Making History Blog

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|

Fourth of July Parade in Mendocino, 1902

Fourth of July parade in Mendocino headed east down Main Street. Horses are pulling decorated wagons carrying people. Seen on the left side of the image are the Ford property's fenced gardens. Note the wooden sidewalk and the square wooden utility poles along the street. On the right side is the Kelley house property with large cypress trees along its fenced frontage. On the far right [...]

By |2025-02-24T12:05:50-08:00March 4, 2025|

Crusade to Save God’s Whales

Local woodcarver Byrd Baker and Jacqueline McAndrews in 1976, standing in front of Baker's Land Rover and Whale Bus with a sign that reads, "Crusade to Save God's Whales." Jackie and Byrd were activists in the Mendocino Whale Wars environmental action movement. This photograph, taken from an elevated position, may have been made from the MacCallum House water tower on the south side of Ukiah Street. [...]

By |2025-02-23T15:54:52-08:00March 1, 2025|

Save the Whales! by Shana Hadley

J. D. Mayhew models the Save The Whales T-shirt he designed for the Mendocino Whale War. He was aboard the Whale War boat Phyllis Cormack in San Francisco preparing to go on the 1976 anti-whaling voyage. (Photographer: Nicholas Wilson) Each year when the Mendocino Coast Whale Festival kicks off, I am filled with memories of my artist grandfather, J.D. Mayhew. He fell in love [...]

By |2025-02-23T15:17:32-08:00February 27, 2025|

The Wreck of the Schooner Alfred

On Wednesday, January 20, 1886, a fierce storm battered the Mendocino coast, leaving destruction in its wake both on land and at sea. Strong winds and relentless rain swept through the region before gradually subsiding. According to the Beacon, the storm “broke upon us quite suddenly, although the cold weather and extremely low barometer of the three previous days were the sure harbingers of an approaching [...]

By |2025-02-23T15:03:55-08:00February 25, 2025|

John & Annie Maria Silveria House

These two photographs, taken 40 years apart, show the John & Annie Maria Silveria House located at 10470 Kelly Street in Mendocino. This home was built in 1916 by Pete Hansen and Ray Valentine for John and Annie Maria Silveria. John and Annie Maria Silveria House, 1985. (Photographer: Bill Wagner)   John and Annie Maria Silveria House, 2025. (Photographer: Robert Dominy) Annie [...]

By |2025-02-23T14:58:06-08:00February 23, 2025|

Born in the USA

Look Tin Eli and his brother, Look Poong Shan, in a photograph taken at a Fort Bragg studio circa 1900. (Photographer: W. T. Fitch; Gift of Mrs. Archie Gordon in 1973) With birthright citizenship everywhere in the news these days, it’s an opportune time to remember the local boy who set the first legal precedent in the process that led to the 1898 U.S. [...]

By |2025-02-16T12:22:22-08:00February 20, 2025|

Steamer Prentiss Goes Ashore at Albion

On November 5, 1917, the steamer Prentiss met with a catastrophic accident while loading cargo at Albion when a sudden and powerful southwest swell caused the ship to crash into the wharf. Despite Captain Iverson and his crew’s efforts to maneuver the vessel into open waters, the strong undertow dragged the stern line into the propeller, leaving the Prentiss helpless. Steamer Prentiss Ashore at Albion, [...]

By |2025-02-16T12:22:34-08:00February 15, 2025|
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