Monthly Archives: August 2022

Heeser House and Odd Fellows Hall, 1898 – 1906

Photograph capturing a view looking northwest in Mendocino taken by Perley Maxwell, probably from a water tower on Albion Street. The large two-story building is the second Odd Fellows Hall, located on the northeast corner of Ukiah and Kasten Streets. It was partially demolished in 1955 and turned into apartments and offices. To its right is the hall's out house, which still stands in 2022. A [...]

By |2022-12-01T08:21:13-08:00August 31, 2022|

First Weather Station

August 29, 1887 - H. E. Wilkinson, a clerk for the United States Signal Service, arrived in Mendocino to install a weather station. This station was one of ten set up thru a partnership between the Signal Service and the San Francisco Chronicle. The other locations were San Luis Obispo, Monterey, Santa Rosa, Yreka, San Bernardino, Modesto, Bakersfield, Indio, and Carson City, Nevada. View of [...]

By |2022-12-01T09:38:24-08:00August 29, 2022|

First Mendocino High School Gym

August 28, 1937 - The high school’s new gymnasium was dedicated with a dance that was open to the public. The Beacon reported that almost 550 people attended the dance, which was sponsored by the Parent-Teacher Association (PTA). The PTA President was Mamie Mendosa. First Mendocino High School Gym, c. 1954 Dancing started about 9 o’clock, and “the floor is in excellent shape and [...]

By |2022-12-01T10:04:07-08:00August 28, 2022|

The Denslow-Maxwell House

In 1887, Charles Denslow, bookkeeper for the Mendocino Lumber Company, purchased this lot on the northwest corner of Kasten and Calpella Streets. Denslow moved an existing small house north onto an adjoining property, and master carpenter J. D. Johnson built this house on the south end of the lot. Undated photo of the Denslow-Maxwell House. Note its distinctive round window and brick chimney top, the [...]

By |2022-12-01T10:13:42-08:00August 26, 2022|

Huckleberries

August 24, 1912 - The Mendocino Beacon reported that a shipment of 3,000 pounds of huckleberries had been sent to San Francisco. The editorial suggested that the huckleberry had “a distinct place as a pie fruit and for other purposes, and the apparent good demand seems to bear out this conclusion.” “There are thousands of acres of these berries along this coast, and in most cases [...]

By |2022-12-01T10:34:26-08:00August 24, 2022|

Kelley the Cat

When Beth Stebbins and Dorothy Bear of Mendocino Historical Research accepted the generous gift of the Kelley family property in April 1975, they received more than just the house and grounds. There was also a resident feline, described in the July 31, 1975 issue of the Beacon. “Then there is the Kelley cat. She is small, black with white markings and naturally, was pregnant when we [...]

By |2022-12-01T10:48:47-08:00August 22, 2022|

Padden Saloon

August 20, 1860 - Patrick Padden purchased a lot on Main Street, west of Kasten, where the Mendocino Jewelry Store is located in 2022. Here, he built and operated Mendocino's second saloon. West Main Street, c. 1865. View of the west end of Main Street in Mendocino looking northeast before the fire of 1870 destroyed this part of town. A group of men gather in [...]

By |2022-12-01T10:54:42-08:00August 20, 2022|

The Gantry Crane

View looking northwestward showing the Company lumberyard, located on the north side of Big River flat. The gantry crane at the end of the rails was used to move the stacks of lumber around within the lumberyard. The rails ran out from the mill (behind the camera), through the lumberyard to the Incline behind the crane. Loaded railcars were pulled by a hoisting engine to [...]

By |2022-12-01T11:03:28-08:00August 19, 2022|

The Street Where You Live

I was walking down Calpella Street toward the ocean last week when I crossed Woodward Street, Heeser, Rundle, and finally Kelly. Heeser and Kelly I know, but who were Woodward and Rundle? Coming back on Ukiah Street, I encountered Osborn and William. Locals know that, with a few exceptions, the north-south streets in Mendocino are named after early settlers and the east-west streets after nearby places. [...]

By |2022-12-01T13:59:58-08:00August 18, 2022|

Herman Fayal and the Ford Roadster

Herman Fayal and His Miniature Houses, 1986. For years the Fayal family home on the corner of Calpella and Kelly streets, where Herman lived for over 80 years, was a showplace for his carpentry skills with a miniature scene of Mendocino’s old Main Street, doll houses, water towers, wind­ mills, flower boxes, and a series of miniatures showing the progression of lumber from the log [...]

By |2022-12-04T09:55:24-08:00August 17, 2022|
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