Making History Blog

Bridget Kies on Murder, She Wrote

Angela Lansbury in front of the Kelley House, 1988. Kelley House Collection. The first weekend of May marks the second annual Murder, She Wrote Festival, bringing hundreds of fans of all ages to Mendocino. The series aired from 1984 to 1996 and has been in syndication since, contributing to its lasting popularity. In her 2025 book Murder, She Wrote, Bridget Kies investigates this popularity, [...]

By |2025-04-24T16:27:10-07:00April 24, 2025|

Spring has Sprouted!

The spring exhibit at the Kelley House Museum is titled Don’t Panic * Eat Organic: 50 Years of the Corners Collective. It features the history of the business and the Kelley church building, photos of collective members, and memorabilia. Included in the exhibit are copies of The Scoop, the newsletter written by collective members from 2009 to 2013. The Scoop included articles on health and wellness, [...]

By |2025-04-21T14:53:03-07:00April 17, 2025|

They’re Back!

Angela Lansbury superfans, known as “Fangelas” are preparing to flock to the Mendocino Coast the first weekend in May for the sold-out Second Annual “Murder, She Wrote Festival.” The TV series is one of the most watched shows in syndication, and Mendocino was used as a filming location for nine of the episodes. Many locals have fond memories of the days the production company came to [...]

By |2025-04-13T12:37:47-07:00April 10, 2025|

Two Clever Women

Theresa Murray, date unknown. Kelley House photo. As Women’s History Month ends, local author Molly Dwyer’s words from 2017 still ring true— “Discovering women’s history is no easy matter … one must scour multiple sources to discover a sentence or, with luck, a paragraph acknowledging them.” Thanks to a small paragraph in an 1884 Mendocino Beacon article, we know a little more about two [...]

By |2025-04-13T12:37:57-07:00March 27, 2025|

Elliott Family

America Jane Moore was born on July 16, 1839 in Missouri to William H. Moore and Nancy Logan. In the late 1840s, the Moore family moved to California, settling in Sonoma County. America Jane married Commodore Cornelius Fulton Elliott, and they had five children: Florence Eleanor (1862), Ida May (1865), Elizabeth (Lizzie) (1867), Henry Harrison (1869), and Burtt Logan (1873). In 1873, America Jane divorced her [...]

By |2025-03-16T16:37:18-07:00March 22, 2025|

James Dean in Mendocino

James Dean was the Timothée Chalamet of his generation. If you have somehow missed Timothée’s rising star, think young Brad Pitt or Leonardo DiCaprio. So when the handsome, moody hunk arrived in Mendocino in late May of 1954 to star in Elia Kazan’s production of “East of Eden,” people took notice. It’s good that they did because it was the beginning of his meteoric film career [...]

By |2025-03-16T12:14:20-07:00March 20, 2025|

The Mendocino Whale War by Nicholas Wilson

The little coastal town of Mendocino, California, has long been a hotbed of progressive activism. In 1976, the cause was saving whales from slaughter by Russian and Japanese whaling fleets. In June, 1975, a Greenpeace patrol boat located a Russian fleet killing sperm whales off Cape Mendocino. Activists used a high-speed Zodiac inflatable to maneuver themselves between the harpooners and the whales, capturing dramatic footage of [...]

By |2025-03-09T16:28:04-07:00March 13, 2025|

Log Rafts

For decades, log rafts were a vital part of transporting timber down Big River to the Mendocino Mill. Francis Jackson’s book, “Big River Was Dammed,” offers a fascinating glimpse into this process, detailing the challenges of controlling logs as they made their way toward the mill pond. Philip Madera and Joe Vincent standing on a log raft in the Mendocino Mill Pond on the north [...]

By |2025-03-10T17:50:38-07:00March 11, 2025|

MacCallum House

MacCallum House Inn, March 2025. (Photographer: Robert Dominy) The original MacCallum House, built by J. D. Johnson in 1881 for Alexander and Daisy Kelley MacCallum on Albion Street in Mendocino, was smaller and located farther north on the lot. After her husband died in 1908, Daisy returned to Mendocino from San Francisco, where they had been living. Later that year, she had the house [...]

By |2025-03-04T15:25:36-08:00March 8, 2025|

What’s With All the Water Towers?

The questions posed most frequently by visitors to the Kelley House Museum have to do with Mendocino’s water towers: why are they here, how do they work, why are some so tall? What were once utilitarian devices that conducted water into houses have become charming and iconic objects of fascination and mystery. To satisfy the curiosity of tourists and locals alike, the Kelley House has just [...]

By |2025-03-04T15:25:31-08:00March 6, 2025|
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