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on photo for larger image
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.
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.
And we have a winner! Brent Nunes was the first to correctly
identify the last mystery spot as the top decoration section of the old Bank of
Italy building (now Bank of Sierra at Main and Church). Nice long distance
identification, Brent!
Here is the next one. Your clues are:
1) It was a business that oftentimes went by the initials
R.E.A.
2) Shipments of merchandise from this location generally
went by rail.
3) It was located at an intersection.
4) This national company was started in 1917 and went out of
business as a company in 1975.
What is this company name and where is the building?
Sally Saunders asked about the granite pillars at the
entrance to Cutler Park. Does anyone know anything about them? I am
convinced
they are original to the park and I would guess quarried at the Rocky Point
Granite Works on Rocky Hill east of Exeter. Any concrete (no pun intended)
information about them would be appreciated. By the way, the Cutler Park land
was donated in 1919 to the county by John Cutler Jr. as parklands in his
father's honor. The park was dedicated in 1921. Thanks for your question Sally,
but after looking at these pillars, I'm wondering, are they really granite?
Painting by Ralph
Homan Now at COS
On September 22, 2015, Richard Drath, along with his brother
Jim, organized an event involving a painting to be displayed at the College of
the Sequoias. The brothers had inherited the Ralph
Homan painting from their
parents and it just so happened to be an original oil painting of a local
Visalia scene. Because Ralph was a long time art instructor at COS, and because
the Drath's mom Helen had worked at the library at COS for quite some time,
they decided to donate the painting to COS. On September 22nd the
dedication event took place at the Learning Resource Center where the painting
is now on permanent display. Ralph Homan was invited and is the man on the left
in this photo, and Richard Drath is on the right. A nice honor for Ralph. Go by
and take a look. Thanks Richard and Jim!
Two Newspapers Merge
into One
J. C. Hickman, a Visalia
Times-Delta reporter in the 1960s who later became the managing editor of
the newspaper shared a replica newspaper from March 1, 1928. It was an important
newspaper in that it represented a historic time in Visalia newspaper history. In
this edition, the Visalia Times and the Visalia
Delta became one newspaper—the
Visalia Times-Delta. Morley Maddox, the owner of the Visalia Times and Charles Whitmore, the owner of the Delta shared equal ownership when the
two papers merged. So now if you're ever asked when did the Times-Delta begin publication, you can
say without question, it was March 1, 1928, nearly 90 years ago. Thanks, J. C. for
this interesting piece of history.
Dana Lubich recently brought something to my
attention—something I didn't realize. Many know that during World War II the
Visalia Airport was home to a military bomber base (part of
A Peak at a Fire Alarm
Box
Eagle eye J. M. Bragg spotted something in the Masonic Lodge photo in the August 2015 posting of Historic Happenings. It is something that I believe no one else noticed on the wooden electrical pole. In that photo you will see two white horizontal stripes on the pole and J. M. believes that between these two lines was
mounted a fire alarm box. I have included here a
close up of that electrical pole (sorry, it’s so blurry). Look closely and see
if you think J. M. is correct. If he is, that fire box which was similar to the
one shown here, is box #123 and is listed as mounted at Church and Center
streets. J. M. remembers riding his bicycle to George McCann School as a
youngster and feeling the urge to pull the alarm handle. Funny how sometimes
delinquent habits follow one even through adulthood, huh J. M. ?Eagle eye J. M. Bragg spotted something in the Masonic Lodge photo in the August 2015 posting of Historic Happenings. It is something that I believe no one else noticed on the wooden electrical pole. In that photo you will see two white horizontal stripes on the pole and J. M. believes that between these two lines was
A Newspaper First
Recently, J. C. Hickman shared another fascinating newspaper replica, this one of Visalia's first newspaper. On June 25, 1859, the first Visalia newspaper was published with the fancy name of Tulare County Record and Fresno Examiner. It proclaimed that it was a politically independent publication and a "journal for the people." The owner was Isaac Carpenter. The masthead was eye catching and allegedly represented a scene on Main Street in Visalia with a Butterfield Stagecoach being pulled by a four-horse team. Also in the image is a sign that says "246 miles to San Francisco." This newspaper gave Visalia the bragging rights for having the earliest newspaper in the Southern San Joaquin Valley. Thanks J.C. for sharing another nice historical tidbit.
Recently, J. C. Hickman shared another fascinating newspaper replica, this one of Visalia's first newspaper. On June 25, 1859, the first Visalia newspaper was published with the fancy name of Tulare County Record and Fresno Examiner. It proclaimed that it was a politically independent publication and a "journal for the people." The owner was Isaac Carpenter. The masthead was eye catching and allegedly represented a scene on Main Street in Visalia with a Butterfield Stagecoach being pulled by a four-horse team. Also in the image is a sign that says "246 miles to San Francisco." This newspaper gave Visalia the bragging rights for having the earliest newspaper in the Southern San Joaquin Valley. Thanks J.C. for sharing another nice historical tidbit.
**Lynne Brumit saw the Hong Kong restaurant menu in the last
HH and remembers as a young girl her father bringing home "yummy fried
rice, egg foo young, chow mein, wonton, and sweet and sour pork." Almost
makes your mouth water, doesn't it?
**If you would like to read about how the Visalia baseball
team nearly killed Baseball Hall of Famer Frank Chance, pick up a copy of
September 2015 Lifestyle Magazine.
The article begins on page 12. Otherwise you can go online and read it at http://www.issuu.com/lifestylemagazine/docs/lifestyle_sep15_web
Another First in Visalia…"It was on July 4, 1858 that
Mr. E. F. Warner received a consignment of fire crackers from Hornitos in
Mariposa County. The man holds the distinction of making the first fire cracker
noise in this city." Visalia Times, July
6, 1908
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