Monday, February 29, 2016

More California

As I have mentioned before it strikes me that folk here are way too cautious in terms of their warning signage. I mean I understand that risks should really be pointed out in advance, but it strikes me that certain things are just plain already understood. Like if you hike in the woods there will likely be ticks.

Or the fact that if you are going to be hiking in the woods that there might be some poison oak around that you could get into. Or you would think that if you are going to be hiking around some rocky areas, that you might encounter a snake or two.

And if you are hiking out in the wilderness that you might, in fact, encounter some wild animals. All three of these signs were placed at the entrance to a hiking trail we set out on in one of the California State Parks. You have to wonder if they really want you to come here to hike!
However there are things that most normal folk (I take some liberty in describing myself) might not expect to encounter in a walk in the woods. Do you know why you have to be accompanied by children when you encounter Big Foot? Because, then you don’t have to be able to outrun Big Foot. You just have to be able to outrun the child!
 
Along the North Fork of the American River I thought this idea was a really good concept. I guess funding for the idea ran out, or maybe they evaluated the cost and the return and determined it wasn't worth actually hanging some life jackets out here.

I thought that California was generally a pretty dog friendly state. But I guess that here they are more livestock friendly than they are dog friendly. Look what happens if your dog causes some local livestock to worry a bit!

We have paid many a visit to California and other state parks during low seasons. Generally they don’t actually man the toll booths in low season. They just post a drop box and leave you with some milk money envelopes to complete, and then put a tag on your dashboard showing that you have paid and are legit.

I always thought that where you put your milk money envelope was a drop box. I didn’t realize that it had a technical name to those in the State Park business. But I really like the nonetheless and plan to use it consistently from now on.

Talk to you soon!

Saturday, February 27, 2016

Chico

I originally thought we were only stopping here to tour a well-known mansion. Little did I know that I would stumble on a man who had so much impact on the state.

In 1841 John Bidwell was a member of the first wagon train ever to cross the Sierra Nevada Mountains into California. His first job when he arrived here was at Sutter’s Mill, where he learned what was needed to look for gold. He decided with these new skills to try his own luck, and in 1848 he was among several miners who discovered gold in the Feather River. He used his earnings from this discovery to purchase 26,000 acres of land on both sides of Chico Creek, built an adobe residence, a general store, and began farming his land.

His agricultural plans were massive. He planned to try plants from all over the world in this rich land and climate and see what would work. He knew that his plans would require a lot of manpower, so in 1860 he hired a surveyor to lay out the town of Chico across the creek from his larger land holdings. To attract people to come he donated some of his land for public buildings, parks and churches. I would have assumed it was a real estate play, building public infrastructure so he could sell other land to folks at an exorbitant price. But apparently all he wanted was for people to move there so he would have a labor supply for his farming ventures. It worked. By 1860 he had an actual operating city. The massive tree in front of the mansion is an example of his work. He planted this Georgia Magnolia 150 years ago, and it appears it was a success.

He began construction of Bidwell Mansion in 1865 and completed it in 1868. This 26 room mansion was state of the art. He had electricity, running water and central heating. While he generally lived frugally he did want to show off his wealth in his home. Every one of the bedrooms on the 2nd floor had a sink, which was an extravagance that would clearly communicate to the guests he was entertaining that he had significant wealth.

We got to tour his mansion and see several artifacts owned and used by Bidwell himself. There were a half dozen additional bedrooms on the 3rd floor, but none of them had sinks. It turns out that in order to have running water in the 1860’s you had to engineer it yourself – there were no municipal water supplies or electric pumps. A water tank was in one of the rooms on the 3rd floor and gravity made the water run on the 1st and 2nd floor – but no such ability on the 3rd floor. As we headed out I spotted what appeared to be bleacher seating on the landing outside the rear door of the home. I could not really figure out what they were – the ranger told me – pie cooling racks!

In addition to his considerable contributions in the area of agriculture, Bidwell was a busy guy. He was a US Congressman from California from 1865 to 1867. His wife Annie was a Presbyterian and would not marry him since he owned and operated a saloon. He closed the saloon, became a prohibitionist, and only then would she marry him. Because of her beliefs he became a strong advocate for the right of vote for women. They tied the knot in Washington DC during his Congressional term, and both President Andrew Johnson and Ulysses S. Grant were wedding guests.

Because of all this social and political action, the Bidwell’s entertained some interesting folk in their home. Annie entertained Susan B. Anthony in her parlor. Susan gave her a personally autographed 4 volume set of The History of Woman Sufferage which was in the bookcase for us to peruse. The likes of John Muir, Rutherford B. Hayes and William Tecumseh Sherman were also guests of the Bidwells, in addition to many other famous people. Apparently Sherman only stayed two days and then moved into town to a hotel. The Bidwell’s prohibitionist’s stance did not fit well for him. He is quoted as saying “Casaba melons for meals daily, but not a drop to drink.”

He actually ran for President in 1892 on the Prohibition Party Ticket and scored 264,133 votes, the most ever of any candidate for the Prohibition Party. Bidwell introduced trees from all over the world into Chico. He began what is now the tradition of heavily tree lined streets. Being a known agriculturalist he actually testified in the Woodruff v North Bloomfield Mining Gravel Company case we learned about that ended hydraulic mining in the state. Interestingly in 1845 he was working for John Sutter, and it was then that he filed a map of Rancho del Arroyo Chico with the Mexican Government and obtained a land grant.

From Bidwell’s land purchase and individual work to create a town, Chico now boasts a population near 90,000. We wandered around town taking in all the remaining evidence of Bidwell’s impact. We strolled the site of the original Bidwell general store and that of the school. The school site has now become UC Chico campus. St. John the Baptist Catholic Church is the only remaining church on the original site originally given by Bidwell.

The lands straddling Chico Creek are today Bidwell Park. We headed up to what they call Upper Bidwell Park and hiked up to the rocky bluffs overlooking Horseshoe Lake. Apparently this is where all the folk of Chico come on a nice day, at least all the students. We were lucky we even found a spot to park!

We visited the home of Dr. Oscar Stansbury. Just after graduating from medical school he received a letter from his cousin asking him to take over his overly demanding medical practice in Chico. Agreeing, he relocated to Chico, and in 1877 wed his fiancé Libbie Manlove. In 1883 he commissioned Sacramento architect A. A. Cook to build this classic Italianate Victorian home.

The folks of the Stansbury Home Preservation Society claim that this is the most original Victorian era home in California. The reason is that Libbie, in her will, had instructed that the home be managed by her daughter Angeline during her lifetime, and then turned into a museum showcasing her husband’s practice. Angeline lived in the home until her death Christmas Day 1974 preserving it as mostly as it had been during her time as a child living with her parents.

Most of the furnishings in the home were original. Our docent indicated that while there were not many of the signs of significant wealth present in the Bidwell mansion there were some very clear indications of wealth. Each of the bedrooms as well as Dr. Stansbury’s office had a large closet. Most homes of the day used wardrobes rather than having built in closets as taxes were based on the number of rooms in a house, and any space with a door was counted as a room, including a closet.

We visited the National Yo Yo Museum. While not a standalone museum – it was actually the back portion of a really cute gift shop – I still enjoyed picking through all the old examples of yo yos. Apparently Chico ended up being the hotbed of yo yo championships and the museum has displays of many trophies as well as information on the champions themselves. This yo yo that was nearly as tall as I was got awarded Guinness world record status in 1982.

At the Chico Museum we learned that in 1859 a 54 pound gold nugget was discovered in the Feather River area near Chico. The museum claims that this nugget was the largest nugget ever discovered in North America.

Finally we visited the Sierra Nevada Brewery. Founded in 1979 by home brewers Ken Grossman and Paul Camusi it has grown to become the 2nd largest craft brewery in the US. Only Boston Brewing, makers of Samuel Adams Lager is bigger. In fact its 1.2 million barrel annual production makes it the 7th largest brewer in the US even when you include all the commercial brands.

The tour was great fun and we learned a couple things we didn’t really know. We learned that there are two different strains of yeast that are used in the brewing process. Lagers are produced with one of the strains and ales are produced with the other. When the Brewery was founded nearly all beer produced in the US were lagers. Sierra Nevada introduced their India Pale Ale which at first was not widely embraced by the public. However, enthusiasts soon began to relish the bold flavors and soon many craft brewers began producing ales.

One of the breweries claims to fame is that they have grown to be the 2nd largest craft brewer with no advertising. From what I have seen I can’t argue with them on this matter. Our tour guide indicated that there has never been any print, radio or TV ad
vertising for Sierra Nevada. All their growth has come from word of mouth testimony from their customers.

There was no skimping at the tasting room at all. Our guide walked us through a narrated tasting of 6 of their most popular labels. Between the expressive tour guide and the depth of the tour it was a very fun experience.

Talk to you soon!

Thursday, February 25, 2016

Covered bridges

When back East we always sought out the local covered bridges which we knew there would be. We didn’t think that we should be keeping our eyes peeled in California as well.

In Chico we found the Honey Run Bridge. This impressive bridge was built by George Miller in 1886 as an uncovered bridge. The bridge spans the Butte Creek, the namesake of Butte County. In 1894 the cover was added.

The vortex continues. It turns out that the formal dedication of the Honey Run Bridge was done by Annie K. Bidwell, John’s beloved wife.

About 8 miles outside Grass Valley we found the Bridgeport Bridge. The bridge is also known as Wood’s Crossing as it was built in 1862 by David I. Wood. Bridgeport Bridge is the longest single span covered bridge in existence. While we were not able to cross it as it was undergoing some maintenance we still enjoyed discovering it and getting this great viewing.

Talk to you soon!

Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Grass Valley

We picked this destination in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada Mountains primarily to visit the Empire Mine State Historic Park. Once here we found more than we had bargained for.

Intersection of Jenkins and Hocking Streets was the first discovery of gold in the area. George Knight was on a Grass Valley hillside in October 1850 when he came upon an outcropping of white quartz rock laced with yellow. He pounded the rock with his cast iron skillet and washed out the gold. Digging under the outcropping he discovered a 4 inch gold vein. Named the Ophir Vein, the race to Grass Valley was on.

After the mining claim changed hands several times it ended up in the hands of William Bowers Bourn in 1869. The mine was highly successful, and in 1897 he commissioned Willis Polk to build what he would call his “Cottage” using waste rock from the mine. By the turn of the century he added a clubhouse with tennis courts, a bowling alley and squash courts.


We visited the mine and the Cottage. Sadly the Cottage was being refurbished and was not open for touring at this time. However we thoroughly enjoyed our visit. Between 1850 and 1956 when the mine permanently closed after a debilitating strike, the mine no less than 5.8 million ounces of gold. The Empire Mine is one of the oldest, largest, deepest, longest and richest gold mines in California history.

My expectations for the visit were modest, but I was really pleasantly surprised. The grounds have been maintained both in the structures and the layout in the way it would have been when the Bourn family lived here. The visitor center has a great overview that was filmed in the 50’s when mining in the area was still being done. The perspective was outstanding. We had seen different kinds of mining going on in Alaska, the Yukon and elsewhere and historical equipment often used – pans, shaker beds, sluice boxes, hydraulic jets and dredges.

However, I never pieced together that these were not just different ways being used in different places – rather they were gradual improvements in technology. Pans were slow and back breaking – lead to shaker boxes to accelerate the refinement of the gravel, which then had to be panned. Sluice boxes were just large shaker boxes with more automated water. Hydraulic nozzles accelerated the scouring of the land and moving the tailings into what was essentially just huge sluice boxes. Finally, the dredges automated the entire process in a self-contained unit. All were used at different points in time in Grass Valley.

While we couldn’t go down inside we did get to see the original Empire Mine entrance. It was an incline shaft with rails. The main shaft went down a mile and shafts branched out from there. By the time it was fully developed there were 367 miles of underground shafts covering a geographic of 5 square miles on the surface. The visitor center has a 3 dimensional scale model of the mine with an interesting audio and visual narration. The model was actually used by the management of the mine to plan and manage operations back at the turn of the century.

Each morning the miners would show up for their shifts. They would clamber aboard a sort of incline rail car that would then lower them the mile down to the base of the main shaft. It appears to me that the equipment looks pretty rickety and that safety measures limited, if they existed at all. Surprisingly the Mine’s safety record was above average for the industry.

We learned that one of the things we had always been told is a myth. Mules were permanent residents in these deep mine situations. Because they could not easily be moved up and down, they lived their entire life within the mines. We had always been told that in those situations the mules went blind over time. Apparently that was a myth – they did not. In fact, as a valuable resource, they were well cared for by especially skilled full time “mule-skinners” on the payroll.

One last interesting thing we learned about underground mining. By the time they finished digging, they had actually gone down over 2 miles. It turns out that the natural water table in this area is only 150 feet underground – now that the mine is abandoned, it is totally filled with water up to 150 feet below the entrance to the main shaft. Imagine the effort needed to keep this 367 miles of shafts free of water to run the operations – sheesh!

At Mill Street and Allison Ranch Road we visited the North Star Mine and Powerhouse. This facility ended up being the 2nd largest producer of gold during the California Gold Rush. In 1898, the largest every Pelton Wheel was built for the mine. Developed in 1870 by Lester Allan Pelton, the Pelton Wheel was a water turbine with a unique paddle shape that was far more efficient in extracting power from the movement of water to run the gold mill. By 1928 the mine had produced over $33 million of gold. While suspended for the war effort, mining continued here until 1956.

While the Post Office was established in 1851, the town was not actually incorporate until 1893. Originally known as Boston Ravine, the name was later changed to Centerville, and then again to Grass Valley. The reasons for the name changes are unknown today.
Named the Del Oro Theatre because of the surrounding area’s connection to gold mining, ‘oro’ being Spanish for gold. This Art Modern theater was built in 1942.

The Holbrooke built in 1862 is the oldest hotel in continuous operation in the California Mother Lode. Guests included Jack London, Mark Twain, US Grant and several other presidents.

Lola Montez internationally known singer and dancer bought a mining office building built in 1851, moving into it in 1853. It is the only home she ever owned. Irish dancer and actress, she became famous as a Spanish dancer, and as the mistress of King Ludwig I of Bavaria, who had her named Countess of Lansfeld. During the Revolutions of 1848 in the German States she was forced to flee and made her way to the US.

Born Charlotte, Lotta Crabtree lived a few houses down Mill Street from Lola Montez. Striking up a deep friendship, Lola taught Lotta to sing and dance and encouraged her to perform locally. Her charisma coupled with what she learned from Lola lead to a highly successful career in the US and abroad. Her life story was recalled in the 1951 film Golden Girl with Lotta being played by Mitzi Gaynor.

Just down the street from both was the Grass Valley Library. This Carnegie Grant library was built in 1914, and is on the National Register of Historic Places.

The Grass Valley Museum currently resides in the Victorian building that housed Mount St. Mary’s Convent and Orphan Asylum. Katherine Russell lead the Sisters of Mercy on a crusade to help the orphans of miners in the valley and in 1866 opened the convent and orphanage. It operated until 1932 when it was purchased by the Grass Valley Historic Preservation Committee.

We ventured over to nearby Nevada City. Actually incorporated before Grass Valley in 1856, this town actually followed its nearby town into the Gold Rush era.

We strolled the main street of Nevada City discovering the Nevada Theater. After the Bailey House Hotel burned down in 1863, locals acting as The Nevada Theater Association began fundraising for a new building, selling stock at $100 a share. Holding a ball in 1865 to raise the final funds needed, the theater opened September 9, 1865. The Nevada Theater is the oldest theater building in the state of California.

In Nice it was nice – temps in the 70’s. At 2,500 feet in the Sierra Nevada’s, it is cold and wet in Nevada City with highs in the 40’s. So when we passed by the historic National Hotel, opened in August of 1856, the Woman heard their famous hot buttered rum’s a callin. Predating the Holbrooke in Grass Valley by half a decade the National would be the oldest continuously operated hotel west of the Rockies if not for an unfortunate fire in 1863 which caused the hotel to be shut down for a short time for repair. Both guests and employees claim to have seen ghostly men dressed in Victorian suits smoking cigars in the lobby, a young woman dressed in a flowing Victoria dress gliding through the bar, and all claim to have heard the bar piano play by itself in the dead of the night (so to speak).

We made one last attempt to embrace the mining history of the area by visiting Malakoff Diggins State Historic Park. This launched another wondrous GPS blunder. We looked up the Park in Brenda’s POI database and she had it, the address the same as the Park brochure we had (but sadly the Park brochure had no maps or directions included.) We started out and could see it was going to be a bit roundabout – 15 miles by the crow was calculating to an hour of driving time. We turned off the main highway on a much smaller but not bad road. We reached the town of Washington on the South Yuba River, founded in 1849 by miners, and sporting a current population of 185. Once we left Washington Brenda directed us to Relief Hill Road, unpaved, and said we would be at the Park in 7 miles.

We began climbing and Relief Hill Road began narrowing. It turns out this is an 1800 era mining road never really intended for automated equipment. We kept climbing until we hit fog. Then we hit snow and the snow was accumulating on the dirt road. We still had 5 miles to go but I pressed on. Eventually we met a Forest Service pickup coming our way, thankfully at a rare spot where I could pull over so a vehicle could pass. The ranger stopped and rolled down his window, suggesting he was attempting to go over Relief Hill and had turned around do to the road conditions. He suggested I do the same, which I did. While this wasn’t the worst road I have ever been on, it is definitely in the top 5.

We asked the ranger, and in fact there was a fully paved route to the Park on pretty major roads. It was a couple miles longer that route than this way, which is why Brenda chose to send us this way. But the estimated driving time was only about ¾ of the time it would take to get to the Park along Relief Hill Road. Thanks Brenda!

In the mid-1800’s most miners had abandoned their claims the town of North Bloomfield as the claims could not produce enough profit for the work. A French immigrant Julius Poquillion bought up these abandoned claims and amassed over 1,500 acres. He convinced a San Francisco investment group to invest in the equipment needed to conduct large scale hydraulic mining. At the height of their activity, 100,000 tons of gravel was blasted from the hillsides by these powerful water cannon.

They blasted so much gravel that the valley began to fill, interfering with their operations. So in 1872 they accomplished an impressive engineering of a nearly 8,000 foot (almost a mile and a half) drainage tunnel straight through bedrock from the Diggins to Humbug Creek. The drainage tunnel allowed them to use the excess water from the hydraulic mining to evacuate the tailings into the South Yuba River.

As you can imagine, this practice was devastating to the land. While done by man and not by nature, the remains of these hydraulic mining operations have left a barren landscape. While I hate to compare this devastation to something created by nature, the landscape reminds me a great deal of Bryce Canyon National Park in Utah. The exposed bluffs expose the underlying rock formations with varying shades of red.

The drainage tunnel led to the end of hydraulic mining in California. Farmers and ranchers along the South Yuba River found the heavy metal laced tailings devastated their crops and livestock.

On January 7, 1884 Judge Lorenzo Sawyer handed down a decision (now known as the Sawyer Decision) in the case of Woodruff, a Marysville property owner, against the North Bloomfield Gravel Mining Company placing significant restrictions on the practice. To date the San Francisco based investors had spent $3 million on the equipment and had only produced $3 million on the value of gold and valuable metals extracted. Under the new restrictions their production would plummet and costs soar. Cutting their risks, the operations were totally abandoned.

We visited the town of North Bloomfield, now part of the Park. Settled in 1852 it was originally named Humbug – a name given by unhappy miners given the meager results for their effort. By the height of the hydraulic mining the population exceeded 2,000, with general stores, pharmacies, saloons, churches and a US post office. However, soon after the Sawyer Decision the town was abandoned and became a ghost town. Interestingly many of the residents who abandoned the town returned during the Depression, occupying the vacant buildings just in order to have somewhere to live.

Today only Park employees live here. I love the official town sign outlining the population. Apparently the winter population of the town is 8, swelling to 12 during the summer months when more tourism needs attending to.

Talk to you soon!