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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.
Pete Cowper is the winner! He
was the first to correctly identify the last mystery spot as the 210 Café
building or the Studebaker building as it was called in its day located at
Locust and Center streets. Nice work, Pete!
Okay, here are the clues for the
next one:
1) This building was built in
1921.
2) It started as a health related
facility and it continues so today
3) The local architect for this
Main Street structure was Harry Michaels and the contractor was Noble &
Toothacre.
4) Mrs. Medda V. Keener lived
here.
Where is this building? Good
luck.
Sandy Warren—He Made Lots of Sweet Music
Recently I met with Lee Otto
Warren to talk about his father who is also Lee Otto Warren. Senior was born in
1910 and was probably known more by his nickname, Sandy Warren. Sandy was quite
a musician and he lived on Center Street near Taylor's Hot Dog Stand. He
attended Visalia High School but dropped out in his senior year to join Augie
Schultz and the Hayseed Band. He played multiple instruments over the years,
was artistic and at various times, worked as a ranch cowboy. During his years
as a musician he played with various local bands including
the Sleepy Heads,
Smokey Mountain Rangers, Hayseeds and Rolling Stones (no, not those Rolling
Stones). Sandy performed frequently at the KTKC radio station in Visalia. By
the way, Sandy entered the military service in 1939 and was discharged in 1943
with a full disability. He died in 1966 and his family has kept his
musical instruments. In this group photo, Sandy is
on the far left and the band is called the Smokey Mountain Rangers. The other
photo is Sandy working the microphone solo. Does anyone recognize any of the
other band members? Thanks Lee for sharing some of the story of your father.
The Waste of War – A Civil War Veteran Visalia Doctor
Native Visalia Carole Mathewson
(now of Payson, Arizona) has recently gone to press with a Civil War novel
based upon the lives of her great-grandparents who served in the Civil War. Dr.
Harley P. Mathewson, a graduate of Dartmouth Medical School, served as a Union
surgeon from the beginning of the war until several months after the war had
ended. His wife, Mary Sanborn Mathewson, a nurse, was beside him throughout the
war. In order to write story lines, Carole has researched all the
battles,
campaigns and hospital in which the duo served. Dr. Mathewson and his wife
joined his brother Arthur in Visalia in about 1893. He practiced medicine in
Visalia from 1893 until his death in 1901. He and his wife were interred in
Arlington National Cemetery. The writer's background includes many years as a
secretary (executive and legal) and a number of years as a newspaper
reporter/copy editor. The Waste of War
by Carole Emma Mathewson is available online through Amazon.com and in printed
form and as an e-book. In printed form the book sells for $17.99. The doctor's
shingle is shown here (circa 1897) on the Main Street side of the Elias Jacob
Building at Main and Church streets where he had his office.
2nd Floor Archaeology Reveals Hidden Sign
Some time back, Michelle Wiebe,
owner of Pacific Treasures in downtown Visalia, alerted me to an interesting
discovery she made on the second floor of her building at 219 W Main Street. The building appears to have been built before
1912, however, I cannot find its construction date. Over the years the front of the building has
been modified. At one time the second story had windows facing Main Street, but
they are now
covered with a façade. Since at least the 1940s, it has been known
as the Cross Building where Robert F. Cross had has real estate and insurance
office. By the mid 1950s the upstairs rooms were called the Cross Apartments.
At that time Lloyd F. Fletcher, a local architect, had his office on the second
floor. And his name could be seen painted on the window advertising his
services. While Michelle was looking in the vacant upstairs, she discovered the
window painted sign showing his name, now covered with the facade. This is what
she found with the partial name of Fletcher. It's not visible today from the
outside. Thanks, Michelle, for your attic archaeology.
John Bergman Discovers A Rare Mooney Grove Postcard
John Bergman recently found this
neat old postcard. The front shows a grove of oak trees and the caption says,
"An oak grove owned by the county, purchased for a park site, near
Visalia, Cal." The back says: Published by Newman Postcard Co., Los
Angeles and it says Made in Germany. The unused postcard gives no direct clue
as to where this grove was located, but
given
the fact that the land that is Mooney Grove Park was purchased by the
county in 1909, it really has to be Mooney Grove. The other park possibility is Cutler Park,
however the land that it is located on, was donated by the Cutler family to
become a park. The county did not purchase the land. Since the caption on the postcard
says "purchased," it leads me to believe the postcard is Mooney Grove
Park. Thanks John for sharing this
postcard – one I had never seen before.
Wunder Bar—A Wunderful Discovery
As everyone knows, Link's clothing
store in the old Sweet building downtown, has closed its doors and that part of
the Sweet building is going through a remodel. In the course of the
construction, Tom Link
noticed that the workers had unearthed a piece of early
Visalia history. The Link's store was pretty much on the exact location of the
Wunder Bar—a Visalia "watering hole" for many years. As you can see,
the entrance to the saloon/restaurant had Wunder Bar printed in tile on the
floor at the entrance. If only these tiles could talk. Thanks Tom for your good
eye for history.
Verfurth—A New One for Me
Recently I was looking in the
1926 Visalia Directory classified section when I spotted this picture. The name
Verfurth is not a local name that I am familiar with, so when I saw it, it
caught my attention. The building at one time housed the local Dodge
dealership. The structure still stands today, I believe as part of Kaweah Delta
on the southwest corner of Acequia and Locust streets. The unique 3-diamond
pattern at the top of the building clearly identifies it as the same old timer
that is there today. The more contemporary photo of the building included here
is one I took in 2009. Does anyone recognize the name Verfurth in Visalia
history?
***I was recently contacted and
asked about a pioneer who the inquirer says was born in Visalia in 1855. His
name was Jerome Frank Reno. Anyone know anything about him?
***For those interested in
history of the old and long- gone Visalia House, you can go to the February
2015 Lifestyle Magazine page 12 and
read about it. It can also be found on line at http://issuu.com/lifestylemagazine/docs/lifestyle_feb15_web
***In the last HH I featured a
photograph of an old school allegedly near Visalia. A few of you suggested it
might be Venice Hill School before the bell tower was added. I haven't been
able to confirm this, but if anyone can help in doing that, I'd appreciate it.
***Dennis Whistler, an architect
here in Visalia, is looking for an older photograph of the R. A. Mahoney brick
building, later the Mooney and O'Dell Ford dealership located at Center and
Garden streets. Anyone have a photograph to help Dennis?
Mrs. King, the woman hobo who was arrested
in Goshen, was arraigned in Justice Buckman's court yesterday morning and pleaded guilty. She was given a
floating sentence. She left on the evening train for Goshen. Visalia
Daily Morning Delta, November 18, 1893
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