Monthly Archives: March 2022

Locomotive Falls Into Big River

Mendocino Lumber Company engine, Climax, pulling loaded cars at Big River. Woods boss, Ed Boyle, standing on the engine at the far left. (The William Ferrill Collection, Kelley House Photographs) March 30, 1921 - The Mendocino Lumber Company’s locomotive “Climax” fell into Big River, landing in 6 feet of water. The engine had been in the machine shop at the mill for weeks undergoing [...]

By |2023-01-12T12:01:36-08:00March 30, 2022|

Caspar Lumber Company Store Fire

Caspar Lumber Company General Store, c. 1900. Left to right: Archie Bailey, C.J. Wood, Walter Higgins. The other men are unidentified. The sign “German American Ins. Co.” was for the German American Insurance Company, founded in 1872.  In 1918, when World War I created a wave of anti-German feeling in the United States, the company changed its name to the Great American Insurance Company. (Gift [...]

By |2023-01-12T12:08:55-08:00March 29, 2022|

Wire Chute at the Shipping Point

The Steamer "Brunswick" being loaded with a wire chute at the Mendocino Headlands and the Sea Foam waiting to come in. (Gift of Emery Escola) March 28, 1902 - The wire chute at the Shipping Point was used for the first time to transfer lumber to a waiting ship. Jerome C. Ford supervised the installation. Previously, lumber was transferred to a ship by lighter [...]

By |2023-01-12T12:13:34-08:00March 28, 2022|

John Q. Brown

The John Q. and Maria Brown family, in front of their house at 45270 Calpella Street, on Pentecost Sunday, 1905. From left to right: Annie, Frank, Maria, John Q., "Spot", Joseph, Mayme, and John J. March 26, 1846 - John Q. Brown, a pioneer of Mendocino, was born at Punto del Gada on the island of Flores, Azore Islands. The Beacon reported, “Of his [...]

By |2023-01-12T12:20:33-08:00March 26, 2022|

Tennis Tournament, 1896

March 25, 1896 - A tennis tournament was held on the property that is now the Mendocino Art Center. The Beacon reported, “The strife for the supremacy in the tennis contest last Saturday was a very interesting affair, and highly exciting at times. Our sporting reporter was present from the tossing of the coppers, and states that during the first inning Julius Allen and his accomplice [...]

By |2023-01-12T12:27:36-08:00March 25, 2022|

A Vanished Landmark at Little River

Take a look at any panoramic photo of early Little River and you’ll notice that where once stood many structures – houses, the mill, hotels – there are now a lot of trees and bushes. Of the several vanished landmarks of long ago, there is one that wasn’t readily seen even when it existed: the shipyard of Thomas Petersen.  The Point Arena and Bessie Kimball [...]

By |2023-01-12T12:33:57-08:00March 24, 2022|

The Potato Club

Photo: Mendocino High School Orchestra of 1928. Back row (L - R): Ernie Handelin, Henry Triplett, Harold Reep, Pete Lemos,  Miss Amerman (Director) Front row: Thelma Silvia, Della Sumner, Dave Paoli, Grace Nichols, Ruby Carvalho. Photograph has been cut out and pasted onto a black paper background. From the reunion album, "A Backward Glance from 1898 - 1983" (Gift of Bertha Mason Estate) March [...]

By |2023-01-12T12:40:38-08:00March 23, 2022|

Jackson Vulcanizing Company

Studio portrait of Walter and Edna Jackson, c. 1930. March 22, 1920 - Walter Jackson opened the Jackson Vulcanizing Company in the old Flanagan Saloon, which he rented from the Kelley estate. This building faced Lansing Street on the west side of today’s Rotary Park and was torn down in 1929. Jackson’s company advertised Archer, Dayton, and Sampson Tires for sale, and he also [...]

By |2023-01-13T03:51:51-08:00March 22, 2022|

Steam Schooner Albion

The Wreck of The Albion, 1913. March 21, 1913 - The steam schooner Albion wrecked on the rocks at Stewart’s Point, 57 miles north of San Francisco. While on her southbound trip from Bowen's Landing for San Francisco, the Albion, commanded by Captain Victor Jacobson, put into Stewart's Point early in the day to load railroad ties. At noon, after only part of the [...]

By |2023-01-13T03:56:15-08:00March 21, 2022|

Ruel Armas

Dodge & Armas Barbershop, Mendocino, 1903-1912. Ruel Armas (left), cuts the hair of Fred Brown. On the right, Lee Dodge, stands next to client, Ed Boyle. March 19, 1938 - Ruel Rodgers Armas, a former resident of Mendocino, died at his home in Oakland. Born in Boston in 1873, his parents moved their family to Mendocino when he was just a year old. “It [...]

By |2023-01-13T04:01:44-08:00March 19, 2022|
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