Memories from a pre-covid trip...
Last year I was teaching high school in California and we were sent home to conduct “distance learning” on March 13th and my old school is still at home trying to teach and learn via the Internet. That’s getting close to a whole year. Now, this post is not about the merits of distance learning or whether students should be in the classroom during a surge in the pandemic. When I decided to share some pictures of the California State Railroad Museum I was reminded that people in professions other than hospitality and travel are having a hard time during this crisis as well. There are a good number of museum workers at home too.The California State Railroad Museum
Our Oregon Field Trip: Fort Clatsop
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Map image from NPS |
Fort Clatsop was the winter encampment of the Lewis & Clark expedition from December 1805 to March 1806. The Corps of Discovery, as the expedition was called, first sighted the Pacific Ocean from Cape Disappointment. However, the explorers thought they would have better weather on the Oregon side of the river. It was here that they built a small fort. The National Park Service has built a replica fort on the site. The members of the expedition hiked from this location to the beach in today's city of Seaside to obtain salt from sea water. Today, if you are feeling adventurous, you can hike the same trail from Fort Clatsop to the monument in Seaside.
When you visit, come early in the day as this is a popular destination. There is a nice little museum and gift shop in the visitor's center. Bring a jacket, even in the summer. Because Astoria gets on average 86 inches of rain a year, even in June we had a light drizzle in the morning. Also, it is a short walk from the visitor's center to the fort. At the fort you will find docents in period costume to answer questions and give short presentations throughout the day.
The history of the Lewis & Clark expedition is well known and readily available, so I won't duplicate that here. But before you make a pilgrimage, you might want to bone up a little bit. I would of course recommend reading Undaunted Courage by Stephen Ambrose for a thorough and enjoyable background. And check out the Oregon Encyclopedia, a project of the Oregon Historical Society, for some related articles and historical records online.
The Whalers Cabin at Point Lobos
Welcome to Monterey Bay!
We tried retirement, it just didn't stick. In reality, I just took the summer and fall off. That was long enough to get me back to work. Since January, Sheila and I have been living on Monterey Bay in the central California coast. I'm back to teaching alt ed high school, currently at a county juvenile hall. When you mention this area, most people probably think of beautiful views of a rocky coastline, Big Sur, or Cannery Row. But there is no doubt that there is a lot of history here in the Monterey - Salinas area too, especially compared to the rest of California. I wanted to share with you a hidden gem where you can get both scenic beauty and a little dose of history: Whalers Cove at Point Lobos State Natural Reserve.
Point Lobos SNR is just a short ten mile drive south on Pacific Coast Highway (Hwy 1) from the Monterey Bay Aquarium. Traveling south on Hwy 1, about a mile or two outside of Carmel you will make a right turn into the reserve. It costs ten dollars per car to get in, but totally worth it. Come early (the reserve opens to vehicles at 8 am), because this can be a popular place. I know I said it is a hidden gem, but that doesn't mean that the locals don't know about it. The ranger at the main gate can give you a map and directions, but it is a short drive to the parking lot at Whalers Cove. From there, you take a short walk back up the road to the Whalers Cabin museum that you drove by on your way in.
Take a break from the scenery and check out the long history of Point Lobos. The area has been occupied by non-native Americans since the 1850s. Until 1879, this spot was one of seven whaling stations along the California coast. Portuguese immigrants started shore-based whaling at this location. Crews would row out of the calmness of the small cove and past the breaking waves to hunt the grey whales that migrate up and down the California coast. You can still spot these giants as they pass by on their way south from Alaska to their breeding and calving lagoons in Baja during December through January. Or you might spot them as they return to their feeding grounds in the north, passing Monterey Bay from March through May. Of course there is more to the history of this particular spot. A community of Asian fishermen hunted abalone and canned the product here. There was a granite quarry here. The cove was used as the shipping point for a nearby coal mine. And troops trained here for specific missions during World War II. See artifacts and pictures of each of these periods in the small museum located in the Whalers Cabin.
Luckily, Point Lobos was never developed as any kind of residential property. Ownership eventually passed to the state of California, and the site was made into an ecological reserve in 1973. That also includes 775 acres of underwater reserve, the first designated in the United States. That's good for us normal folks because the real treat here is the views of plants and animals and rocky California coast. On the day that we went, we saw sea lions, an otter, and plenty of birds. The best way to see it all is to walk. Hiking trails honeycomb the shoreline around the point. There are three main parking areas, so you'd never have to walk more than a mile from your car. Or you can leave the car where it is and walk the whole point and probably not log more than five miles.
When you vacation to Monterey, take the opportunity to visit Point Lobos. It is very accessible and worth the time to stop. If I haven't sold you on visiting, then take a look at the Whalers Cove Live Stream, or take a virtual hike with Google street view. When you do come, bring a light jacket or sweatshirt as the coast here gets a marine layer at times that can be a bit chilly, especially if you just left the warmer interior.
We tried retirement, it just didn't stick. In reality, I just took the summer and fall off. That was long enough to get me back to work. Since January, Sheila and I have been living on Monterey Bay in the central California coast. I'm back to teaching alt ed high school, currently at a county juvenile hall. When you mention this area, most people probably think of beautiful views of a rocky coastline, Big Sur, or Cannery Row. But there is no doubt that there is a lot of history here in the Monterey - Salinas area too, especially compared to the rest of California. I wanted to share with you a hidden gem where you can get both scenic beauty and a little dose of history: Whalers Cove at Point Lobos State Natural Reserve.
Point Lobos SNR is just a short ten mile drive south on Pacific Coast Highway (Hwy 1) from the Monterey Bay Aquarium. Traveling south on Hwy 1, about a mile or two outside of Carmel you will make a right turn into the reserve. It costs ten dollars per car to get in, but totally worth it. Come early (the reserve opens to vehicles at 8 am), because this can be a popular place. I know I said it is a hidden gem, but that doesn't mean that the locals don't know about it. The ranger at the main gate can give you a map and directions, but it is a short drive to the parking lot at Whalers Cove. From there, you take a short walk back up the road to the Whalers Cabin museum that you drove by on your way in.


When you vacation to Monterey, take the opportunity to visit Point Lobos. It is very accessible and worth the time to stop. If I haven't sold you on visiting, then take a look at the Whalers Cove Live Stream, or take a virtual hike with Google street view. When you do come, bring a light jacket or sweatshirt as the coast here gets a marine layer at times that can be a bit chilly, especially if you just left the warmer interior.
D-day plus 75 years and other stories to be heard.
I’m going to go out on a limb and assume that even if you
are not a fan of history, but you participate in social media, or certainly if
you watch the evening news, you know that it is the 75th anniversary
of the WWII Allied invasion of France. Over the past eight years we’ve had a
number of significant anniversaries of our country’s military history. They
include the 150th anniversary events that took place during the
American civil war, the 100th anniversary of WWI battles, and now
the 75th anniversary of World War II and the 50th
anniversary of the Apollo Moon Landing. I appreciate these benchmark anniversaries
because like James Holzauer’s winning streak bringing new fans to Jeopardy, the
buzz about the anniversary of a significant historical event will make more
people take note and hopefully learn about these great trials and triumphs of
our past. The difference between the 75th anniversary of the
Normandy invasion and the other wars mentioned is that we still have a lot of
regular people who can tell us what it was like.
Surviving veterans and eyewitnesses to the Second World War
are in their nineties. I heard on ABC News the other night that over 300 World
War II veterans pass away every day. And the thought occurred to me that we
aren’t considering how many non-veterans we are losing who can tell us what it
was like on the home front during the war years. Of course I love my military
history, but one of the most fascinating and educational places I’ve visited is
the Rosie the Riveter and WWII on the Home Front National Historical Park. There
is a lot to learn from those who stayed home, worked, and sacrificed to win the
war.
And what about veterans and civilians from other countries? When
it comes to meeting folks from our “Greatest Generation,” I’m lucky to be a
baby boomer. When I was in my twenties most WWII veterans were in their sixties,
so I have met a few in my time. Moreover, having been stationed in Germany for
three years, I met a few German veterans and civilians who experienced the
tragedy of war first hand. My landlord’s father (I called him “Opa Willie”)
fought on the Russian front, but deserted at the end of the war so that he
could surrender to American forces. Good thing he did. I dated a German woman
for a while whose father was a POW held by the Russians. They did not
repatriate him for eleven years. And I met that girl’s apartment manager, who
was married at age 19 and only spent three weeks with her husband before he
went off to fight in the war. He never returned and remained missing in action.
She never remarried.
As an aside, do you think that Germany has learned from its
history? I think so. When I visited the concentration camp at Dachau, I saw
school children arrive on a bus for a field trip. That is just one example of
how the Germans don’t hide from their past. This week, Chancellor Angela Merkel thanked the Allies for “liberating Germany from the Nazis.” I’m sorry, but I
just can’t see the United States being that forthright, especially when you
read reports that say that only about forty percent (40%) of Americans can correctly answer the history questions on the citizenship exam.
I regret that I didn’t start a serious study of history
until after my years in the army. I believe my conversations with the veterans
I had met would have taken a different turn. Like many young people, I had
different priorities. Nevertheless, I can’t help but wish I could go back and
take the opportunity to conduct an in-depth oral history interview with all of these
people I’ve met over the years. Of course, there are members of this great
generation still with us. And it is not too late to hear their stories and it
is never too late to learn our history, so that we don’t have to repeat it.
End of the Oregon Trail
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There is a nice garden display and plenty of outdoor seating for a picnic. |
I never played the Oregon Trail computer game when I was a kid. But I've been fascinated by the Oregon Trail most of my life. Some day I'm going to devote a vacation to traveling the the modern day route and visit all of the sites and museums along the way. But while we are here in Oregon, I can at least say that I visited the end of the trail.
The early history of the state of Oregon can be generalized in decades. The fur trappers were here in the 1810s to 1820s, setting up forts and trading posts. The missionaries arrived and created their stations in the 1830s. From 1840 was the time of the settlers and farmers. Thousands of them arrived by the Oregon trail that ran from the area around Independence, Missouri to Oregon City, in the Willamette Valley of Oregon Territory. It is estimated that over 50,000 emigrants traveled the trail until 1869 when the transcontinental railroad was completed.
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What tools would you take with you on the trail? |
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At the end of your tour, find out how travelers fared in Oregon. |
"You have died of dysentery" on the Oregon Trail. |
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My very own office bison! |
The Mussel Slough Tragedy
Last year I was teaching at a high school in the Central Valley of California. As you know from reading this blog, I like to find the local history in the places we live and visit. Earlier this summer I told you about the spot in the San Joaquin Valley where Murrieta was killed. Continuing with the wild west history of California, I tracked down the location of the shootout at Mussel Slough.

In the nineteenth century the area was called the mussel slough region due to a slough off of the Kings River that backed into Tulare Lake. The lake and the slough are no longer present due to modern agriculture. The Southern Pacific Railroad was granted odd numbered lots of a square mile each as an incentive to build a line through the Central Valley of California. The line through this area was completed in 1872. Settlers had come into the area and homesteaded the even numbered lots and began to create improvements such as buildings, fencing, and irrigation ditches. This included hand-dug canals to bring water from the Kings River, more than two miles away for some.

With the stage now set, on May 11, 1880 a meeting of settlers was being held when false rumors where spread that U.S. marshals were conducting evictions. The settlers grabbed their guns and went to intercept them. The truth was that a railroad appraiser, two potential buyers from the cattlemen's side, and a U.S. marshal along for protection, were driving around in a carriage looking at properties. The two belligerent parties met at the site of the monument, the homestead of one Henry Brewer. While the marshal and a leader of the group of farmers stepped off to talk about resolving the situation peacefully, the bad blood between the farmers and the two from the cattlemen's side spilled over. No one knows who shot first or even what was said to start it. But in the end, the two cowboys and five farmers were dead.
About five miles to the northwest of Hanford, California, in Kings County you will find California Historical Landmark #245, that is titled Location of the Famous Mussel Slough Tragedy. It's located on a country road almost indistinguishable from all of the other farm roads in the San Joaquin Valley. Don't drive too fast or you'll miss it. I believe I drove by it at least four times before I finally recognized it for what it was. The text on the monument reads:
Here on May 11, 1880, during a dispute over land titles between settlers and railroad, a fight broke out in which seven men - two deputy U.S. marshals and five ranchers lost their lives. The legal struggle over titles was finally settled by a compromise. Location: 5833 14th Ave, between Everett and Elder Aves, 1.5 miles SE of Hardwick.
It seems like a short description (in error) for what happened here. Especially since there are no original structures left, or even a tree that witnessed the event. Here's a summary of what happened.
In the meantime, the railroad put out brochures to sell the land they controlled. Farmers would be able to settle on the land for a few years, then gain title when a price was fixed. Brochures from the railroad advertised prices at $2.50 per acre and up. Of course the purchasers assumed that they were getting their land at that bargain price, and set about improving the land. When it came time to complete the transaction, the railroad insisted on valuing the land with improvements, inflating their asking price to twenty dollars an acre. After the railroad filed suit against settlers and won, the price inflated again up to $35 an acre. There was also an element of rancher versus farmer in that some cattlemen who had the wherewithal were stepping front of the farmers to purchase the improved land.
No marshals were killed despite what the marker says. Five farmers were convicted of interfering with a marshal in the performance of his duties, each spending eight months in jail and paid a $300 fine. Although there was a high level of animosity toward the railroads, the people could not get the government to change the policy of providing land grants to railroads. In the end, the railroads reduced their asking price a token amount and most of the settlers stayed on their land and paid the asking price. At the time of the incident, the dead and wounded were brought to the shade of a large oak tree on the property that was referred to as the "Tragedy Oak." It blew down in the 1990s. A piece of the tree is reportedly put on display in front of a local elementary school. Ultimately the fight was lost to history, with the exception of some local interest and fans of old west history.
The Mussel Slough Tragedy took on a bit of mythology over the years and like so many wild west gunfights there are multiple versions of what actually happened. The three that I consulted, each with a little bit different take, are the Wikipedia article on the incident, "Garden in the Sun: A History of the San Joaquin Valley 1772-1939" by William Seacrest, and "Hanford" (Images of America Series by Arcadia Publishing by Robin Roberts.
Fort Humboldt State Historic Park
We decided to vacation in northern California a bit while on the way to Oregon this summer. While very scenic and awe inspiring (think big redwood trees), I was still able to fit in a little history tourism. I had just started the book on Ulysses Grant so we couldn't pass through Eureka without stopping off to visit Fort Humboldt, where Grant was stationed early in his army career.
Fort Humboldt State Historic Park is the site of the fort that was occupied from 1853 to 1870. The fort was built overlooking
Humboldt Bay to provide protection to gold seekers and arriving settlers from the local Native Americans. Captain Ulysses Grant was stationed here for a few months in 1854. At its peak, the fort had 14 buildings arranged around a parade field. For the troops stationed here, the duty was dull and boring.
We visited the park in early June and the weather was still very cool compared to the Central Valley of California where we had just come from. Being the "morning people" that we are, we arrived just before they opened the gate. Actually, it's a good thing we had Google Maps giving us the step-by-step directions, as the signage directing you to the site was not obvious. The gates opened at eight o'clock. The visitors center and the two buildings of the fort that remain were not scheduled to open until nine. We spent an hour and a half walking around the park, starting with a display of logging machinery that is co-located with the fort. The park is certainly well tended, but not well visited by all appearances. We pretty much had the park to ourselves with the exception of a local walking her dog and some high school kids on bicycles that I'm pretty sure were ditching the last day or two of school.
The buildings at the fort are the original hospital and a reconstructed surgeon's quarters. The hospital building has some displays on the history of the fort, but unfortunately they were not open during the time we were there. I guess that the park is staffed by volunteers and they were having a late morning. It was disappointing, but the main thing to see when you visit a historic site is actually the location and the lay of the land. The fort is on a bluff and today the city of Eureka has grown around the bay that the fort overlooks. It is obvious that the fort is defensible with a small number of soldiers (I believe that less than 50 were typically at the fort), and the view allows for easily spotting arriving ships.
Probably the best part of visiting Fort Humboldt State Historic Park is knowing that you are walking on the same ground as U.S. Grant, George Crook, and other noteworthy soldiers from the Civil War period. You also gain a glimpse into what their living conditions were while serving in what was then still a far off place, well removed from the civilization in the East that these soldiers were used to.
Next stop in this little "Grant Pilgrimage" I've got going on will be
a visit to Fort Vancouver, another frontier outpost where Grant served before his civilian hiatus from the army.
Fort Humboldt State Historic Park is the site of the fort that was occupied from 1853 to 1870. The fort was built overlooking
We visited the park in early June and the weather was still very cool compared to the Central Valley of California where we had just come from. Being the "morning people" that we are, we arrived just before they opened the gate. Actually, it's a good thing we had Google Maps giving us the step-by-step directions, as the signage directing you to the site was not obvious. The gates opened at eight o'clock. The visitors center and the two buildings of the fort that remain were not scheduled to open until nine. We spent an hour and a half walking around the park, starting with a display of logging machinery that is co-located with the fort. The park is certainly well tended, but not well visited by all appearances. We pretty much had the park to ourselves with the exception of a local walking her dog and some high school kids on bicycles that I'm pretty sure were ditching the last day or two of school.
The buildings at the fort are the original hospital and a reconstructed surgeon's quarters. The hospital building has some displays on the history of the fort, but unfortunately they were not open during the time we were there. I guess that the park is staffed by volunteers and they were having a late morning. It was disappointing, but the main thing to see when you visit a historic site is actually the location and the lay of the land. The fort is on a bluff and today the city of Eureka has grown around the bay that the fort overlooks. It is obvious that the fort is defensible with a small number of soldiers (I believe that less than 50 were typically at the fort), and the view allows for easily spotting arriving ships.
Probably the best part of visiting Fort Humboldt State Historic Park is knowing that you are walking on the same ground as U.S. Grant, George Crook, and other noteworthy soldiers from the Civil War period. You also gain a glimpse into what their living conditions were while serving in what was then still a far off place, well removed from the civilization in the East that these soldiers were used to.
Next stop in this little "Grant Pilgrimage" I've got going on will be
a visit to Fort Vancouver, another frontier outpost where Grant served before his civilian hiatus from the army.
NARA's Prologue To End Print Version
I have a glorious week off from Teaching for Thanksgiving, something to be thankful for, surely. It's a great time to catch up on some reading and writing of my own choosing. ;-)
Prologue is the quarterly journal of the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). It has been in publication since the spring of 1969, highlighting programs and news about NARA. The articles are all based on the holdings of NARA in and around Washington, DC., the regional archives located around the United States, as well as the Presidential Libraries.
I have been a subscriber to Prologue off and on for a little over ten years. Needless to say, I enjoy this publication very much. So I was very sad that my Fall issue came in the mail recently with a letter that stated that the next issue (Winter 2018) will be the last print issue. Of course, they will continue to put content on the NARA website, but no longer will I be able to hold a printed copy.
So along with the letter, there is only a one-line statement on the journal's website that says, "The Winter 2018 issue will be the last printed edition." I did a quick Google search and did not find any news release, there is not even a statement in the NARA news on the archives.gov website. Moreover, I haven't found any statements of shock, surprise, or disappointment.
I won't go into a lament on the switch from print to online content. Business is business and I'm sure it's hard to keep a print publication like a history journal on a paying basis. Additionally, I am sure that NARA will come up with an engaging way to present the content that was once provided exclusively in the print medium. In fact, their notification letter asks for input on what that content should look like. I'm just sorry to see Prologue (for me anyway) get lost in the flood of online information that comes at me every day. I will miss the print version coming up in my reading stack. Which is where I go to escape that flood of electronic noise at the end of the day. I just thought someone should mark the passing.
Point Reyes and Drake's Bay
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It is 308 steps down to the lighthouse, and 308 back up! |
So what does this trip have to do with history? Well, it's not about the lighthouse, although I do love them. If you look at a map of Point Reyes (Google Maps will do), you will see that the point wraps around a body of water named "Drakes Bay." Remember the story of Sir Francis Drake from elementary school? From 1577 to 1580, Drake and his ship, the Golden Hind, sailed into the Pacific to raid Spanish shipping, with the full
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Waysides at the visitor center tell the story of Drake's stay in California. |
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The cliffs along this bay supposedly reminded the English sailors of home. |
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The only visitors to the beach on the day we visited were some elephant seals. |
Sutter’s Fort State Historic Park
One of my favorite historical fantasies includes the wonder of
what certain places in California looked like before the modern world took over.
I would love to be able to go back in time as an immigrant to California in the
1840s and be able to experience the sight of the Sacramento Valley before there
was a city of Sacramento. Well, a trip to Sutter’s Fort State Historic Park
doesn’t make that visualization any easier. The park is located in a quiet
neighborhood on the corner of L Street and 28th, just a block or so
west of Interstate 80. The fort used to be in the middle of rolling grassland
in sight of the American River to the north and the Sacramento River to the
west. Now it is surrounded by residential streets of Sacramento, less than two
miles from the state capital.

With the help of Native-American labor, Sutter built his
fort with adobe walls that were two and half feet thick. The compound was
reported to be 425 feet by 175 feet. Inside the fort there were carpenter and
blacksmith shops, a gunsmith, a distillery, bakery, grist mill, and a blanket
factory. Over the next several years, Sutter welcomed immigrants arriving over
the California trail. Many new arrivals went to work for him. Eventually
Sutter’s “New Helvetia” would encompass approximately 191,000 acres.
When James Marshall brought the gold nuggets to the fort in1848, Sutter initially tried to keep the discovery a secret. But once word got
out, the flood of fortune seekers overwhelmed him and his holdings. Sutter lost
his empire faster than he built

Russians in California? Our Trip to Fort Ross State Historic Park
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I've wanted to see Fort Ross State Historic Park for a long
time. The village is not represented, but the recreated
stockade and interior buildings are awesome to explore.
|
We had a rather warm couple of days after Christmas, so
Sheila and I took the opportunity to drive up the coast to Mendocino County and
check out Fort Ross State Historic Park. This place has been on my radar for
several years, and since it is too far for a day trip from our house, we made a
weekend out of it, staying in Mendocino and visiting the Point Cabrillo Light Station State Historic Park (which I’ll tell you about in the next post).
Fort Ross is located on the northern California coast, an
approximately 2-hour drive north of San Francisco along Highway 1. The area
receives about 44 inches of rain a year, 35 of it between November and April.
So typically a visitor in the winter would take the chance of encountering
coastal storms with rain and gale force winds. However, on the day that we
visited we hit the weather jackpot with the sun shining, highs in the upper 50s
and a very gentle breeze.
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The weather was perfect on this winter break. Check the
forecast before you go.
|
Russians had been crossing the Bering Strait in search of
furs since the middle of the 18th century. By the end of the 1700s,
the Russian-American Company had settlements from Kodiak Island in the
Aleutians to Sitka in present-day Alaska. Operations expanded with the
contracting of American ship captains to use native Alaskans to hunt sea otters
along the California coast. To help in these operations, the Russians chose to
build a settlement at Metini, 18 miles north of Bodega Bay. The Russians
arrived in 1812 with 25 Russians and 80 Alaskans, who built the first houses
and a stockade. The site was populated with a native American village, plenty
of fresh water, forage, and pasture. There were nearby forests for an ample
supply of wood, and best of all, since they were technically encroaching on
Spanish territory, the site was defensible. They named it Fort Ross, to honor Imperial
Russia, or Rossiia.
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I have never seen so many hand tools! |
As it turned out, a defense was not necessary. The site was
about sixty miles from the nearest Spanish mission, in Sonoma, and eighty-five
miles from the Presidio at San Francisco over rough terrain. Moreover, the
Spanish (and later the Mexican Californios) seemed to be more interested in
trading with, rather than expelling the Russians. Which is a good thing, since
the marine mammal population began to be depleted by over hunting by 1820. Along
with trading and hunting fur, the settlement also farmed and ranched. They were
productive enough to send foodstuff to their outposts in Alaska. In 1841 the
Russian-American Company sold their holdings to John Sutter, of Sutter’s Fort
fame. After the Gold Rush and the American annexation of California, the area
was ranched by a succession of owners that ended with the property being transferred
to the State of California in 1906. This makes Fort Ross one of the oldest
California State Parks.
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Did I mention the weather was perfect? The coast the best
part of the trip.
|
Fort Ross is definitely a destination. I highly recommend a
picnic lunch, which is what we chose to do. The nearest inexpensive restaurant
is more than an hour’s drive in either direction. But picnicking is really the way
to go if the weather is nice, which it was on the day we visited. Besides the
drive, give yourself a half a day to go through the visitor’s center and the
grounds. Along with the buildings and the stockade, take the time to walk out
to the sea cliff and sit on the bench for a little while.
Marshall Gold Discovery State Historic Park
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The site of Marshall's discovery of gold is on the South Fork of the American River, in Coloma, California. |
After the Old Town Sacramento Gold Rush Days, I figured that the best place to start exploring the California Gold Rush was to travel to where it all started. Most people call the place “Sutter’s Mill” but since it is the site where James Marshall discovered gold, it is now the location of Marshall Gold Discovery State Historic Park.
John Sutter, a Swedish immigrant, came to California in 1839. His eventual aim was to create an agricultural empire he called “New Helvetia.” The settlement he built would for the most part become Sacramento. More about his story in another post. By 1847, one of Sutter’s planned ventures was to build a saw mill up in the foothills, where the trees are. Fortunately, a carpenter and craftsman, James W. Marshall, had recently arrived in California and agreed to work
for Sutter in building such a mill. They chose a site on the south fork of the American River about 45 miles east of Sacramento.
for Sutter in building such a mill. They chose a site on the south fork of the American River about 45 miles east of Sacramento.
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Replica of Sutter's Mill at Marshall Gold Discovery State Historic Park. |
Today the site is a California State Park in Coloma, California, a little less than nine miles north of Placerville along Highway 49, “The Gold Rush Trail.” If you get there early, stop off at the Sierra Rizing Coffeehouse and Bakery. Good coffee and
friendly people. Besides, you won’t find Starbucks or any other chain restaurants. You’ll probably only spend a half day at Marshall Gold Discovery park. It’s a great place to enjoy a picnic lunch. Or you can head down Highway 49 to one of the Gold Rush towns for lunch or dinner. The state park doesn’t charge any fees. There is a small museum that is very good if you are unfamiliar with the Gold Rush. However, the best part of the visit is outdoors. There is a replica of the mill to look over. There are also some period buildings and outdoor exhibits with wayside markers. My favorite part of the visit was the monument that noted the location of the actual discovery. I stood on the edge of the American river and tried to imagine, as I often do, what it was like in 1848, before the crowds and development that came with California being such a populated state. It’s easier to do here than at most Gold Rush towns, except for the voices of a few other visitors, we had the beautiful river to ourselves.
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This is believed to be the actual tailrace dug in 1847. |
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A large stone marker approximates the spot where Marshall made his find that started the Gold Rush. |
P.S. I just finished a pretty good book for reference on the California Gold Rush. Enough information, in an entertaining voice, and not so much detail to become boring for the casual reader. Try "The Rush: America's Fevered Quest for Fortune, 1848-1853" by Edward Dolnick.
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There is a small, modern, museum at the park as well. Nice little museum bookstore and gift shop too. |
Labels:
California,
day trips,
Gold Rush
Location:
Coloma, CA, USA
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