking lot near a sandy beach.

    Then I went inside the camper to use the plumbing, and when I came out the sunset and reflection appeared to be even better. Both were taken just after 5:00 p.m. on Wed 14 December.
    However, because the second photo is blurred, it's difficult to tell if the sunset was indeed better.
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    Darrell J. Sedgwick was another founder of Tau Delta Phi, the men's scholastic honorary society/fraternity. [N.B. In the early 70s women were admitted because of Title IX; hence, TDP is now a co-ed honorary society.]
    The 3 December post contains information on Raymond W. Miller, who was the fraternity's first Grand Magistrate.
    Here then is an obituary for Darrell J. Sedgwick, Cupertino's first Superintendent of Schools.
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Darrell John SEDGWICK
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Obituary
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Thursday 14 December 1961 San Jose Mercury News
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Long-Time Cupertino School Leader Dies
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    Cupertino -- Darrell J. Sedgwick, 69, retired school superintendent here, died Tuesday in San Jose after an apparent heart attack. He served as head of the Cupertino schools for 36 years.
    Sedgwick was stricken in a San Jose parking lot on a shopping trip with his wife. Parking attendants called an ambulance, but he was dead before medical aid could be provided.
    The retired school man was a native of Santa Maria. He came to San Jose in 1899 as a youngster with his parents. He was educated in San Jose public schools and graduated from San Jose Normal School, the forerunner of San Jose State College.
    He taught band and orchestra at San Jose High School.
    In 1921 he became principal of Cupertino's then new eight-grade grammar school on Steven Creek boulevard. After World War II when subdivisions with hundreds of children began to crowd out the area's orchards he was given the newly created job of district superintendent. He directed the planning and construction of at least eight of the 23 schools now in the District.
    In 1956 he was granted a sabbatical leave, and he retired in 1957. During his retirement Sedgwick pursued his hobbies of photography and visiting historic sites. He took many pictures for the School District showing its growth and the construction of its new schools.
    He was past master of Friendship Lodge No. 210, F&AM, local Scottish Rite Bodies, and Cupertino Community Church.
    Sedgwick is survived by his wife, Grace, two sons, Dr. Darrell S. Sedgwick, M.D., Capitola, Dr. Charles Sedwick, DVM, Pomona, a daughter, Mrs. Carolyn O'Mara, Cupertino, and eight grandchildren.
    Funeral services are pending at John E. Dowdle Mortuary, San Jose. [End of obituary]
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    Darrell J's grandson, Darrell Kenneth, graduated from Santa Cruz High School and taught at Soquel High School for many years. For more on the Sedwick family see the link to the genealogy of the Faculty & Staff of Soquel HS below.
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Links:

W 14 Dec Actual Route: Dos Reis RV Park - Stockton - Woodland - Esparto - Clearlake

Th 15 Dec Actual Route: Clearlake - Lakeport - Willits - Fort Bragg

F 16 Dec Actual Route: Fort Bragg - Boonville - Ukiah - Healdsburg - Westside Road

Sa 17 Dec Actual Route: Westside Road - Healdsburg - Jimtown - Calistoga - Napa - Skyline Park

Su 18 Dec Actual Route: Skyline Park - Martinez - Livermore - Milpitas - Palo Alto VA Hospital

M 19 Dec Actual Route: Palo Alto VA Hosp - Menlo Park - Scotts Valley - Santa Cruz - Pinto Lake (Watsonville)

T 20 Dec Actual Route: Watsonville - Aptos - Santa Cruz - Pinto Lake RV Pk

W 21 Dec Actual Route: Pinto Lake RV Pk - Monterey VA Clinic (Ft Ord) - Monterey - El Carmelo Cemetery (Pacific Grove) - Salinas - Castroville - Pinto Lake

Th 22 Dec Actual Route: Pinto Lake RV Pk - Castroville - Pinto Lake

F 23 Dec Actual Route: Pinto Lake RV Pk - Marina - Pinto Lake

Sa 24 Dec Actual Route: Pinto Lake RV Pk - Santa Cruz - Castroville - Salinas - Laguna Seca RV Pk

Su 25 Dec Actual Route: Laguna Seca RV Pk - Monterey - El Carmelo Cemetery - Corral de Tierra

M 26 Dec Actual Route: Corral de Tierra - Salinas - Santa Cruz - Palo Alto VA Hospital

T 27 Dec Actual Route: Palo Alto VA Hosp - Palo Alto - PA VA Hosp

W 28 Dec Route: PA VA Hosp - Mountain View - Santa Cruz - Pinto Lake

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Finding Campgrounds:

N.B. I receive nothing from Trailer Life or Woodalls for including links to their free campground lookups.

Saturday, December 3, 2011

On the Trail of Raymond W. Miller, Tau Delta Phi Co-Founder

Sonora, CA
    According to Brian Kromrey, self-appointed historian of the Tau Delta Phi Alumni Society, Raymond W. Miller, Tau Delta Phi's first Grand Magistrate in 1916, went on to compile a rather impressive record not only academically but also in business and government service. The 1939 La Torre is dedicated to Raymond.
    He was born in San Jose in 1895 and likely graduated from San Jose Normal School in 1916 or 1917. He went on to earn a PhD, write seven books, create one of the first public relations firms, and serve as a United Nations adviser to farmers in several foreign countries. For a time he followed in his father's footsteps and became a walnut grower near Linden in San Joaquin County.
    It's rather clear that his father had a very strong influence on him. Here's an obituary for his father, David Wiley Miller.
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David Wiley MILLER
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Obituary
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Wednesday 14 December 1927 Stockton Daily Evening Record, Page One
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David W, Miller, Linden Grower, Called By Death
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Was Community Builder and Father of Area's Walnut Industry
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    David W. Miller, one of San Joaquin county's best known and loved farmers and a guiding force in the development of the Linden district, passed away on his 77th birthday this morning after an illness of some three months. Death occurred at Dameron Hospital, to which he was removed from his Linden home a few days ago.
    Always interested in community and county problems, David W. Miller's name has been identified with movements for the betterment of civic and rural life. Age failed to retard his activities. During the last few years he centered his activities around the Linden High School and the Linden Community Church, from which he will be buried. He served as chairman of the building committee responsible for the present church structure and for the past six years has been chairman of the board of trustees of Linden Union High School.
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Father of Walnut Industry
    In the Linden district Miller was considered the father of the walnut industry, which has made that district famous. Back in 1904 against the advice of nurserymen Miller planted his first walnut orchard. Since that day he has watched and influenced the development of the entire district, which is now recognized as one of the best in Northern California. The Miller home is surrounded by one of the best orchards in the district. Miller's farming activity in the Linden district extends back more than thirty-three years.
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Active in Farm Bureau
    The deceased was for years prominently identified with the farmer organizations in the county. He was a director of the San Joaquin Farm Bureau Federation and an active worker in the interests of the farmer. He was likewise closely connected with Stockton's civic life and was the first farmer admitted to the Stockton Rotary Club under the farmer classification.
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Served as Assemblyman
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    At one time in his career he was elected to represent his district in the State Legislature. As an assemblyman he served but one term, but his interest in legislative matters was continued and served the farm bureau in good stead.
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Came to State 55 Years Ago
    David W. Miller was born in Northhampton, Mass., in 1850. He came to California at the age of 25 years by way of the Panama canal. His first activities in this state were around San Jose, where he became engaged in newspaper work and later accepted an appointment as deputy county assessor. During his residence in the Santa Clara valley he developed a number of orchard properties, all of which he sold when he moved to the Linden district.
    The deceased is survived by a wife, Jennie G. Miller, and three children, Raymond, Margaret and David Miller, all of Linden. The funeral will be held Friday, Dec. 16, at 2 p.m. from the Linden Methodist Church. Interment will be in the Linden cemetery.
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    In 1927 Raymond was in Linden when the co-operative his father was instrumental in founding, which eventually became part of Diamond Walnut, wanted to build a processing plant. The following excerpt explains Raymond's part.
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Walnut Growers Ready to Launch Big Campaign
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Article
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Saturday 24 December 1927 Stockton Daily Evening Record, p.25
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By Verne Scoggins
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First Meeting January 3; Committee is Named; Prof Christie to Assist
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    Progress is being stealily made in the preliminaries for a campaign to organize San Joaquin county walnut growers and bring about the construction of a walnut processing plant in the county. A county committee has been named and the first week in January will see the first gun fired in the campaign.
    Raymond Miller, Linden grower appointed by the San Joaquin farm bureau federation to take the lead in preliminary activities, has appointed the county campaign committee and announced two meeting, one to be held in Linden January 3 and one in Lodi the following day. Miller also announced that he has received the promise of whole-hearted co-operation from the California Walnut Growers Association and that A.W. Christie, field manager of the big co-operative, has been detailed to spend two weeks in the county helping with organization activities.
...
....
    The Truman Library has an Oral History of Raymond W. Miller done in Oct and Nov 1969 by Jerry N. Hess at this link.
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    And you'll find a brief obituary in the New York Times Archives.
    Once I find microfilm of the Washington Post perhaps I might find a lengthier obituary; there was no obituary for him in the Stockton Record.
....
    However, a librarian at the Linden Library gave me a booklet on the history of Linden done by three 1955 Linden High School grads and they noted that Raymond was the most famous person from Linden.
....
    "Dr. Ray Miller was maybe the most famous person produced in that era; a Farm Bureau executive, and Harvard lecturer, he traveled the world as a UN consultant on agricultural cooperatives. Into his 90s he lived at the elegant Cosmos Club in Washington DC, still churning out a column for the Scottish RiteMasonic magazine." [From "Remembrance of Linden Past: Geo-History of Linden, Calif. in the 1950s," pp. 47-48]
....
    Perhaps the most notable thing I learned in researching Raymond and his family was that his father used to commute from Linden to San Jose and back weekly by bicycle sometime during the first two decades of the 20th century. [N.B., When George Tinkham's biography of David Wylie Miller was transcribed, the comment on commuting by bicycle from Linden to San Jose was excised; however, it's likely that David used Patterson Pass (elev: 1602') to get from Livermore to the San Joaquin Valley; see first link below.]
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Links:

Th 1 Dec Actual Route: Sutter Creek - Lathrop - Dos Reis [San Joaquin] County Park

F 2 Dec Actual Route: Dos Reis County Park - Stockton - French Camp - Escalon - Woodward Resv

Sa 3 Dec Actual Route: Woodward Resv - Oakdale - Sonora

Su 4 Dec Actual Route: Sonora

M 5 Dec Actual Route: Sonora - Oakdale - Riverbank - Waterford - Modesto Reservoir RV Park

T 6 Dec Actual Route: Modesto Reservoir RV Park - Waterford - Modesto - Waterford - Modesto Reservoir RV Park

W 7 Dec Actual Route: Modesto Reservoir RV Park - Waterford - Modesto - Waterford - Modesto Reservoir RV Park

Th 8 Dec Route: Modesto Reservoir RV Park - Waterford - Empire - Modesto - Waterford - Modesto Reservoir RV Park

F 9 Dec Actual Route: Modesto Reservoir RV Park - Waterford - Turlock - Merced - Chowchilla - Arena RV Park

Sa 10 Dec Actual Route: Arena RV Park - Merced - Chowchilla - Eastman Lake COE CG

Su 11 Dec Actual Route: Eastman Lake COE CG

M 12 Dec Actual Route: Eastman - Chowchilla - Merced - Waterford - Modesto Resv

T 13 Dec Actual Route: Modesto Resv - Waterford - Empire - Modesto - Lathrop - Dos Reis County Park

W 14 Dec Actual Route: Dos Reis RV Park - Stockton - Woodland - Esparto - Clearlake

Th 15 Dec Actual Route: Clearlake - Lakeport - Willits - Fort Bragg

F 16 Dec Actual Route: Fort Bragg - Boonville - Ukiah - Healdsburg - Westside Road

Sa 17 Dec Route: Westside Road - Healdsburg - Jimtown - Calistoga - Napa - Skyline Park

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Finding Campgrounds:

N.B. I receive nothing from Trailer Life or Woodalls for including links to their free campground lookups.

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Three Tuolumne County Obituries

Sutter Creek,CA

    Here are obituaries for three prominent Tuolumne County residents or former residents.
....
Marie Elizabeth ROZIER
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Obituary
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Thursday 30 October 1997 [Sonora, CA] Union Democrat, p.2A
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Marie Elizabeth Rozier, Teacher and Historian
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8 July 1904 - 25 October 1997
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    Marie Elizabeth Rozier, a Tuolumne native, long-time teacher and historian, died Saturday at St. Elizabeth Convalescent Hospital in North Hollywood, her home for the last three years.
    Miss Rozier, 93, who never married or had children of her own, was nevertheless deeply involved with children.
    A long-time friend, Joan Gorsuch of Jamestown, said Miss Rozier may never have had children, but "I don't know how many children she had around the world -- former students."
    "She was really an interesting person," she added.
    Miss Rozier's teaching career began with a two-month assignment at Middlecamp School. She then taught for a year at Spring Gulch School on Priest-Coulterville Road before being assigned to Summerville Elementary School, where she worked from 1925 until her retirement in 1963.
    She was also very involved in the history of Tuolumne and could easily provide information on the history behind the name changes of the town, or any other topic, either from memory or from any number of papers she had compiled over the years.
    She was honored by the Tuolumne Chamber of Commerce in 1978 as Citizen of the Year. She was only the third person from Tuolumne in the history of the award, which began in 1921, to receive it.
    Miss Rozier is survived by two sisters, Frances McNeill of Vallejo and former Tuolumne resident Sister Clair Antione Rozier, now of Indiana.
    Visitation will be held from 3 p.m. until a Vigil service at 5:50 p.m. Monday at Terzich and Wilson Funeral Home's Tuolumne Chapel, which is handling arrangements. Mass will be celebrated Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. at St. Joseph's Catholic Church in Tuolumne.
....
Renato "Reno" SARDELLA
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Obituary
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Monday 8 May 1995 [Sonora, CA] Union Democrat, Page One
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Family, Friends Mourn Rancher Reno Sardella
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By Kathe Waterbury
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    Horseman, rancher, high country pack station founder, Renato "Reno" Sardella died Friday at his Stent home. He was 82.
    Born in Sonora July 1 1913, Mr. Sardella was the first child born in the United States to the late Maria and John Sardella, who arrived in Tuolumne County from their native Italy in 1910.
    One of nine children born to the couple, Mr. Sardella lived his entire life in Tuolumne and attended Sonora schools.
    His first job was in the water department of PG&E, where he later worked as a lineman.
    He then went into ranching and cattle raising, which in turn led him into his other careers, including [operating] resort and pack stations in the Sierra Nevada. He started his first pack station in 1929, which is now [the] Boulder Creek Campground.
    A man who made friends easily and valued the traditions of the Old West, Mr. Sardella knew the back county like few others and trained others in his sense of the woods.
    He ran horse stables in Pincrest, Long Barn and Mi-Wuk Village in the 1950s and 1960s, owned and operated pack station in Cherry Valley and Dorrington and frequently helped his brother, the late Miller Sardella, on high country searches when Miller was sheriff.
    Early on in Pinecrest, he offered horse-drawn sleigh rides during the winter. He later bought Douglas Resort and Kennedy Meadows, which he also operated for many years.
    The family still owns the Reno Sardella Pack Station.
    Mr. Sardella was also involved in the county's long-time and active connections with film and television production.
    As a young man he workded on [films which] included "For Whom the Bell Tolls," "Robin Hood of El Dorado," and "High Noon."
    More recently, his equipment and livestock were used in the series "Tales of Wells Fargo," "The Big Valley," and "Little House on the Prarie."
    He willingly loaned his stock and equipment to celebrations and parades to promote county organizations.
    He was a member of the Sonora Motion Pictures Association, Sonora Pass Vactionland, West Coast Packers Association, Native Sons of the Golden West, Tuolumne County Sheriff's Posse, Movie Wranglers and Teamster Local 439 and St. Patrick's Parish.
    He was grand marshal of the Mother Lode Roundup Parad in 1971 and High Sierra Packer Association's Packer of the Year for the Bishop Mule Days Parade in 1986.
    Mr. Sardella is survived by his wife of 59 years, Geraldine Sardella of Stent; two sisters and bothers-in-law, Mary and Ben Cassinetto and Leona and John Kisling, all of Sonora; a brother and sister-in-law, John and Blanche Sardella of Columbia, and a daughter and son-in-law, LaVerne and former Tuolumne County Sheriff Jack Litteral of Stent.
    He is also survived by a granddaughter and her husband, Renalda Salyers and Joson Penders of Stent; a grandson and wife, Joe and Robin Litteral of Chinese Camp; a granddaughter, LaRinda Litteral of Sonora; four great grandchildren, Todd Salyers, Devon Salyers, Brody Salyers and Matthew Litteral, and numerous nieces and nephews.
    Mr. Sardella was preced in death by sisters Diane "Dena" Hooe and Rosie Pinotti; brothers Albert "Red" Sardella and former Tuolumne County Sheriff Miller Sardella.
    A memorial service will be held Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at Terzich & Wilson Funeral Home in Sonora.
    Donations in Mr. Sardella's memory may be made to the American Cancer Society, P.O. Box 73, Jamestown, to [The] Visiting Nurses Association-Hospice of the Mother Lode, P.O. Box 4805, Sonora, or to a favorite charity.
....
Emilio "Miller" SARDELLA
--
Obituary
--
Tuesday 17 May 1988 [Sonora, CA] Union Democrat, Page One
--
Rites Set for 'Mr. Tuolumne County,' Miller Sardella
--
By Russell Frank
--
    When Miller Sardella was elected sheriff in 1962, Tuolumne County had 15,000 people and one stoplight. When he died yesterday at the age of 78, both the population and the number of stoplights had tripled.
    Perhaps more than anyone else, Miller Sardella symbolized what the old one-stoplight Tuolumne County was all about.
    He wasn't born here. He made the voyage to American from Italy "in arms," as his brother Reno put it, in 1912. To the hard-line oldtimers, the ones whose granddaddies came during the Gold Rush, this made him a "newcomer."
    But what really defines the oldtimer is not the date or place of birth, but a system of values based on an ideal of neighborliness.
    "We knew everybody," Sardella said during a 1985 interview on the eve of a party in his honor. "That was the main battle, see. When I was sheriff, every time a new house would go up, if I didn't know 'em, I'd go up and visit. 'I'm the sheriff; I'm glad to know ye.'"
    When Sardella was sheriff he was often seen on Washington St., squatting like a baseball catcher as he regaled his fellow cowmen and anyone else who cared to listen with death-defying tales of search and rescue.
    "You could be going to a deadline appointment and he'd see someone he wanted to talk to and he'd just stop," said his wife Mary on the occasion of the couple's 50th anniversary last fall. Talking to people, telling stories, Mary said, "was his whole life."
    "He could start in the morning and tell stories 'til the end of the night," said his sister Leona Kisling.
    The stories were mostly true, his friend and family say. But like any master storyteller, Sardella was not above an occasional elmbellishment if it made for a livlier tale.
    "This is the truth," he'd say when he got wound up, and that's how you knew the truth was about to bent a little bit.
    It was this gift for gab -- for taking the time to talk to people -- that made him such a popular figure. And that popularity translated into votes: beginning with a recall election in 1961, he was elected four times, receiving more total votes than any other elected official in Tuolumne County history.
    When he retired to his Wards Ferry Rd. ranch in 1974 the immigrant had become the oldtimer's oldtimer and when he was introduced to 500 people who attended the 1985 party, it was as "Mr. Tuolumne County."
    The Sardellas were part of a wave of Italian immigrants who found their way to Tuolumne County in the early years of this century. John Sardella came in 1910. Two years later, with a secure job at the U.S. Lime Quarry on Limekiln Rd., he sent for his family: his wife Maria, daughters Dena and Rosa and sons Ernesto (Curly) and Emilio (Miller).
    Six more children were born here. All the men -- Curley, Miller, Reno, Johnny and Albert ("Red") -- worked at the lime quarry at one time of another. But Miller and Reno were more interested in horses and cattle. As teenagers, they worked as cow hands, horse breakers, and high country packers.
    When Miler became a sheriff's deputy in 1946, one of the first things he did [was to form] a search and rescue team, and the first person he would call was his brother Reno. Whichever brother made the rescue wouldn't let on so he could send the other on a wild goose chase.
    "We pulled a lot of tricks on each other," Reno said. "Yeah, God sakes. That made life, you know."
    Sardella is surved by his wife Mary, son Michael, brothers Reno, Curly, and Johnny, sisters Leona Kisling, Mary Cassinetto and Dena Hooe and grandchildren Jolene and Adam.
    The rosary for Sardella will be said Thursday at 8:30 p.m. at the Terzich-Wilson chapel. The funeral service will be held Friday at Terzich-Wilson at 9:30 a.m. The pallbearers will be Ed and John Popke, Jack Cassinetto, Joe and Jack Litteral and John Kisling. Burial will be at St. Patrick's Catholic Cemetery.
    The family has asked that memorials be in the form of contributions to a law enforcement shcolarship fund at the Bank of America.
....
Tributes Aplenty Paid Main Who Loved People
--
    Family and friends have responded to the news of Miller Sardella's death with an outpouring of tributes. Here are a few:
    Jack Litteral - Served 17 years under Sardella and served one term as sheriff after Sardella retired -- 1975 to 1979:
    "He was one of a kind, a compassionate man. A lot of law enforcement officers are called peace officers. This guy was a peacemaker. When he started working for the sheriff's office, they'd send him out on a call, and I guess he didn't like to write reports -- so he settled everything out in the field. If he had two people with conflicts, he could get them together and resolve most of the cases out in the field. Of course, as time goes by and the complexion of law enforcement changed, it got tougher and tougher to do that.
    "I think he was one good sheriff for his time and the people of the county. I'll miss him a hell of a lot. He made whoever he come into contact with feel good, even the people he had to pick up. He was a champion."
    Sheriff Bob Coane:
    "There no doubt in my mind he's the most memorable sheriff the county's ever had. I was lucky to be around while he was sheriff because he demonstrated to me many traits that I think are necessary for a sheriff -- compassion, humor, a true love for the people and a desire to serve them."
    Ray Antonini -- As a young boy he was a frequent visitor at Miller Sardella's ranch on Wards Ferry Rd. Later, he worked under Sardella in the sheriff's office from late 1958 until Sardella's retirement:
    "I'm sure he was the most colorful sheriff Tuolumne County ever had, and I'm pretty sure he was the most popular one. That man had a lot of friends, I tell you, and a lot of friends he put in jail. But when he needed help, he had his own backup from the citizens he had to deal with. Very few law enforecement people can say that.
    "He was on the most compassionate sheriffs in he history of the county. Miller's main concept was to keep people out of jail if it was at all within our means. He would just as soon go out at 3 or 4 in the morning as at any other time to settle family arguments and mediate their problems.
    "Miller never asked anybody else (in the departement) to do something he could do himself. The front door was always open, and people didn't call for appointments. If someone had a problem, he would listen to it and try to help.
    "I found him very good to work with. He was always willing to listen and talk about any problems I was having, and he never hesitated about going with me on tough cases. He handled murder cases, drownings, rescues -- so many experiences over the years.
    "I hold him in the highest regard of any sheriff I have worked with."
    Ralph Thiel -- Former county supervisor. Closest contact with Sardella was in 1955 and 1956 when Thiel was constable in Groveland and Sardella was a deputy sheriff:
    "I developed a tremendous admiration for his homespun ability. I've gone on trips with him to recover bodies, and his mountaineering skills were really great. I remember one rescue at Cherry Falls, where Cherry Lake is now. We were never told we could not get the horses into where the body was because of the sheer granite bluffs, but Miller got the horses in and we got the body out.
    "The thing that impressed me the most about Miller was that he knew people so well. He had a way to cause a crime to be downscoped so it could be easily handled instead of making a federal case out of it. He could bring things down to the basic elements.
    "His personality was a big thing. Long before I knew who he was, I remember his warm smile and greeting when I met him walking down the sidewalks of Sonora. He always had a warm smile and friendly greeting for everybody. I formed a liking for him before I even knew him.
    "And Miller had lots of courage. I remember he was shot once by a boy with a pistol on the railroad grade near Sonora. The poor kid in his nervousness shot Miller in the stomach. But Miller never pressed charges, because he knew the boy had no intention of shooting him. It had just happened because he was so nervous."
    Carlo DeFerrari -- County historian and chief deputy county clerk and auditor starting in 1947, County Clerk from 1966 to 1978. He and Miller Sardella went to work for the county within a month of each other. At that time the sheriff had a small office in the county courthouse:
    "I remember when Miller reported to work his first day as a deputy. He came in with his old ragged cowboy jeans and old hat. Walter Hoskins ran him right back home to change clothes. Miller was right off the range, you might say.
    "When Miller passed away it was the end of the era of old-fashioned, practical, common sense sheriff[s].
    "He was a strange man. Although he was injured in the line of duty several times, he never brought charges against the people who injured him. He just didn't see the sense in wrecking somebody's life by bringing charges against him.
    "Miller had a great deal of faith that everybody in the world was really good. He just couldn't conceive of anyone being really bad. He was a very persuasive person with a way of doing thing that didn't 'rub the fur the wrong way.'"
    County Assessor Dave Wynne:
    "He was the same way with anybody no matter who you were. It didn't matter whether you were important or not. He treated you the same way whoever you were."
    Albert N. "Bub" Dambacher, former cook at the county jail and lifelong friend:
    "He was just as common as an old shoe. He was a true friend always; he stood by me all the way."
    Mary Cassinetto, sister:
    "We dearly loved Miller. Everybody loved him and he was such a giving person. I'll miss him terribly."
    Leona Kisling, sister:
    "Miller is a legend. He knew the mountains like the back of his hand, he was a great storyteller, and he helped a lot of people in this county. He was more like a father to me. I was closer to Miller than anyone in the family."
....
A Sardella Sampling [Homilies]
....
    Miller Sardella was always good for a colorful quote. He was at his best telling long, detailed stories about events that may have happened 30 years ago, but here are some of his pithier sayings covering his years as county sheriff:
    On being sheriff:
    "The gamblers made bets that I wouldn't be there two weeks. Well, I fooled 'em. I stayed 30 years and never lost a a shift for bein' sick in my life and worked Saturdays and Sundays, too."
    "I didn't go to parties; never joined. I never been to the district attorney's house, I never been to the judge's house, I never been to any of the supervisors' houses in my life. Now go put yourself in a position like me for bein' a politician 30 years. That's what kept me here that long. See, I didn't join 'em."
    "All the meanest person needs is a fair deal."
    "You can't be a good sheriff unless you've been an outlaw first."
    Justice is the Statue of Liberty. It's up there so high and you can't shake hands with it. You should be able to shake hands with the Statue of Liberty and say, 'Hello, Justice.'"
    "The grand jury called me a Model T sheriff and with all the problems we have today maybe we should to back to the Model T."
    On search and rescue:
    "We used to pack out dead people by horseback. I'd like to have a dollar for every one I packed out."
    "I know the mountains better than I know my own chair."
    On how the county has changed:
    "Everything's changed. We knew everybody. That was the main battle, see. We lost all that, and when we lose all that trust in people, we lost everything. See, now they offer you $50 and you'll squeal on your mother, see, and it's no good[;] boy, and we had a good county then."
....
Links:

Sa 26 Nov Actual Route: N.F. Tuolumne River - Sonora - Frogtown RV Park

Su 27 Nov Route: Frogtown RV Park - Angels Camp - Murphys - Angels Camp - San Andreas - Valley Springs - New Hogan Reservoir Campground

M 28 Nov Actual Route: New Hogan Resv CG - Valley Springs - San Andreas - New Hogan Resv CG

T 29 Nov Actual Route: New Hogan Resv CG - Mokelumne Hill - Martell - Sutter Creek

W 30 Nov Actual Route: Sutter Creek

Th 1 Dec Actual Route: Sutter Creek - Lathrop - Dos Reis [San Joaquin] County Park

F 2 Dec Actual Route: Dos Reis County Park - Stockton - French Camp - Escalon - Woodward Resv

Sa 3 Dec Actual Route: Woodward Resv - Oakdale - Sonora

Su 4 Dec Actual Route: Sonora

M 5 Dec Actual Route: Sonora - Oakdale - Riverbank - Waterford - Modesto Reservoir RV Park

T 6 Dec Route: Modesto Reservoir RV Park - Waterford - Modesto - Waterford - Modesto Reservoir RV Park

--

Finding Campgrounds:

N.B. I receive nothing from Trailer Life or Woodalls for including links to their free campground lookups.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

One Year on the Road

Modesto Reservoir, CA

    One year ago I left Jim Tripp's spread near Castroville and drove north; because I had never been to the Napa Valley I headed for Calistoga. Since then my travels have taken me through parts of the southwestern states, California, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah as well as Oregon.
    One of my primary goals was to visit as many National Parks, Monuments, etc. as possible along with state parks where the costs seemed reasonable. Will include some of the photos I've taken along the way like the one to the right taken on 23 April of El Capitan from the floor of Yosemite -- a place I visited for the first time this year despite making numerous backpack trips all around the populous valley floor.

    During the 12 months I've been on the road I've put over 26,000 miles on my new Ford F250, a 3/4-ton pickup. And I've learned how to use virtually everything in the camper except the shower, for which one needs to be as thin as Twiggy. [Yes, there's an outside shower attachment for which one can presumably heat up the water, but I eschewed that also.]
    The ski area on top of my mountain north of Tucson, Mt. Lemmon. [Actually it's name after amateur botonist Sarah Lemmon, who was largely responsible for the selection of the Golden Poppy as California's State Flower.]

 

    The entrance to the "lowest golf course in the U.S.A. No, that doesn't mean everyone shoot under par, but rather because it's located in Death Valley National Park. [One can only wonder what the sand traps are like!]

 

 

 

    Since California and Oregon received above-normal rain and snowfall last winter, poor Zion N.P. only had "skinny waterfalls" like the one above my camper.

 

    Unless the stock market continues to fall, forecasting even more contraction in the economy, gasoline price seem stuck around $3.50/gallon for unleaded. Hence, my plan for the next 12 months is to spend more time in one place, particularly if I can dry-camp (aka, boon-dock) for free or at a campground where I get half price.
    The eastern side of the Sierra Nevada from near Independence on 1 April.

 

 

    Though I have to be back in California for a Lemmon Clan reunion in Fort Bragg in July or August, I plan to spend the rest of the summer in the winter wheat belt, which runs from Texas up to Montana.

 

    A neck-bending look at the biggest tree (by volume) in the world: the General Sherman Sequoia.

 

 

 

 

    There's also a possibility that the Santa Cruz High School Class of 1957 will have a 55th Reunion next summer.

 

 

    Another massive tree: a valley oak in California's Indian Grinding Rock State Park.

 

 

    Finally, I hope during the next 12 months to update all of the genealogy web sites I created and/or maintained.

 

    Most people would give an incorrect answer when asked where the only U.S. Army general was killed during the Indian Wars. No, it wasn't Custer, who was temporarily a General at the Little Big Horn, but rather it was Gen. Edward Richard Sprigg Canby who was talking with Captain Jack of the Modocs under a white flag of truce in what is now the Lava Beds National Monument. Captain Jack and two others of his band were hanged shortly thereafter.
--
Links:

  • Wikipedia article on Gen. E.R.S. Canby

Sa 19 Nov Actual Route: Dos Reis County Park - Stockton - Linden - Woodward Reservoir

Su 20 Nov Actual Route: Woodward Reservoir - Oakdale - Woodward Reservoir

M 21 Nov Actual Route: Woodward Reservoir - Oakdale - Riverbank - Modesto - Modesto Reservoir

T 22 Nov Actual Route: Modesto Reservoir - Waterford - Modesto - Modesto Reservoir

W 23 Nov Actual Route: Modesto Reservoir - Waterford - Modesto - Riverbank - Oakdale - Woodward Reservoir

Th 24 Nov Actual Route: Woodward Reservoir - Oakdale - Woodward Reservoir

F 25 Nov Actual Route: Woodward Reservoir - Oakdale - Sonora - N.F. Tuolumne River

Sa 26 Nov Actual Route: N.F. Tuolumne River - Sonora - Frogtown RV Park

Su 27 Nov Route: Frogtown RV Park - Angels Camp - Murphys - Angels Camp - San Andreas - Valley Springs - New Hogan Reservoir Campground

M 28 Nov Actual Route: New Hogan Resv CG - Valley Springs - San Andreas - New Hogan Resv CG

T 29 Nov Actual Route: New Hogan Resv CG - Mokelumne Hill - Martell - Sutter Creek

W 30 Nov Route: Sutter Creek

--

Finding Campgrounds:

N.B. I receive nothing from Trailer Life or Woodalls for including links to their free campground lookups.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Two San Joaquin County Death Notices

Twain Harte
    Here are two San Joaquin County Death Notices for Prince Allen ATHEARN and his wife Louisa Higgins ATHEARN.
....
Deaths
--
Monday 25 February 1867 Stockton Daily Independent, p.2
--
    At Athearn's Ranch, on the Mokelumne river, February 22d, Prince A. Athearn, aged 57 years.
    [The funeral services will be held in this city as soon as practicable. Due notice will be given.]
....
Deaths
--
Thursday 8 March 1888 Stockton Daily Indpendent, p.3
--
    ATHEARN - At her residence near Clements, March 6, 1888, after an illness of two weeks, Mrs. Louisa Athearn, beloved mother of Allen and Lucian Athearn, a native of Massachusetts, aged 75 years and 1 month.
....
Links:

  • World Connect website for Prince Allen Athearn; N.B., none of the W/C sites extend very far past 1900>

M 14 Nov Actual Route: Dos Reis County Park - Stockton - French Camp - Woodward Resv

T 15 Nov Actual Route: Woodward Resv - Oakdale - Sonora - N.F. Tuolumne River

W 16 Nov Actual Route: N.F. Tuolumne Riv - Sonora - N.F. Tuolumne River

Th 17 Nov Actual Route: N.F. Tuolumne Riv - Twain Harte - Sonora - Oakdale - Woodward Reservoir

F 18 Nov Actual Route: Woodward Reservoir - Escalon - Stockton - Dos Reis County Park

Sa 19 Nov Actual Route: Dos Reis County Park - Stockton - Linden - Woodward Reservoir

Su 20 Nov Actual Route: Woodward Reservoir - Oakdale - Woodward Reservoir

M 21 Nov Actual Route: Woodward Reservoir - Oakdale - Riverbank - Modesto - Modesto Reservoir

T 22 Nov Route: Woodward Reservoir - Waterford - Modesto - Modesto Reservoir
--

Finding Campgrounds:

N.B. I receive nothing from Trailer Life or Woodalls for including links to their free campground lookups.

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Copperopolis & Tuolumne, California

Sonora, CA

    A plaque explaining the source of the name Copperopolis. Copper was discovered in the area in 1860. And since the Civil War would begin the following year, the Union Mine was one of the primary sources for copper. [Click once or twice to enlarge.]

 

 

 

    Two brick buildings: on the right, an armory which was allegedly established in 1854 and a store specializing in olives, hot sauce, etc.

 

 

 

    During World War II, with a Japanese blockade of copper exports from SE Asia, the War Department re-opened some of the copper mines in Copperopolis. My Great Uncle George C. Lemmon was not only the superintendent [of the former Union Mine?] but also postmaster. His 2d or 3d wife ran a diner/cafe in the same building.
    The woman manning the cash register at the McCarty Store said that the smallest portion of the building to the far left in this photo was the Post Office; the rest was a cafe, store, and [,today,] a gas station.

 

 

 

    One of the more ornate combined grave markers at the Copperopolis Cemetery.

 

 

 

    When I asked the woman if there were still McCarty descendants in the area, she said there were. That's confirmed by the three headstones in this photo. [Click 1 or 2 times to zoom in.]

 

 

 

    One of the older pair of gravestones in the Copperopolis Cemetery: Balthasar & Emilie Engel. Presumably the fences around burial plots were to keep feeding cattle out, for you know what happens when cattle munch on grass -- they do "what comes naturally." In other words, they desecrate.

 

 

 

    The old bridge and road over Turnback Creek just to the west of the RR tracks.

 

 

 

 

 

    And since reflectors were not quite a reflective as today's materials, road signs often contained a lot of them.

 

 

 

 

 

 

    A look at the west end of the old Turnback Creek bridge from the new bridge.

 

 

 

    A barely-visible plaque, at least when traveling east since it under some overhanging oaks and on a turn, describing the Westside Flume & Lumber Company. (Some of the trees need to be trimmed, if not removed, for I drove by this plaque at least 7 or 8 times this year without noticing it.)
--
Links:

W 9 Nov Actual Route: N.F. Tuolumne River - Sonora - Copperopolis - Woodward Reservoir CG

W 9 Nov Actual Route: N.F. Tuolumne River - Sonora - Woodward Reservoir CG

Th 10 Nov Actual Route: Woodward Resv - Oakdale - Copperopolis - Oakdale - Woodward Reservoir

F 11 Nov Actual Route: Woodward Resv - Oakdale - Sonora - N.F. Tuolumne River

Sa 12 Nov Actual Route: N.F. Tuolumne River - Sonora - N.F. Tuolumne River

Su 13 Nov Actual Route: N.F. Tuolumne River - Sonora - Oakdale - Manteca - Lathrop - Dos Reis County Park

M 14 Nov Actual Route: Dos Reis County Park - Stockton - French Camp - Woodward Resv

T 15 Nov Actual Route: Woodward Resv - Oakdale - Sonora - N.F. Tuolumne River

W 16 Nov Actual Route: N.F. Tuolumne Riv - Sonora - N.F. Tuolumne River

Th 17 Nov Route: N.F. Tuolumne Riv - Twain Harte - Sonora - Oakdale - Woodward Reservoir
--

Finding Campgrounds:

N.B. I receive nothing from Trailer Life or Woodalls for including links to their free campground lookups.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Anderson Valley to Wards Ferry

Oakdale, CA

    After leaving Eastman Lake I drove north over a little used Mariposa County road call Ben Hur Road; it's slightly less than 2 lanes wide even though there is a solid double yellow line down its center. It's likely an old wagon road which has been paved.
    Here's a view west into the San Joaquin Valley from a high point on Ben Hur Road.

    Anderson Valley, where I worked for the US Forest Service pruning pine trees during the summers of 1958 and 1959. Note the snow left over from the previous night on a hill on the other side of Bull Creek.
    Bull Creek was part of the stage route to Yosemite in the late 19th century. Here's how Russell P. Sage described the route in his One Hundred Years in Yosemite: "The Coulterville Trail started at Bull Creek, to which point a wagon road already had been constructed, and passed through Deer Flat, Hazel Green, Crane Flat, and Tamarack Flat to the point now known as Gentry, and thence to the valley. Its total length was forty-eight miles, of which seventeen miles could be traveled in a carriage."

    A plaque describing the Coulterville Toll [or Stage] Route. Unfortunately the $50,000 raised and used to improve the road in 1956 was wasted since the majority of traffic used the Big Oak Flat road [CA120] and entrance. In fact, when I asked both campers at Anderson Valley and USFS personnel they both said the road from near Anderson Valley to Deer Flat was impassable -- supposedly because of the heavier than normal winter and late spring. But that road was in poor condition in 1959.

 

 

    Panning to the right: more of Anderson Valley.

 

 

 

 

 

 

    Between the trees: Pilot Peak Lookout, which a mine owner in the area said had just closed for the season.

 

 

 

 

 

    As I looked outside my camper on the morning I discovered that someone had put a tablecloth on my picnic table. Hey! Mother Nature did it, for the white tablecloth is snow!

 

 

 

 

    The new Wards Ferry Bridge built after the level of Don Pedro Reservoir was raised by a new dam.

 

 

    Since law enforcement rarely travels down to the Wards Ferry Bridge (except perhaps when an RVer with a large Class A on the Groveland side tries to take a shortcut to CA108) the spray-can vandals have covered most of the bridge; indeed, with no unpainted (ie., untainted) surface left, they're now working on the road.

 

 

    Looking up the North Fork of the Tuolumne River arm of Don Pedro one can see the remnants of the previous Wards Ferry Bridge. The previous time I drove this route in 1959 I had to work my way through a flock of 150-200 sheep which a herded was moving to greener pastures on the Groveland side.
--
Links:

Su 6 Nov Actual Route: Pines CG - Wards Ferry [Bridge] - Tuolumne - Sonora - N.F. Tuolumne River

M 7 Nov Actual Route: N.F. Tuolumne River - Sonora - N.F. Tuolumne River

T 8 Nov Actual Route: N.F. Tuolumne River - Sonora - N.F. Tuolumne River

W 9 Nov Actual Route: N.F. Tuolumne River - Sonora - Copperopolis - Woodward Reservoir CG

W 9 Nov Actual Route: N.F. Tuolumne River - Sonora - Woodward Reservoir CG

Th 10 Nov Actual Route: Woodward Resv - Oakdale - Copperopolis - Oakdale - Woodward Reservoir

F 11 Nov Actual Route: Woodward Resv - Oakdale - Sonora - N.F. Tuolumne River

Sa 12 Nov Route: N.F. Tuolumne River - Sonora - N.F. Tuolumne River
--

Finding Campgrounds:

N.B. I receive nothing from Trailer Life or Woodalls for including links to their free campground lookups.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Eastman Lake, CA

Sonora, CA

    After driving from the Big Oak Flat Entrance in Yosemite to the Wawona Entrance, with a detour on the way to Glacier Point Road, I camped at the only campground still open on Bass Lake -- the Lupine-Cedar Bluff CG.
    The next morning I drove down to the dam across Crane Valley and discovered why the lake was as low as I had ever seen it; there were many workers repairing and improving the dam -- as you can see from the photo above.

 

 

    The Pines Resort on the east shore of Bass Lake as seen from the west shore.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

    Panning left, a view up Bass Lake.

 

 

 

 

    Panning further left note the boat left high and dry by the declining lake level.

 

 

 

 

 

 

    As I approached Eastman Lake I found an historical marker which explained that town of Buchanan had been located at this spot. [Because I was shooting directly into the sun I had to hold my hat in place to shield the camera lens; Click 1 or 2 times to zoom in.]

 

 

    Corps of Engineers plaque for Eastman Lake.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

    Buchanan Dam on the Chowchilla River.

 

 

 

 

 

 

    Eastman Lake along the dam.

 

 

 

 

 

 

    As you can see Eastman Lake is a fairly large lake.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

    Panning further right one can see the remainder of the lake.
--

 

 

Links:

Th 3 Nov Route: Cedar Bluff CG - Oakhurst - Coarsegold - Raymond - Eastman Lake CG

F 4 Nov Actual Route: Eastman Lake CG - Raymond - Mariposa Fairgrounds - Bagley Recreation Area (Lake McClure)

Sa 5 Nov Actual Route: Bagley CG - Coulterville - Greeley Hill - Anderson Valley - Pines CG (near Groveland R.S.)

Su 6 Nov Actual Route: Pines CG - Wards Ferry [Bridge] - Tuolumne - Sonora - N.F. Tuolumne River

M 7 Nov Actual Route: N.F. Tuolumne River - Sonora - N.F. Tuolumne River

T 8 Nov Actual Route: N.F. Tuolumne River - Sonora - N.F. Tuolumne River

W 9 Nov Actual Route: N.F. Tuolumne River - Sonora - Copperopolis - Woodward Reservoir CG

W 9 Nov Actual Route: N.F. Tuolumne River - Sonora - Woodward Reservoir CG

Th 10 Nov Actual Route: Woodward Resv - Oakdale - Copperopolis - Oakdale - Woodward Reservoir

F 11 Nov Route: Woodward Resv - Oakdale - French Camp - Stockton - Dos Reis County Park
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Finding Campgrounds:

N.B. I receive nothing from Trailer Life or Woodalls for including links to their free campground lookups.