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Thanks for visiting Historic Happenings! If you are not on the email list, and would like to be notified via email when a new posting of this newsletter is made, please email Terry Ommen at histerry@comcast.net. I will add you to the list. I will never share your email address with anyone without your permission.
Congratulations go out
to Wendy Kenison who was the first to correctly identify the last mystery spot.
Nice work, Wendy. By the way it was the building where Grandma's Attic Antiques
& Collectibles is on E. Main, just
west of the PPAV Hall.
For those of you who
are up to it, here are the clues for the next mystery spot:
1) The building is
near a church.
2) The building is
near Mill Creek.
3) It holds meetings
inside.
4) The building has its
roots back to Asia.
Where is this
building? Good luck!
Mooney Grove Speedway
Mooney Grove Park is
full of historic surprises. Tom Rey's father was a veterinarian (Dr. Robert S.
Rey) and he was also a model midget racing car hobbiest. These 1939 photos
supplied by Tom, show the Mooney Grove Speedway—a track for model race cars.
Who
would have thought there was such a thing? One of the photographs shows one
of the cars and another shows Dr. Rey holding one in his hand. The sign seen in
the first photograph says "Model Midget Racing Club of Tulare County, Mooney Grove Speedway." Tom's father is identified as “track manager”. Thanks, Tom, for sharing these great old photos. What other surprises does the old park hold?
Rountree-Morris Furniture—Witness to a Tragedy
Quite by accident I
found this 8x10 photograph on the wall in Visalia's Southern Pacific Depot
Restaurant. I had never seen it there before. To most people the old
Rountree-Morris Furniture store at 229 E. Main Street (Garden and
Main) isn't
very special, but it was in the alley behind this building that Sergeant
Charles Hugh Garrison was shot and killed in a shootout with a stolen vehicle
suspect. He was Visalia's first police officer killed in the line of duty. It
occurred on December 5, 1946.Thanks to the Depot restaurant for sharing this hard-to-find
photograph.
Lone Oak Park—Smallest Park in the U.S.
In 1913 as the town
was moving west, Visalia encountered a
large oak tree standing right in the
middle of what was going to be the extension of Main Street at Giddings. Rather
than cut the tree down, the city built Main Street around it, surrounded the
tree with curbing, and as a result created Lone Oak Park, the smallest park in
the country. For many years this single oak tree park was praised for its
beauty, but others saw it as a traffic safety hazard. Caution signs, reflectors
and lights were mounted on it, but still autos crashed into it. The 1930s
brought extra scrutiny to the old tree and discussion began to intensify about
the future of it. This photo dated
December 7, 1934 shows
how intense the discussion became about the removal of the
tree. It shows Visalia Councilman Rufus Connelly
and Miss Marguerite Dunaway, a member of the Business and Professional
women's Club". Both are shown guarding the tree to keep it from being cut
down. Their efforts bought some time for the big oak
tree, but in September 1936, removal pressure
became too strong and the city removed the tree. The smallest park in the U.S.
was no more. Sure looks like a Bonnie & Clyde pose to me! Thanks Bruce
Geiger for sharing this great old photograph. Navy Gas—A Downtown Filling Station
Occasionally when
talking about historic Visalia, the name of a business called Navy Gas comes
up. Photos of this early gas station are rare, but recently Tom Stroben shared
this one, probably taken by his father Albert during the 1945 Visalia flood.
Navy Gas was on the north side of the roadway at 901 E. Main Street. Charles
"Chuck" Ehrhorn, a Stanford University graduate, owned the station
for many years. The view of this photo is looking westbound on Main Street from
about Burke. Thanks Tom for sharing your dad's great old photo.
George Reece—A Career Lawman
On May 5, 2014, George
Reece came back to his hometown of Visalia from his home in northern California.
At least part of his reason for returning was to allow me to interview him. For
several hours we talked and toured Visalia and this nearly 90-year old man had
some amazing stories about early Visalia. George was a juvenile officer here early
in his career and later he became a liquor control officer for the state of
California. George retired from the
Alcoholic Beverage Control as Deputy Director . His insight into law
enforcement in early Visalia, was so interesting and I learned a lot. By the way, as a young
man, George lived in the Harrell Building at the southeast corner of Main and
Court Streets, and remembers the Wunder Bar just to the east. He shared a token
from this old Visalia "watering hole." Thanks, George for spending
time with me and giving me a wonderful education.
End of the Trail and Pioneer—Duct Tape and Bailing Wire
For many decades the
End of the Trail and the Pioneer statues stood at Mooney Grove Park giving so
many people so many memories. As a result, lots of photographs of these statues
are available. Both statues were on exhibit at the Pan-Pacific Expo in 1915 in
San Francisco. They were made out of plaster of Paris like material and were never
intended to be permanent. As the years went by, chunks fell off and
they
started to show their age. Brown paint was used to attempt to bond the statue
together and to keep it from deteriorating any further. The first photograph
shows a close-up of the bonding material used. The Pioneer eventually collapsed
in a pile of rubble and was destroyed,
but the End of the Trail was given to the Cowboy Hall of Fame in Oklahoma City
and it is now back to its original bright white color on display. These photos
were probably taken by Tom Stroben's father Albert. Thanks, Tom for sharing.
***George Reece passed
along that he believes the magic shop referred to in the previous Historic
Happenings was in fact Ricardo's and named after the son of attorney Joe Lopes.
Hope that helps Floyd.
***If you would like
to know more about the Security Title business conducted in its beautiful old
building that is still standing, read the Lifestyle magazine April issue and
the story begins on page 18 or you can go online to: http://issuu.com/lifestylemagazine/docs/lifestyle_apr14_web
***Watch for the
dedication and historic recognition of the famous Spalding House. The
dedication is tentatively scheduled for later this month or early in June.
Announcements with the detail should appear in the Visalia Times Delta in the
next couple of weeks or so. Hope to see you there.
Good Whiskey—Persons desiring pure whiskey can find it at
F. W. Blake's. We were the recipient of some of it, the other day and have been
using it under the doctor's orders of course, and is the best we have met with
in Visalia. Tulare Times (Visalia) October 2, 1869
1 comment:
Mystery spot is the Buddhist temple on center st
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