Making History Blog

What Tangled Webs We Weave!

Joseph Silva Neto was born in 1844 on Sao Jorge Island, the Azores. He came to California when he was 20 years old, first working in the lumber mills of Humboldt county. In 1875 he married Maria S. Armas, who was also from the Azores Islands. Joseph's brother George had a hotel in Mendocino and, when he needed a hotel clerk in 1878, he sent for [...]

By |2024-12-02T16:28:07-08:00December 5, 2024|

Mendocino Landmark Burns Down

Mendocino lost one of its earliest structures in 1936, when the “Company Barn” succumbed to flames. The 70-year-old landmark, originally built as a skating rink, had served a variety of roles over the decades, reflecting the town’s evolving needs. Situated south of the intersection of Lansing and the now-defunct Old Coast Road, the barn was fully engulfed when the fire was discovered. The volunteer fire company [...]

By |2024-11-25T17:00:17-08:00December 2, 2024|

Friends til the End by Dee Stenback Lemos

Ida Mary Peterson Jaakola Peterson was the daughter of Andrew and Anna Peterson, their fourth child and the only one to live a long adulthood. She was born on September 28, 1892 in Comptche. She first married Isaac Jaakola, but he died of influenza in November of 1918 at the age of 27, leaving her with three young children: Irene, Oliver, and Sylvia. His dying wish [...]

By |2024-11-25T17:06:55-08:00November 28, 2024|

The Majestic Shenandoah Soars Over Mendocino, 1924

The Navy dirigible, Shenandoah, over Mendocino Bay, 1924. The Shipping Point can be seen in the background. (Gift of Emery Escola) A sight unlike anything seen before captivated Mendocino residents in 1924. The Navy dirigible Shenandoah, a colossal airship spanning 680 feet, glided majestically over the town at an altitude of 500 feet. Having departed San Diego the day before, the airship’s journey along [...]

By |2024-11-25T17:07:40-08:00November 26, 2024|

Mendocino’s First People

November is National American Indian Heritage Month and the Kelley House Museum is observing it by opening a new exhibit on the history and culture of the Northern Pomo Indians, who have lived on the Mendocino Coast for thousands of years. The Pomo people comprised a network of Indigenous communities that crafted canoes, baskets, and other tools from local materials. Known worldwide for their exquisite baskets, [...]

By |2024-11-21T11:54:31-08:00November 23, 2024|

The Caspar Choo-Choo by Chuck Bush

Reprinted from the February 25, 1993 Mendocino Beacon and annotated with additional information. Caspar Creek, and later the town of Caspar, were named after Siegfried Caspar, an early settler of German descent who raised cattle in the vicinity. Construction of the sawmill near where Caspar Creek meets the ocean commenced in 1861, after the owners, William Kelley, Captain Richard Rundle, and Eugene Brown purchased 5,000 acres [...]

By |2024-11-21T11:57:09-08:00November 14, 2024|

On the Skids by Chuck Bush

Reprinted from the January 21, 1993 Mendocino Beacon For our mill here on Big River, the first large redwoods were cut down entirely with double-bitted axes, and cut into logs with axes. In those very early logging days it might have taken two experienced men a week to bring down a big tree, including a few days to prepare a bed or cushion of smaller trees [...]

By |2024-11-07T08:01:41-08:00November 7, 2024|

Coffee to Go!

While the Mendocino Coast has seen many shipwrecks along its shores, and enjoyed salvaging the cargo that washed up, the sinking of the “SS Dorothy Wintermote” in September of 1938 stands out in the memories of the locals. A veteran of Pacific coastal service, with more than 15 years of traffic on her record, the steamer was carrying a cargo of large appliances, gas cylinders, pharmacy [...]

By |2024-11-21T13:12:58-08:00October 31, 2024|

Big River House

Excerpted and annotated from “Mendocino’s Hotels & Saloons,” by Dorothy Bear and Beth Stebbins, Mendocino Historical Review, June, 1980. Big River House was a hotel at the west end of Main Street, just west of the present Zacha Building [Now the Healing Arts Building]. [The three-story hotel sat on the northeast corner of Main and Woodward Streets. Mendocino Jams and Jellies and Mendocino Sandpiper occupy the [...]

By |2024-10-22T14:56:37-07:00October 24, 2024|

Lansing Street in Mendocino, 1906 by Karen McGrath

A hand-colored promotional postcard created for the Fort Bragg Drug Store showing buildings along Lansing Street in Mendocino in 1906. The photograph from which this postcard was made was probably taken from the second floor of the Occidental Hotel, located at the southeast corner of the intersection of Lansing and Main Streets. The building on the lower left side of the image (and which fronts Main [...]

By |2024-10-16T12:30:59-07:00October 19, 2024|
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