Making History Blog

The Set of the Sail by Wally Smith

Reprinted from the November 15, 1984 Mendocino Beacon Few sailing ships or steamers plied their trade between San Francisco and Anchorage without occasionally dropping anchor off the mouth of Big River, taking on passengers or cargo to fill the hold when Noyo Harbor failed to fill it. Nearly all of them were photographed and identified at one time or another lying off the Mendocino Headlands, and [...]

By |2024-10-13T15:48:25-07:00October 17, 2024|

Johnson-Stauer Building

The Johnson-Stauer building, situated on the northeast corner of Lansing and Ukiah Streets in Mendocino, is steeped in local history, reflecting the evolution of the town’s commercial and social life. In 1902, master carpenter J. D. Johnson, who owned the property, demolished an old barn on the site, which had most recently been used as a blacksmith shop. In its place, he constructed the current two-story [...]

By |2024-10-09T15:07:05-07:00October 12, 2024|

Mudtime in Mendocino by Dorothy Bear

Robert Foster Andrews in his later years. (Florence Andrews Collection, Kelley House Museum) In 1984, the Kelley House supplied local historian Robert Winn with material he used in his College of the Redwoods course, “New England in Mendocino.” Dorothy Bear shared some of that information in the column below, which was first published in the November 8, 1984 Mendocino Beacon. The best sources in [...]

By |2024-10-06T17:02:18-07:00October 10, 2024|

The Ghosts Always Tell Their Stories by Rob Hawthorn

If there’s one thing I’ve learned from walking around the charming town of Mendocino, it’s that the town itself is alive. It breathes. It moves. Mendocino even talks to us. As I take people around town and tell them about the haunted houses, phantom horses, and the hotel guests that refuse to leave after 150 years, I realize that the ghosts also talk to us. They [...]

By |2024-09-30T16:22:32-07:00October 3, 2024|

Mendocino Model, c. 1890

On display at the Ford House on Main Street is a meticulously detailed scale model of Mendocino as it appeared in the late 19th century. Created by master craftsman Lennard "Len" Peterson between February 1989 and December 1990, the model spans a four-by-eight-foot base, with a scale of 1:384 (3/64 inches to the foot). It features 358 buildings, including hotels, businesses, homes, and outhouses, alongside 34 [...]

By |2024-09-25T12:43:28-07:00September 28, 2024|

Scandals Brewing by Kaylin Harr, Kelley House Museum summer intern

Coming home from a hard, day-long job, it’s likely that you want to sink onto your couch and pour yourself a beer. The loggers of Mendocino felt the same way 150 years ago. After chopping, milling, and shipping tons of redwood trees, sipping a cold one was a perfect way to relax and forget about the limbs you almost lost. Luckily, the area was not short [...]

By |2024-09-25T11:07:48-07:00September 26, 2024|

The House of Many Gables by Dee Stenback Lemos

“J. E. Packard is having a neat cottage built on his lot near the school house grounds. We have no building boom, but several new houses are being erected about town.” Thus it was reported in the Mendocino Beacon on March 21, 1891. What has become known as the Packard-Johnson House was one of two houses built for Justin Packard in the east part of town, [...]

By |2024-09-15T16:33:54-07:00September 19, 2024|

Mendocino’s Master of Miniatures

Herman Fayal, a lifelong resident of Mendocino, became known for his intricate miniatures that captured the spirit and history of the town he loved. Born in 1893, just a year after his parents Manuel and Maria Costa immigrated to California, Herman grew up with deep ties to the Mendocino coast. (Herman later changed his last name to avoid confusion with other Costas.) Herman Fayal in [...]

By |2024-09-13T12:45:57-07:00September 14, 2024|

In the Valley among the Hills by Chuck Bush

According to the late Charlotte Hoak, daughter of one of the first settlers in Comptche, the town was named after Compatche, a Pomo chief who brought his people through that beautiful area seasonally, as a part of their hunting and gathering, nomadic life. The Pomos told her his name means, "in the valley among the hills, beside the river of potholes"—quite a lot for only one [...]

By |2024-09-11T14:36:01-07:00September 12, 2024|

Kelley House Arbor

Kelley House Lattice Arbor with Abalone Shells. Undated photo of a wooden arbor with decorative abalone shells in the Kelley House yard. This small arbor was located next to the Kelley House water tower. A handmade chair made from sticks sits empty to the left of the arbor. (Gift of Margaret Kelley Campbell) Saturday and Sunday @ 11AM! Walking Tours of Historic Mendocino - [...]

By |2024-09-06T11:20:04-07:00September 7, 2024|
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