Making History Blog

Moving Logs with the Maru by Chuck Bush

Part 2 of 2; reprinted from the June 1, 2006 Mendocino Beacon; Read Part 1 With the engine-driven Maru, rafts became much longer. A November 14, 1908 Beacon note: "A raft of logs nearly one-third of a mile long, one end invisible from the other, having 1,500 logs, which equaled 800,000 feet of lumber, was moved down the river by the ‘Maru.’ Perley Maxwell was the [...]

By |2024-08-29T07:22:31-07:00August 15, 2024|

Moving Logs on Big River by Chuck Bush

Part 1 of 2; reprinted from the May 25, 2006 Mendocino Beacon During all of the early days of our fair Mendocino, logging was king. Once the big redwoods were felled, bucked (cut into movable lengths), and peeled (debarked), they had to be brought to the mill. That involved using jackscrews (like an automotive screw jack), building chutes and skid roads, utilizing horses and oxen and [...]

By |2024-08-05T12:17:22-07:00August 8, 2024|

Beyond Them the Ocean by Kevin Milligan

In observance of the Kelley House Museum’s current exhibition, “Paint the Town: The Art of Kevin Milligan,” we reprint here an excerpt from his, Mendocino: A Painted Pictorial. The book features many of his paintings along with history of the subject in each one. Copies of the book are available for purchase at the Kelley House Museum.  When I was a child my mother Jacquelyn Milligan [...]

By |2024-07-28T16:43:57-07:00August 1, 2024|

Looking north on Lansing Street, Mendocino, California, 1919-1925

This photo was taken between 1919 and 1925 at the intersection of Lansing and Ukiah Streets, looking north. On the left side of the street is the Masonic Hall, built between 1866 and 1872, then a small store, followed by another small commercial building attached to a 2-story structure where carpenter/undertaker J. D. Johnson stored his burial caskets. Beyond that is a garage, which would be [...]

By |2024-07-29T17:09:19-07:00July 30, 2024|

Kelley’s Girl by Katy Tahja and Karen McGrath

The Kelley House Museum loves a good history mystery, and recently we had a query about a redwood sculpture named “Kelley’s Girl.” The correspondent said all he knew was that his parents had purchased the statue in Mendocino in the early 1970s. Did Kelley’s Girl have something to do with Mendocino’s Kelley family, or did the museum have other information about it? At first, no one [...]

By |2024-07-20T16:55:55-07:00July 25, 2024|

Kelley House Museum – Summer 2024

Stop by the Kelley House Museum at 45007 Albion Street in Mendocino! Visit our gardens, and explore the inside of one of the first homes built in Mendocino. The museum is open Thursday-Monday, 11am - 3pm. Kelley House Museum, July 2024. (Photographer: Robert Dominy) Our current exhibit is “Paint the Town: The Art of Kevin Milligan.” Kevin Milligan’s gorgeous oil paintings capture the breathtaking [...]

By |2024-07-23T12:33:18-07:00July 24, 2024|

Mendocino Hat Shop Summer Sale

July 21, 1926 - A summer sale began at the Mendocino Hat Shop. The store advertised in the Mendocino Beacon, offering greatly reduced prices on their current inventory. Rose Cole opened the Mendocino Hat Shop, which featured straw and trimmed hats for ladies and children, in 1924. This business was located in the eastern part of a now-demolished building on the south side of Main Street. [...]

By |2024-07-20T16:09:29-07:00July 21, 2024|

And the Livin’ was Easy by Mary Stinson

Alice Earl Wilder, granddaughter of Jerome B. Ford, wrote several letters to Beth Stebbins and Dorothy Bear recounting her adventures as a child in Mendocino. Last week we published one about Mendocino’s early years; below is another one of her letters, this one about her childhood memories. This article by Mary Stinson was originally published in the Mendocino Beacon on August 2, 2013.   Summer was [...]

By |2024-07-13T15:55:52-07:00July 18, 2024|

Caspar Mill Pond and Log Chute

Caspar Mill Pond and Log Chute. Men on rafts can be seen moving the logs away from the bottom of the chute to clear the landing area and sorting the logs into pockets in the pond according to species and size. Logs were brought from the woods to the mill via railroad. The log chute connected the terminus of the railroad at the top of the [...]

By |2024-07-14T13:10:02-07:00July 14, 2024|

The Summer of 1852 by Mary B. Stinson

Alice Earl Wilder, 95, at the Ford Family reunion in 1984. Alice Earl Wilder was the granddaughter of Jerome Bursley Ford, one of the founders of Mendocino. Her letters to Dorothy Bear and Beth Stebbins in 1973 contain reminiscences of her summers spent in Mendocino as a child and later as an adult. The letter below was found in the Kelley House archives by Mary [...]

By |2024-07-10T13:01:21-07:00July 11, 2024|
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