Making History Blog

Ford House – THEN and NOW

By |2022-12-08T12:56:22-08:00July 13, 2022|

A color image of the south entrance to the Jerome B. Ford House, located on Main Street in Mendocino, before restoration, c. 1975. Image was taken from the Mendocino Headlands looking north. Of the many buildings the Mendocino Lumber Company owned on the south side of Main Street, the historic Ford House is the only one that remains. In April 1854, Ford returned to [...]

Stauer Grocery Store

By |2022-12-08T13:14:17-08:00July 11, 2022|

Northeast corner of Lansing and Ukiah Streets, 1932. The Johnson building on the corner housed the Mendocino Justice Court on its first floor. The two small rental houses down Ukiah Street on the right, were built by architect/builder/undertaker J. D. Johnson. Stauer's Grocery Store was located on the left and is currently the home of Goodlife Cafe & Bakery. July 11, 1942 - The [...]

Truck Cuts Through Floor Of Big River Bridge

By |2022-12-08T13:18:48-08:00July 10, 2022|

Playing at Big River Beach, 1920-1940. Children playing and swimming and people boating at the mouth of Big River. One can see the Big River bridge in the background. (Gift of Dot Johnson) July 10, 1930 - The wheel of a large truck crossing Big River Bridge cut through the floor of the bridge about 60 feet from the north end and fell into [...]

Fred Halling

By |2022-12-08T13:25:15-08:00July 8, 2022|

Mendocino Mill Crew, 1897. Front row, left to right: William (Bill) Hines, George Knudsen, Frank Brown, Ernest Knudsen, Will Brown, Albert Gregory, John Salvador. Second row: Henry Kleinschmidt, Joe King, Sr., John Ramus, Fred Halling (Mill boss), Albert Peterson, Frank Clement, Theodore Hansen, Sam Bever (planing mill foreman). Third row: George Jarvis, Frank Mendosa, Tom Knudsen, John Larsen, George Marshal (sawyer), Unidentified, Isaac Silvia, Tom [...]

New Tours for Every Body

By |2022-12-08T13:31:10-08:00July 7, 2022|

Walking or sitting, you will pick up some fascinating facts in two new tours for history lovers at the Kelley House Museum. David and Katy Tahja, a team of Kelley House docents from Comptche, have developed tours about the areas of Mendocino history that interest each of them most. Beginning on July 10th, David will lead a two-hour walking tour called “Stump to Ship: Logging in [...]

July 4, 1908

By |2022-12-08T13:35:31-08:00July 1, 2022|

by Nancy Freeze Mendocino Fourth of July Parade, 1902. A Perley Maxwell photograph of the 1902 Mendocino Fourth of July parade heading east on Main Street near the intersection with Lansing Street. Elaborately decorated floats are drawn by horse teams. People stand and watch the spectacle along the parade route. Note the tall board fence enclosing a garden on the left, constructed with braces to [...]

Full House Near the Big Woods

By |2023-01-10T12:09:51-08:00June 30, 2022|

When we left off last week, Footprints on the Mendocino Coast had John Simpson Ross hurrying to finish his house in Caspar before his family arrived from Canada. In mid-June of 1870, before the house was completely ready, Jane Ross and the three children (William, John, and Lizzie) and her aged parents,  Ann and Robert Ralston, disembarked from the Cora down in Caspar Cove. Members of [...]

Mendocino Peace Fair

By |2023-01-10T12:18:10-08:00June 29, 2022|

Sandra Hahn reading her opening speech. June 29, 1966 - A Peace Fair opened at the Mendocino Coast Gallery located on the northwest corner of Main and Lansing streets. Running thru July 4th, the theme of the fair was "Peace and War,” and its purpose was to explore the critical issues involved in the search for peace during the Vietnam War era. Sandra Hahn [...]

The Eugene Brown House

By |2023-01-10T12:25:46-08:00June 26, 2022|

Looking northeast towards the Eugene Brown House, located at 45120 Main Street, Mendocino, c. 1973. (Gift of Beth Stebbins) Albert Maxwell constructed this two-story home for Eugene Brown in 1878. At that time, Eugene owned and operated the mercantile store just to the west. Eugene and his mother were living in Pine Grove, but his mother wanted to live in town. Eugene Brown died [...]

Little House Near the Big Woods

By |2023-01-10T12:33:59-08:00June 23, 2022|

Last week in the Mendocino Community Library I was sorting through donated books and found a publication called Footprints on the Mendocino Coast with a drawing of a strangely familiar house on its cover. I recognized the house almost immediately and opened the book to learn more. Published in 1970 by the Mendocino County Historical Society, the book is the Reverend John Simpson Ross’ account of [...]

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