Making History Blog

Seman Blacksmith Shop

By |2023-11-26T17:00:28-08:00November 27, 2023|

November 27, 1964 - The old blacksmith shop on the northwest corner of Lansing and Little Lake streets (where Century 21 is located today) was demolished. According to the Beacon, the big building “went down with a crash when Clarence Ponts made his final attack on it with his big cat.” The building had its beginnings in November 1882, when blacksmith and wheelwright George Hall built [...]

WIN 2 NIGHTS IN A WATER TOWER!

By |2023-11-25T15:06:21-08:00November 26, 2023|

Enjoy unobstructed views of the Mendocino Bay from your private suite at the top of a water tower. The Kelley House Museum is auctioning off a package that includes two nights at the boutique MacCallum House Inn. The three story water tower sleeps four people and features a luxurious bath and sauna. Place the highest bid online by 5:00 PM PST on December 5th, and you’ll [...]

Frank J. Mendosa

By |2023-11-24T14:05:55-08:00November 25, 2023|

November 25, 1924 - Frank J. Mendosa passed away at his home on Little Lake Road at the age of 73. Born on the island of Flores in the Azores, Frank left Portugal at a young age, joining the crew of a whaling vessel and making several trips around Cape Horn. In his early twenties, he landed in Boston, where he worked for a short time [...]

Golden Days in Comptche

By |2023-11-22T14:37:53-08:00November 23, 2023|

Nannie Escola, one of the first chroniclers of Mendocino coast lore, left the Kelley House notebooks full of newspaper clippings and her handwritten notes about local happenings. What follows are some tidbits of interest about Comptche, 12 miles inland, gleaned from those three-ring binders. In the fall of 1884, Newman E. Hoak showed off a gloria mundi apple weighing 29 oz. and a pippin weighing 18 [...]

Mendocino Night School

By |2023-12-28T14:35:10-08:00November 20, 2023|

November 20, 1933 - Night school classes were offered for the first time at Mendocino High School. The courses were made possible through cooperation with the Russian Gulch Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camp. President Franklin Roosevelt established the CCC in April 1933 as part of his New Deal legislation. The program put hundreds of thousands of young men across the country to work on environmental conservation [...]

Cattle Drive Through Caspar, c. 1916

By |2023-11-14T14:38:37-08:00November 17, 2023|

Cattle drive down Caspar's Main Street, past the Caspar Athletic Club. The cows and their calves are being driven to pasture on the Caspar Headlands. The buildings shown on Main Street are, L - R: Dance Hall, Caspar Hotel, Nolan Grocery Store and the Caspar Athletic Club. Also in this view are square utility poles and a residential picket fence. Celebrate the 50th anniversary of Mendocino [...]

Gobble Gobble Gobble

By |2023-11-14T13:02:13-08:00November 16, 2023|

A patriotic turkey family in a postcard from about 1900. Image from the Library of Congress. I was in the grocery store the other day looking at the displays of all the edibles and drinkables I am supposed to buy for Thanksgiving. Turkey, cornbread stuffing, pumpkin pie, cranberries, sweet and mashed potatoes, gravy, Beans or Brussel sprouts, and, of course, dinner rolls. Is there [...]

Rose Valador Mussio

By |2023-11-13T13:26:37-08:00November 14, 2023|

November 14, 1910 - Rose Valador was born in Mendocino, daughter of Domingo and Marian (Thomas) Valador. She was the second of six children and their eldest daughter. Rose and her siblings grew up in the historic Valador House, situated on the southeast corner of Ukiah and Rundle Streets. Black and white photograph of Domingo and Marian Valador with their six children. They are standing [...]

Recruits Return to the Coast

By |2023-11-11T13:35:49-08:00November 12, 2023|

Senior portrait of Charles Tannlund, Class of 1918, Mendocino High School. (Gift of Jeanette Mendosa Hansen) November 12, 1918 - A number of young men returned to the Mendocino Coast, just days after being called up to serve their country during World War I. The armistice ending the war had been signed just the day before, and their military service was abruptly cancelled. Two [...]

The First of Many Good Times Was Had by All

By |2023-11-07T12:26:02-08:00November 9, 2023|

This article was originally published in the Mendocino Beacon on May 29, 1975. We reprint it here to mark the 50th anniversary of the Kelley House. The first open house at Kelley House last weekend was an auspicious occasion in the sense that it surely was a good omen for the future. The sun shone, the Mendocino High School Band played, the American Flag was presented [...]

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