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The Story of Mineral King

by Louise Jackson

     Sometimes it takes more than an individual, organization, community, government agencies, or political and legal processes to preserve an important piece of our environment and human history. Sometimes it can take all of them.

  Even in 1863, when hunter Harry Parole discovered the pristine Mineral King Valley, the ravages of the Industrial Revolution and international commerce were beginning to show their effects across the nation. Still, it took decades for an awareness of mankind’s place in his environment to grow. By the 1930s conservation movements were forming throughout the world and Tulare County’s Mineral King Valley became a major landmark in the American conflict between commercial development and preservation of our mountain resources.

     By the end of World War II, the Mineral King Valley had experienced three quarters of a century of exploitation by stockmen, miners, recreationists, and lumber and power company interests. Its small communities of Cabin Cove, Silver City, and the old mining town of Beulah had survived the governance, agendas, and changing policies of several government agencies through constant adaptation and sometimes conflict. However, now the communities were in danger of extinction. Between 1945 and 1960, with the national economy and disposable wealth rapidly growing, both state and federal agencies were promoting increased commercial use of Sierra resources and the potential of a Mineral King Valley ski resort emerged.

     In 1946, Alf Engen, U.S. Olympic Ski Team coach, declared the valley to be the best ski country in the United States. A year later a winter survey team concurred with that assessment and in 1948 the Sierra Club, along with several other organizations, local communities and businesses, publicly backed a proposal for its recreational development. In response, the Sequoia National Forest issued a prospectus for a small winter sports complex, but no qualified bids were received. The narrow, winding dirt road into the valley proved too great a deterrent.

     Still, the dream continued. Several moneyed interests and ski enthusiasts including Luggi Foeger, Walt Disney, and Robert Brandt and his wife, actress Janet Leigh, visited the valley. The Brandts requested a re-opening of bids and in February of 1965 Sequoia National Forest issued a new prospectus for a huge multi-million dollar sports complex. This time, the agency received six bids, four of them far exceeding the prospectus requirements. It seemed the greatest ski area in the United States, or perhaps the world, was about to be born.

     At the same time, the national environmental movement was growing. In 1962 Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring was published. In 1963 and 1964 the first Clean Air Act and the Wilderness Preservation Act were passed. When the scope of the Mineral King project was publicized, the proposed “rape” of such a pristine Sierra valley became a national issue.

     In March of 1965, the Sierra Club once again released a statement backing the concept of a Mineral King ski area, but two months later its members voted to oppose it. That summer the Mineral King community formed the Mineral King District Association to resist planned destruction of its three cabin enclaves. When Disney’s WED Corporation won the bid in December, the Sierra Club led a fight by the District Association and several other organizations to stop the immense $35 million development. In 1966 the National Park Service became involved when it held a hearing on wilderness designation along its portion of the Mineral King Road.

     In spite of the increasing opposition, the Forest Service and Disney Corporation forged ahead. By 1968, with several years of research, development of a master plan, and state funding lined up for an all-season road, the resort appeared to be an accomplished fact. However, the next year the Sierra Club won an injunction against the building and maintenance of the planned all-season highway and a ten-year journey through the nation’s district and federal court system began. Finally, the lawsuit reached the Supreme Court of the United States.

     On April 19, 1972, the Supreme Court, by a vote of four to three, rendered its decision. The Sierra Club could not show that the club itself would suffer economic or other injury from development of the valley so it lacked standing to sue.

     It was a landmark decision. Not because it seemed big business interests had won, but because of the dissenting opinion of Justice William O. Douglas, which asserted that environmental well-being is as important as economic well-being and that entities as well as individuals may sue if they can show direct cause for harm. That opinion would help guide and motivate the forces for conservation throughout the nation and the world for years to come.

     Planning resumed for the Disney resort, but on a smaller scale. At the same time, another long-contemplated solution to protect Mineral King’s historic and natural character took shape. California Congressman Phillip Burton was helping to craft an “omnibus” bill redefining the management of nearly one hundred national scenic areas, trails and rivers. In conjunction, California Congressman John Krebs also wrote a bill to include Mineral King’s transfer to Sequoia National Park in the omnibus bill and President Jimmy Carter agreed to support it. On October 12, 1978, the bill passed. Once again, Mineral King faced the challenge of management by another agency and, while no ski resort could be built, the new law still called for eventual termination of the cabin communities.

     In 1982, Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks completed a cultural resources plan in which the 113-year-old Mineral King cabin community was not included. Also, as cabin owners of record began to die, the 1978 legal mandate to remove those cabins became reality, and community member Ora Kay Peterson became alarmed. In the summer of 1986 she invited a few other concerned people to her cabin and the Mineral King Preservation Society was born. Its key goal was to preserve mankind’s historic role in his natural surroundings, specifically in the Mineral King Valley.

     For seventeen years, Ora Kay led a comprehensive program of surveying, mapping, and recording historic sites; setting up a repository and display for historic writings, photos, and artifacts; restoring the last remaining original resort cabin; funding a written history of the valley; and most critical, working toward listing the historic district on the National Register of Historic Places.

     The state and national process of gaining National Register listing dragged through the next eleven years. Finally, while in the midst of creating a new park general management plan, Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks officials decided to proceed with their own nomination. Six more years passed before National Register listing was at last achieved, but there was still one caveat. The Mineral King Road Cultural Landscape District would preserve the historic nature of the road and communities, but the law still said the cabins could be removed.

     It required one final effort to preserve the historic valley. This time it was the Mineral King District Association that took the lead. Members John Crowe and Kathy Hath spearheaded the effort with a San Francisco environmental law attorney, a congressional lobbyist, and young California Congressman Devin Nunes. Nunes wrote a bill amending the 1978 legislation to grant the Mineral King summer homeowners and their “heirs, successors and assigns” the right to continue ownership in perpetuity of their privately owned cabins on lands leased from the park. President George W. Bush signed the bill into law on December 8, 2004, and the Mineral King communities continued their time-honored role as conservators of the Mineral King Valley’s unique history.

     Today the National Park Service, Mineral King Preservation Society, and Mineral King District Association work together to assure the historic integrity of the valley’s communities and the natural resources surrounding them.

June, 2013




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Quotes & More Photos:

“My father considered a walk among the mountains as the equivalent of churchgoing.” ​— Aldous Huxley

“Mineral King is doubtless like other wonders of the Sierra Nevada. . . . Those who hike it, fish it, hunt it, camp in it, or visit merely to sit in solitude and wonderment are legitimate spokesmen for it, whether they be few or many. Those who have that intimate relation with the inanimate object about to be injured, polluted, or otherwise despoiled are its legitimate spokesmen.” —U.S. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas.

“By this time most conscious people realize the incredibly delicate inter-relationships of the earth and its inhabitants. Like the human body, any abuse in any one part affects the whole system . . . [Therefore] we, the real owners of the public land, parks and forests, should not hesitate to help formulate general plans that affect the air, water and land by which we live.” ​—Mineral King Planning Committee, an organization of cabin owners, 1972.

“There are no better stewards of the environment than those who live in an area that the federal government is seeking to protect.” ​— Jo Findaro, legislative advocate.

“Before these priceless bits of Americana (such as a valley, an alpine meadow, a river, or a lake) are forever lost or are so transformed as to be reduced to the eventual rubble of our urban environment, the voice of the existing beneficiaries of these environmental wonders should be heard.” —U.S. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas.

​”A true conservative is a man who knows that the world is not given by his fathers, but borrowed from his children.” ​—John James Audubon

“Eventually, all things merge into one, and a river runs through it.” — Norman McLean

“It is here, in our lives, that we must come to know our essential connection to the wilder earth, because it is here, in the activity of our daily lives, that we most surely affect this earth, for good or ill.” ​— Lyanda Lynn Haupt

“Our public lands are lands held in trust for all of us. A certain responsibility goes with that, for the government, for the public at large, and for the people of the region. As for stewardship, or trust, we can see that the whole world is in the trust of humans now, whether we want this responsibility or not. The air and waters, the rivers, the deer and owls, the genetic health of all life are in our trust.” — Gary Snyder


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

Address: Mineral King, Sequoia National Park

Location Coordinates:

WGS84 36° 16′ 13.08″ N, 118° 21′ 14.76″ W

36.2703, -118.3541

UTM 11S 378373 4014780

From Visalia, take Hwy 198 east into Three Rivers to the sign for Sequoia National Park and Mineral King; turn right onto Mineral King Road. Stay left on Mineral King Road at the junction with Hammond Road. There is an NPS self-service fee station at Lookout Point about 12-13 miles up the road. The road is steep, narrow, and winding for 25 miles; drive cautiously and yield to oncoming traffic. 

Note: Mineral King road is closed below Lookout Point during the winter. Road is open all the way to Mineral King Valley usually Memorial Day to mid-October depending on weather. Wide vehicles, RVs and trailers are not recommended. Call 559-565-3341, (then press 1, 1, 1) for road status and advisories.


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Foothills, Mountains, Sequoia National Park, historical and cultural landscape
Activities: backpacking, birding, botanizing, camping (at Atwell Mill and Cold Springs), educational activities (historic structures, small visitor center/ranger station with displays, signage, interpretive walks and talks), hiking, photography, picnicking, fishing (license required) scenic views, wildflower and wildlife viewing; food and lodging available at Silver City store and resort
Open: Sequoia National Park is always open unless closed due to weather or emergency conditions (fee to enter National Park); road from Three Rivers to Mineral King is steep, narrow, and winding for 25 miles; drive cautiously and yield to oncoming traffic. Note: road is closed in winter.
Site Stewards: Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks (SEKI), 559-565-3341; Mineral King Ranger Station (open only in summer), 559-565-3768; SEKI Wilderness Office, 559-565-3766; Mineral King District Association, Mineral King Preservation Society
Opportunities for Involvement: donate, volunteer; Sequoia Parks Conservancy
Links:
Books: 1) Mineral King: The Story Of Beulah, by Louise A. Jackson, (Sequoia Natural History Association, 2006)
2) Challenge of the Big Trees: The Updated History of Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, by William C. Tweed and Lary M. Dilsaver (George F. Thompson Publishing; Revised edition 2016)
3) Mineral King:Public Concern With Government Policy, by John L. Harper (Pacifica Publishing, 1982)

 

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The Story of Lewis Hill Preserve

by Paul Hurley

     Two elusive plants and the love for flowers of a rancher/naturalist were the factors in a formula that conserved 110 acres of Lewis Hill as a nature preserve in the Sierra Nevada foothills of Tulare County. Cole Hawkins is the rancher, and his family once owned 600 acres of Lewis Hill. From his childhood fascination with plants, through his developing interest in conservation and persistence in preserving a site he loved, Hawkins worked with many others to protect what he saw as miracles of nature.

     Set in rocky foothills north of Porterville, Lewis Hill is an unprepossessing, grassy hump that rises to 1,028 feet in the middle of grazing country. Arid and speckled with random outcroppings of rock, it is typical of foothills grassland and blue oak habitat, although treeless. Each spring the hill supports an enticing mix of wildflowers: California poppy, wild hyacinth, miner’s lettuce, blue dicks, fiddleneck, popcorn flower, milk thistle, and cluster lily among them.

     Two flowers are imperiled: the San Joaquin adobe sunburst (Pseudobahia peirsonii, classified as endangered) and the striped adobe lily (Fritillaria striata, classified as threatened). The common names of both plants indicate they grow only in rocky, clay-based soil called adobe, Lewis Hill is one of the few places on Earth with the appropriate soil and climate for these species to thrive. They flower on Lewis Hill briefly from mid-January into early spring, and disappear the rest of the year. In this ephemeral botanical environment, Cole Hawkins fell in love.

    I‘ve always had a real interest in plants and animals,” Hawkins said. “I think I was born with it. I was just amazed by plants.” Hawkins grew up in citrus orchards in Southern California. His family bought the Beatty Ranch, which included much of Lewis Hill in Tulare County, in 1953, when Cole was three years old. His father named it Hermosa Tierra, “Beautiful Land.” They grew citrus and olives and ranged cattle on about 600 acres bisected by Plano Road and rising from the base to the peak of Lewis Hill.

     From spending his early years there off and on, Hawkins became enchanted with the place. At first he was more taken with the animals than the plants – bobcats, coyotes, squirrels, the occasional mountain lion, deer, fox, and striped and spotted skunks. But gradually he started noticing the plants, too, especially the bright indigo cluster lilies. “One of my milestones of the year was when the first brodiaea would bloom,” he said. “And brodiaea is a beautiful small blue lily. I was always excited when that happened.”

     Hawkins started working on the ranch in 1969, but took time off to pursue his college degree. Although he enjoyed the natural wonders of the property, the purpose of the farm was to raise food. The focus on the ranch was to suppress plants that weren’t citrus and olives, Hawkins said. “My uncle was afraid they were competing with the trees for water and nutrients.”

     They knew that grazing cattle on the ranch would suppress the wild oats, an introduced species that competed with the native plants. Hawkins said his interest in managing the land and encouraging the native plants started with his experiments in selective grazing. And that led to the conservation of Lewis Hill.

     Hawkins worked toward a Master’s degree in biology at California State University, Fresno while he nurtured his interests in botany. He would roam the fields of Lewis Hill, armed with a Munz guide to California plants, cataloging the various species he found.

     He decided he needed to learn more about what was on his ranch, so he asked for help from biologist Dave Chesmore and botanist Howard Latimer at Fresno State. He conferred with Bob Barnes of the Tulare County Audubon Society and biologist Rob Hansen. He called on another local farmer, Jack Zaninovich, who was active in the California Native Plant Society. They eventually determined that Lewis Hill had two threatened or endangered species, the striped adobe lily and the San Joaquin adobe sunburst.

     Hawkins began managing the ranch when his uncle retired in 1978. A few years later, he met a self-described “city girl,” a musician from Detroit named Priscilla Haapa. Priscilla moved to Porterville in 1972, where her daughter, Shanda Lowery, was born. Priscilla played principal cello in the Tulare County Symphony, taught private cello students, and started the string instrument program in the Porterville schools in 1973. She met Cole Hawkins at an Audubon Society meeting in 1981. He was looking for a volunteer for his water conservation booth at the Porterville Fair.

    I was the only one who signed up for helping him at this booth,” Priscilla said. “So that was the start of us realizing how much we really had in common. “About six months after that, I was going to leave Porterville, because I thought, ‘Oh, this is just too small of a town and all that.’ But by then I had already realized that Cole and I had something very special going.” Cole and Priscilla married in 1982. Two years later they moved into a house they built on Lewis Hill on 25 acres of ranch property the Hawkins family gave them.

     They both knew they wanted to keep Lewis Hill just as it was. They reveled in their views of wildlife, sweeping vistas, and delicate flowers. The fact that some were threatened or endangered was an asset. They would share strategies to preserve the place, talk to dozens of other people, and explore their options. Family events forced their hand.

     Hawkins’ mother, who owned a majority of the ranch, died in 1989, and the Hawkins family made plans to sell the property. Cole Hawkins was eager to pursue a Ph.D. in wildlife and fisheries science, and Priscilla wanted a place where she would play her cello and teach. They moved to Davis in 1991.

     Meanwhile, they continued their plans to preserve some of Lewis Hill. His brothers and sister donated 90 acres to the project, and Hawkins donated 20 of his 25 acres. Cole gives Priscilla the credit for coming up with the idea of a conservation easement for the property. They approached various organizations that could take the land in trust. For a time, the Nature Conservancy was interested, but the project eventually wasn’t big enough for them.

     Finally, in 1994, the family donated 110 acres to the Kern River Research Center, which Bob Barnes had helped to establish. Six years later, Lewis Hill was acquired by the Tule Oaks Land Trust, which has become part of the Sequoia Riverlands Trust (SRT). Each spring, SRT conducts a guided wildflower walk on Lewis Hill. Other times the property is open to groups for study and research only by arrangement with SRT.

     Cole and Priscilla Hawkins still return to visit Lewis Hill and Hermosa Tierra. The farmer who bought the ranch has kept it in citrus production, allaying the Hawkines’ fears that the property would be developed. “We just loved Lewis Hill and we wanted to keep it for other people to be able to enjoy it the way that we did.”

     Lewis Hill remains a preserve for the unique natural habitat of the Southern San Joaquin Valley and Sierra Nevada foothills, just the way Cole and Priscillla Hawkins wanted it to be.

February, 2016



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Quotes & More Photos:

“Join us for a Saturday stroll and wildflower immersion experience at Lewis Hill Preserve. We will be taking a guided tour of wildflowers including the rare striped adobe lily . . . . Bring your friends, bring your family!” — Sequoia Riverlands Trust

“Here there are two very rare flowers including the striped adobe lily (Fritillaria striata). This flower only grows on a few scattered hills in the area and nowhere else on earth. Why? Because it prefers a certain type of soil that comes from a certain type of rock. [T]he Sierra Nevada . . .  in its central and southern portions is mostly granite. . . Lewis Hill is made instead of a mix of dark volcanic and metamorphic rocks. And wherever this rare rock type occurs in this part of the world you may find this rare lily growing on it in late February and early March.” — Tarol

“Fritillaria striata produces an erect stem 25 to 40 centimeters tall and bearing pairs of long oval-shaped leaves 6 to 7 centimeters long. The nodding flower is a bell-shaped fragrant bloom with six light pink petals each striped with darker pink. The tips roll back. In the darker center of the flower is a greenish-yellow nectary surrounded by yellow anthers.” — iNaturalist.org

“I can show you how beautiful the lilies are by showing you a photograph, but oh how I wish I could let you get a whiff of them! They smell heavenly! They are closely related to the leopard lilies that grow higher in the mountains and like them exhibit one of the best wildflower smells that I have ever smelled. So be sure if you ever get a chance to meet this flower to get on your hands and knees and smell them, too.” — Tarol

“Along with the adobe lilies we saw blue dicks . . ., lomatium, poppies, wild onion, fiddlenecks, popcorn flower, soaproot, and a lone rare white shooting star. And some very cool rock outcroppings with very colorful lichen. [T]he views of the Sierra Nevada were drop dead gorgeous . . . .” — Tarol

“The main threat to the [striped adobe lily] plant is cattle grazing, wild pigs, and invasive species of grasses. Fritillaria striata is listed by the State of California as a Threatened species, and is on the California Native Plant Society Inventory of Rare and Endangered Plants of California, listed as Seriously Endangered in California.” — iNaturalist.org

“San Joaquin adobe sunburst is a member of the Asteraceae family. It is an erect annual herb about 1 to 6 decimeters (4-18 in.) tall, loosely covered with white, wooly hairs. Its alternate leaves are twice divided into smaller divisions (bipinnatifid), triangular in outline, and 2 to 6 centimeters (1 to 3 in.) long. Flower heads, which appear in March or April, are solitary at the ends of the branches. The ray flowers are bright yellow and equal in number to the subfloral bracts. They are about 3 millimeters (0.1 in.) long with many disk flowers. The dry fruits, called achenes, are black.” — U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

“Conversion of natural habitat to residential development is the primary threat to San Joaquin adobe sunburst. In addition, road maintenance projects, recreational activities, competition from nonnative plants, agricultural land development, incompatible grazing practices, a flood control project, transmission line maintenance and other human impacts also may threaten the species.” — U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

“There are a lot of people who take really good care of their lands. And it would be really nice if more people would become aware of conservation easements and land trusts and preserve the habitats that these plants and animals grow in.” — Cole Hawkins


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

Note: Usually open only one day per year, as scheduled by Sequoia Riverlands Trust. Please do not visit the Preserve without express permission from SRT and do not trespass on the private land surrounding the Preserve.

From Visalia, take Hwy 198 east to Hwy 65 south toward Porterville. Exit onto Henderson going east toward Plano Road.  Take Plano Road south to the crest of the first hill. Lewis Hill is on the west side of the road.

(Alternatively, continue south on Hwy 65 and exit east on Hwy 190 into Porterville.  Exit Hwy 190 north onto Plano Road, about one-and-a-half miles east of Highway 65. Drive north on Plano Road about four miles to the crest of the first hill. Lewis Hill is on the west side of the road.)


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Foothills, just north of Porterville; peak elevation 1028′; 110 acres; rare wildflowers; great views
Activities: open to the public for special tours and events only (please contact SRT to arrange); annual guided wildflower walk with Sequoia Riverlands Trust (suggested donation $15; $10 for SRT members), usually in February; dogs are not allowed on this preserve
Open: usually only once each year, in the spring, usually in February; check with Sequoia Riverlands Trust
Site Steward: Sequoia Riverlands Trust, 559-738-0211
Opportunities: donate, volunteer
Links:

 

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The Story of the Kaweah Oaks Preserve

by Louise Jackson

     As far as the eye could see, there were oak trees — over four hundred square miles of woodlands stretching westward from the Sierra Nevada foothills to the vast Tulare Lake. When the first Spanish and American explorers came into the southern San Joaquin Valley almost two hundred years ago, they struggled for days through a maze of rivers, wetlands, and towering trees.

     The riparian landscape of the Kaweah River delta was especially formidable with thickets of willows, tangled wild grape vines, elderberries, and blackberries. It was so marshy, particularly during the annual winter flood season, that the local Yokuts people could not live in it. They fished in its ponds and streams, hunted its great variety of wildlife, and harvested its abundance of plants and acorns, but they located their villages on higher, drier ground.

     Then the European and American settlers arrived. They created the town of Visalia on the flood plain of the Kaweah River and began to farm the area. They cleared the surrounding land of oak trees so they could grow grain crops, orchards, and vineyards, and also use the oaks for firewood. Decade after decade, farmers channeled the river and streams into ditches and canals until only one large area of wetlands to the east of Visalia survived. “The swamp” flooded each winter and its water table was too high for successful farming. However, even there the land began to dry, especially after Terminus Dam was completed in 1962 to control the Kaweah River’s flooding.

     In the mid 1900s, the Davis family of Woodlake gained title to this land and for three generations grazed cattle in its meadows. In 1982, young Myrtle Davis Franklin inherited the 324-acre property. It was no longer a swampland and she decided she wanted to clear it and turn it into a walnut grove. On friends’ recommendations, Myrtle sought the advice of the University of California’s Tulare County Farm Advisor, Alan George. Surveying the land, Alan found that the water table was still only about eight feet below the surface. He advised Myrtle that her property was suitable only for high-maintenance field crops.

     Alan then asked Myrtle if she might consider preserving the land. He and his friend, educator Max Cochran, had discussed the fact that the area was one of the few Valley Oak woodlands still in its near-natural state, and they felt it should be preserved. Nevertheless, Myrtle wanted to pursue farming and declined Alan’s suggestion. Later, however, she reconsidered. Alan promptly contacted Jack Zaninovich of Delano, a farmer and also a Director of the Nature Conservancy. Jack referred Alan to Steve McCormick, chairman of one of the Conservancy’s acquisition projects. Steve hurried down to inspect the acreage and immediately knew it was prime conservation land.

     A few months later, after extensive negotiations, the Nature Conservancy bought the land for $1,010,000, about $3,000 an acre. In a drive organized by Alan George, the people of Tulare and Kings Counties raised over $100,000 through community donations to help The Nature Conservancy pay for the 324-acre oak woodland.

     In 1998, The Nature Conservancy turned over control of the preserve to the newly formed Four Creeks Land Trust, made up of local volunteers who had been successfully managing it for several years. (Four Creeks merged with two other local land trusts in 2003 to become today’s Sequoia Riverlands Trust.)

     Now thousands of visitors enjoy Kaweah Oaks Preserve every year. Education is a major emphasis of activities at the preserve, highlighted by school tours, guided public walks on its trails, interpretive materials, and historical information. As Alan George tells us, if we could see “all the young people that go out to Kaweah Oaks to enjoy the beauty of this area and to imagine what the area was like before the white man came in,” we would fully understand the preserve’s importance.

     More than 400 people attended the dedication of the Preserve on May 15, 1983. Many of them had worked hard to contribute to the success of one of the most unique preserves in our nation. However, none of them could feel the joy that Myrtle Davis Franklin felt. “You don’t know what this means to me,” she exclaimed to Alan George that day. “This is one of the most exciting things I’ve done in my life.”

                                                                                                                                                                          October, 2012

     Note: Now read Alan George’s first- person account of the origins of the Kaweah Oaks Preserve: “A Lucky Day in the Office.”

 



Slideshow:


Quotes & More Photos:

Alan George, Tulare County’s “Mr. Oak”

“And the world cannot be discovered by a journey of miles, no matter how long, but only by a spiritual journey, a journey of one inch, very arduous and humbling and joyful, by which we arrive at the ground at our feet, and learn to be at home.” — Wendell Berry

“Around me the trees stir in their leaves, and call out, ‘Stay awhile.’ The light flows from their branches. And they call again, ‘It’s simple,’ they say, ‘and you, too, have come into the world to do this, to go easy, to be filled with light, and to shine.'” — Mary Oliver

“In a place where recorded history is so short and the people so transient, the few remaining valley oak trees stand out with their deep-rooted pasts. Some are six hundred years old. Their trunks, which reach diameters of nine feet, are strong enough, considering the sail effect of their large canopies, to withstand the spring winds that sweep across the valley. The trees are huge and many-limbed in a graceful, drooping sort of way.” — Philip L. Fradkin

“As for myself, I swung the door open. And there was the wordless, singing world. And I ran for my life.” — Mary Oliver


Maps & Directions*:

Kaweah Oaks Preserve Address: 29979 Road 182, Exeter, CA 93221

Latitude/Longitude:

N36° 19.9403’/W119° 9.977′

36.332338, -119.166283

 

From Visalia, go east on Hwy 198 about 7 miles to Road 182; go north on Road 182 about ½ mile to Kaweah Oaks Preserve parking lot on the west (left) side of the road.

 

*To visit the Alan George Grove at Seven Oaks Park: from Visalia, take Hwy 198 east to S. Ben Maddox Way. Go north on Ben Maddox to E. Mineral King Ave., west on E. Mineral King Ave. to S. Burke Street. Go south across 198 to E. Noble Ave. Go east on E. Noble Ave. to S. Edison St. Go south on S. Edison St. to Seven Oaks Park at 942 S. Edison St. (on the east side of the street). The Park also features a children’s play area, covered picnic tables, and a disc golf course.

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Valley, riparian, Valley oak woodlands
Activities: birdwatching, botanizing, dog walking (on a 6′ leash; scoop poop), educational activities, hiking, photography, picnicking, special events
Open: Winter: 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m., Summer: 8:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m., Spring/Fall: 8:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.; free admission (donations accepted)
Site Steward: Sequoia Riverlands Trust (SRT), 559-738-0211
Opportunities: donate, volunteer
Links:

Click on photos for more information.

A Trip to the Great Canyon of the Kings

by Laurie Schwaller

     The southern part of Kings Canyon National Park is in Tulare County, including readily-accessible sequoia groves, such as the southern part of General Grant Grove, the Redwood Meadow Grove, and the Buena Vista Grove. Take the trail to the top of Buena Vista Peak, an easy day hike, for terrific views.

     For a wonderful backcountry experience, hike from the Lodgepole Visitor Center area in Sequoia National Park into the spectacular Sequoia Kings Canyon Wilderness section of Kings Canyon National Park, where peaks, meadows, lakes, streams, and many beautiful trails await you. (You can also hike out of Wolverton and over the Tablelands into this wilderness portion of Kings Canyon National Park.)

     However, if you’re here during the three seasons when the road to it is open, you must see also the great canyon of the Kings River for which Kings Canyon National Park was named, and to do that, you must leave Tulare County (although that tremendous canyon was within our county, until boundary changes in the 1870s put it into Fresno County). From the Kings Canyon Visitor Center in Grant Grove Village (in Tulare County), take Highway 180 north, cross the county line, and drive through the northern section of Giant Sequoia National Monument (where you’ll glimpse the effects of the logging over 100 years ago in the sequoia groves that impelled the campaigns to save these giants).

     After winding steeply down the flanks of the vast canyon (on a good, paved 2-lane road with many curves), stop for sensational views of the Wild and Scenic Kings River at Junction Vista and again at Horseshoe Bend, just before you finally reach the level of the river, where you can tour beautiful Boyden Cavern (guided tours only; fee).

     Now follow the tree-lined Kings River up-canyon and stop to visit marvelous Grizzly Falls, just a few steps from the roadside picnic tables.

     Soon after that, you’ll re-enter Kings Canyon National Park, with several campground options, a lodge, a restaurant, a ranger station, a riding and packing stable, picnic areas, abundant wildlife, trails for people of all abilities and inclinations, ranger programs, and some of the most sensational scenery in the nation.

     John Muir called Kings Canyon “another Yosemite,” and the forests, flowers, meadows, rivers, creeks, waterfalls, lakes, cliffs, and peaks calling you to explore and enjoy them make spending at least one night, and preferably several, in this richly rewarding environment a must.

     Be sure to take the short walk (paved trail) to Roaring River Falls, the easy walk along the river at Zumwalt Meadows, and the quick walk to the huge rock in the river where John Muir spoke. The trails on the canyon floor are almost flat, and you’re sure to see wildlife along them.

     When other commitments force you to leave this gigantically grand and yet invitingly intimate canyon, there’s only one road out: take Highway 180 back to Grant Grove and be amazed all over again by the views going the other way.

May, 2014


Susan Thew and Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks:

“Susan Priscilla Thew[‘s] . . . enthusiasm and energy left a lasting impact on Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks. . . . [In 1923] Thew [resident of Exeter] hoped to capture a still untouched landscape in images and words that would make clear the need for its preservation. Little did Thew know that her work would succeed in nearly tripling the park’s acreage . . . .” — National Park Service/Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks

“She spent several summers traversing some of the most rugged terrain in the continental United States . . . photographing the landscape in hopes of conveying . . . its beauty.” — National Park Service/Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks

“With these images, the largest and most complete photographic record of the region to date, Thew produced a publication for distribution to members of Congress promoting the park idea. . . .” — NPS/Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks

“Shall we place under the supervision of the National Park Service for Federal protection a distinctive scenic area, whose greatest value to you – the people – is for the advancement of science in various forms, for the protection of watersheds, the perpetuation of the oldest living family of trees, the preservation of wild life, and as an incomparable wilderness playground.” – – Susan P. Thew

“This is an appeal to you to help save for posterity one of the most splendid portions of the High Sierras, the wild country to the north, northeast, and east of the present Sequoia National Park, by expanding this park to larger boundaries.” – – Susan P. Thew

“After passage of the bill, the director of the National Park Service sent a telegram to Susan in recognition of her efforts. . . . her persuasiveness and ardor were undoubtedly the deciding factor in the push for park expansion.” — NPS/Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks

“During the campaign to create Kings Canyon National Park in 1940, Thew’s approach was used again. Photographer Ansel Adams created a portfolio of stunning images for distribution among members of Congress and, like Thew, his efforts contributed to success in passing an expansion bill.” — NPS/Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks

“If you are weary with the battle, either of business or the greater game of life, and would like to find your way back to sound nerves and a new interest in life, I know of no better place than the wild loveliness of some chosen spot in the High Sierra in which, when you have lost your physical self, you have found your mental and spiritual re-awakening.” — Susan P. Thew (1920s)

“In 1918, Susan Thew discovered something she loved and devoted all her efforts to making a change. She not only found a new source of personal energy in the parks, she ensured that generations to come would have the same opportunity.” — NPS/Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks

“To honor her efforts on behalf of Sequoia National Park and her love of the High Sierra, in 2023 the newly-renovated theater inside the parks’ Lodgepole Visitor Center was dedicated as the Susan Thew Wilderness Theater.” — National Park Service/Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

Latitude/Longitude:

36°47′27″N 118°40′13″W

From the Kings Canyon Visitor Center in Grant Grove Village in Kings Canyon National Park, take Highway 180 north down into Kings Canyon, the Cedar Grove area, and Road’s End (Kanawyers Loop).

 

Click on photos for more information.

The Story of the Kaweah Post Office
Kaweah, CA 93237

by Shirley Kirkpatrick

     For more than 120 years, the tiny Kaweah Post Office has served the folks on the north fork of the Kaweah River. A rustic wooden cabin, just 10 feet by 12 feet, it has withstood time and the elements to carry out its mission.

     It has also withstood periodic challenges to its very existence. Many times the U.S. Postal Service has pursued closure and each time loyal supporters from far and near have defended this historical gem. It has become more than a post office; it is a gathering place, a vestige of the community’s idealistic roots and a touchstone to history.

     The building is tangible evidence of the once-famous Kaweah Cooperative Colony – an effort to form a Utopian community that garnered international attention but only lasted from 1886 to 1892. The post office was first established in 1890 in a tent at Advance, the name chosen as the townsite of the Kaweah colonists. In 1890 the office was moved a short distance away and the name changed to the Kaweah Post Office.

     When the cooperative dream failed, many colonists stayed in the area. They kept the postal connection, moving the location several times to suit their needs.

     As the area became more populated, the post office outgrew this portable system. In 1910, local ranchers pitched in $2.50 each, along with their labor, to build the sturdy little redwood building in use today.

     For awhile, it sat at Bartlett’s Dairy on North Fork Drive, the road constructed by the Kaweah Colonists to reach the higher elevations for their planned lumbering business. Tourists used it as well, since it served as the entrance to Sequoia National Park until a new road on the Kaweah’s Middle Fork was built in the 1930s.

     In 1926, Ida Purdy, whose family were colonists, was appointed postmistress of the Kaweah Post Office. Since she was also the Kaweah Branch librarian and the library was in her home, she asked that the post office be moved there too. No problem. Neighbors put the building onto logs and rolled it down North Fork road about 800 feet to where it remains firmly planted under a towering oak tree to this day – still serving as a community gathering spot where box holders share greetings and news as they gather their daily mail.

     Often called quaint and picturesque, on October 24, 1948, the Kaweah Post Office had its historical status officially recognized by the California Centennial Commission and the Tulare County Historical Society. A special cachet was designed by a local artist for the occasion and 4,000 letters from far and near were posted that day.

     The operating post office has always gone with the land it sits on. Still, it came as a surprise to Kathleen McCleary when she bought her 32-acre ranch in 1999 and was told that she also owned and was responsible for the structure. She has taken that responsibility seriously.

     And, in the cooperative spirit of the early colonists, a whole host of other people took it seriously every time closure threat was imminent, especially in 1953 and 1975.

     The 2010 closure threat came as residents were gearing up for the building’s 100th birthday celebration. School children painted a large “Save the Kaweah Post Office” banner; a special cachet cancellation was welcomed by stamp collectors from around the world; the birthday party featured food and craft booths and music and, as Kathleen put it, “people came in droves.” Beyond public support, the event generated some income – enough to trim the big oak tree for the safety of the building and its patrons.

     The latest appeal for the endangered little building was made as recently as March, 2013. In a letter to the editor of The Kaweah Commonwealth, Kathleen urged more people to sign up as box holders to create a larger revenue stream. The office is now staffed by a volunteer who puts up the mail daily for the 50 box holders and is “open” for counter work one hour a day on weekdays.

     Knowing we cannot always count on tourist appeal and historical nostalgia to convince the government to continue service at the small post office, Kathleen worries about what might become of it when she’s gone. She and others are beginning to research how a permanent land easement could be placed on the property on which the building sits. “It would be nice to preclude somebody from developing the land in a different way. My dream would be to have the post office fully operational again, with a paid postmistress,” says McCleary.

     Pipe dream? Who knows. As we’ve seen before, dreams do come true in Kaweah country.                                               

                                                                                                                                                                                                 September, 2013                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

Update: In 2021, Kathleen McCleary sold the parcel containing the Kaweah Post Office to her neighbors Ramon and Maria Rodarte, who have vowed to maintain it in its vintage condition and treasure it in honor of their grandchildren and all the generations to come. Mail is still picked up at the post office, but, alas, it can no longer be postmarked “Kaweah.”



Slideshow:


Quotes & More Photos:

“When I came to Three Rivers and Tulare County, I immediately loved the feeling of history. You had ranchers who had been here all their lives, and you just had that feeling. And so I adopted that. I loved that feeling of you belonging.” — Kathleen McCleary

“When I became the owner of this little bit of history, that was my chance to actually participate and feel like I really, really belonged to a place. And it had a vibrant history, a socialist, Utopian, colony history. That’s how it got started.” — Kathleen McCleary

“One of our major projects for the past year or so has been the registration of points of historical interest. The first such marker under this program will be placed at Kaweah Post Office later this month. The Centennials Commission furnishes the bronze tablet and the Society has undertaken to erect the monuments and place the markers.” – Tulare County Historical Society “Bulletin No. 1,” October, 1948

“People come from all over the world. It’s on an A to Z list for the Harley Davidson motorcycle group. There’s a little hidden box around the corner for a group of stampers. They have their own little stamps and they put their name in this book, and stamp with the Kaweah stamp, saying they’ve found this spot. It’s a spot on people’s wish lists, and bucket lists.” — Kathleen McCleary

“Our school children come. They’ve had watercolor classes here. One artist had them painting little birdhouses to look like the Kaweah Post Office. A woman who teaches photography in Visalia has brought her children here, for photo lessons on a field trip.” — Kathleen McCleary

“And every day, people come to get their mail. It’s a social experience. I’ve watched some of these people getting older along with the building. And then there’s some young families that have started to get boxes. . . . a new group coming up that still wants to get mail in this little tiny community.” — Kathleen McCleary

“If you’re not financially productive, the business commercial world sometimes doesn’t see any reason for your existence. But people look at this little building and they say, ‘Oh, yes, but you have to keep this one going.'” — Kathleen McCleary


Maps & Directions:

 

From Visalia, head east on Hwy 198 into Three Rivers. Turn north onto North Fork Drive, cross the river, drive about 3 miles up North Fork, and the post office and its historic marker will be on your left.

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Foothills
Activities: history, photography, picnicking, scenic drive; 100 years old May 19, 2010; was third? smallest and oldest continuously operating P.O. in U.S.
Open: The inside of the building is no longer open to the public, but the porch, exterior, and picnic area are always accessible.
Site Stewards: Ramon and Maria Rodarte; Kathleen McCleary, 559-561-4055; katmccleary@att.net
Opportunities: donate, volunteer
Links:
Books: 1) Co-Operative Dreams: A History of the Kaweah Colony, by Jay O’Connell (Raven River Press, Van Nuys, CA, 1999)
2) Kaweah Remembered: the Story of the Kaweah Colony and the Founding of Sequoia National Park, by William C. Tweed (Sequoia Natural History Association, 1986)

 

Click on photos for more information.

The Story of the Hogwallow Preserve

by Delora Buckman

     The Buckman family were Tulare County pioneers, arriving here in the late 1800s. The journey of those early settlers in covered wagons through mile upon mile of rough, uneven primitive land is an important part of our heritage; and it led to the creation of the Hogwallow Preserve – to protect in perpetuity some of that wild hogwallow land as it appeared for hundreds of thousands of years before intensive farming began.

     My father, Dr. Phil Buckman, purchased 40 acres of hogwallow property near Lindcove sight unseen in 1943. But he knew what he was getting. He knew the region well, having traveled through it every summer from his boyhood home in Exeter to the cool High Sierra country of Mineral King. He supported his college education by operating the Mineral King Pack Station during the summer months before graduating and eventually returning to Exeter to practice medicine.

     To him, the hogwallow land was much more than just a piece of property. It was one of his favorite places. He was humbled by the panoramic view of the Sierra Nevada that included Homer’s Nose and Sawtooth Peak. He used the clay soil to make the adobe bricks for his impressive home. He grazed livestock on the hogwallows’ mounds and swales and hunted quail. He appreciated the unique land’s rare plants, animals, and vernal pools, and its changing beauty in each season. He enjoyed its peace where he could sit quietly and hear birds sing.

     Hogwallows, also called mima mounds, are land forms of mounds and swales; some of the mounds are three or four feet high. Vernal pools appear in the low areas between the mounds in wet seasons, producing uncommon vegetation and providing habitat for wildlife. Mariposa lilies and brodiaea bloom during the spring; in the summer months the hogwallows are mostly covered with dried grasses.

View Toward High Sierra

     When we were children, my brother, sister, and I loved playing there, running up and down the mounds and discovering treasures like four-leaf clovers, frogs, and tiny, delicate plants. In really wet years when the vernal pools were very full, our hired man built a Tom Sawyer-type raft that we navigated across the pools by pushing with a long stick.

     As nearby property owners leveled their parcels of native land to plant grapes and citrus, my father grew even more appreciative of the hogwallows. They once had covered thousands of acres in Tulare County, and soil scientists estimated them to be as much as 150,000 years old. He knew the mounds and swales were disappearing and he wanted to preserve an example of them for future generations. To him, the land was more valuable in its natural state than a cash crop or the profit from a sale.

     And so, on a beautiful day in April, 1979, the Hogwallows were formally dedicated to the Tulare County Historical Society to be preserved in perpetuity, through the generosity of Dr. Phil Buckman and his daughter, Carol Buckman.

     I am very appreciative that my father and sister had the foresight to donate the ten acres of hogwallows to the Historical Society. Soil scientists continue to visit the preserve to study and evaluate the phenomenon of this ancient and remarkable landform. I hope that you, too, will visit the Hogwallow Preserve and enjoy seeing this piece of Tulare County as it once was.

June, 2013

                                                    Note: For additional information, see the Origins of the Hogwallows.

                                                      Read more about vernal pools at Mysterious Life of Vernal Pools.



Slideshow:


Quotes & More Photos:

“For years people have said that a little patch of good ‘hog wallows’ ought to be preserved. They used to cover a considerable part of the valley near the foothills, but at the present rate of leveling they will soon be gone. The Society has done some work looking toward securing a few acres of these mysterious mounds. Should this effort be intensified?” — TCHS “Los Tulares,” #1, October 1948

The Buckman family were pioneers, coming to Tulare County in the late 1800s, and homesteading property; the whole family farmed.” — Delora Buckman

“If future generations are to remember us with gratitude rather than contempt, we must leave them something more than the miracles of technology. We must leave them a glimpse of the world as it was in the beginning, not just after we got through with it.” — Lyndon B. Johnson

“[O]ne’s first appreciation is a sense that the creation is still going on, that the creative forces are as great and as active today as they have ever been, and that tomorrow’s morning will be as heroic as any of the world. Creation is here and now. . . . It is as impossible to live without reverence as it is without joy.” — Henry Beston

“Through the generosity of Carol Buckman and her father, Philip E. Buckman, M.D., this ten acres of primitive land, never cultivated, has been donated to the Tulare County Historical Society for preservation in its natural state in perpetuity. The rough, mounded land is typical of what much of the Tulare County prairie along the base of the Sierra looked like before farming began . . . . [T]hese peculiar structures the pioneers called hogwallows.” — Tulare County Historical Society, Preserve dedication plaque, 04/22/1979


Maps & Directions:

 

Directions:

From Visalia, take Hwy 198 east to turn left onto Road 245 north; turn right (east) onto Avenue 314 and in about 1.5 miles see the Hogwallows on the south (right) side of the road (note dedication plaque).

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Valley, hogwallows landforms (AKA mima mounds), seasonal vernal pools
Activities: birdwatching, botanizing, exploring vernal pools (seasonal), hiking, photography, special events
Access:  Due to the rarity and fragility of its ecosystem, this preserve is open to the public primarily on only one or two days each year, for special tours and events.  Individuals or organizations wishing to visit at other times must contact SRT for permission to access the preserve.  There is no fee for access, but donations are greatly appreciated.  The preserve may be viewed easily from outside the perimeter fence.  The stile permits access to the historic plaque only. 
(Note: Site Steward may allow periodic cattle grazing to manage vegetation.)
Site Steward: Sequoia Riverlands Trust (SRT), 559-738-0211
Opportunities: donate, membership, volunteer
Links:

 

Click on photos for more information.

The Story of the Exeter and Orosi Carnegie Libraries

by Shirley Kirkpatrick

Emerging Towns and Inquiring Minds Garner Carnegie Libraries — The Story of the Exeter Public Library/Carnegie Community Building/Senior Center and the Orosi-Cutler Branch Library

     At the turn of the twentieth century, no one in Tulare County had a radio. Such electronic marvels as television, computers, and cameras as we know them had not even been dreamed of. There were few schools with sufficient supplies, and many households could not afford to buy much in the way of books or magazines. Yet, as small towns across America grew, their residents were hungry for knowledge. They yearned for schools and libraries.

     Scottish-born American industrialist and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie fully understood this. Between 1889 and 1929 his Carnegie Corporation funded construction of 1,681 public library buildings in the United States, as well as many more in Africa, the Caribbean, Canada, and Europe. Rural Tulare County received six of them.

     Of those six, only two remain in use today. The Orosi Carnegie still serves as a free public library. The Exeter Carnegie building serves as a community center for senior citizens. Both have achieved listing on the National Register of Historic Places, Orosi in 1983 and Exeter in 1990.

     Tulare County established its own library system in 1910. This added stimulus and encouragement for cities to submit grant applications to the Carnegie Foundation to fund their own buildings. To qualify for the Carnegie grant each city had to meet four requirements: it had to demonstrate need for a library, provide the building site, provide ten percent of the grant amount annually for operational expenses, and provide free service to all.

     The Exeter and Orosi proposals moved forward nearly simultaneously. Both communities had to deal with James Bertram, Andrew Carnegie’s private secretary and fellow Scotsman, who was in charge of the library grant program and who monitored – some might say gave an undue amount of attention and advice to – even a small library

   Exeter’s Carnegie approval was not without some testy correspondence.

     Exeter became an incorporated city in 1911. Two years later, with a population of 1,500 in the city and 1,000 more in the surrounding rural area, Exeter made its first application to the Carnegie Corporation for a library. There was no response. Undaunted, the city made a new request the next year (1914) with a letter of support from the county librarian. This brought an almost immediate offer of $5,000, subject to the above-listed contingencies.

     Soon the first disagreement arose. A controversy over the location of the library was reported to Bertram, and he urged that the whole community be satisfied. He required that the lot be large enough for light all around, plus room for future expansion. Thus, the location at the northwest corner of the new one-block square City Park at the corner of Chestnut and E Streets seemed a natural and was finally chosen.

     When the City Clerk sent Bertram plans from three separate architects, a flurry of correspondence ensued. The first letter from Bertram said, “… it is about as much as we can do to go over one set of plans which has been tentatively decided by a community, without having to take up the points for, or against, three different sets.” He then proceeded to comment on all three, suggesting revisions. He also cautioned that lack of a basement might prejudice against any request for future expansion funds.

     The Carnegie library, which combined Mission and Spanish Colonial Revival style elements – and yes, it has a basement – was completed in 1916. When it was outgrown, the city built a new, larger library nearby on city park land in 1975. The Carnegie building was then renovated, with the only major revision being the addition of a wheelchair accessible ramp on the back side, and has been used as a gathering place for senior citizens since that time.

     Orosi’s construction was delayed until the end of World War I

     As in many other unincorporated communities, the first lending library in Orosi served the area from a private building, initially in a room of Ryan’s Cyclery beginning in 1911. Three more moves were made, each time to a small room in an otherwise occupied building. Then, in 1914, a group of enthusiastic women organized The Improvement Club for Orosi “for the general welfare of Orosi and vicinity.”

     Through creative fundraising efforts they were able to pay $250.00, one-half the purchase price, for the corner lot at 12646 Avenue 416 (El Monte Way), where they proposed to build a library. The owner took a mortgage for the balance, to be paid in three years, and in 1917 a Carnegie grant of $3,000 was obtained. Construction was delayed because of World War I, but the Improvement Club went on to raise $2,000 more to match the grant funds, and provided some materials and labor. In 1921, the library, the last Carnegie library to be built in California, became a reality.

     Planners of the Orosi building, like those in Exeter and all others, had to deal with James Bertram, who published his “Notes on Library Buildings” in 1911. The leaflet detailed his requirements – that each community obtain the greatest amount of usable space consistent with “good taste in building.” He also advised that the edifices should be plain and dignified structures, not Greek temples.

     The Orosi library reflects Bertram’s advice faithfully and is one of only three in California designed in the simple style of a Craftsman bungalow. Key features of the Orosi building were two fireplaces, one at each end of the two main rooms that comprise the T-shaped structure. It has shiplap siding, and all masonry, both inside and out, is random stone with an unusual overlaid tubular grouting.

     Large double-hung windows on all sides allow ample light into the rooms and, in pre-air conditioning days, provided good air circulation. The fireplaces are no longer in use, with the stonework of just the one on the east side still in view.

     In 1978, the Orosi library’s service was expanded to the nearby community of Cutler, so in the county’s library system the branch became known as the Orosi-Cutler Branch Library. It was given a remodel in 2013 with new carpeting and fresh paint. “The Orosi-Cutler Library represents the history of libraries and the strength of the community,” said the county librarian at the time of the branch’s grand re-opening. “The work performed on this renovation will ensure the library will provide the same great service for many more years.”

December, 2015


Orosi Library Slideshow:


Exeter Library Slideshow:


Quotes & More Photos:

“A library outranks any other one thing a community can do to benefit its people. It is a never failing spring in the desert.” — Andrew Carnegie

“A man’s . . . duty . . . is to contribute to the general good of the community in which he lives. . . . To try to make the world in some way better than you found it, is to have a noble motive in life.” — Andrew Carnegie

“It was from my own early experience that I decided there was no use to which money could be applied so productive of good to boys and girls who have good within them and ability and ambition to develop it, as the founding of a public library in a community.” — Andrew Carnegie

“. . . Carnegie . . . believed that in America, anyone with access to books and the desire to learn could educate him- or herself and be successful, as he had been. Second, Carnegie, an immigrant, felt America’s newcomers needed to acquire cultural knowledge of the country, which a library would help make possible.” — Carnegie Corporation of New York

“When you are growing up, there are two institutional places that affect you most powerfully: the church, which belongs to God, and the public library, which belongs to you.” — Keith Richards

“When I got [my] library card, that was when my life began.” — Rita Mae Brown

“When I graduated from high school, it was during the Depression and we had no money. I couldn’t go to college, so I went to the library three days a week for 10 years.” — Ray Bradbury

“I like libraries. It makes me feel comfortable and secure to have walls of words, beautiful and wise, all around me.” — Roger Zelazny

“Books permit us to voyage through time, to tap the wisdom of our ancestors. The library connects us with the insight and knowledge, painfully extracted from Nature, of the greatest minds that ever were, with the best teachers, drawn from the entire planet and from all our history, to instruct us without tiring, and to inspire us to make our own contribution to the collective knowledge of the human species. I think the health of our civilization, the depth of our awareness about the underpinnings of our culture and our concern for the future can all be tested by how well we support our libraries.” — Carl Sagan

“[A library] is a space ship that will take you to the farthest reaches of the Universe, a time machine that will take you to the far past and the far future, a teacher that knows more than any human being, a friend that will amuse you and console you — and most of all, a gateway, to a better and happier and more useful life.” — Isaac Asimov

“Libraries store the energy that fuels the imagination. They open up windows to the world and inspire us to explore and achieve, and contribute to improving our quality of life. Libraries change lives for the better.” — Sidney Sheldon

“There is not such a cradle of democracy upon the earth as the Free Public Library, this republic of letters, where neither rank, office, nor wealth receives the slightest consideration.” — Andrew Carnegie

“I have an unshaken conviction that democracy can never be undermined if we maintain our library resources and a national intelligence capable of utilizing them. — Franklin D. Roosevelt

“Civilized nations build libraries; lands that have lost their soul close them down.” — Toby Forward


Maps & Directions:

Exeter Senior Center Directions:

Address: 301 South E St. (corner of Chestnut and E), Exeter, CA 93221

From Visalia, take Hwy 198 east to Hwy 65 south to Exeter. Turn west (right) onto East Chestnut St. and go three blocks to the corner of South E St.

 


Maps & Directions:

Orosi Library Directions:

Orosi Address: 12662 Ave. 416 (corner of El Monte Way and Eddy Street), Orosi, CA 93647-2018

From Visalia, take Hwy 63 north to Orosi. Take Ave. 416 (El Monte Way) west (left) to 12662 Ave. 416, at the corner of Eddy St.  Library is on the north side of El Monte Way.


Site Details & Activities:

EXETER SENIOR CENTER:
Environment: Valley, downtown Exeter; this Carnegie library has become the Exeter Senior Center
Activities: history, photography; for seniors (age 60 or older): lunch at 11:30, computers, crafts, exercise, games, monthly health checks, socializing, talks, etc.
Open: Monday-Friday 8:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. (closed weekends); seniors lunch at 11:30
Site Steward: CSET, 1-800-321-2462; Site Manager: Benny Rodriguez, 559-592-5960; email csetseniorservices@cset.org
Opportunities: volunteer
Links:
 
OROSI-CUTLER BRANCH LIBRARY:
Environment: Valley, downtown Orosi, historic Carnegie lending library
Activities: borrowing books and other media; board games, Take and Make crafts on Wednesdays, computers (four public internet stations), educational activities, Music Day at 2:00 p.m. on Fridays, reading, Storytime at 11:00 a.m. on Thursdays, performances, etc.
Open: Wednesday-Friday, 10:00 a.m. -1:00 p.m. and 2:00 p.m.-6:00 p.m. (closed Saturday-Tuesday)
Site Steward: Tulare County Library, Orosi-Cutler Branch, 559-591-5830
Opportunities: volunteer
Links:

 

Click on photos for more information.

The Story of Lake Kaweah

by Paul Hurley

     Nature instigated the creation of Lake Kaweah. The story of this Tulare County treasure chronicles a classic struggle between nature and humanity, in which nature repeatedly exerts its power and humanity stubbornly shrugs it off.

     The conditions that led to the creation of Lake Kaweah might be unique in North America. From its headwaters at an elevation of 12,000 feet in the Sierra Nevada the Kaweah and its tributaries create one of the steepest cataracts on the continent. Its waters drop to the San Joaquin Valley floor more than two vertical miles over a horizontal distance of 30 miles if it were drawn as a straight line on a map.

     When tame, the Kaweah is a life-giver. Indigenous people thrived along this river for centuries before Europeans arrived. Cattleman Hale Tharp started a ranch at the confluence of the Kaweah River and Horse Creek in 1856 and lived there until his death in 1912. Prospectors, ranchers, and homesteaders pursued prosperity along the forks of the river and into its canyons and fertile flood plains.

     But the Kaweah has a wild side. When conditions are right — warm rain melting mountains of snow or sudden torrential deluges cascading down the steep slope — it is a natural flood maker that has produced a devastating inundation on average about every 10 years.

     The river’s first documented flood, in 1862, was so powerful that it created a new channel, the St. John’s River, and wiped out a new town built along a small Visalia creek. Visalia itself was immersed in four feet of water, and people used boats to get around. In 1867, it began raining on November 1 and continued almost non-stop until late December. People in Visalia again got around in boats, not for the last time. The river flooded in 1877, 1884 and 1890.

     In June, 1906, heavy winter snows rapidly melted under a spring heat wave and warm rains. The waters rose to a height of two feet on Visalia’s Main Street and stayed that way for two weeks. The Visalia Times-Delta suggested that the river be dammed to prevent future flooding. That was the first time it was proposed to build a dam, but it would not be built for another 56 years. A flood in 1914 again stirred talk of a dam, but the idea was easily quelled when the next two decades were relatively dry.

     Then came the flood of 1937. It caused more than $15 million in damage to crops and property. More than 80 people on the valley floor died. Finally, some concrete steps were taken to dam the river. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers determined the best spot for the dam was near Lemon Cove at Terminus Beach, a popular recreation spot since the 19th century.

Horse Drawn Wagon in Visalia, 1955 Flood

     The Kaweah was only one of many rivers in the nation to flood in the 1930s. Congress passed, and President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed, a series of flood control acts, including ones in 1937 and 1944. The 1944 act was directed mainly at flooding on the Missouri River, but it also authorized the building of Terminus Dam.

     Although the Kaweah flooded again in 1943, 1945 and 1950, work on Terminus Dam stalled because of opposition by ranchers downstream over their water rights. The flood that broke the logjam of resistance arrived in 1955.

     Snowfall had been heavy early that winter, and then warm, heavy rain began falling on the evening of December 22. Twelve inches of rain fell in 12 hours. The Kaweah soon crested, and water began barreling downstream into the valley. The volume rose to 85,000 cubic feet per second, wreaking destruction on Three Rivers, Farmersville, and Visalia. Water in downtown Visalia rose to more than five feet deep, and boats were used again. Floodwaters affected more than 100,000 square miles. Damage was estimated at $12 million to $20 million.

 

     The 1955 flood galvanized the political will to build the dam. Newspapers demanded action. Local governments sent lobbyists to Washington, D.C. and pushed Congress to appropriate the money. The matter of ranchers’ water rights was set aside.

     In 1956, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the legislation that authorized construction, and money was appropriated in 1958. Construction began in February, 1959, and the project was completed in November, 1961, at a cost of $19,375,000. Terminus Dam was dedicated on May 18, 1962, and began operations in June, 1962.

     Terminus Dam/Lake Kaweah has staked its claim as Tulare County’s most successful public works project. At the dam’s 50th anniversary, the Army Corps of Engineers estimated that Terminus had prevented damage that would have totaled $373,225,000.

     But while the dam had prevented or minimized flood damage, it still could not prevent all downstream flooding. A “50-year” flood in 1997, for example, did not breach the dam, but the reservoir was filled and emptied twice. It was then decided to increase the lake’s capacity and the protection capability of the dam.

     In 2004, the Corps installed the world’s largest fusegates atop the dam. Six 21-foot high structures essentially raised the height of the dam to withhold a 1,000-year flood event (a flood so great that its statistical likelihood is once in 1,000 years). The enlargement project cost an additional $48 million and included funding from federal, state, and local agencies.

     Flood control was the initial motivation for building Terminus Dam, and the primary purpose of Lake Kaweah continues to be flood control. But it has also become an important installation for water conservation, agricultural irrigation, power generation, and recreation. Boating, water-skiing, swimming, fishing, horseback riding, hiking, and camping attract 40,000 visitors a year.

     Terminus Dam has tamed the capricious and dangerous Kaweah River. In extremely dry winters, it is nearly possible to see the river as it used to flow through the lake’s valley. It is much harder to imagine the devastating flood flows that tormented residents from Three Rivers to Tulare Lake. With the taming of nature, the Kaweah’s waters have been harnessed. It has been decades since anyone needed a boat to get around downtown Visalia.

March, 2015

 

                                                          For a related article, see the Kaweah Delta Water Conservation District

  

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The Visalia Times-Delta in its 01/20/56 “FLOOD” edition commemorating the December, 1955, disaster, published the headline: “Terminus Dam, still only paper project after 11 years, would have saved us.” The Exeter Sun newspaper noted that the cost of the damage from any one of the previous four floods would have equaled the cost of the construction of Terminus Dam.

Terminus is an earthen core dam that rises 250 feet high. The length of the dam at its crest is 2,375 feet. Lake Kaweah inundates about 1,945 acres at maximum pool and floods nearly five miles of river.

With the 2004 enlargement, the capacity of Lake Kaweah was increased to 185,630 acre-feet. (One acre-foot is enough water to flood one acre to a depth of one foot, or about 326,000 gallons.)

Irrigation water from Terminus is administered by the Kaweah Delta Water Conservation District, which provides irrigation service to dozens of water users in 384,000 acres of farmland downstream of the dam.

In 2004, the hydroelectric power plant at Terminus Dam was retrofitted to increase its annual production to 21 megawatts as water is released for flood control and irrigation.

The Kaweah Heritage Visitor Center on Lemon Hill offers visitors dramatic vistas of the lake and fusegates as well as information about its history, archaeology, geological features, and wildlife.

Largemouth bass, crappie, bluegill, catfish and trout are popular game fish caught at Lake Kaweah. The California Department of Fish and Game continues to stock the lake with game fish, including trout.

Horse Creek campground is a popular camping destination. The area also includes more than five miles of trails for hiking, dog-walking, and horseback riding.

The lake has three, three-lane boat-launch ramps. Water skiing and personal watercraft are permitted on the lake. Slick Rock Recreation Area is suitable for swimming even at low flows.

“The rock face of Terminus Dam loomed beyond the flat across the Kaweah canyon, the only straight line this side of Blue Ridge and the Great Divide, its control tower and space age hydro plant and poles as the last attempt to train and harness the whims of weather like a dependable horse under the wildest of circumstances.” — John Dofflemyer


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

Coordinates: 36.4166° N, 119.0034° W

 

From Visalia, go about 20 miles east on Hwy 198 and follow the signs for the lake facilities.

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Foothills, dam, lake, marina, campground, visitor center
Activities: biking, birdwatching, boating and boat rentals, camping, disc golf (via Slick Rock parking area), dog walking (on 6′ leash, scoop poop), educational activities, fishing, hiking, horseback riding, kayaking, marina, photography, picnicking, sailing, swimming, Kaweah Heritage Visitor Center (exhibits, bookstore, gifts, free loaner life vests for kids), waterskiing, wildflower and wildlife viewing. Note: Some activities are seasonal.
Open: daily ($10 fee for day use, $40 for annual pass, $20 for campsite, $40 for double site; make reservations through www.recreation.gov – see Link below); check with Site Steward for most current fees.
Site Steward: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 559-597-2301; Kaweah Heritage Visitor Center, open 10-4:00 M-F, 559-597-2005 – USACE in cooperation with Education Partner Sequoia Parks Conservancy; marina and boat rentals, 559-597-2526; Tulare County Boat Patrol Office, 559-733-6218 (non-emergency; call 911 if emergency); campground reservations, 1-877-444-6777 (see Link below before online reservations).
Opportunities for Involvement: volunteer
Links:
Books: Floods and Droughts in the Tulare Lake Basin, by John T. Austin (Sequoia Natural History Association, 2013)
Floods of the Kaweah, by Mark Tilchen (Sequoia Natural History Association, 2009)

 

Click on photos for more information.

Ledbetter Park — Historic Hub of Cutler-Orosi

by Laurie Schwaller

     In 1971, over 30 years had passed since Tulare County had last established a park for its residents (in Pixley, in 1938). But in 1971, thanks to Lee and Hazel Ledbetter of Orosi, and many dedicated local volunteers, that was about to change.

     The Ledbetter family forebears had arrived in Tulare County in 1876 by emigrant train, and soon established a tradition of farming, civic engagement, service, and generosity. In 1879, Lee’s grandfather James purchased the land which became the site of Orosi. Later, he traded that parcel for another half a mile south of the townsite, where he spent the rest of his life.

     Education and young people were important to James. In 1880, he was instrumental in organizing on his property the first school for the local pioneer children in what was then known as Sand Creek. His own wife was unable to read or write, but since then four Ledbetter women have taught successively in the Cutler-Orosi community — for almost 150 years. One of them was Hazel Church, who married Lee Ledbetter in 1912, when she was teaching school in Orosi.

     In the family tradition, Lee Ledbetter farmed and lived in the Cutler-Orosi area all his life. He was also a county tax assessor. While Lee and Hazel had no children of their own, Hazel taught and often served as principal in the local schools for 41 years. Both were philanthropists, who gave generously to their community in many ways. But perhaps their greatest and most lasting gift was the land for Ledbetter Park.

     In 1970, the couple began talking with then County Supervisor Fred Batkin about their desire to donate 12 acres of their property to the county for the creation of a neighborhood park to serve both Cutler and Orosi.

     That September, the Board of Supervisors authorized Batkin to work with County Park Superintendent Merle Harp, Chief Administrative Officer Dave Ogden, and Planning Director Don Woolfe to develop the park, which would be located at the southwest corner of Avenue 408 and Highway 63.

Ledbetter Park Committee Members

     In April, 1971, the Board of Supervisors gratefully accepted the deed to the parkland from the Ledbetters, calling their gift “another milestone in a long path of community service that the Ledbetters have given to the Cutler-Orosi community” and “an act of generosity which will benefit the Cutler-Orosi community for many years to come.” Supervisor Batkin announced that the park would be seeded with grass immediately and interested people would be asked to help devise a master plan for it.

     The Ledbetters, along with the Cutler Latin American Club (CLAC) and a Cutler-Orosi park committee chaired by Batkin and Orosi Union High School principal Jack Mann, worked with Superintendent Harp to plan the site. Concurrently, the County decided to build a new fire station there: A firehouse would keep responsible people on the premises 24 hours a day, and the money saved by not having to buy land for the station could be used for landscaping the park.

     By early 1973, bids had been let, and construction of the fire station and a park restroom was about to begin. A sprinkling system had been installed, and some Monterey pines had been planted. The committee appealed to Cutler-Orosi area clubs and organizations for donations to cover more trees, shrubs, and other park construction items.

     While elements in the park have changed through the years, the original grand design included parking for over 100 cars; a baseball field; a multi-use sports area for tennis, volleyball, and basketball; plus a quieter area for horseshoes and croquet to meet a broad range of recreational interests. Two picnic arbors and 25 picnic tables would be installed, and a bandstand had been designed, in hopes that it could be completed before the annual spring Tomato Festival organized by the Cutler Latin American Club.

     On July 3, 1973, following a steak barbecue sponsored by the Latin American Club, the new park was officially dedicated to the public. The ceremony was held in the new fire station, which already provided welcome shade and was scheduled to open in August. Master of ceremonies Ed Tellalian, Orosi High School civics teacher, read letters of congratulation from local, state, and national politicians, including one on behalf of President Nixon from the White House.

     Although the tennis and croquet courts never got built, the bandstand/stage was ready for the 1974 Tomato Festival’s festivities, and much has been added to Ledbetter Park in the decades since its dedication. From its conception, the Cutler Latin American Club has contributed countless hours of labor, constructed many improvements (including the bandstand), carried out maintenance work, and held dozens of community events there.

     The County’s Cutler-Orosi Senior Center, in 1984, and a County Sheriff’s substation, in 2007, have joined the fire station in offering essential services to their communities. In June, 2003, the Little Tikes fire engine playground equipment was installed. Volunteer firefighters from the real fire station helped County Parks employees put the fire engine structure together to inspire kids’ imaginations for play and to serve as a memorial to the firefighting heroes of the 9/11 attacks on New York City in 2001.

     In 2008, the Cutler-Orosi Community for Youth Organization, working with County Parks, the Cutler-Orosi School District, the Stewardship Council, and the Tony Hawk Foundation, raised the funds to build a skate park next to the Sheriff’s substation at Ledbetter Park. Spearheaded by former school district superintendent Frank Murphy, the campaign, helped by the County, which contributed matching funds, covered the total project cost of $100,000.

     Through the years, Ledbetter Park has served as its communities’ hub. It was the destination of the annual parade of the Tomato Festival (eventually re-named the Pre-Harvest Festival and then the Spring Festival). It was the venue for its booths and carnival, and its bandstand was the stage for announcements, music, and other entertainment. The park has hosted major concerts, firefighters’ training exercises, Summer Night Lights events, health fairs, thousands of basketball and baseball and soccer games, picnics and barbecues, celebrations of all kinds, and endless hours of safe and healthy play.

     Long-needed upgrades to the parks’ accessibility features and its electrical and irrigation systems were completed in 2018, helping to prepare this vital green and open space for its next 50 years of service to the enjoyment and well-being of the people of these north county communities.

December, 2018


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Quotes & More Photos:

Lee Ledbetter’s father, Addis Goulder Ledbetter, worked with his father (James) and brother in farming and teaming. He served for twelve years as a school board trustee, including eight as president, and was also Superintendent of the First Presbyterian Church’s Sunday school.

A.G. and his wife, Mary, along with another couple, gave the land to create the town of Cutler in 1897.

Lee and Hazel visited patients at the County’s Sequoia Home for the Aged and arranged birthday parties for the seniors. They served on the board of the Tulare County Tuberculosis Association and the Humane Society. They gave scholarships, and Hazel served for 15 years as secretary of the Orosi-Orange Cove Farm Bureau, of which they were members.

“In deeding the land to the county, Mr. and Mrs. Ledbetter expressed the hope that it would be developed into a ‘Miniature Mooney’s Grove’ for the enjoyment of family type activities.” — Dinuba Sentinel, October 19, 1972

“Noting that the site was the original Ledbetter homestead upon which Mr. Ledbetter was raised as a boy before the turn of the Century, County Supervisor Fred Batkin says that every effort is being made to help the Ledbetters realize their dream which has also become the dream of the people of the community.” — Dinuba Sentinel, October 19, 1972

“Ed Tellalian . . . read letters of congratulation from Assemblyman Gordon Duffy, State Senator Howard Way, and a letter on behalf of President Nixon from the White House. Congressman Bob Mathias wrote: ‘This very generous contribution by Mr. and Mrs. Ledbetter is a very special and selfless act.'” Mrs. Kandy Mimura thanked a number of individuals in the Cutler-Orosi Community for their donations to the park.” — Dinuba Sentinel, July 3, 1973

“The Cutler Latin American Club was established in 1956 in the pursuit of meeting the needs of the people in Cutler and Orosi. The Club’s mission is simple: ‘Get the Job Done.’ The club’s most noticeable projects are visible at Ledbetter Park.” — Pre-Harvest Festival (formerly Tomato Festival) program, April 26, 2003

“In cooperation with the county, CLAC has built and paid for the stage, planted trees, installed electrical towers, baseball diamond, fenced the perimeter of the park, installed horse shoe pits, installed modern playground equipment for the children; finally curb and gutters have been installed in front of the property with two entrance approaches. Scholarships for college bound students have been granted in the tens of thousands of dollars throughout the years.” — Pre-Harvest Festival program, April 26, 2003

“Children will be able to pretend they are firefighters, as they watch men and women nearby volunteer to risk their lives to protect their community, on Ledbetter Park’s new fire engine playground equipment. Last week the County started installing a state of the art Little Tykes [sic] fire engine, which is nearly as big as the real thing. This is the first one installed on the West Coast. The very first model went to a park near the World Trade Center in New York City.” — Dinuba Sentinel, June 19, 2003

[The] Lyons [sic] club, a Veterans group, churches and Cutler-Orosi Latin American Club are very involved. They use the park and invest in it. For example, these groups built the stage and the backstop for the baseball field. Each year four to six very large community events are held at Ledbetter Park, and during the summer, the soccer field is used every day.” — Tulare County Parks Advisory Committee minutes, report by Neil Pilegard, Tulare County Parks and Recreation, April 21, 2016

“[The Cutler-Orosi Latin-American] club, along with the community raised $10,000 to provide a stage for special activities. Driving the tractor is Pete Marquez, who does a super job maintaining the park. Pete says,”It’s just like taking care of my own back yard.” The Cutler-Orosi Latin-American Club helps to sponsor the Tomato Festival every year.” –1982 Cutler-Orosi Tomato Festival Program

“We are designed to be outdoor creatures. We need to be outside, not huddled around the TV set.” — Andrew Duxbury

“A growing body of evidence suggests that exposure to nature is an essential component of human health and well-being. The mere sight of trees . . . lowers levels of the stress hormone cortisol and decreases blood pressure.” — Katherine Ozment


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

Address: 45779 Road 128, Cutler/Orosi, CA; located 1 mile NW of Cutler on Road 124/Hwy 63.

From Visalia, take Hwy 63 north to 1 mile NW of Cutler; park will be  on your left (west).

 

“The outdoors is the very best place for preschoolers to practice and master emerging physical skills” — Early Childhood News


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Valley, near Cutler; 11 acres; trees and lawns
Activities: baseball/soccer field, 2 full basketball courts, birdwatching, dog-walking (on leash; scoop poop), picnicking (arbors by reservation), photography, playground, skate park, stage/bandstand, veterans memorials
Open: daily Thursday-Monday for day use (closed Tues. and Wed.); Summer (June 1-September 8): 8:00 a.m.- 8:00 p.m.; Fall (Sept. 9 – Oct. 31): 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. on Mon., Thurs., and Fri.; 8:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m. on Sat. and Sun.; Winter (Nov.-Feb.): 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.; Spring (Mar.-May): 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. on Mon., Thurs., and Fri.; 8:00 a.m.-7:00 p.m. on Sat. and Sun. No entrance fee. Reservations for picnic arbors are taken throughout the year.
Site Steward: Tulare County Parks and Recreation Division, 559-205-1100; same number for reservations. Contact Site Steward for current fees and open days and hours.
Opportunities for Involvement: donate, volunteer

Click on photos for more information.

The Story of Kings Canyon National Park

by William Tweed

     Although only about twenty percent of Kings Canyon National Park falls within Tulare County, the saga of how this superb mostly wilderness national park came to be is very much a Tulare County story. Tulare County residents, in fact, played key roles in the decades-long campaign to create the park.

     Like both Sequoia National Park and Sequoia National Forest, the area that is now within Kings Canyon National Park was placed within the original Sierra Forest Reserve in 1893. In 1908, that vast reserve was broken apart and its several portions re-designated as national forests. After that date, what later became the Tulare County portion of Kings Canyon National Park fell within the newly created Sequoia National Forest.

     From the beginning, although both were conserved as public lands for the public good, areas identified as national forests and national parks drifted in very different directions. National Forests fell under the control of the United States Forest Service, an agency in the U. S. Department of Agriculture. Forest Service management policies emphasized using land for public benefit. Potential uses included grazing, mining, and logging – all to be carried out in a responsible manner. Agency policy also emphasized dams, reservoirs, and hydroelectric development, undertakings that seemed to many to be well-suited for the mountain gorges of the Kings River portion of the Sierra Nevada.

     At the same time, areas designated as national parks evolved to have their own unique mission. In 1890, Congress had created Sequoia and General Grant national parks in Tulare County as well as Yosemite National Park to the north. All three were envisioned as nature preserves – places where natural features would be left undisturbed and human use would be limited to recreation and inspiration. Management of these federal parks fell to the Department of the Interior.

     Each of these two visions reflected the hopes and dreams of its supporters, and Congress eventually created a federal agency to manage each system. The Forest Service came into existence in 1905, and the National Park Service, an Interior Department agency, was created in 1916. The competing land management visions represented by the two agencies both made sense. Clearly, America had lands that ought to be used for the benefit of society as well as special places that ought to be protected for their beauty. Inevitably, however, these two agencies, each with its own mission, sometimes set their sights on the same places. The Kings River portion of the High Sierra was such a place.

     The battle over the fate of the Kings Canyon region began early. The men who had led the campaign to create Sequoia National Park in 1890 dreamed almost from the beginning of enlarging the park to take in more of the spectacular High Sierra. They were particularly interested in two scenic regions: the Kern Canyon/Mt. Whitney area immediately to the east of the 1890 boundaries of Sequoia National Park and the Kings Canyon region to the northeast of the existing park.

     The Sierra Club, in those days a San Francisco Bay Area-based mountaineering organization, began taking large groups into these two areas in 1902, when it brought over two hundred persons into then-remote Kings Canyon for several weeks. The club returned, always with large groups, to either the Kings Canyon or the Kern Canyon in 1903, 1906, 1908, 1910, 1912, 1913, and 1916. These trips exposed hundreds of people to the beauty of these areas and laid the foundation for political action leading towards their protection.

     In 1915, the Department of the Interior recruited Chicago businessman Stephen T. Mather to take over administration of the national park system and lead the campaign to create a national park agency – the National Park Service. Mather, a native of California, had strong ties to the Sierra Nevada and had taken part in the Sierra Club’s 1912 outing to the Kern Canyon. On that trip, like many others, he had become convinced that Sequoia National Park must be enlarged. When he joined the Interior Department in 1915, he put this enlargement high on his list of goals. In the summer of 1915, Mather organized an overtly political pack trip into the Kern Canyon/Mt. Whitney region. Visalians George Stewart and Ben Maddox met the group when it first assembled in Visalia and made clear their support for park enlargement.

     Mather became the first director of the newly created National Park Service in 1916, and in this role he continued his efforts to enlarge Sequoia National Park. The Forest Service prized the area highly, however, and worked hard to keep both the Kern Canyon/Mt. Whitney and Kings Canyon regions within the Sequoia National Forest. Finally, after a decade of contentious political debate, a compromise was struck. In July 1926, Sequoia National Park was more than tripled in size to include the Kern Canyon and Mt. Whitney areas. Kings Canyon, however, remained within the national forest systems and open to development.

High Country Horsebackers and Pack Stock

     The Forest Service, pursuing its mandate to find uses for its lands, began to make plans for the development of the Kings River region. In the late 1920s, in cooperation with the State of California, the Forest Service approved the construction of a modern highway into the region, and the following year the Federal Power Commission issued a report making clear the potential of the area as a locale for reservoirs and power plants. As early as 1920, the city of Los Angeles had also filed claims for dam sites and reservoirs on the Kings River. There were even rumors that the Los Angeles interests intended to tunnel under the Sierra Crest to divert Kings River water eastward into its Owens Valley Aqueduct.

     All these proposals eventually reinvigorated those who still wanted to place the Kings Canyon and its surrounding high country within a national park. In the middle 1930s the Sierra Club resumed its campaign. This time the goal was not to add the area to Sequoia National Park but rather to create an entirely new park centered on the great glacial canyon of the Kings River. Local opinion split between those who wanted dams and those who thought the area worth protecting for its natural beauty and spectacular scenery. Nearly everyone in Central California agreed, however, that allowing the water to go to Southern California would be a mistake.

     Eventually, the fight over whether there should be a national park in the Kings Canyon region came down to a political dispute between two local elected officials. The U.S. congressman from Fresno, a Republican named Bud Gearhart, led the campaign to create the park. He was opposed by Representative Alfred Elliott of Visalia, a Democrat.*  The Sierra Club sided with Gearhart, and the Forest Service worked hard to help Elliott. The final vote could have gone either way, but Elliott overplayed his hand when he charged that Gearhart was accepting illegal donations from national park supporters. Gearhart, in an impassioned speech on the floor of the House of Representatives, successfully demolished Elliott’s accusations, and the bill passed the House shortly thereafter.

     President Franklin Roosevelt signed the legislation creating Kings Canyon National Park in March 1940. The political deal that led to the creation of the new national park also committed the federal government to building a dam on the lower Kings River at Pine Flat. That dam was constructed between 1947 and 1954.

     The highway into Kings Canyon that the Forest Service commissioned in the late 1920s finally reached the canyon floor in 1939. Today, as California State Route 180, that route provides a scenic drive into the heart of Kings River country. The highway ends just past Cedar Grove on the floor of Kings Canyon. The rest of the main section of Kings Canyon National Park, including all of it that falls within Tulare County, remains as un-roaded wilderness. It took half a century, but the 1890 dream of Visalian George Stewart that the Kings Canyon region should be part of a national park eventually did come to pass. Today, Kings Canyon National Park stands as the great wilderness park of the Sierra Nevada.

     * Observers of contemporary politics in Central California may be surprised to read of a Republican leading a campaign to create a national park while a Democrat fought against the park. Over the decades, the two parties have changed positions several times on these matters. The greatest presidential advocate ever for public lands, for example, was Republican Theodore Roosevelt, and both the National Environmental Policy Act and the Endangered Species Act were signed by Republican Richard Nixon.

May, 2014

                                                                      Now read:  A Trip to the Great Canyon of the Kings

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Quotes & More Photos:

“Thousands of tired, nerve-shaken, over-civilized people are beginning to find out that going to the mountains is going home; that wildness is a necessity; and that mountain parks and reservations are useful not only as fountains of timber and irrigating rivers, but as fountains of life.” – – John Muir, 1901

“When one looks at the great trailblazers of the American preservation movement, many names grace Kings Canyon. John Muir, of course, stands at the summit with veneration. At his side stands Little Joe LeConte . . . .  There were countless other giants, among them [Theodore] Solomons, [Walter “Pete”] Starr [Jr.], [Stephen] Mather, [Horace] Albright, [William] Colby, [Ansel] Adams, and [David] Brower, all of whom heeded the call to preserve and protect the best of the American earth.” — Gene Rose

“[All} of this wonderful Kings River region, together with the Kaweah and Tule sequoias, should be comprehended in one Grand National Park. . . . Let our law-givers make haste before it is too late to set apart this surpassingly glorious region for recreation and well being of humanity, and all the world will rise up and call them blessed.” – John Muir, 1891

“[I]n 1905, [Gifford] Pinchot orchestrated the transfer of the [forest] reserves from the Interior Department to the Department of Agriculture — an event usually recognized as the genesis of the modern Forest Service . . . .  An advocate of utilitarian conservation, [Pinchot] believed that all the resources on the public lands should be available for use and development — as long as those uses were sustainable . . . centered on the magnanimous slogan, ‘the greatest good for the greatest number and in the long term.’ Multiple use was his byword.” — Gene Rose

“It was a treasure house of riches far greater than any hidden beneath the surface. Cutting the sky the most colossal of all Sierra crests reared its adamantine spires, walling a world of can[y]ons, peaks, dashing ice torrents, unassailable heights, green parks bordered and starred with exquisite Alpine flowers, which fringed even the snow banks . . . awful, austere, beautiful in its scarred and chaotic majesty. A world to behold: no pen nor brush may picture it. The transcendent glory of the mighty Sierra Nevada.” — Frank Dusy

“[I]n 1912, [Stephen] Mather, who became the first director of the National Park Service, made the first of his own mountain trips in the Sierra [where] he met Colby and other Sierra Club members. One of the highlights of Mather’s life was the opportunity to have a long talk with the legendary [John] Muir . . . [who] . . . interested him in another of his vital concerns—the addition of vast majestic Sierra areas to Sequoia National Park or, better still, the creation of a new park between Yosemite and Sequoia.” — Horace Albright

“The Mather Mountain party . . . gathered for the first time on . . .   July 14, 1915 in Visalia, California. . . . [A]t the Palace Hotel . . . a dinner party was held that first night, hosted by local businessmen. . . . After dinner, [George] Stewart [Visalia attorney and long-time editor of the Visalia Weekly Delta] gave an informative talk on the giant sequoias. [Ben] Maddox [owner and publisher of the Visalia Daily Times] followed with a summary of the proposed enlargement of Sequoia National Park. . . . Robert Marshall [Chief Geographer of the U.S. Geological Survey] . . .gave a rousing pep talk encouraging the people of Visalia to promote a bigger and better Sequoia National Park. Then Mather sent his guests off to the last indoor beds they would see for several weeks.” –Horace Albright and Marian Schenck

“[T]he Sequoia-Whitney country is God’s own country, . . . and the mountains assure me that . . . the [Mather Mountain] . . . party will sing of the ‘Greater Sequoia’ until all the world shall have heard them and will unite to preserve this really wonderful region for the ‘benefit and enjoyment of the whole people’ for all time.” — Robert Marshall (1915)

“The immediate effects of the mountain party were local: elimination of toll roads; publicity creating strong support in the San Joaquin Valley for extension of Sequoia or the creation of a new park to encompass the Kings and Kern canyons; purchase of the Giant Forest, the heart of Sequoia; fifty thousand dollars from the federal government; twenty thousand from Grosvenor and the National Geographic Society; precedent for private parties to purchase lands and donate them to the government. . .; and impetus for the U.S. government to aid in the completion of the John Muir Trail.” — Horace Albright after Mather Mountain Party expedition

“[T]he publicity about the mountain party, through newspapers and magazines, focused attention on the parks and the need for a national park service. The newly found belief in conservation and the concept of “wilderness” was generated from influential men in our group” — Horace M. Albright after Mather Mountain Party expedition

“Think of Sequoia as incomplete until the Kings River area is added, until Mt. Whitney and its soaring granite appendages are under the care of a national park, until the magnificent Giant Forest is out of private hands.” — Stephen Mather

“Maybe [creating the National Park Service is] like constructing a house . . . I have no blueprints and no architect. Only the ideals and principles for which the Park Service was created – to preserve, intact, the heritage we were bequeathed.” — Horace M. Albright, September 1917


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

Coordinates: 36° 47′ 21.41″ N, 118° 40′ 22.3″ W36.78928, -118.67286

 

From Visalia, take Hwy 198 east via Three Rivers to enter Sequoia National Park and proceed on the Generals Highway to the Grant Grove area in Kings Canyon National Park.  

Alternately, take Hwy 63 north from Visalia to Hwy 180 east to enter the Grant Grove area of Kings Canyon National Park.

From Grant Grove you can continue 30 miles east on Hwy 180 down the canyon to the Cedar Grove area and 6 more miles to Road’s End. 

Note the possibility here for a fine loop trip.

Note: Vehicles longer than 22 feet should take Hwy 63 to Hwy 180. The road between the Foothills Visitor Center (east of Three Rivers) and the Giant Forest Museum is too steep, narrow, and winding to accommodate longer vehicles.

 

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Mountains, Foothills, forests, giant sequoias in Grant Grove area
Activities: backpacking, bicycling (on-road only), birdwatching, botanizing, camping, educational activities, fishing (license required), hiking (all-abilities-accessible trail at Grant Grove and Zumwalt Meadow), horseback riding, horse packing, photography, picnicking, scenic drives, snow play (seasonal), wildflower and wildlife viewing. Dogs allowed (on leash) in campgrounds and parking areas only; not allowed on trails.
Open: General Grant Grove Section open daily, year-round, depending on weather (snow may temporarily close roads); Canyon section typically open late April into November, depending on weather. Check Parks’ Road Conditions page or call (559) 565-3341 (press 1, 1, 1). National Park entrance fee.
Site Steward: Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks; 559-565-3341 (559-565-3766 for wilderness permits); www.nps.gov/seki/contacts.htm
Opportunities for Involvement: donate, volunteer
Links:
Books: 1) Challenge of the Big Trees -The Updated History of Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, by William C. Tweed and Lary M. Dilsaver (University of Virginia Press, 2017)
2) Images of America – Kings Canyon National Park, by Ward Eldredge (Arcadia Publishing, 2008)
3) Kings Canyon – America’s Premier Wilderness Park – A History, by Gene Rose (Sequoia Natural History Association, 2011)
4) The Mather Mountain Party of 1915, by Horace Marden Albright and Marian Albright Schenck (Sequoia Natural History Association)
5) King Sequoia: The Tree That Inspired a Nation, Created Our National Park System, and Changed the Way We Think about Nature, by William C. Tweed (Heyday, 2016)

Click on photos for more information.

The Story of the Kaweah Delta Water Conservation District

by Terry Stafford

     If there’s one thing the residents of Tulare County understand, it’s the importance of water. The fact that there is sometimes too much or often too little of it is the norm for our most unpredictable climate. Water is the lifeblood of Tulare County’s agricultural economy and communities. The heart and the arteries that regulate and move that lifeblood to these critical components in the Kaweah River watershed is a water management concern that has been evolving for decades — the Kaweah Delta Water Conservation District.

     Commercial farming began in the San Joaquin Valley in the early 1800s. Although the valley averages only ten inches of rain per year, the meltwater from the Sierra Nevada’s snow pack enabled farmers to irrigate their crops, greatly expanding production.

     Shortly after California became a state, in 1850, its legislators adopted laws to insure riparian water rights were maintained, allowing property owners along rivers and streams to divert water for their own use. But relatively few farms were close enough to the rivers and streams to take advantage of them; and often this surface water was available only during the wet season. As the population increased, and farming exploded, water began to be collected and funneled to key distribution points through a vast network of channels, canals, and ditches. However, there was no “beneficial use” mandate at the time for farmers, and the water could essentially be wasted at the landowners’ discretion, and often was. Soon the farmers were also pumping water from the valley’s underground aquifers, to meet ever-greater demand in the dry season. Aquifer levels dropped alarmingly, forcing the ever-growing population to recognize that local water was a very precious and limited resource.

     In 1927, California’s Water Conservation Act was adopted, to better manage the state’s water. The Act allowed for the establishment of Water Conservation Districts across the state, and local citizens were quick to respond. The Kaweah Delta Water Conservation District (KDWCD), encompassing 337,000 acres of Tulare County and parts of Kings County, was voted into existence that same year.

     Since its inception in 1927, KDWCD has worked hand in hand with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the many area irrigation districts and ditch companies on important matters such as flood control; development of the Terminus Dam (forming Lake Kaweah) for flood control, irrigation, and power generation; and ensuring that the agricultural needs of the valley are met by maintaining over 200 miles of waterways and hundreds of acres of recharge basins. While both the dam and Lake Kaweah are federal resources managed by the Corps, KDWCD was instrumental in sponsoring the lake enlargement project and developing environmental mitigation sites in surrounding areas to help ensure that affected plant species are preserved.

     Over the years, the District’s responsibility has grown beyond maintaining and distributing local water resources to encompass the role of enhancing them. It is incumbent on the District to manage surface water allocations and to oversee the importing and exporting of water during dry and wet years to ensure there is no net loss of the precious resource to our residents. More recent discussions have focused on the need for managing our shrinking ground water resources and what role the District might play in that critical arena.

     In addition to regularly maintaining and clearing primary rivers and channels in the district, KDWCD responds to flood events during major rains. By moving and storing water in the many basins owned by the District, KDWCD can reduce potential damage downstream in Exeter, Visalia, and surrounding areas. You will also find KDWCD employees out in the rain, shoulder to shoulder with the irrigation district employees, clearing mounds of debris from the many gates, diversions, and other restricted flow areas around the county. (There have been 36 major flood events in and around Tulare County from 1950 to 2010.) Many lessons have been learned since the floods of 1861-62 and 1955. Terminus Dam itself is a product of those lessons.

     In the decades since its beginning, KDWCD has acquired over 5000 acres of land around Tulare County for the purpose of developing recharge basins and to assist with flood control. These basins are used primarily to capture rainwater and return it to the aquifers, but some are configured to receive water diversions during high water years to help reduce the effects of flooding.

     KDWCD has also purchased the 5000+ acre Davis Ranch north of Lake Kaweah as well as a 40-acre parcel alongside Dry Creek, just south of Homer Ranch, for the purpose of mitigating the environmental impacts of the lake enlargement project. The District sponsored that project in 2001 to increase the lake’s capacity from 150,000 acre-feet to approximately 185,600 acre-feet. These parcels will remain in their natural state in perpetuity and are inspected regularly to ensure that protection. Davis Ranch is leased to local ranchers for raising and grazing cattle, and many other parcels owned by the District are leased back to farmers for raising crops.

     Employees of KDWCD also manage the Kaweah River Power Authority to operate and maintain the Terminus Power Plant, a 20- megawatt hydropower facility that was constructed just below the dam in 1990 through a partnership between KDWCD and the Tulare Irrigation District. The plant generates power during flood releases in the winter and agricultural releases during the summer growing season. The release of water is strictly controlled by the Corps of Engineers. The power is currently sold to Southern California Edison, providing additional funds for maintaining and improving the waterways and properties throughout the district.

     While the district offices and the power plant are not generally open to the public, arrangements can be made for group tours and site visits by calling the office. Annual open houses and water education presentations for schools and civic groups are under consideration by the District.

March, 2014


Slideshow:


Quotes & More Photos:

“The Kaweah River flows westward 32 miles from the Sierra Nevada to the Central Valley, where it flows into Lake Kaweah and is managed for flood protection and stored for irrigaion purposes.” — Kaweah Delta Water Conservation District

“To irrigate the eastern portion it is but necessary to construct dams at the foot of the low hills on the different rivers and lead the water through channels to any portion of the plain desired.” — James H. Carson, 1852

“As early as 1854 an irrigation project was begun near Visalia, the first such project in the entire San Joaquin Valley and the first step in a new episode of environmental alteration that would ensure the spread of settlement throughout the basin.” — William L. Preston

“At first . . . water was cheap and plentiful. The late 1920s and early 1930s brought dramatic price increases as demand rapidly outpaced the supply of irrigation water, and a severe drought in the mid-1920s also encouraged basin farmers to turn to the development of groundwater resources. The capacity of pumped wells trebled by 1929, until well production amounted to about twelve times the volume of summer stream discharge from the Sierra Nevada into the basin.” — William L. Preston

“Whenever fifty or more owners . . . shall desire to conserve the waters of such stream or unnavigable river, they may propose the organization of a water conservation district under the provisions of this act . . . .” — State of California Water Conservation Act of 1927

“. . . to conserve and store water by . . . constructing dams and reservoirs for storage of water, and by spreading and sinking water . . . [and] to prevent . . . diminution of the natural flow of any stream or unnavigable river, including the natural subterranean supply of waters therefrom . . . .” — State of California Water Conservation Act of 1927

“Pursuant to the provisions of the ‘Water Conservation Act of 1927,’ the Board of Directors of the Kaweah Delta Water Conservation District met . . . on . . . the 22nd day of November 1927 . . . in the Larkins Building, at No. 117 North Church Street, in . . . Visalia . . . . The following Directors were present: E.F. Hart, Chas. A. Kimble, A.C. Rosenthal, J.N. Hagler, U.D. Switzer, W.B. Parr and Alex Whaley.” – – Minutes of the organizational meeting of the KDWCD

“We never know the worth of water ’til the well is dry.” — Thomas Fuller

“No matter how many reservoirs, dams, and aqueducts, we lived and prospered in California at the sufferance of the natural elements and the ability of our institutions to maintain huge public works.” — Philip L. Fradkin

“The District and the Kaweah River groundwater basin have experienced long-term groundwater overdraft estimated in 2007 to be as much as 40,000 acre-feet per year.” — KDWCD website

“The old Incas used to say, ‘The frog does not drink up the pond in which he lives. — Donald Worster


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

Address:  KDWCD District Offices, 2975 Farmersville Rd.,  Farmersville, CA 93233

Latitude/Longitude: Latitude: 36°19’25.78” N, Longitude: 119°12’24.90” W

Decimal Degrees: Latitude: 36.323827, Longitude: -119.206890

From Visalia, take Hwy 198 east onto the Farmersville exit. On the first roundabout, exit east toward the second roundabout.  On the second roundabout, exit right (south) onto Farmersville Rd.  In a few hundred feet, the KDWCD offices will be on your right.


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Valley, Foothills, seasonal streams and irrigation ditches; administration office sited in environmentally rich garden setting
Activities: educational activities by appointment
Open: Office hours are Monday through Friday, 7:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. District facilities are generally not open to the public, but group tours may be arranged by contacting the office.
Site Steward: Kaweah Delta Water Conservation District (KDWCD), 559-747-5601
Opportunities for Involvement: none currently
Links: KDWCD

 

Giant Forest

Click on photos for more information.

The Story of The Giant Forest of Sequoia National Park

by William Tweed

     For more than a century, the people of Tulare County have had a special relationship with the Giant Forest, the giant sequoia grove that is the most-visited single feature in Sequoia National Park. Over the years, local residents have involved themselves in the grove in many different ways, and this involvement has made a real difference. The story reminds us that just because a place is “saved,” our responsibility for it is far from done.

     The giant sequoia trees of the Sierra Nevada grow only in very limited geographical areas called groves. The entire Sierra Nevada contains only about seventy-five such places, which vary in size from less than an acre to several square miles. Tulare County provides a home for over three-quarters of these groves, and most are to be found within either Sequoia National Forest or Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks.

     Only a handful of groves are larger than the Giant Forest, which covers about three square miles and contains about 2,000 sequoias larger than ten feet in diameter. Of the ten largest sequoias, five are found in this single grove, including the General Sherman Tree, the largest of them all. No other grove even comes close.

     As detailed in our Sequoia National Park story, the addition of the Giant Forest to Sequoia National Park came as a surprise to those who had campaigned in the summer of 1890 to convince Congress to create that park. George Stewart of the Visalia Delta newspaper, who led the campaign that year, knew how special the grove was but believed that the government had already made a commitment to sell the forest to the Kaweah Colony.

     A week after the original Sequoia National Park bill was signed by President Benjamin Harrison on September 25th, a second bill arrived on his desk. Among other things, this second bill, signed by the president on October 1st, added the Giant Forest to the new national park. At the time, no one stepped forward to take credit for the second wave of legislation, but modern historians give credit to attorney and railroad land agent Daniel K. Zumwalt of Tulare. In the fall of 1890, when Congress was considering these questions, Zumwalt was visiting in Washington, D.C. After his death in 1905, Zumwalt’s family felt comfortable giving him public credit for the creation of General Grant National Park, which was another part of that same bill. Without Zumwalt’s likely involvement, it is quite possible that the Giant Forest would ultimately have been sold and logged.

     A century later, it’s easy to assume that everyone immediately understood the significance of Sequoia National Park, but for the first decade of its existence, Congress allocated no money whatsoever to make the park accessible to visitors. Frustrated by this obvious omission, the residents of Tulare County sought to correct the situation. In the summer of 1899, the Visalia Board of Trade (we now call similar organizations “chambers of commerce”) organized a political pack trip into the park to show off both its potential and its needs. Playing a key role was Ben Maddox, publisher of the Visalia newspaper known as the Tulare County Times (an ancestor of the modern Visalia Times-Delta). Out of this came an annual appropriation to build roads and trails within the park.

     In 1903, using this money, the park completed a wagon road into the Giant Forest. Almost immediately, Tulare County residents started visiting the cool, green grove, especially during the hottest part of the year. Farmers and businessmen alike would take their wives and children up to the forest to camp for a month or two while they stayed in the valley to earn a living. By the 1910s, the Giant Forest sheltered a sizeable contingent of local residents each summer. To this day, old-time local families still remember stories of the many happy months they spent beating the heat in the shade of the towering sequoias.

Camp Sierra Campfire, Giant Forest, 1910

     After 1926, additional connections linked Visalia and the Giant Forest. That summer a new road opened, the Generals Highway. Suddenly, it was easy to drive an automobile up to the grove. The trip took less than three hours in a car versus the two to three days the same journey had taken in a wagon via the original road.

     Visitation soared, and a park concessioner known as the Sequoia and General Grant National Parks Company built hundreds of cabins and tents in the heart of the grove. The company would make its headquarters in Visalia for the next forty years. In these same years, Visalia adopted the descriptive slogan “Gateway to the Sequoias,” a title it maintains to this day in its municipal marketing efforts.

     In the 1970s, the size and scope of the human development within the grove became an issue. Simply put, many worried that the human footprint within the Giant Forest had become too large. In response, the National Park Service developed a proposal to remove all commercial development from the grove and relocate it a few miles away in new buildings outside the giant sequoia area.

     In August 1974, the Park Service took this proposal to the residents of Tulare County in the form of a public meeting in Visalia. At that meeting, the Park Service heard both that relocating the lodges made sense and that preserving park campgrounds was of the highest importance. This proved a key turning point in the development of the final plan. In the years to follow, all commercial development did leave the Giant Forest, to be replaced by the modern Wuksachi Lodge some six miles away. And as many Visalians had advocated, the nearby campground at Lodgepole was retained and remodeled.

     Today, the long-established relationship between Visalia and the Giant Forest continues to find new expressions. Since 2007, the city has operated a summer shuttle service between the transit center in Visalia and the Giant Forest Museum. Each summer day, buses connect these two destinations and provide an easy way for local residents to continue to do what they have done for so long – enjoy the Big Trees.

     The many residents of Tulare County continue to take a very strong interest in the Giant Forest. Since the late nineteenth century, this special place has kept its hold on the hearts of its lowland neighbors. Visitors from all over the world would agree the Giant Forest, in many ways, is Tulare County’s ultimate sequoia grove.

July, 2015

 

SEE related articles:  Moro Rock Stairway, Tharp’s Log, Sequoia National Park



Slideshow:


Quotes & More Photos:

“When the Mayflower arrived on the eastern shore of this continent, the great sequoias were already here. When the seal was fixed on the Magna Carta, the great sequoias were already here. They were here when the Roman Empire fell, and they were here when the Roman Empire rose. And had Christ himself stood on the spot, He would have been in the shade of this very tree.” — George W. Bush

“After a general exploration of the Kaweah basin, this part of the Sequoia belt seemed to me the finest, and I then named it ‘the Giant Forest.’” — John Muir

“It extends, a magnificent growth of giants grouped in pure temple groves, ranged in colonnades along the sides of meadows, or scattered among the other trees, from the granite headlands overlooking the hot foot-hills and plains of the San Joaquin back to within a few miles of the old glacier-fountains at an elevation of 8400 feet above the sea.” — John Muir

“Go where I would, sequoia ruled supreme. Trees of every age and size covered the craggiest ridges as well as the fertile, deep-soiled slopes, and planted their colossal shafts along every brook and along the margins of spongy bogs and meadows.” — John Muir

“. . . I discovered the majestic dome-like crowns of Big Trees towering high over all, singly and in close grove congregations.” — John Muir

There is something wonderfully attractive in this king tree, even when beheld from afar, that draws us to it with indescribable enthusiasm; its superior height and massive smoothly rounded outlines proclaiming its character in any company, and when one of the oldest attains full stature on some commanding ridge it seems the very god of the woods.” — John Muir

“Of all the forces on Earth, only man is capable of cutting down a sequoia, and only man is capable of fully appreciating its beauty. And fortunately, more than a century ago, the Government of the United States stayed the hand of all who would destroy this place and these trees. That decision . . . reflects an ethic of respect for the natural world that was once shared only by a few but is now a basic commitment of American life.” — George W. Bush

“We should boldly ask ourselves whether we want the national parks to duplicate the features and entertainments of other resorts, or whether we want them to stand for something distinct, and we hope better in our national life . . . . ” — Col. John R. White, Superintendent, 1936

“[T]here is danger unless all plans are subordinated to that atmosphere which though unseen, is no less surely felt by all who visit those eternal masterpieces of the Great Architect which we little men are temporarily protecting.” — Col. John R. White, Superintendent, 1936


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

From Visalia, take Hwy 198 east through Three Rivers to the Park entrance (entrance fee). Continue up into the Park on Generals Highway to the parking area across from the Giant Forest Museum. Giant Forest is entirely within Sequoia National Park.

 Plan Your Trip: https://www.nps.gov/seki/planyourvisit/vehicle-restrictions.htm

Giant Forest Map

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Mountains, giant sequoia grove, Sequoia National Park, elevation approx. 6500′-7000′
Activities: backpacking, birding, botanizing, camping (nearby at Lodgepole), educational activities (Giant Forest Museum, Ranger-led programs), hiking, photography, picnicking, scenic driving, skiing (cross-country, seasonal), snow play (seasonal), wildflower and wildlife viewing
Open: daily, year-round, weather permitting, unless closed due to emergency conditions
Steward: National Park Service, Sequoia National Park, 559-565-3341
Opportunities for involvement:  donate, volunteer; Sequoia Parks Conservancy (SPC) membership
Links:
Books:
1) Challenge of the Big Trees -The Updated History of Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, by William C. Tweed and Lary M. Dilsaver (University of Virginia Press, 2017)
2) A Guide to the Sequoia Groves of California, by Dwight Willard (Yosemite Association, 2000)
3) Kaweah Remembered, the Story of the Kaweah Colony and the Founding of Sequoia National Park, by William Tweed (Sequoia Natural History Association, 1986)
4) Images of America – Sequoia National Park, by Ward Eldridge (Arcadia Publishing, 2008)
5) King Sequoia: The Tree That Inspired a Nation, Created Our National Park System, and Changed the Way We Think about Nature, by William C. Tweed (Heyday, 2016)

 

Click on photos for more information.

The Story of Dry Creek Preserve

by Paul Hurley

     Nature rules again at Dry Creek Preserve.

     Situated on 152 acres of a former gravel quarry on a mostly dry stream bed north of Lemon Cove, Dry Creek is ecologically significant as a sycamore alluvial woodland. It is one of only seventeen such environments scattered through Central California and one of the largest. It was home to a thriving settlement of the Wukchumne tribe in pre-European-American times. Then it was used for cattle grazing. More recently, it was a rock and gravel mine for twelve years until that use was nearly exhausted by the end of the twentieth century.

     Dry Creek was restored to its natural – although not original – condition by a partnership led by Sequoia Riverlands Trust (SRT). It is the first such mining reclamation site in Tulare County and is singular because the restoration effort used the damage caused by the mining operations to create unique and enhanced habitat.

     Hilary Dustin, conservation director of Sequoia Riverlands Trust, worked on the restoration from its beginning in 2004. The first time she saw Dry Creek, it was so desolate and gloomy it reminded her of Mordor in “Lord of the Rings.”

     “This mine had affected virtually every square foot of the property,” Dustin said in an extensive video interview with Tulare County Treasures. “You would think, this is devastation, you know, it’s ruined; we can never do anything with it.”

     The multi-year mining operation at Dry Creek had never been popular with the neighbors. When the owner, Artesia Mining Company, eventually foundered, one of its creditors, California Portland Cement, took over the property and was considering what to do with it. One of the neighbors urged Sequoia Riverlands Trust to talk with the new owner. The land trust contacted the cement company and initiated a meeting.

     No longer viable as a mine, the property was subject to expensive reclamation work mandated by the state of California. After only weeks of deliberation, California Portland Cement decided to turn the property over to SRT. Both sides had seen an opportunity: California Portland Cement shed its obligation to clean up the mine site, and SRT saw a chance to restore a unique natural habitat. That was in 2004, and it began more than eight years of restoration to return Dry Creek to something resembling its natural state.

     Shortly after acquiring the property, SRT received a $200,000 grant from a private foundation to begin planning and restoration. That same year, the trust added another $100,000 from the Natural Resources Conservation Service, a federal agency, to pay for the reclamation. More assistance arrived in short order: The Nature Conservancy offered its services and connected SRT with experts at University of California, Berkeley and UC, Davis.

     Landscape students from California State Polytechnic University, Pomona supported the project. Kaweah Delta Water Conservation District extended its expertise. Two grants from the state of California helped pay for visitor amenities such as signs and restrooms. Volunteers showed up to help move rocks, clear trails, and plant trees.

     Dustin estimates that about $1.2 million in donations contributed to the Dry Creek Preserve restoration, and of that about a half million dollars was from in-kind donations of professional and volunteer work.

    “The vision for the reclamation was not just to get back to the way things were before mining,” Dustin said, “which was essentially open grazing land, but to actually do what we could to enhance the values out there for wildlife habitat and also for people to come and enjoy the place and to make it a wonderful outdoor classroom as well.”

      The restoration created opportunities to improve upon what nature had created. In some cases, the restoration project removed berms and ditches so that the water returned to its natural courses. Mining had also disrupted the water table, and some deep quarries created pools, including a small lake that wasn’t there before. With the natural habitat restored, oaks and sycamores began to return. Bird and animal species took hold in the newly restored environment.

    “There’s a lot of volunteer cottonwoods, willows, and other vegetation that came back on its own, once mining stopped,” Dustin said. “But we’re kind of nudging it along, trying to help the sycamore alluvial woodland come back a little faster than it might otherwise.”

     It’s a case of nature getting by with a little help from its friends.

   “We actually have more native plants out there now than we did before and we have a more natural stream flow,” Dustin said.

     Dry Creek was also established as a kind of open-air laboratory, with nature as the scientist in charge. SRT envisions it is as a place for field study and natural experiments. The trust has already established a native plant nursery and a native plant demonstration garden.

     The preserve welcomes what Dustin calls “citizen scientists”: visitors who make observations about habitat or wildlife and record them. It also encourages students to use the site as a classroom.

     Dry Creek has been a tribal village site, a cattle grazing site, a unique natural habitat, and a mine. Now a reclaimed site, it still shows evidence of all those uses in its past. And all of them have something to teach people.

    “Many people would have considered this place trashed, if they had gone out to Dry Creek ten years ago,” Dustin said in 2014. “If they go out there today, I think they would say, Wow, look what happened when we sort of got back out of the way of nature, and we helped a little bit to do some restoration.”

July, 2014



Slideshow:


Quotes & More Photos:

“This family of sycamores (Platanus racemosa) is among the largest Sycamore Alluvial Woodlands in the Sierra Nevada ecoregion and one of 17 stands over 10 acres remaining on the planet.

It is connected by a common root ball. Rarely exposed, some root balls measure 15 feet in diameter and have been pushing new stems for centuries. Some stems here are three to four hundred years old—alive, perhaps when Sir Francis Drake claimed California for Spain. Imagine how old the root balls must be!” — John Dofflemyer

“Mining is a necessary art, but it does not tend to beautify the face of nature.” — Horace Greeley

“Mountains of white and empty pits where the gravel miners quit pulling the last dollar out of ground we irrigated for thirty years, when it cost too much to dig.” — John Dofflemyer

L-R: Sopac Mulholland McCarthy, John Dofflemyer, Scott Spear, Hilary Dustin

“One of the neighbors who had been very involved in the opposition to the mine came to Sequoia Riverlands Trust and said, ‘Hey, we ought to go talk to them. They’re not going to be able to make money on this mine. . . .  Maybe they should just give you the property.'” — Hilary Dustin

“We started a native plant nursery at Dry Creek. And we got to thinking. We’ve got restoration going on at Kaweah Oaks Preserve, at the Herbert Preserve, why don’t we start growing more things? And then NRCS, which works with other land owners doing restoration projects, asked if we would raise plants for them. So now we are providing tens of thousands of plants to these other projects.” Hilary Dustin

“He who plants a tree plants hope.” — Lucy Larcom

“Now we’re really shifting our focus to ways that people can continue to be involved out there, whether it’s in a formal learning setting, like school tours for kids, or a service learning project, helping kids meet their community service hours, but also getting them outdoors and learning the story of our area and how they can become involved in conservation, in caring for the land.” — Hilary Dustin

“The environment is where we all meet; where all have a mutual interest; it is the one thing all of us share. It is not only a mirror of ourselves, but a focusing lens on what we can become.” — Lady Bird Johnson

“Earth laughs in flowers.” — Ralph Waldo Emerson


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

Address: Dry Creek Preserve, 35220 Dry Creek Drive, Woodlake, CA 93286

GPS Coordinates: 36.43188, -119.02469300000001

From Visalia, take Hwy 198 east to Lemon Cove. Turn left onto Hwy 216 toward Woodlake. Cross the bridge in 1/2 mile and turn right onto Dry Creek Drive. The Preserve is 2 miles north, on the right.

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Foothills, sycamore alluvial woodland, seasonal stream, pond
Activities: birding, botanizing, disc golf, dog walking (on leash; scoop poop), educational activities, hiking, native plant nursery and trail, photography, picnicking, wildflower and wildlife viewing
Open: daily 8:00 a.m. to sunset, EXCEPT open on weekends only during summer months due to fire danger (check dates with Site Steward)
Site Steward: Sequoia Riverlands Trust (SRT), 559-738-0211
Opportunities for Involvement: donate, volunteer
Links:

 

Click on photos for more information.

The Story of the Buck Rock Fire Lookout — The Place to Go For High Adventure

by Terry Ommen

     Perched atop an enormous granite rock on the northern boundary of Tulare County is a historic building called the Buck Rock Fire Lookout. It is a working lookout, but it is much more. At an elevation of 8,502 feet, this observation post is an amazing place … one that Huell Howser, host of the hit television show “California’s Gold,” strongly endorsed, saying, “For high adventure, this is the place to come.”

     This granite outcropping first served as a lookout post for fires in 1912. To get to the top, early fire watchers had to scramble up a tree trunk that leaned against the rock, and then, using a series of makeshift ladders, make their way up the steep face to the summit and its 360-degree panorama of a vast portion of the southern Sierra. Not only did they have a great vantage point to spot fires, they had an amazing view of a spectacular section of a mountain range known for its beauty.

     In 1923, a one-room cabin, or cab as it is called, was built on top of the rock, and this live-in style structure became the prototype for many other lookouts that followed.

     Hundreds of fire watchers have served lookout duty at Buck Rock over the years, but none has been involved with it any longer than Leatrice Evinger Dotters. She started as a fire lookout on June 6, 1944. While most men were off to war, Lea took over what was traditionally a man’s job, and did it for $120.00 per month—the first female firewatcher at Buck Rock. She worked there the entire fire season and has been connected to this special place ever since.

     At one time about 600 fire lookout facilities served California, with about 8,000 nationwide. Over the years many have disappeared.

     Buck Rock might have been lost too, had it not been for U. S. Forest Service employee Kathryn (Kathy) Ball Allison.

     In 1997, in anticipation of a major lightning storm, Kathy was moved from Delilah Lookout to Buck Rock, which had been staffed only during emergencies since 1987. The reassignment decision was a good one. While at Buck Rock, Kathy reported multiple fires, made weather observations, relayed radio transmissions, and monitored the fire well after the firefighters left the scene. The Choke Fire, as it was called, proved to be a big one, involving hundreds of firefighters. Once it was out, Kathy returned to Delilah, leaving Buck Rock unstaffed again.

     But Kathy didn’t forget Buck Rock. Saddened by the prospect of its closing, she led an effort, with help from co-workers, to create an advocacy organization that would support not only Buck Rock, but all lookouts. From that, the Buck Rock Foundation, www.buckrock.org, was formed, a non-profit corporation “dedicated to preserving the tradition of forest fire lookouts and other historically significant buildings.” In 1999, with the help of the Buck Rock Foundation, Buck Rock was re-established as a primary location for fire detection and has been staffed seven days a week ever since during fire season by Forest Service personnel in partnership with Foundation volunteers who provide relief. Visitors can climb the safe, but thrilling, 172 steps to the cab and its catwalk when the lookout is open.

     Buck Rock has been nominated for the National Register of Historic Places. Kathy has been the foundation’s only president. Lea Dotters credits Kathy’s effort in the creation of the foundation and keeping Buck Rock a working lookout. “I just can’t say enough about her and her tireless work on behalf of Buck Rock and all the lookouts,” she said.

September, 2012



Slideshow:


Quotes & More Photos:

“In the morning, she was the first to watch the sun emerge from the hills to the east, and in the evening, when it was dark beneath her, the valleys and ridges gripped by the insinuating fingers of the night, she was the last to see it set.” — T. Coraghessan Boyle

“I’ve got a great office with a great view and a deluxe built-in Stairmaster.” — Helen Roe

“If a fire lookout does his or her job well, few people will ever know. The primary objective is to spot a fire — ‘a smoke,’ in lookout lingo — while it is still small and help fire crews extinguish it before it races across the landscape. The only way to do that is to climb the tower and watch, hour by hour, day by day, from the time the snow melts until it returns.” — Shaun McKinnon

“Somewhere in the history of fire watches, the tower and the lookout acquired an almost mythic quality, immortalized and romanticized by writers who spent a season or more climbing the stairs, looking for smokes.” — Shaun McKinnon

“Once only utilized for the detection of fire, lookouts are now considered functional for non-traditional uses and are being restored to serve as museums, interpretive centers, wildlife observation posts and vacation rentals.” — Buck Rock Foundation

“[T]he sheer bubbling joy of living on the crest of the sky . . . It was like floating untethered, drifting with the clouds, like being cupped in the hands of God.” — T. C. Boyle


Maps & Directions:

 

Directions:

Address: 2.5 miles north of Horse Camp USFS Campground

Latitude/Longitude:

N36° 43.9038’/W118° 51.7474′

36.731730400/-118.862457300

From Visalia, go north on Hwy 63; turn right (east) onto Hwy 180 into Kings Canyon National Park.  At the “Y” turn right (south) onto CA-198/Generals Hwy.

Exit Generals Highway left (east) onto Big Meadows turn off (FS Road 14S11), and drive 3 miles to Horse Camp; turn left onto FS 13S04.

Follow the signs, driving 2-½ miles along an often narrow, rough dirt road to parking areas near the tailhead to Buck Rock Lookout.

Note: You can enjoy a great loop trip by going south on Generals Highway through Sequoia National Park to Three Rivers and back to Visalia on Hwy 198 west.

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Mountains, fire lookout, elevation: 8,502′
Activities: birdwatching, camping near by, dog walking (on 6′ leash; scoop poop), hiking, horseback riding near by, photography, picnicking (picnic tables and restroom near lookout, but no water), rock climbing, visiting lookout, volunteering
Open: 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. daily during fire season, usually June to October, but may be closed due to fire activity or adverse weather conditions. A sign below the lookout informs visitors if the tower is open. No more than six people at a time are recommended on the lookout as there is very little room on top. Please keep in mind that the lookout is used as office and residence for the firewatcher on duty.
Site Steward: Buck Rock Foundation:  559-920-6824, hello@buckrock.org; U.S. Forest Service/Giant Sequoia National Monument/Hume Lake Ranger District:  559-338-2251
Opportunities for Involvement: membership, donate, volunteer
Links:

 

Click on photos for more information.


A Lucky Day In The Office

by Alan George

   The 324 acres now known as Kaweah Oaks Preserve (KOP) are a remnant of one of the finest Valley Oak woodlands still left in the world. Valley Oaks grow only in California, mainly along the state’s waterways and generally below an elevation of 2500 feet. Their species, Quercus lobata, is the largest of all oaks and is generally considered the most attractive and graceful. KOP is considered one of the best examples remaining of the original 400 square miles of oak forest that thrived in the Kaweah River watershed. This forest spread from the base of the Sierra on the east to the edge of historic Tulare Lake (now drained) on the west.

   The aboriginal Yokuts Indians of the Wukchumni tribe used the acorns from this area as a primary source of food. They harvested many plants and hunted animals here but never actually lived on this site because of the annual spring floods.

     By the turn of the twentieth century, this forest was disappearing at a rapid rate and was being replaced by agriculture – grains, orchards, and vineyards. The property that became KOP, however, had been kept as grazing land for cattle, with little to no cutting of the oaks.

   Because I had long been interested in Tulare County history and the preservation of the Valley Oaks, saving 324 acres of native oak woodland was the chance of a lifetime for me. The whole process was like a big jigsaw puzzle with all the parts finally coming together to the satisfaction of all involved.

     The property had belonged to the Davis family of Woodlake for several generations and had been used for cattle grazing with no land tillage, ever. The Nature Conservancy, a national land conservation group interested in significant land preservation, had approached the Davis family previously, to ask whether they might be interested in selling their land, but the family was not interested in selling because they wanted to stay in the cattle business.

     I was employed as a Farm Advisor at that time and was somewhat familiar with this property as I have always been interested in trees, particularly the Valley Oak, since I was a small boy. During my childhood, we used to go for a Sunday ride after church dinner and often drove by this area. In the summer, the “swamp” always felt so much cooler than urban Visalia’s temperature. This property is typical of the original oak forests ranging along the Four Creeks of the Kaweah River, with Deep Creek and other native streams meandering through it.

     The Farm Advisor’s office is an educational function of the University of California, originally set up in the Land Grant Colleges to work with and advise farmers. We had office days at the direction of our County Director and on one of those days the office secretary told me there was a young lady there to see me — Myrtle Franklin of Pebble Beach, California.

     Myrtle informed me that she had just inherited the 324 acre Davis property when her mother passed away. Myrtle was interested in developing the property for farming, instead of using it for grazing as her family had done. She had come to me for advice, probably because of her cousin, Everett Welch, who was a friend, and because I was a native of the county and a long-time agriculturalist.

     Myrtle wanted to plant walnuts. I told her that was not a good choice because the water table was too high – only about 8 feet below the soil surface and walnuts are subject to “wet feet” (disease) from too high of a water table. She asked what she could plant and I suggested field crops such as cotton, corn, alfalfa, etc. I emphasized this would entail a lot of work and expense – water wells, pipelines, leveling, tree removal, and more. But, nevertheless, she was determined to farm that land. Knowing the property, I asked her if she had ever considered selling it to preserve such a beautiful, natural area. She said she was “definitely not interested.”

     Several weeks later, Myrtle surprised me. She came back to see me and said she might be interested in selling. To farm it would be a big investment and a lot of headaches. To preserve it would be a possible tax advantage.

     Knowing one of the Nature Conservancy (TNC) Directors in Delano, Jack Zaninovich, I immediately called him for advice on whom to contact. Jack told me that the timing was perfect as the Conservancy was embarking on a California Critical Areas program with 11 natural areas they were especially interested in preserving. One area was Valley Oak woodland.

     On Jack’s advice, I contacted Steve McCormick in San Francisco. He was the Chairman of the Critical Areas acquisitions project. Steve was excited and made a hurried visit to Visalia. I showed him the property and then arranged for a friend to fly him over it, as well. It was love at first sight — exactly what the Conservancy had in mind, according to Steve.

     After Steve’s visit, I arranged for Myrtle to go to San Francisco to meet with him. Steve told me later that they had the door closed to his office for several hours and his staff was beginning to wonder what was going on.

     It took awhile, but they had agreed on the next step. Steve and Myrtle, independently, had the property appraised. Unfortunately, the appraisals came in many dollars apart. I assured Myrtle that if she would stick with me, I would make sure she got a fair price. Being involved in agriculture, I knew about land values. Negotiations continued, but the parties remained far apart on the value of the property.

     I urged Steve not to let this property get away, as the Nature Conservancy would never have a better chance to buy such a property to preserve.

     After several months of negotiations, they came to an agreement, at last. Myrtle would sell the land to the Conservancy and the Conservancy would help Myrtle tax-wise on the sale and on another property investment.

     Steve phoned me from San Francisco with the thrilling news: “The Kaweah Oaks Preserve is yours!” The price was $1,010,000, or about $3,000 an acre. The Nature Conservancy put a person on the property to inventory its assets and to work with some of us locals to help raise funds to offset their investment. (Typically, the Nature Conservancy acquires a critical area and often several years later turns it over to another organization or agency to manage and maintain.)

     Before all this happened, I was in line to become the President of the Tulare County Historical Society. At one of the Board meetings, one of our Directors, Max Cochran, told me he had a project in mind when I became President. I told him, I, too, had one – the replacement of the Pioneer statue at Mooney’s Grove Park that had crashed during a small earthquake. Max was a former County Schools Superintendent and a strong environmentalist. His idea was to preserve the “Swamp” which, ultimately, was to become the Kaweah Oaks Preserve.

     Talk about a jigsaw puzzle. When all the foregoing happened with Mrytle Franklin, Max’s idea came out better than mine; the whole project was really his idea. I happened to be in the Farm Advisor’s office at the right time to follow through on his idea. Together, we established a lifetime bonding with 324 acres of native oaks woodland.

     P.S., Steve McCormick moved up to become President of the California Nature Conservancy and later became Chairman of the National Nature Conservancy in Washington D.C.

     Myrtle told me, at the dedication of the Kaweah Oaks Preserve, on May 15, 1983, that preserving this area was one of the most exciting things she had done in her life. When I retired in 1984, Myrtle took my wife, JoAnn, and me out for dinner to thank me for what I had done. With part of the proceeds from the sale of Kaweah Oaks, Myrtle bought some property on the Rogue River in Oregon. As for the people in Tulare County, we were happy she did not carry out her original idea of farming this treasure.

     [In a drive organized by Alan George, the people of Tulare and Kings counties raised over $100,000 through community donations to help The Nature Conservancy pay for the land that became Kaweah Oaks Preserve.]

September, 2012


Quotes & More Photos:

“Mr. Oak” and a favorite Valley Oak

“We are essentially a people to whom land comes first. We are its children; we have emotional ties to it that we can never forget, even way down into generations that no longer live in the old way. It is a basic part of our identity – it makes us feel who we are, and without it, we have been cut off and bewildered.” –Alfred Ketzler

“Where once there had been riparian woodlands ten miles wide, now they do not exceed a few hundred feet and are confined to preserves. Oaks once covered a million acres, but only 1 percent of that acreage is now considered pristine oak woodlands. The king of trees has been reduced to a few solitary mendicants.” — Philip L. Fradkin

Demonstration of packing for backcountry travels.

California Nature Conservancy was a vital partner in the acquisition of Kaweah Oaks Preserve

California Sycamore in the KOP meadow

Bird watching with Rob Hansen after the dedication

Myrtle Davis Franklin with Don Hillman during the KOP dedication May 15, 1983

Nature walk for visitors of all ages

Alan George speaking at KOP dedication 05/15/1983

                      

                                                                                                                                                  ALAN GEORGE

                                                                                                                         10/06/1924 – 04/14/2019

                                                                                                                    A True Tulare County Treasure

Click on photos for more information.

The Story of Homer Ranch Preserve

by John Greening

     Big Trees, the magnificent giant sequoias growing between 5,000 and 7,000 feet in our skyscraping Sierra Nevada, have made Tulare County world famous, and justifiably so. But our county is home to some other big trees that are also well worth visiting, beautiful in all seasons, and very easy to get to, with no mountain driving required. Head north from Lemon Cove for just a few miles on a scenic rural road and discover Homer Ranch Preserve, where majestic valley oaks and splendid sycamores enhance a picturesque foothill environment conserved and managed by Sequoia Riverlands Trust.

     Spreading across 1,819 acres along Dry Creek Valley, the preserve protects one of California’s rarest habitats, a sycamore alluvial woodland, and provides critical habitat for native species such as the bald eagle, acorn woodpecker, and western pond turtle. The preserve combines historic land preservation with modern habitat-sensitive cattle ranching on its extensive grasslands and blue oak woodlands. In springtime, in most years, a spectacular display of wildflowers splashes the green hillsides with brilliant fields of yellow, orange, and purple.

     Running through the valley is Dry Creek, a seasonal stream which drains approximately 25 square miles of watershed extending from the western edge of Kings Canyon National Park to its junction with the Kaweah River. The stream is shallow and dries up in the hot months, because it is not fed by any snowpack, but in wet winters it can produce startling, rejuvenating floods.

     For many centuries, the Wukchumni Yokuts lived on and managed these lands. They used fire to stimulate the growth of useable plants. The men hunted small game such as squirrels and rabbits, and the women collected bulbs, seeds, and blue oak acorns. You can still see some of their mortar holes for grinding the acorns in two granite boulders just south of the preserve entrance. Remnants of campsites and villages in the valley give evidence of a stable, enduring population.

     In 1882, the great-great-grandparents of Richard Homer settled and began ranching here. For 120 years, generations of the family raised cattle along Dry Creek. Then, in 2002, Richard and his wife, Stephanie, inspired by a visit to the Kaweah Oaks Preserve, approached Sequoia Riverlands Trust (SRT) about selling the ranch. They were moving out of state and wanted to ensure that their land would continue the Homer heritage as a working cattle ranch, but also that it would allow people to visit and enjoy its beauty.

     SRT was immediately interested in the Homers’ offer to sell the ranch because the creek area along its western edge hosts such a significant sycamore alluvial woodland. Only 17 areas in the state still support this habitat, and Dry Creek is the second largest of these. The large size of the property prompted SRT to partner with The Nature Conservancy to raise funding for the $1.5 million purchase price. Generous support from the River Parkways program of the California Resources Agency and from the David and Lucile Packard Foundation met the goal.

     In June, 2004, SRT, in partnership with The Nature Conservancy, announced the enduring protection of the Homer Ranch lands. Cattle grazing would continue under a conservation plan as an integral part of managing the preserve, to ensure that invasive, non-native grasses would not out-compete and overwhelm the native species.

     After acquiring the land, SRT’s initial challenge was to upgrade the fencing and to develop several water sources for the cattle to keep them away from the overgrazed creek area, where they were even eating the sycamores. By 2012, the fence work was completed, and three springs and ponds in the hills to the east had been rehabilitated, allowing the cattle to be moved away from the creek in summer.

     Before cattle came to the San Joaquin Valley, elk would intensively graze an area and then move on, often not returning for several years. The elks’ hooves broke up the ground, allowing seeds, including the sycamores’, to become established. To learn what grazing patterns will be most effective today, SRT is partnering with Point Blue Conservation Science and the National Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) to establish sustainable grazing practices that are compatible with preserving the native species present.

     After completing baseline inventories of native and non-native species distributions, the land trust and Point Blue, working with the preserve’s grazier, will experiment with modern rotational grazing patterns. The results will be shared with interested ranchers, so that they can evaluate options for their own land.

     SRT completed another important project in 2012, the construction of a parking lot and a network of trails on the ranch, open on weekends all year except in summer and early fall, when fire danger is too high.

     Late November is one of the nicest times of the year to enjoy the Homer Ranch trails. Fall storms and cooler weather then are turning the grasses green and coloring the big, leathery, five-lobed sycamore leaves yellow and red-orange, striking against the trees’ sinuous white trunks and limbs mottled with exfoliating bark. Dry Creek swells and sometimes floods, bringing new alluvial soil and sycamore seeds to higher ground, and recharging the aquifer.

     At the western edge of the floodplain, live oak trees shade granite boulders. To the east, an extensive blue oak woodland climbs the foothills, densest in the rocky canyons and on the north-facing slopes, while the south-facing slopes and flatter areas are covered with native perennial bunch grasses and annual non-native grasses.

     Watch for birds and small animals, black Angus cattle, and high-soaring hawks. Savor the solitude and the aromas of autumn as you walk where Wukchumni people once flourished.

     Be sure to come again in spring, when California poppies, lupine, fiddleneck, popcorn, clarkia, madia, and other wildflowers spread sensational patches of color across the grasslands and up the hillsides. At pastoral, historic Homer Ranch, you can still experience an exceptional Tulare County landscape that is little changed from when the first European settlers arrived.

     (History Note: When Richard Homer’s great-great-grandparents and other European-American settlers such as the Pogue family arrived in their covered wagons and established homesteads there, Dry Creek and Dry Creek Valley were known as Limekiln Creek and Limekiln Valley, as they were named in Thompson’s Atlas of 1892.)

November, 2015


Slideshow:


Quotes & More Photos:

“The Dry Creek Watershed supports one of the most extensive stands of nearly pure California sycamore woodland in the world.” — Bobby Kamansky

“California’s critical watersheds count on oaks to hold soil and filter the water supply needed for a growing population. Oak woodlands — those densely wooded areas where the dominant trees are oaks — support a surprising variety of wildlife.” — Janet Cobb

“If you want to feel whole again, sit with the creek and its meanderings through the old sycamores here.” — John Dofflemyer

“It comes to me only now/That time is short for natives/Unless you are an oak/ Making shade and acorns/For the future/Adding more than/You take away /From this earth /– this tilted plain/ Of clay and rock — /sacred places/ Under oaks where we can talk.” — John Dofflemyer

“The truth is: the natural world is changing. And we are totally dependent on that world. It provides our food, water, and air. It is the most precious thing we have, and we need to defend it.” — David Attenborough

“There is new life in the soil for every man. There is healing in the trees for tired minds and for our overburdened spirits, there is strength in the hills, if only we will lift up our eyes. Remember that nature is your great restorer.” — Calvin Coolidge

“[Forests are] the ‘lungs’ of our land, purifying the air and giving fresh strength to our people.” — Franklin D. Roosevelt

“I think having land and not ruining it is the most beautiful art that anybody could ever want to own.” — Andy Warhol

“[A] group of about 120 volunteers donated their time and muscle to complete a scenic hiking trail at the Homer Ranch Preserve . . . . The trailblazing event brought together groups of volunteers from the local business community — Southern California Edison and Kawneer — as well as student groups from CSET, Redwood High School’s Pro-Youth HEART program and COS Upward Bound, in addition to other committed volunteers from the community.” — Niki Woodard

“Autumn is a second spring, when every leaf is a flower.” — Albert Camus

“A short and easy fall between summer and winter, oak trees heavy, woodpeckers overstocked for cold, every crack and post full, a left over crop drops in circles beneath the trees.” — John Dofflemyer

“Open spaces between scattered oaks hoard a springtime wealth, wildflowers flourishing with bright prodigality.” — Elna Bakker


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

Address:  37628 Dry Creek Dr., Lemon Cove, CA, 93244

Latitude:36.4724488

Longitude:-119.0245483

From Visalia, take Hwy 198 east to Lemon Cove. Turn left onto Hwy 216 toward Woodlake. Cross the bridge in 1/2 mile and turn right onto Dry Creek Drive (J21). The Preserve is 5 miles north, on the right.

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Foothills, 1,819-acre preserve, seasonal stream, oak and sycamore alluvial woodlands; working cattle ranch
Activities: birding, botanizing, dog-walking (on leash; scoop poop), educational activities, hiking, photography, picnicking, wildflower and wildlife viewing
Open: On weekends only, from sunrise to sunset, during the cooler, wetter months (usually November 1-June 1); closed all summer and into autumn as necessary due to fire danger (phone or check SRT website for open/closed dates); free entry, with suggested donation of $3/adult and $1/child
Site Steward: Sequoia Riverlands Trust (SRT), 559-738-0211, info@sequoiariverlands.org
Opportunities: donate, volunteer
Links:

 

Click on photos for more information.

The Story of McCarthy Blue Oak Ranch Preserve

by Laurie Schwaller
with John Greening and Skip May

     When the staff and directors of Sequoia Riverlands Trust (SRT) learned in 2005 that a nearly two-square-mile portion of the 4,000 acre Golden Sierra Ranch just five miles north of Springville was coming up for sale, they knew they had to find the funds to buy it.

     Bordered by Dennison and Sycamore creeks and the north fork of the Tule River, this beautiful land supported biologically rich riparian areas and extensive blue oak woodlands. Cattle had grazed its grasslands for over one hundred years, and all kinds of wildlife visited its ponds and springs. Substantial elevation changes provided varied habitat and marvelous 360-degree views. Rising from the river up the slopes toward Giant Sequoia National Monument, the ranchland also served as an important travel corridor enabling wild creatures such as mule deer, black bears, mountain lions, bobcats, and Pacific fishers to move unhindered between the foothills and the mountains.

     Both Harris Road and Bear Creek Road provided easy access to the property, and just across Bear Creek Road, SCICON, the Tulare County Office of Education’s Clemmie Gill School of Science and Conservation, protected 1,000 similar acres. Historic ranch structures and prehistoric artifacts added cultural values to the site. In short, the parcel was a perfect fit with the land trust’s mission of permanently protecting the productive land and healthy natural systems that promote our county’s vitality and prosperity.

     Along the north fork of the Tule, Sequoia RIverlands Trust already held conservation easements on other key landscapes, including River Ridge Ranch and SCICON’s Circle J-Norris Ranch. But on the Golden Sierra Ranch, hundreds of homesites had been mapped out on one- and two-acre lots. Fortunately, a loan from the Packard Foundation enabled SRT to make the purchase, with the goal of managing the newly-named Blue Oak Ranch as a permanent nature preserve.

     Opening the new preserve to the public was a priority, but detailed planning and multiple projects had to be completed first. Since education is another SRT priority, the land trust reached out to involve local students of the Environmental Sciences Academy (ESA) career-based learning program at Porterville’s Monache High School in these processes. The first idea was to work over the summer with some engineering student interns, who would have the opportunity to plan and build trails to lead visitors into the ranch. Then Geographical Positioning System (GPS) and Geographic Information System (GIS) training became important, then communications skills, then creating a video record of the students’ work.

     Over several summers, the ESA student interns were joined by AmeriCorps volunteers, working closely with SRT project leaders to design and carry out the tasks at Blue Oak that would gradually return the land to its natural balance as a healthy riparian oak savannah and make it more visitor-friendly. The volunteers dedicated thousands of hours under the hot summer sun to removing stubborn invasive species such as the Himalayan blackberries that had overrun and blocked the riparian areas, and the massive patches of Italian and bull thistles that were degrading the grasslands.

     They planted appropriate native species in the salvaged spaces. With GPS and GIS, they located and mapped significant biological, archaeological, and historic sites on the preserve and determined where trails should go. Then they shouldered their shovels and set out to build the trails they had designed for the public to follow and share in the riches of Blue Oak Ranch Preserve.

     Armed with their ever-increasing knowledge of the preserve’s resources, the young volunteers helped plan a preview day for Blue Oak Ranch held on December 4, 2014. They proudly served as docents, led interpretive tours, and introduced visitors to the many recreational activities to be enjoyed there, including hiking, birdwatching, photography, horseback riding and biking at special events, and even archery on a parcel leased to the Springville Archery Club.

  While Blue Oak is presently open to the public only on first Saturdays and for special events, students continue to regularly work there, volunteering both during the school year and in a specialized summer program, carrying out research, monitoring the Western Pond Turtle population, creating phenology records, enhancing maps and trails, and increasing their knowledge and skills related to preserve management. During their senior year, in cooperation with their teachers, local officials, and various non-profit organizations, the students continue to design projects for the preserve.

     This resource-rich new link in the chain of preserves protecting a vital watershed is well on its way to becoming a key environmental, educational, and recreational asset to Tulare County. SRT is planning to house residential caretakers on the ranch, establish a sustainable cattle grazing operation, develop interpretive signage and other features to help the public learn more about the blue oak woodlands, and increase the days that the preserve is open to the public.

     On open days, visitors can take a short, easy walk from the parking area by the old corrals to a shady oak grove where a tall granite chimney is all that remains of a historic ranch house. Just a few hundred feet from there are bedrock mortars etched into the big boulders where generations of native Yokuts women ground acorns into nutritious meal. Take the quick path up a gentle hillside and you’ll find a beautiful pond, perfectly reflecting the bordering oaks and hillsides and the sky above. Adventurous hikers can make their way to the top of the peak for a real workout and a tremendous view.

     On a lucky day, you might see a rare Swainson’s thrush or black swift flying by. And if you spot some students at work, stop and ask what they’re doing. What you learn from them will add to your appreciation of this vital foothill landscape that still looks much as it did when the first Euro-American settlers arrived, 175 years ago.

                                     

                                                                                                                                                                                                               September, 2016

UPDATE: In 2023, this preserve’s name was shortened from Sopac McCarthy Mulholland Blue Oak Ranch Preserve to McCarthy Blue Oak Ranch Preserve.


Slideshow:


Quotes & More Photos:

“Conservation and rural-life policies are really two sides of the same policy; and down at the bottom this policy rests upon the fundamental law that neither man nor nation can prosper unless, in dealing with the present, thought is steadily given for the future.” — Theodore Roosevelt

“Throughout California’s history, people have lived among the oaks, raised families in homes shaded by oaks, worked and played around these generous natural and cultural icons. Oaks have played a crucial role in supporting the health and well being of people, plants, and animals across the state for decades.” — Janet Cobb

“[A]n intimate awareness of the continuity between our lives and the rest of life is the only thing that will truly conserve the earth — this wonderful earth that we rightly love.” — Lyanda Lynn Haupt

“I’m proud of [Porterville Unified’s Environmental Sciences Academy students’] accomplishments, . . . amazed at their growth, knowledge, and confidence. [They] sacrificed their weekends, free time, summer vacation . . . to come work in the . . . preserve . . . .” — Bud Darwin

“I feel like Blue Oak Ranch is my second home because I was out here GPS mapping and trail walking all summer long. It was a great experience for me, and made me want to pursue a career in environmental science.” — Luis Galvan

“Come forth into the light of things, let nature be your teacher.” — William Wordsworth

“Don’t judge each day by the harvest you reap but by the seeds that you plant.” — Robert Louis Stevenson

“There is new life in the soil for every man. There is healing in the trees for tired minds and for our overburdened spirits, there is strength in the hills, if only we will lift up our eyes. Remember that nature is your great restorer.” — Calvin Coolidge

“These old Blue Oaks, charcoal gray after rain, gathered to the shady side of every draw, have seen all kinds of weather, evolved to survive and give back more than they take away.” — John Dofflemyer

“I wandered among the oaks, sat on their roots, and observed their changing moods in different light and different seasons. Slowly, I began to hear their whispers.” — William Guion


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

Address:  40865 Harris Rd., Springville, CA  93265

From Visalia, take Hwy 198 east. Turn right (south) onto Road 204/Spruce Rd. Turn left onto Hwy 65 south toward Porterville.  Turn left onto County Route J28 through Strathmore to the junction with Hwy 190.  Go left (east) on Hwy 190 into Springville. Turn left (north) onto J37/Balch Park Dr. Watch carefully for the right turn in about 5 miles onto Harris Rd. Proceed about 1/2 mile on Harris Rd. to the entrance to Blue Oak Ranch Preserve on your right.


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Foothills, near Springville; 928 acre blue oak woodland with pond, streams, and trails; working ranch featuring sustainable cattle ranching practices
Activities: archaeology, birdwatching, botanizing, dog-walking (on leash; scoop poop), educational activities, events, hiking, history, photography, picnicking, wildflower and wildlife viewing
Open: on weekends sunrise to sunset, and as announced for events; check Sequoia Riverlands Trust website for open hours and events; no fee for entry, but donations are greatly appreciated
Site Steward: Sequoia Riverlands Trust; 559-738-0211 
Opportunities for Involvement: donate, volunteer
Links:

 

Click on photos for more information.

The Story of Bravo Lake Botanical Garden

by Paul Hurley

     From tiny seeds, great things grow.

     In Woodlake, the Bravo Lake Botanical Garden has grown fruits and vegetables, flowers, trees, and samples of the San Joaquin Valley’s agricultural bounty since 2003. Its 13 acres of plantings extol the area’s botanical diversity, teach people about the value of natural resources, and promote community pride.

     “We sort of knew that we wanted to create the first agricultural botanical garden in California,” said its co-founder and director, Manuel Jimenez.

     Manuel and his wife and garden collaborator, Olga Jimenez, both lifelong Woodlake residents, trace the origin of the botanical garden to 1972, when they first began beautification projects and planting community gardens in Woodlake, with the help of youth volunteers. “Our premise was that we would grow kids by planting gardens,” Manuel said.

     The Jimenezes had almost 30 years of experience planting community gardens when the city of Woodlake approached them in 1999, wondering if they would be interested in a barren stretch of ground near Bravo Lake that had been the Visalia Electric Railroad right of way. “The city had an empty area that was available,” Olga said, “and we had been doing beautification projects in different parts of the little town.”

     The couple launched into the large project with their Woodlake Pride youth as grass-roots collaborators with the city of Woodlake. They sought funding from service clubs, including the Woodlake Rotary. They received donations of plantings from nurseries, notably L.E. Cooke for fruit trees and Monrovia Nurseries for ornamentals. They visited other botanical gardens throughout California. They appealed to local businesses and farms for financial and technical support, including carpenters, plumbers, and electricians for infrastructure. Grading and grooming the site took a couple of years.

     They planted tens of thousands of annuals with the help of a labor force composed mostly of volunteering teenagers. When they began planting, they solicited experts to lay out specific areas of the garden. They planted 1,700 rose bushes in 130 varieties. The garden began to take shape, not just as a ground for growing plants but as a complete ecosystem.

     “The botanical garden was just a piece of dirt that was barren,” Olga said. “Now, if you go and visit it, you will see that not only have we got plants growing, kids growing, but we also have a variety of birds that have come to visit us. We have cottontails that are there, and turtles, and doves, and lizards. Things that were never there. And since we put the plants down, we see a lot of variety of wildlife just existing in our area.”

     The garden officially opened in 2003, and welcomes the public on weekends. Visitors walk a 1.2-mile trail that takes them past fruit trees and vegetable patches, ornamental shrubs and rose gardens, row crops and flower beds. Young people plant between 10,000 and 20,000 specimens a year.

     The garden is organized to show off not only the plants that grow in California, but the abundance of its agriculture and the heritage of farming in the San Joaquin Valley. “Once we did that, the next phase was to begin to include the key things that we thought were important for the community to learn, and that was conserving the natural resources that we have,” Manuel said.

     Water conservation was a priority, so the Garden installed several different efficient irrigation systems. They encouraged wildlife, and gradually observed snakes, frogs, birds, small mammals, and insects using the garden.

    We share our resources with the wildlife,” Manuel said. “So we plant fruit trees, you know. Fifty percent is for us, and fifty percent is for the wildlife. We let them feed.

     At the gardens, we let nature take its course.”

     The Bravo Lake Botanical Garden is a place for hands-on learning. People are encouraged to taste the produce. “You don’t have to visit 10 farms to see 10 crops. Our goal is eventually to plant everything that’s grown in the state. And so, I believe that people do seek to visit a facility like ours.”

     As complete as the garden is, it is not finished, Olga said. “I know that the seed, that it comes from the seed, but then the good Lord provides the water and all these beautiful plants that come up,” she said. “So, it’s been a learning experience, having this garden, and I’m sure that there’s more to be learned.”

October, 2012

 2017 Update: The City of Woodlake has changed the garden’s name to Woodlake Botanical Garden, and management, maintenance, plantings and purpose of the garden may be subject to change.



Slideshow:


Quotes & More Photos:

“You’re only as happy as your surroundings. And by planting gardens, we thought that people would be happy, and they were. They saw the gardens, and they would stop and say, you know, ‘This is beautiful.’ And they would tell the kids, ‘This is an awesome project that you guys have.'” — Manuel Jimenez

“And I think I haven’t found one lazy child yet, or one bad kid yet, and I’ve been doing this volunteer work over at the botanical garden for almost nine years.” — Olga Jimenez

“People from a planet without flowers would think we must be mad with joy to have such things around us.” — Iris Murdoch

“Tu, que caminas acaso con pensamientos perturbados, en entra aqui y reposa; y que la dulce serenidad de las cosas que brotan y la paz celestial, se reflejen en tu alma. You who walk, maybe with troubled thoughts, come, enter here and rest; and may the sweet serenity of growing things, and the heavenly peace be mirrored in thy soul.” — Doxis M. Palmer

“If we do not permit the earth to produce beauty and joy, it will in the end not produce food, either.” — Joseph Wood Krutch

“The legacy that I’d like to leave Tulare County and its residents is mostly the beauty, the beauty that can be.” — Olga Jimenez


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

 

Address: Naranjo Blvd. just east of Hwy 245, Woodlake, CA 93286

 

Latitude/Longitude:

36-24’28” N, Longitude: 119-05’49” W

36.4077273, -119.0970507

 

From Visalia, take Hwy 198 east to Hwy 245 (Valencia Blvd.).  Go left (north) on Hwy 245 about 5 miles into Woodlake, and take the first right turn on the roundabout to go east on Hwy 216 (Naranjo Blvd.).  Woodlake Botanical Garden is quickly on your right (south); parking is available along the street and in a parking lot.

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Valley, in Woodlake, community agricultural botanical garden
Activities: birdwatching, botanizing, dog walking (on a 6′ leash; scoop poop), educational activities, photography, picnicking, produce tasting (during events), walking (1.2 mile trail, wheelchair accessible), wildlife viewing
Note: To schedule a group tour of the gardens, contact Manuel Jimenez at 559-280-2483
Open: The rose garden on the west side of the parking lot is open daily, year-round. The eastern, gated part of the garden is open Thursday, Friday, & Saturday 9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. Note: Please check the Garden’s Facebook page for any changes to Open days and for current hours and announcements of special events – (https://www.facebook.com/WoodlakeBotanicalGardens/)
Site Stewards: Woodlake Pride, Manuel and Olga Jimenez, 559-280-2483; City of Woodlake, 559-564-8055
Opportunities for Involvement: Donate, volunteer
Links:

Click on photos for more information.

A Dream Come True: The Story of the Circle J-Norris Ranch

by Eleanor Norris

     The Circle J-Norris Ranch lies in the foothills of the Southern Sierra Nevada, 25 miles northeast of Porterville and seven miles north of Springville. Its 620 acres of rolling oak woodland was owned and ranched by one family, the Marion and Julia Gill Andersons and their offspring, for nearly eighty years. But in 1997, while still home to cattle, the ranch began to serve also as an outdoor classroom for children of all grade levels to study the amazing workings of the natural world they find there. This is the story of how that came to be.

     It all began with a dream – a dream I shared with my mother – that the Circle J would remain as open space, and never be broken up into many parcels with big houses, instead of cattle and wildlife, dotting its hills. I had no idea how the ranch could be preserved, but when my mother, Cora Norris, died in 1991, and left the ranch to me, I began to learn how to turn our dream into reality.

     That challenge led me to draw together a group of people to help create a land trust so that I could place legal restrictions on how the land could be used, now and “in perpetuity.” It took well over a year, but with the help of many friends and a few experts, we at last got our Tule Oaks Land Trust established as an official non-profit organization, and I got a conservation easement placed on the ranch, specifying that it could be used only for conservation, cattle ranching, or education. (Later, our Tule Oaks Land Trust merged with two other Tulare County land trusts to become the Sequoia Riverlands Trust, which stewards a number of preserves and other properties today in and beyond Tulare County.)

   While I was thinking about how the ranch should be used, SCICON came to mind, the Clemmie Gill School of Science and Conservation. Since it began, in the 1960s, SCICON has provided all Tulare County sixth-graders with a week of outdoor education on its residential campus, located just six miles from the Circle J. The campus’s original 35 acres were a gift to SCICON from my great-aunt Clemmie Anderson Gill.

     That led me, in 1992, to ask Jim Vidak, Tulare County Superintendent of Schools, “Do you need any more land for outdoor education?” “Yes!” said Jim immediately. They wanted to expand SCICON to include a day-use program for all grade levels. Soon we began meeting in my living room, with school teachers and administrators, dreaming into being the new life for the ranch.

     I explained that I loved the land, it was part of my family, and I wanted to keep it in open space. We walked over the ranch and saw it as a place where kids could come and experience being in the open, where many have never been — in the foothills, studying the oaks and the wildflowers, the streams and the pond, the wild creatures, and the long story of human use of that land.

     In 1997, this exciting educational endeavor got underway, with first graders from Springville as our first students. Dedication to outdoor education for young people must run in my family!

     In 2004, with the outdoor education program growing steadily, I sold the ranch to the Tulare County Office of Education (TCOE). TCOE manages the ranch as a second campus of SCICON, available for children of all grades, from pre-school through high school and into college, who come by bus for day use or, occasionally, for special weekend studies. With 600 acres protected under permanent conservation easements, cattle continue to graze there, as they have for close to 100 years. And so, my dream has come true.

     In closing, I want to tell you the story of how the Circle J-Norris Ranch got its name. When I was getting near to reaching my goal of protecting the ranch as open space, I wanted to give it a name that would honor both sides of my family. My Grandpa and Grandma, Marion and Julia Anderson, first owned the land, and their cattle were all branded with the Circle J.

     The Circle J brand was on cattle that belonged to Grandpa Anderson’s mother, Martha McDaniel Graham, and her first husband, John Graham, when they came across the plains in a cattle drive from Texas to California n 1859. They settled near Farmersville, but in 1866, John died from pneumonia. So it was Martha’s second husband, Garland Anderson, who registered the Circle J brand in Tulare County in the Anderson name in 1868.

     Martha and Garland Anderson were my great-grandparents. All four of their children, including my grandpa, Marion, were born in the old Anderson homestead in Yokohl Valley (where the family had moved to escape the wet flatlands of the Central Valley floor). Many years later, my mother, Cora Anderson, was born there, too.

     In the 1920s, my grandparents bought the land that I have named the Circle J-Norris Ranch. It was deeded to my grandmother, Julia Gill Anderson, in 1927. My grandparents,who made their year-round home in Porterville, ranched it, and they spent a few weeks there every summer, out of the valley heat. Then, in the late 1940s, my family moved to the ranch, and it was my dad, Norman Norris, and my mother, Cora Anderson Norris, who kept the place going for so long, until it came to me. So there you have it, the story of how the Circle J-Norris Ranch got its name.

October, 2012



Slideshow:


Quotes & More Photos:

“May all who come to this land carry on the heritage begun by the first People who lived here from ancient times, and the settlers who came after, love and stewardship of all the Earth and the creatures who inhabit it.” — Eleanor Norris

Conservator: “One who conserves or preserves; a protector; a guardian; a custodian.” — Webster’s Dictionary

“The ultimate test of a moral society is the kind of world that it leaves to its children.” – Dietrich Bonhoeffer

Elli holding the logo for the Tule Oaks Land Trust.

Cattle grazing on the ranch.

Circle J Ranch brand.

Elli with the Circle J-Norris Ranch branding iron.

“As we take care of the land, the land takes care of us.” – – Canadian First Nations


Maps & Directions:

Address: 41893 Yokohl Valley Rd., Springville, CA 93265

Latitude/Longitude:

N36° 13.4031’/W118° 49.7658′

36.223385/-118.829429

 

From Visalia: Head east on Hwy 198.  Turn right (south) onto Road 204/Spruce Rd.  Turn left (east) onto Hwy 65 south toward Porterville.  Turn left (east) onto County Route J28 through Strathmore to the junction with Hwy 190 into Springville.

Turn left (east) onto Hwy 190 into Springville, then turn left (north) at the big white barn onto Balch Park Road/County Route J37. 

Drive 6 miles and turn left onto Yokohl Valley Road.  In about 3/4 of a mile, see the gate on your left with the Circle J sign and turn into Circle J-Norris Ranch.

 

NOTE: Visits to Circle J-Norris Ranch must be arranged in advance (see Site Details below).

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Foothills, oak woodlands, working cattle ranch, ponds, education center
Activities: birdwatching, botanizing, photography, school field trips, wildflower and wildlife viewing
Open: Students’ field trips are scheduled by their schools; open to the public by appointment, and during Student and Family Events (pre-registration required).  To pre-register, contact Amanda Driver, Circle J-Norris ranch Education Coordinator, 559-539-2263, or circlej@tcoe.org.
Site Stewards: Tulare County Office of Education (TCOE)/Clemmie Gill School of Science and Conservation (SCICON), 559-733-6300; Sequoia Riverlands Trust (SRT), 559-738-0211
Opportunities for Involvement: Audubon Christmas Bird Count, donate, volunteer
Links:

Click on photos for more information.

The Hockett Trail, Meadow, and Ranger Station – Enduring Southern Sierra Legacies

by Laurie Schwaller

     For countless centuries, Native Americans in what is now Tulare County traveled into and across the vast, rugged southern Sierra Nevada to avail themselves of its abundant resources. Following the courses and canyons of its streams and rivers, the blue and green chains of its little lakes and lush meadows, and the purposeful paths of its wildlife, they hunted and fished, gathered useful plants and seeds, escaped the San Joaquin Valley’s scorching summer heat, and visited and traded with the people who lived in the huge Owens Valley on the other side of the range.

     In the 1800s, new groups of people from far away began coming into these mountains to exploit their resources on a much greater scale. Prospectors, miners, hunters, trappers, cattlemen, sheepmen, loggers, and mule packers transformed the ancient trails and the landscapes they traveled through.

     In the 1860s, two men, John Jordan and then John Benjamin Hockett, contracted to build trans-Sierra pack trails under the authority of the Tulare County Board of Supervisors. The Jordan Toll Trail, constructed in 1861-62, extended almost 100 miles from Yokohl Valley to near Olancha at the southern end of Owens Lake. Hockett’s Toll Trail was authorized in December, 1862, and built in 1863-64 to connect Visalia to Lone Pine. It traveled up the South Fork of the Kaweah, crossed the Hockett Plateau, incorporated parts of the Jordan Trail, and finally descended near Cottonwood Pass to the Owens Valley. For the next forty years, it served as the principal trail route across the Southern Sierra.

     Harry O’Farrell, a meat-hunter for the Hockett Trail crew, discovered the Mineral King valley in 1864 while searching for game to feed the workers. Union Army troops traveled the trail from Camp Babbitt in Visalia to help protect the Coso silver mines and Camp Independence in the Owens Valley. Ranchers drove their livestock up the trail to feed on mountain meadows in the summer.

     In the 1870s, these trails and the new Mineral King road, built in 1873, were being used by increasing numbers of recreationists — campers, mountaineers, adventurers, fishermen, hunters, and nature enthusiasts. Most traveled with pack trains. Tremendous overgrazing, especially by herds of thousands of sheep, caused extensive erosion, depleted or eliminated plants and forage, and severely damaged the trails. Those who thought of the future believed that uses of the mountains and their resources would have to be regulated and even halted in some areas if their destruction were to be avoided.

     In 1890, Sequoia National Park was established (initially, only one-third its current size). Its mission was to protect the land and resources within its boundaries to provide “a public park, or pleasure ground, for the benefit and enjoyment of the people.” Clearly, the unregulated, unfettered exploitation had to be stopped inside the park. This became a chief duty of the U.S. cavalry troops assigned to administer Sequoia starting in 1891.

     Patrolling the big, rugged park meant good trails were needed. The Hockett Trail was ready-made for use by the troops guarding the park’s southern boundary. To facilitate the soldiers’ work, four civilian rangers had been hired and a series of cabins began to be envisioned along the patrol routes. By the summer of 1906, two had been constructed on the trail to Giant Forest and one was underway at Hockett Meadow, about 3-1/2 miles north of the Hockett Trail at an elevation of 8500 feet.

     This prime location was directly south of Atwell Mill and Silver City, where the Army troops were headquartered for the summer. It provided good water from Whitman Creek, good fishing, plenty of deer in the broad, lush meadow, and fine forage for pack and riding stock. The original sturdy cabin, with its shake walls and roof, glazed windows, and large rock outside the front door, served the park’s rangers until 1934, when Civilian Conservation Corps workers built a new ranger station to the east of it. The 1906 building continued to provide accommodations for work crews until it was badly damaged by the heavy winter of 1968-69, and then razed by the Park Service.

     In 1934, along with the new ranger station, the CCC constructed an adjacent barn and, in the forest near Hockett Meadow, a trail camp for tourists and a short-term (“stub”) camp for work crews. The 1934 ranger station continues in use today, serving backcountry rangers, trail crews, snow surveyors, and weather station and meadow monitors. Its companion barn provides storage space and houses tack and feed for ranger and crew livestock.

     The Hockett cabin measures 23 x 33 feet, with two bedrooms and a kitchen-living room. The wood-burning cooking range also heats the interior and vents through the stone chimney in the center of the roof. The log walls rest on a concrete foundation veneered with native stone. An inviting stone-floored porch, 12.5 feet long and 7 feet wide, frames the entry door. The gable roof was originally made of shakes. Later it was covered with aluminum, but the metal has since been replaced with shakes, returning it to its original appearance.

     The barn stands just northeast of the cabin. It, too, is built of logs supported on a stone foundation and capped with a shake roof. It measures 17 x 26 feet outside and 13 x 17 feet inside (the battered pattern of the log corner joints adds to the exterior dimensions).

     Both structures are excellent examples of National Park Service rustic architecture, also called “Parkitecture.” The natural, native materials of their exteriors — the lodgepole pine logs, hand-cut shakes, and granite rock facings on the concrete foundations — enable them to harmonize with their surrounding landscape. Their design and workmanship are compatible with the work of early pioneers in the Sierra Nevada. Recognized for their significance in both architecture and landscape architecture, the two buildings were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978. They are also culturally significant, because they were constructed by workers in the CCC, the most concerted social program ever to occur in the area.

     Today’s visitors can still hike or ride on the old Hockett Trail to admire these iconic buildings. Carefully maintained and restored over the years by Park craftsmen, the cabin and barn continue to look just as they did when skilled CCC workers built them in 1934. Deer still graze together with pack and saddle stock on verdant Hockett Meadow. And the Park’s backcountry rangers continue to protect the park and its visitors, just as they have for over 100 years, by patrolling from Hockett Meadow’s ranger station

May, 2020


Slideshow:


Quotes & More Photos:

Hockett Meadow Ranger Station is centrally located on the Hockett Plateau in the southeast section of Sequoia National Park, about 11 miles south of Silver City as the crow flies. The thick dark line marks the park boundary.

“With discovery of silver in the Coso Range almost directly east of Visalia the desirability of a short cut across the mountains was obvious.” — Los Tulares, #64, March, 1965

“There is no longer a shadow of doubt that by the time the next crop is ready for market, there will be a rich, industrious population across the mountain, ready to buy and pay for everything which this valley can produce . . . . [They] . . . will be delving and blasting in these mines, taking out gold and silver in millions, and calling on the Tulare Valley to receive it, in exchange for flour, barley . . . potatoes, beef, pork, green and dried fruits, beans, eggs, butter, cheese, honey, and in fact everything which is consumed by American miners.” — Visalia Delta, November 6, 1862

John Benjamin Hockett, an Alabama native, at age 22 in 1849 when the California Gold Rush began, “wasted no time in hooking up with a westward-bound wagon train to seek his fortune. . . . Although Hockett tried his hand at mining, he quickly turned to another enterprise — packing supplies from Stockton to the mining camps, . . . ‘a business which he found very lucrative.'” — The Porterville Recorder, May 24, 2002

“By 1859, Hockett had relocated again and was running a business in Visalia. . . . He died at the age of 71 in May 1898, 10 years after bringing the railroad through town [Porterville, to which he had moved in 1864], and four years before Porterville was incorporated as a city.” — The Porterville Recorder, May 24, 2002

“The Tulare County Board of Supervisors issued a franchise December 11, 1862, to Henry Cowden, Lyman Martin and John B. Hockett ‘to build a pack trail at a point in the Tulare Valley near where the Kaweah river leaves the foothills and thence easterly across the Sierras to the foot of Big Owens Lake between Haiwee Meadows and Lone Pine.'” — Annie R. Mitchell, Sites to See, 1983

“On August 5, 1864, Cowden presented a sworn statement that the three men had finished the trail at a cost of $1,000 and asked permission to charge tolls. The supervisors set the tolls at: mule or horse, fifty cents each; head of cattle, twenty-five cents each; sheep or hogs, five cents each; man on foot, twenty-five cents each. The Hockett Trail was well marked and shortened the earlier Jordan Trail.” — Annie R. Mitchell, Sites to See, 1983

“The Hockett Plateau includes vast rolling forests of lodgepole pine surrounding spectacular subalpine meadows. The area is a favorite destination for equestrians, backpackers and anglers, people who, like all of us, like to enjoy our mountains. . . .” — House of Representatives bill H.R. 3022, March 10, 2008

“The Hockett meadows, containing about one hundred sixty acres of land lying on the plateau region near the head waters of the south fork of the Kaweah, are desirable camping places. The elevation is about eighty-five hundred feet and in consequence the climate during the summer is cool and bracing. Lake Evelyn, one of the most beautiful of mountain lakes, is distant about three miles.” — Eugene L. Menefee and Fred A. Dodge, 1913

“There is excellent trout fishing in Hockett meadow creek, in Horse creek, one and one-half miles away, and in the waters of the south fork, two miles away. The park line is distant but a mile and a half, so that hunting for deer, which are here numerous, is within easy reach.” — Eugene L. Menefee and Fred A. Dodge, 1913

“[F]ive ranger cabins have been built, horse pastures for the use of rangers fenced, and one hundred and twenty-nine miles of streams stocked with trout. . . . The first ranger for park duty was appointed in 1900 [sic], and the force has since been increased to five . . . .” — Eugene L. Menefee and Fred A. Dodge, 1913

“Hockett Meadow . . . is a lush, subalpine gem that attracts an abundance of wildlife. The nearby ranger station, itself a historic structure, houses a friendly ranger who can offer support and suggestions. . . . [P]rovided you time your arrival correctly (usually late June through July), you should see a dazzling array of wildflowers. Mule deer browse through this buffet, and black bears occasionally amble by.” — modernhiker.com

“Before you spreads the impressive expanse of verdant Hockett Meadows. The vast spread of grass beyond the fenced area attracts large gatherings of deer, most often seen at dusk.” — J.C. Jenkins and Ruby Johnson Jenkins, 1995


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

NOTE: Hockett Meadow Ranger Station is accessible only by foot/stock trail. Trailheads at several starting points provide access. The ranger station is about 12 miles in from most of these trailheads. NOTE: Wilderness Permit required for overnight trips: Plan your visit/wilderness  permits

A) Most visitors start from the Mineral King area and travel via the Atwell-Hockett Trail or the Tar Gap Trail. For this approach, from Visalia, take Hwy 198 east through most of Three Rivers. Two miles before the main Sequoia park entrance, watch for the National Park mileage sign on your right, at the junction with Mineral King Road. NOTE that Mineral King Road is narrow (sometimes single lane), steep, winding, and partly unpaved, and is not recommended for RVs or trailers. It is about 19 miles from this junction to Atwell Mill campground, trailhead for the Atwell-Hockett Trail; it’s about 23 miles to Cold Springs campground, trailhead for the Tar Gap Trail. Proceed past these campgrounds to the Mineral King Ranger Station (on your left, just beyond Cold Springs campground) where you must pick up your Wilderness Permit prior to overnight stays in the Wilderness, then backtrack to the appropriate campground and your trailhead.

 


Directions:

B) Hockett Meadow Ranger Station is also accessible via the Garfield-Hockett Trail, which begins at South Fork campground, reached via South Fork Drive in Three Rivers.

From Visalia, take Hwy 198 east to Three Rivers and note the junction with South Fork Drive, on your right. However, do not exit here. You must first drive 5 more miles east on Hwy 198 to the main Sequoia park entrance (fee) and then continue to park headquarters, to the Wilderness Office, near the Foothills Visitor Center, to pick up your Wilderness Permit prior to any overnight stay in the Wilderness.

Then return to South Fork Drive and follow it east for 12.3 miles. The paved road ends a short distance before you reach South Fork Campground, and a rough dirt road, not recommended for vehicles with low clearance, continues to the campground area, where you will find the sign for the Garfield-Hockett Trail.

 

NOTE:  South Fork campground and its access road were heavily and extensively damaged by floods and landslides from 2022-2023 winter storms.  The campground is closed until further notice, the dirt road is completely impassable to vehicles, no potable water is available, and trucks and RVs are not permitted.


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Mountains, subalpine meadow, lodgepole pine forest, elevation: about 8500 ft., Sequoia National Park (NOTE: Hockett Meadow Ranger Station is accessible only by foot/stock trail.)
Activities: Architecture and landscape architecture study, backpacking, birding, botanizing, camping (nearby; Wilderness Permit required), fishing (license required), history, photography, wildflower and wildlife viewing
Open: Sequoia National Park is always open, weather permitting (unless closed due to emergency conditions); park entrance fee; Wilderness Permit required for all overnight trips. NOTE: Park Ranger Stations serve as residences for rangers and backcountry crews. Therefore, while you may knock on the door, please respect the privacy of the cabin occupants. Knock on the door when park employees are present if you need assistance or information or have information to report (e.g., wildfire, hazardous conditions, etc.). You may also leave a note.
Site Steward: National Park Service-Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks; 559-565-3341; Wilderness Office: 559-565-3766: website https://www.nps.gov/seki/
Opportunities for Involvement: donate, volunteer; Sequoia Parks Conservancy membership
Links: 
NRHP Nomination Form
Books: 1) Challenge of the Big Trees -The History of Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, a revised edition, by William C. Tweed and Lary M. Dilsaver (George F. Thompson Publishing in association with Sequoia Parks Foundation and American Land Publishing Project, 2016)
2) The Mule Men, A History of Stock Packing in the Sierra Nevada, by Louise A. Jackson (Mountain Press Publishing Company, 2004)
3) The Sierra Nevada Before History – Ancient Landscapes, Early People, by Louise A. Jackson (Mountain Press Publishing Company, 2010)

Click on photos for more information.

The Story of Grant Grove

by William Tweed

     Every big story starts somewhere, and it is up in the Sierra at General Grant Grove that we find the first example of Tulare County citizens taking action to protect natural resources they care about. The saga of how the Grant Grove came to be protected for public use more than 140 years ago is chapter one in a story that is still progressing today.

     By the 1860s, cattlemen, miners, and mountaineers had explored enough of the Sierra Nevada to know that the southern third of the range – located largely in Tulare County – contained numerous stands of giant sequoia trees. Of all these groves, perhaps the easiest to access were the stands located on the divide between the Kaweah and Kings rivers. Wagon roads were pushed into these woods in the middle 1860s, when logging first began in the region, and those primitive routes soon also provided access for summer visitors seeking to escape the extreme summer heat of the San Joaquin Valley.

     Tulare County residents so enjoyed camping in the cool green forests around the General Grant Tree that they began to develop protective feelings about their summer camping grounds. In 1870, when Mariposa County resident William Snediker came to the area looking for a large sequoia to cut down and remove for display purposes, local residents reacted negatively. Editor R. H. Shearer of the Tulare Weekly Times (an ancestor of the modern Visalia Times-Delta) came out against the project and talked Edward Willett, registrar of the federal General Land Office branch in Visalia, into taking action to stop Snediker.

     The Mariposa County man had already selected a tree and begun preparing it for felling. When ordered to stop, Snediker walked away from the tree, which had already been damaged sufficiently to cause it ultimately to die. The towering remains of the dead tree still stand today, more than 140 years after it was first attacked. The snag is known as the Dead Giant.

     Though Snedicker had been stopped, threats to the grove continued to multiply. In 1872, brothers Thomas and Israel Gamlin built a log cabin near the General Grant Tree and filed papers to purchase the surrounding land. Government officials apparently talked them out of the claim on the grounds that the area should be preserved for public use. (The Gamlin Cabin still stands today.)

     Worried that they would lose their summer camping grounds, Visalians began to organize to give the area better protection. Several newspaper editorials about the value of the sequoias appeared, and in January 1880, the General Land Office withdrew from sale four square miles of land in and around the General Grant Tree. A resulting field inspection disclosed that the best Big Trees were not quite where they had been thought to be, however, and on June 1st 1880, the withdrawal was shifted to better protect the trees. The boundary separating Tulare and Fresno counties now split the reserved tract in half.

     The withdrawal from sale of these 2,560 acres marked the first formal step in the preservation of what would ultimately become modern Kings Canyon National Park. For the next ten years, the four square miles around the General Grant Grove remained in government hands while nearly all the surrounding lands were sold to private parties. Ultimately, most of the land that was sold would be logged.

     In 1881, California Senator John Miller proposed a bill that would have laid a large national park over the southern Sierra, including the Grant Grove area, but the bill had little support and died. It was not until 1890 that the withdrawn lands around the General Grant Tree received permanent protection. In the summer of that year, Visalians George Stewart, R. E. Hyde, Frank Walker, Tipton Lindsay, and Daniel K. Zumwalt began agitating for the creation of a national park in the Kaweah River watershed to protect giant sequoias. Santa Barbara congressman William Vandever (who also represented Tulare County) submitted a bill to do just that. Vandever’s Sequoia National Park bill passed and became law on September 25, 1890.

     One week later, a second bill made it through the Congress. This one had as its primary purpose the creation of Yosemite National Park, but it also contained a provision to give permanent national park status to the four square miles surrounding the General Grant Tree. On October 1, 1890, this relatively small area became General Grant National Park, the nation’s fourth such reservation.

     General Grant National Park endured under that title for the next half century before it was merged in 1940 with the new and much larger Kings Canyon National Park. Since that time, the area has been known formally as the General Grant Grove Section of Kings Canyon National Park.

     Today, this island of virgin forest, together with its visitor center, campgrounds, and lodge, is one of the most-visited destinations in the southern Sierra Nevada. Numerous local residents still enjoy visiting this magnificent green forest that Tulare County residents worked so long ago to protect from destruction.

June, 2014


Slideshow:


Quotes & More Photos:

About 1650 years ago, as the Roman Empire declined and fell, the giant sequoia that is now the world’s third-largest tree began to rise toward the sky. Known since 1857 as the General Grant, this splendid tree may yet be only half way through its life span. What kind of world will it be living in 1650 years from now?

1862 — Joseph Hardin Thomas, Visalia resident, while operating a lumber mill at Shingle Flat (now the site of Sequoia Lake) “discovers” this majestic sequoia (known by then for hundreds of years to the Yokuts and Monache Indians visiting hunting and trading camps nearby).

1867 — Mrs. Lucretia P. Baker, member of a pioneer Porterville family and married to a Visalia merchant, camps with a party in the “Visalia Big Tree Grove” in August; she measures a huge sequoia and names it General Grant to honor Civil War General Ulysses S. Grant (18th President of the U.S. as of 1869).

Mrs. Baker writes to General Grant in Washington, D.C.; he replies October 4, 1867, thanking her for the “box containing branches etc. from the largest tree in California, and no doubt in the world” and for her “kind expressions of regard.”

1873 — John Muir stops at Thomas’s mill, likely visits the Grant Tree, returns in 1875 and 1887; horrified by the ever- accelerating destruction of the sequoias, he works and writes tirelessly to rally support for their protection.

1890 — U.S. Congress creates General Grant National Park, the nation’s fourth, comprising four square miles.

1907 — Visitation to General Grant exceeds 1,000 for the first time. The tremendous tree, 267 feet tall, then thought to be 3,000 to 5,000 years old, is touted as the biggest tree and oldest living thing on earth.

1922 — Over 30,000 visit.

1924 — A small girl inspires R.J. Senior, Sanger Chamber of Commerce president. While admiring the General Grant, he hears her say, “What a lovely Christmas tree that would be.”

1925 — Along with Charles Lee, Sanger Chamber Secretary, Senior starts the tradition of holiday services in the snow beside the Grant Tree.

1926 — Responding to a campaign led by Lee, President Coolidge officially designates the General Grant as the Nation’s Christmas Tree (April 28). Ever since, people have gathered beneath this giant sequoia in December “to stimulate the spirit of ‘Peace on Earth, Good Will to All Men'” and to pay tribute to this wonder of nature, with members of the National Park Service placing a big wreath at the foot of the great tree. These services (re-enacted simultaneously at Fresno radio station KMJ) were broadcast over nation-wide hookups, and Presidential messages constituted part of the program.

1936 — Internationally-renowned American composer Charles Wakefield Cadman, visiting his friend Grace Osborn Wharton at her Grant Grove cabin, composes music on his portable organ at the base of the inspiring Grant Tree. He writes “Star of the East, A Christmas Song” for the holiday celebration; Wharton writes the words.

1937 — The United Press announces that “The designation of the General Grant Tree as the nation’s Christmas Tree has added significance in the fact that a survey by the American Forestry Association revealed that the sequoias were overwhelmingly the most popular tree in the United States and the sequoia gigantea thereafter was honored as the official tree of the nation.”

1956 — By joint resolution of Congress (March 29), President Eisenhower proclaims the Grant Tree a national shrine (our only living shrine) to those who have died in service to our country. Fleet Admiral Chester Nimitz presides beside the great tree at its dedication ceremony (November 11). “Today this shrine takes its place in equal stature with that other great shrine in Arlington Cemetery — the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.”

1990 — Grant Grove celebrates the centennial of General Grant National Park, along with Sequoia National Park (in September), while Kings Canyon National Park celebrates its Golden Anniversary (March 4).

An icon for the ages, the General Grant is truly an exceptional tree. It now stands just over the Tulare County line, but its recorded history is so entwined with Tulare Counteans that we’ve made an exception to include it as one of our Tulare County Treasures.


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

Latitude/Longitude: N36.74661 and W-118.97594

Start and end at Visalia, CA. A loop trip is a good way to travel Generals Highway through the park to visit Grant Grove.

From Visalia head east on Hwy 198, through Three Rivers to Sequoia National Park Ash Mountain Entrance Station (fee), where the road becomes the Generals Highway. Drive into and through the park on Generals Highway north to Grant Grove and Kings Canyon National Park. 

After visiting Grant Grove, you may also wish to drive on to Cedar Grove in Kings Canyon National Park.

Return to Visalia by leaving the park via Hwy 180 west and then, in about 23 miles, turning left onto Hwy 63 south to Visalia.

(Note: Hwy 245 is a scenic alternative, but it is narrow and very winding, not recommended for large RVs and trailers.)

If you don’t want to drive the loop, just take Hwy 63 north from Visalia to Hwy 180 east to Grant Grove and return via the same roads.

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Mountains, sequoia grove, conifer forest, Kings Canyon National Park
Activities: birdwatching, botanizing, camping, cross-country skiing (seasonal), educational activities (visitor center, ranger-led programs, signed nature trails), hiking (General Grant Tree trail paved, handicapped accessible), historical sites, museum, photography, picnicking, wildflower and wildlife viewing, snow play (seasonal)
Open: daily (unless closed due to weather or emergency conditions; roads may be temporarily closed by snow in winter); park entrance fee
Site Steward: Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks; 559-565-5341
Opportunities for Involvement:  donate, volunteer; Sequoia Parks Conservancy membership
Links: 
Books: 1) Challenge of the Big Trees -The Updated History of Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, by William C. Tweed and Lary M. Dilsaver (University of Virginia Press, 2017)
2) King Sequoia: The Tree That Inspired a Nation, Created Our National Park System, and Changed the Way We Think about Nature, by William C. Tweed (Heyday, 2016)

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Click on photos for more information.

Mounds of Mystery

by Delora Buckman

     From the scientific perspective:

     Hogwallows. Mima Mounds. Pimpled Plains. All are names of similarly described land formations existing in great numbers in many locations in North America, South America, and Africa. In the United States the principal locations of these mounds are from Missouri to southern Texas, the plateau regions of Colorado, the northwestern states, and the Great Central Valley and southern coastal regions of California. In 1966, some 665 acres of mima mounds near Little Rock, Washington, were protected under the National Natural Landmark program of the National Park Service.

     Soil scientists around the world have spent untold hours studying these mounds and swales, resulting in more than 30 theories being posited to explain what caused their formation. These range from earthquake or glacial action, to ancient fish nests, to flooding due to giant tsunamis raised by asteroid impacts at sea. Nevertheless, their origin remains an unsolved mystery.

     One of the dominant theories of their formation is that the mounds are the work of pocket gophers, as cited in an article in “Soil Science Society Proceedings 1954,” by Rodney Arkley and Herrick Brown of the Soils Department of the University of California, Berkeley. After extensive study of hogwallows in the Merced area, they concluded that “the pocket gopher is responsible for the mounds, but he builds them only on soils where the thickness of soil is suitable for burrowing and root growth is restricted.” Thus, generation after generation of gophers, from the prehistoric to the present day, may keep building nests near the crest of any high spot in the land surface, forming the characteristic hogwallow mounds above the hardpan swales.*

     * See also: https://www.science.org/content/article/mima-mound-mystery-solved

Pocket Gopher at Work

     From the Native American Perspective:

     As part of the Creation Story related to historian Frank Latta by a Wukchumni (Yokut), this is how the hogwallows were formed: In the very old days, after the Eagle made the world, there was only Tulare Lake and the plains. Eagle called the People and told them to build a new place for him. The People got together to build high mountains for Eagle. They used their carrying baskets to take the dirt from the San Joaquin Valley and pile it up to make the mountains. When Eagle saw that the mountains were high enough to have snow on their tops, he called to the People to stop. The People took their baskets off their backs and emptied the remaining dirt onto the ground, making the little round mounds that White People call Hogwallows. The Wukchumni word for hogwallows is Pawkawkwitch.

June, 2013

 

 

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Backcountry Wilderness Rangers in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks

by Laurie Schwaller

     Sequoia National Park’s historic backcountry ranger stations and their adjacent barns, meadows, and nearby campsites serve the parks and the public in many ways. They accommodate not only rangers, but also trail crews, cultural resources crews, snow surveyors, occasionally monitors of meadows, water, wildlife, wildfires, and weather stations, and sometimes backcountry visitors in distress.

     Their barns (also called tack sheds) store equipment and supplies used by these personnel, and their pastures provide grazing for their stock and, when conditions allow, for visitors’ animals also. Most of today’s backcountry visitors spend only a night or two in the campsites near these iconic cabins, but seasonal backcountry Wilderness rangers may be stationed in them or patrolling to them from May into October.

Redwood Meadow Ranger Station

     This strenuous backcountry work is often carried out far from many comforts, conveniences, and sometimes even company. It can be dangerous, sometimes cut off from communications, and often far from help. Many of these Park employees are seasonals, whose paychecks start and end depending on when the snow melts enough to allow access to their work sites — and when autumn weather once again closes the trails. Yet many return year after year to the wilderness.

     Like all Park employees, backcountry Wilderness rangers are charged under the National Park Service’s mission to preserve unimpaired the natural and cultural resources set aside by the American people for future generations. Rangers also strive through their visitor contacts to promote appreciation and stewardship of these resources and compliance with the regulations designed to protect them.

Captain Cornelius C. Smith, 14th Cavalry
Soldiers of the 14th Cavalry at the General Sherman Tree

     In 1906, when the national parks were still administered by the U.S. Army, prior to the creation of the National Park Service, Captain C.C. Smith, 14th Cavalry, Acting Superintendent of Sequoia and General Grant National Parks, defined the ranger’s qualifications to be “somewhat as follows: He must be an experienced mountaineer and woodsman, familiar with camp life, a good horseman and packer, capable of dealing with all classes of people; should know the history of the parks and their topography, something of forestry, zoology, and ornithology, and be capable of handling laboring parties on road, trail, telephone, bridge, and building construction. These men, in the performance of their duties, travel on horseback from 3,000 to 6,000 miles a year, must face dangers, exposure, and the risk of being sworn into the penitentiary through the evil designs of others.” In addition to the troops, four civilians were working as rangers in Sequoia and General Grant National Parks at that time.

     Stephen T. Mather, first Director of the National Park Service (established in 1916), described the early NPS rangers this way: “They are a fine, earnest, intelligent, and public-spirited body of men . . . . Though small in number, their influence is large. Many and long are the duties heaped upon their shoulders. If a trail is to be blazed, it is ‘send a ranger.’ If an animal is floundering in the snow, a ranger is sent to pull him out; if a bear is in the hotel, if a fire threatens a forest, if someone is to be saved, it is ‘send a ranger.’ If a Dude wants to know the why, . . . it is ‘ask the ranger.’ Everything the ranger knows, he will tell you, except about himself.”

First NPS Director Stephen T. Mather, 1927

     Author Eric Blehm describes the diversity of Sequoia’s modern seasonal backcountry Wilderness rangers and their commitment and dedication to their work: “[They] held master’s degrees in forestry, geology, computer science, philosophy, or art history. They were teachers, photographers, writers, ski instructors, winter guides, documentary filmmakers, academics, pacifists, military veterans, and adventure seekers who . . .were drawn to wilderness. In the backcountry, they were on call 24 hours a day as medics, law-enforcement officers, search-and-rescue specialists, and wilderness hosts. They were interpreters who wore the hats of geologists, naturalists, botanists, wildlife observers, and historians. On good days they were ‘heroes’ called upon to find a lost backpacker, warm a hypothermic hiker, or chase away a bear. On bad days they picked up trash, extinguished illegal campfires, wrote citations, and were occasionally called [bad names] simply for doing their jobs. On the worst days, they recovered bodies.

     “Park Service administrators often referred to these rangers as ‘the backbone of the NPS.’ Still, they were hired and fired [laid off] every season. Their families had no medical benefits. No pension plans. They paid for their own law-enforcement training and emergency medical technician schooling. And . . . each one of them knew the deal when he or she took the job.”

     In their end-of-season reports, the Wilderness rangers describe their patrols (miles on horseback, miles on foot, areas and sites patrolled), visitor services (contacts: backpackers, day hikers, park staff, private and Park stock users, and commercial stock users, both spot and full-service trips), law enforcement (contacts, warnings, education, citations). They report on search and rescue and medical incidents, opening and closing times and condition of the ranger station and grazing areas, signage issues, meadow health, and fencing. They discuss natural resources (wildlife, vegetation, water), cultural resources (historic and prehistoric sites, historic structures), and backcountry facilities (ranger stations, barns, outhouses, water and electrical and solar systems), sanitation (campsites, fire rings, pit toilets, “TP roses”), and food storage cables and bear boxes. Other areas covered include supply and equipment inventories and needs lists, aircraft observations, interface with area trail crews, and special projects and recommendations.

     Backcountry Wilderness rangers also do their own cooking, clean and maintain their cabins and barns, trap hordes of invading mice, cut firewood for their cabin stoves, build and repair fences, doctor and shoe horses and mules, help to clear and maintain trails, and assist park scientists with projects such as residual biomass monitoring on meadows. Rangers remove hundreds of pounds of trash from trails and campsites, break up illegal fire rings and restore abused camp areas, look for lost stock and missing hikers, conduct hunter patrols in the fall, and rarely work an eight-hour day, as they are on call as long as they are in the backcountry.

     Their work can be exhausting, and it goes on no matter what the weather. Bad weather or trail conditions are often when rangers’ aid is needed most, leading to some longer work days. And yet many of the parks’ Wilderness rangers return for duty repeatedly, as long as they can afford to. They love their jobs and the country they work in. There are hundreds of applicants for each opening every season.

     Many cite the beauty of their surroundings, their wholehearted support of the Park Service mission, the pleasure of working with their dedicated colleagues. They care deeply about the health of the backcountry, its lakes and streams, grasses and trees, wildflowers, birds, insects, fish, and animals from little haystack-making pikas to big black bears. They appreciate the opportunity to meet and interact with park visitors, sharing their knowledge of and joy in the backcountry, and keeping the parks safe from the people and the people safe from the parks. And, as Ranger Randy Morgenson said, backcountry rangers get paid in sunsets.

 “. . . July and August saw several days each of excellent afternoon thunderstorms complete with hail and strong winds. A family of six . . . were caught in one of the storms as they hiked back from Evelyn Lake to their camp at Hockett. At 6:30 pm the group had still not returned and I went out looking for them. I found the 8 year old and her 13 year old brother running down the trail about a half-mile from the station. . . . I sent these two who were soaked and shivering to the station where I had a fire going. . . . I continued up the trail and located the 10 year old and 16 year old . . . and a few minutes later I located [their parents].

 “On the way back to the station I came upon two other backpackers, both soaked and cold. The cabin was crowded that evening with everyone crowded around the stove, drying wet clothing and attempting to keep warm. The trail crew served up some pasta and sauce for everyone and by 9 pm the rain had stopped. The family went to their respective tents and the two backpackers spent the night in the tack shed.” — Joe Ventura, Hockett Meadow Ranger, 2008

May, 2020


Quotes & More Photos:

In Their Own Words — Excerpts from Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks
Backcountry Wilderness Rangers’ reports and articles:

 

” The backcountry ranger job is a very coveted park position and the one in Sequoia has got to be one of the best in the nation. . . . To get the gig, you have to . . . [g]o to USAJobs.com, fill out the resume . . . . score very well on the questionnaire . . . . [Y]ou have to have past experience . . . living in the wilderness . . . not to mention a lot of past time in the High Sierra or a comparable environment. You have to be an EMT, you have to qualify for the GS-5 using education or past government employment . . . . It’s actually a very difficult job to get.” — Chris Kalman, 2015

“[W]e are all visitors here in the parks . . . because we love their astounding beauty. Every time I met someone on the trail, I tried to engage them in conversation that would help them reach, recall, or revel in that conclusion on their own. . . . ” — Chris Kalman, 2015

“I felt connected to people from around the world. I eased visitors into the spirit of the place, offered route suggestions, passed on weather forecasts, repaired boots, supplied a little extra food, or just lent a compassionate ear. Under the open sky, people’s hearts come out to play.” — Rick Sanger, 2019

“Most visitors either want a weather forecast or just to visit the ranger and see the ranger station, and of course take a picture of the station and/or ranger.” — Dario Malengo, McClure Meadow Ranger, 2014

“We met with the Little Five ranger and collected nearly 800 pounds of his food and gear, and the next day Don and I saddled up 6 mules and our horses, and headed for Little Five via Pinto Lake.

“Chris did not tell us that there were 6 dozen fresh eggs in the loads. We packed it all up at Mineral King, rode to Pinto, unpacked for the night, repacked in the morning, rode over Blackrock Pass arriving at Little Five, without breaking a single egg.” — Joe Ventura, Hockett Meadow Ranger, 2015

“Training Curriculum for Level III certification requires the rider to overnight in the wilderness, and catch, pack, and lead a string of up to 4 pack animals . . . . Mineral King Trailhead Ranger Cody Cavill traveled to [Hockett] with me and led a string of pack animals. . . .

“Cody assisted in the search and capture of overdue stock, led three head cross-country from Wet Meadow to Quinn Patrol Cabin. He set up an electric fence there, took the stock to water and put three head in the fenced area and turned out the others.

“He caught the stock the next morning, saddled and packed and led the string back to Hockett. His training covered approximately 63 miles of riding and he is certified as a Level III rider.” — Joe Ventura, Hockett Meadow Ranger, 2015

“Due to heavy spring snow, I was flown into the Hockett Ranger Station on June 19th. . . . There was three to four feet of snow on the meadow and six to eight feet of snow covering the trails on the plateau with drifts to twelve feet.” — Cindy J. Wood, Hockett Meadow Ranger, 1995

“I brought my three head of stock into the backcountry on August 4th when the Atwell-Hockett trail was opened to stock. During the season, I patrolled 913 miles of trail. (527 miles patrolled on stock and 386 miles on foot.)  I contacted 892 visitors this season. (5 day hikers, 517 backpackers, 6 hunters and 364 stock users with 550 head of stock.)” — Cindy J. Wood, Hockett Meadow Ranger, 1995

” On July 23 two pack mules and an 80 year old male on horseback went off the trail at Cabin Creek, about 1 mile from Atwell Mill. . . . The injured party was carried out by litter to Atwell Mill . . . and flown by Life Flight to UMC. By 10:30 pm I had the equipment, mules, and fellow companion of the injured party out to Atwell.” — Joe Ventura, Hockett Meadow Ranger, 2006

“It was a life steeped in beauty. . . . I woke with the chickaree’s chatter and eased into each morning with anticipation for the day’s adventure, whether a mellow exploration or a grand challenge. The summer’s passing was ticked off by the early season song of the hermit thrush, the bloom and fade of Jeffrey shooting stars, the height of the corn lilies, the late season calming of the stream’s frenzy.” — Rick Sanger, 2019

“The National Park Service preserves unimpaired the natural and cultural resources and values of the national park system for the enjoyment, education, and inspiration of this and future generations.’ I stand by that, and I believe it is one of the most important things the United States of America does as a nation.” — Chris Kalman, 2015

“There was never a U.S Flag in the cabin. I always brought in a new one each season . . . . The cabin just looked more handsome with the flag flying.” — Joe Ventura, Hockett Meadow Ranger, 2008

“I have told many of you of the times when sitting on the porch of the Hockett in the evening, . . . someone hikes in from the trees, views the meadow and the cabin, looks at me and says, ‘Wow, how does a person get a job like this?’

“So thanks to all of you for allowing me to enjoy the experience ‘of a job like this.’ It has been a genuine pleasure working for and with all of you.” — Joe Ventura, Hockett Meadow Ranger                                                                        

 

 

THE LASTING LEGACY OF WILLIAM PITT BARTLETT

by Laurie Schwaller


“Your town, your schools, your community spirit and your newspaper will be just what you make them.” — W.P. Bartlett

  William Pitt Bartlett left Tulare County a lasting legacy. He was not only a prime and tireless mover in establishing and developing several of the public parks that we still enjoy today; he also secretly aided deserving Porterville students, and his generous scholarships continue to be awarded every year in that city.

  Born in New Portland, Maine, in 1855, Bartlett moved to California as a young man and at age 22 became a newspaperman. He acquired the Livermore Valley paper, renamed it The Herald, and for the next 15 years worked to better the valley through the paper. Always interested in civic, conservation, and beautification activities, he used this platform to advocate for the valley’s agricultural and economic possibilities and to encourage environmentally friendly projects such as spreading gravel over dirt roads to keep down dust and plowing stubble under instead of burning fields. He got hundreds of drought-tolerant locust trees planted along the city’s streets and the roads leading into town.

  The Herald took a prominent part in the introduction of many new industries to the area, including vine and fruit growing, manufacturing, and coal and chrome mining. Bartlett also campaigned for better roads, pushed the growth of the local wine industry, and urged a prominent local farmer to take his wines to an international competition in Paris, where he won the gold medal and made the Livermore Valley famous.

  In 1891, Bartlett sold the paper and moved with his wife, Anna, to the Mojave Desert to spend the next five years in borax mining. He traveled all over California, constantly curious about its plants, people, landscapes, and industries, then moved to Porterville in 1901, to manage the local magnesite mines for the Willamette Pulp and Paper Company. The company built a house for him at the end of Sunnyside Avenue, and he and Anna lived in it the rest of their lives.

  Bartlett soon became involved in community affairs, especially in parks and conservation. He contributed material and money to the construction of “El Granito,” the Porterville high school built in 1905. In 1907, he helped to form the Porterville Chamber of Commerce, which he served as both director and president. He was appointed a member of the Porterville Park Commission, a position he held until he died. The commission soon got the Pioneer Land Company to donate 20 acres for a city park, and the people of Porterville subscribed $6,000 to improve the site. As a member of the Park Board, Bartlett was vitally active in the development and continuing improvement of the new Murry Park (originally named Burbank Park); 110 years later, the people of Porterville still flock to it.

  In 1910, as another life-long, unpaid appointment, Bartlett was named to the new Tulare County Parks Commission. Renamed the Board of Forestry in 1913, the commission was charged with developing and managing 100-acre Mooney Grove Park, which the county had purchased in 1909. Roads, bridges, and amusement areas were installed, and Bartlett was instrumental in creating its small lake. An avid gardener and botanist, he also implemented a large nursery there, where trees, shrubs, and other plants were grown to beautify county and community roadsides and parks. The Forestry Board published his illustrated booklets on “Roadside Trees” and “Sun-loving Trees and Flowers,” and planted over 600 miles of roadside trees, including grevillea, acacia, palms, peppers, and Arizona ash, to beautify the county.

  By the time Bartlett retired from the mining operation in 1921, the Forestry Board was in charge of two big parks, having been given the land for 52-acre Cutler Park in 1919. Another park was added in 1923, thanks in large part to Bartlett’s efforts. The Porterville Chamber of Commerce sponsored a successful fundraising drive to buy land along the Tule River for a city park, with the understanding that it would be donated to the County and the Forestry Board would develop and maintain it. The goal was to acquire the best, most easily accessible place to swim and to beat the summer heat.

Purple Lupine Blooming

  Bartlett planned and supervised much of the work of developing and landscaping the new 34-acre park for the public — clearing brush, enhancing the swimming area, building picnic tables, planting trees and shrubs from the Mooney Grove nursery, constructing two dressing room buildings, and digging wells. The new Tule River Park was very popular, so the next year, a caretaker’s cottage was built, along with a pavilion, tables and seats set in concrete for 400 people, fencing, and a rock dam to increase the depth of water in the 400 foot long swimming area.

  Bartlett wrote of his innovative planting plan that the Forestry Board was including only wild trees, shrubs, plants, and flowers, such as wild lilac, manzanita, mountain mahogany, bush monkey-flower, toyon, and more than 100 other species. The wild grape vines were being trained into arbors above the picnic tables, “making, with the California sycamores, delightful picnicking grounds the entire length of the park.” He thought that Tule River Park was unique, “probably the only wild plant park in the State,” and that its beauty would “soon begin to appeal to all visitors.”

Mimulus Flower

  All his life, Bartlett kept writing, and not just about plants. He published two books, Happenings and More Happenings in California, about California history and personalities and his travels in the state. As a senior member of the Quiller’s Club, a local writers’ group, he contributed both prose and poetry. He loved the California mountains and had a second home, called Tumbling Waters, above California Hot Springs. He extensively landscaped the area around this cabin as well as the property around Green Acres, his Porterville home. He also farmed citrus.

  In 1923, Bartlett’s beloved wife, Anna, died. They had no children. Bartlett, despite failing health, continued his civic activities, especially those that engaged his special interest in nature.

  Then, in 1925, he undertook a significant new project. As an anonymous “Unknown Friend,” he began awarding scholarships every year to deserving Porterville students, with the condition that his name would not be revealed until he died. The Reverend John Milligan bestowed these gifts as Bartlett’s agent, keeping the benefactor’s secret.

Park Sign
Porterville H.S., 1940s with Bartlett’s Tree

  In February, 1929, to honor his many years of service to the parks and people of the county, and in response to a petition from the Porterville Chamber of Commerce and many other local organizations and citizens, the Board of Supervisors renamed Tule River Park as Bartlett Park. Bartlett died on July 5th. Businesses and city offices closed for his funeral. The services were conducted by Reverend Milligan, who revealed during his eulogy that Bartlett was the scholarship students’ “Unknown Friend” and that the bulk of his estate would be placed in a trust to continue the annual awards.

  The Quillers Club planted a tree on the front lawn of the high school in Bartlett’s memory, and in 1938, a new Porterville elementary school (now Bartlett Middle School) was named in his honor. In 1960, Bartlett was named to the California Newspaper Hall of Fame, which honored him as a community builder, publisher, author, mining man, and nature lover. For close to a century, Murry, Mooney Grove, Cutler, and Bartlett parks have continued to provide beauty, recreation, and relaxation to Tulare County residents, and Bartlett’s scholarships are still given to Porterville area (including Springville, Terra Bella, and Strathmore) students every year. It was indeed a fortunate day for Tulare County when William Pitt Bartlett moved to Porterville.

                                                                                                                                                                                               August, 2018                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               

“In recognition of the fact that during many years past, Mr. W.P. Bartlett has served as a member of the Forestry Board of Tulare County, and with great ability and untiring zeal given of his time and means for the development of our County Parks, and the adornment of our public highways, and, Further, in recognition of the fact that Mr. W.P. Bartlett has been incapacitated by illness and may not remain long with us to inspire us all to a more devoted citizenship and interest in things beautiful, and while still able to appreciate our recognition of his worth as a citizen, and his work for the interests of our county that is a distinct and lasting contribution to the interests of the whole State of California, and that will ever remain as the best memorial of his work and worth;

“WE, THEREFORE, REQUEST your Honorable Body to change the name of the ‘Tule River Park’ to the name of ‘Bartlett Park’ . . . .”  — February, 1929, petition to the Forestry Board and County Board of Supervisors, signed by Rotary Club, 20-30 Club, Lions Club, Porterville Chamber of Commerce, Inter-Circle, Prerian Club, Quiller’s Club, Porterville Women’s Club, Porterville Citrus Association, First National Bank, Springville Sanatorium, Porterville’s Mayor, and many other organizations, businesses, and individuals.
 
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            

    

                                           For current information about the W.P. Bartlett scholarships for Porterville

                                        area students, contact the counselors at area high schools or Porterville College.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        


Quotes & More Photos:

“[Bartlett] became interested in the manufacture of newsprint. One of the filler ingredients was calcined magnesite. Bartlett invested in magnesite mines in Northern California, and in 1892 came to Porterville where he and George Stanley bought magnesite mines northeast of Porterville. . . . In 1900 the Willamette Pulp and Paper Company bought the mines in Porterville and hired Bartlett as resident manager.” — Tulare County Library, Annie R. Mitchell History Room

“Although the Bartletts had no children, they were very much interested in their community’s schools. . . . A few years after Bartlett moved to Porterville bonds were voted to build a new High School. Mr. Bartlett suggested that the best building for the money available could be built of native granite and he offered to oversee the job and guarantee the costs.” — Los Tulares #44, June, 1960

The granite was quarried on the west side of Porterville Rocky Hill just south of Bartlett’s magnesite mine. . . . Magnesite workers were used in the quarry . . . . Bartlett was unable to complete the building for the stipulated amount and paid some two thousand dollars of the cost himself. . . . The Porterville High School publication El Granito memorializes this old granite structure.” — Los Tulares #44, June, 1960

“It was interest in the people and especially for families of children, that, in response to his vision of what could be accomplished in providing recreation grounds enabled him to use his genius and without any compensation whatsoever to give liberally of his time and energies to the establishment of our county parks and the Porterville city park.” — Rev. John A. Milligan

He watched with interest the improvement of these public playgrounds because he was a lover of the beautiful, and the more because the people, and especially the children, were to enjoy these privileges.” — Rev. John A. Milligan

“Beginning with two massive stone pyramids covered with lichen and flowers at the south entrance near Success bridge, wild shrubs and flower gardens line either side of the driveway for several hundred feet, with shaded table[s] and seats for visitors. The boundary fences are planted with wild clematis.”– W. P. Bartlett

“Within are six kinds of wild lilac ranging in color from white to deepest blue, the crimson-flowered sweet shrub, the sumac, the California coffee-berry, manzanita, mountain mahogany, bush monkey-flower, toyon, perennial aster, golden rod, wild fuchsia, wild rose, tree lupine, annual lupines, ash, elder, and more than 100 other kinds of shade trees, shrubs, and perennial flowers.” — W. P. Bartlett; “(Thus Mr. Bartlett planted not only for beauty but also for conservation.)” — Ira H. Stiner

“His formal education had ceased after grammar school, but he continued to educate himself through an encyclopedia.” — Bartlett Bio 4 from Tulare County Library, Annie R. Mitchell History Room

“A great nature lover, he possessed a decided fondness for mountain scenery. He made frequent trips through the Coast Range and Sierras, each of which added to a fund of information for use in subsequent literary work. A series of his articles on the scenery of the high Sierras was published in San Francisco newspapers and later copied by numerous journals on the east coast and in Europe.” — Bartlett Bio 4 from Tulare County Library, Annie R. Mitchell History Room

“I have for many years been greatly interested in young men and young women of special talent and industry, and I hope by means of the trust fund hereby created to serve the public interest and welfare by the development of talent and ability.” — from Bartlett’s Will in Decree of Distribution

 

 

Click on photos for more information.

THE STORY OF THE GOLDEN TROUT WILDERNESS

by William Tweed

     Perhaps the most remote and least known of all the major geographical features of Tulare County is to be found in the county’s southeastern quadrant. Here, near the southern end of the Sierra Nevada, the range takes on a distinctive character found nowhere else. Instead of raising high peaks against the sky, this part of the Sierra takes the form of an extensive uplifted plateau. Those who know the Sierra call this region the Kern Plateau. No other part of the Sierra Nevada looks anything like it.

     A combination of altitude and aridity makes this part of the Sierra unique. Much of the undulating surface of the plateau lies between 7,000 and 9,000 feet. Usually, altitudes of this height would guarantee generous winter snowfall, but the Kern Plateau finds itself within the rain shadow of the Great Western Divide, the north-south ridge that forms the headwaters of the Kaweah and Tule rivers. To the east of the divide, exhausted winter storms deposit only a fraction of the water they dump on the mountains immediately to the west. No other part of the High Sierra is so dry.

     Those who have visited the Kern Plateau know how all this comes together. Open sandy meadows, covered with sparse grass and sagebrush, run for miles. Around them, rolling hills support open stands of Jeffrey, lodgepole, and foxtail pines. Small streams flow across the sandy landscape, and it is here that the golden trout – California’s state fish – evolved. The bright colors of the golden trout mimic the shining flakes of mica and quartz in the stream bottoms.

     Getting to the Kern Plateau country has always been difficult. Travelers coming from the San Joaquin Valley must surmount the Great Western Divide, then cross the rugged and deep canyon of the main stem of the Kern River before they can climb onto the plateau. To the east, a row of peaks — including 12,700-foot Olancha Peak, and a mile-high escarpment separate the plateau from the northwestern edge of the Mojave Desert near Ridgecrest.

     The history of the plateau reflects its remoteness. Like all the surrounding mountain country, the Kern Plateau was first set aside as public land when the Sierra Forest Reserve came into being in 1893. In 1908, when the reserve lands were re-designated as national forests, the Forest Service divided the plateau between the Sequoia and Inyo national forests, a condition that continues today.

     For the first half of the twentieth century, the Forest Service essentially left the plateau alone. Cattle ranchers’ herds grazed the meadows each summer, and hunters and fishermen packed in to enjoy the solitude. Most of these visitors arrived on horseback. Over time, the secluded country earned a small cadre of dedicated fans, people who enjoyed the quiet and beauty of this often-stark high country retreat.

     Foremost among these were Ardis Walker and his wife, Gayle Mendelssohn Walker, who grew up in Tulare County. By the early 1950s, Ardis and Gayle lived in Kernville, the southern entrance to the Kern Plateau region. There, they owned and operated the Kernville Inn. The two pursued many interests. They worked hard to establish CSU Bakersfield, and Ardis wrote poetry. The High Sierra, however, always stayed near the top of their personal lists. Year after year, they traveled into the mountains and especially into the Kern Plateau country.

     As early as the 1930s, Walker had begun to worry that the beauty of this wilderness retreat might eventually be compromised by road building and logging. In 1947, he persuaded a high-ranking Forest Service official, Regional Forester Pat Thompson, to accompany him on a prolonged trip through the heart of the Kern Plateau. Thompson was so impressed that he issued an order reserving the country for wilderness recreation.

     A decade later, however, at the height of the economic boom of the 1950s, the Forest Service reversed itself and announced that it would allow the plateau to be logged. By the early 1960s, roads were being pushed into the plateau from both east and west, and truckloads of logs were spilling out of the region.

     Ardis Walker was appalled. Now in his 60s, he recruited a new generation of activists to help him protect the landscapes he so appreciated. Schoolteacher Bob Barnes of Porterville played an important role, as did Joe Fontaine, who lived in Tehachapi. The campaign to preserve at least a portion of the plateau as wilderness went on for a full twenty years, until finally, in 1978, Congress gave protection to the northern portion of the Kern Plateau, designating more than 300,000 acres as the Golden Trout Wilderness, about 80% of it in Tulare County.

     The wilderness also included much of the rugged eastern slope of the Great Western Divide, as well as a major portion of the canyon of the Kern River. Ardis Walker celebrated the wilderness he had worked so hard to create and lived another dozen years before he passed away in 1991 at the age of 90.

     Today, the Golden Trout Wilderness protects the High Sierra country immediately to the south of Sequoia National Park. Within this Forest Service-administered wilderness, life goes on much as it has for more than a century. Cattle graze the meadows during the summer months, hikers, hunters, and fishermen come to enjoy the solitude, and the beauty of the land remains for all to enjoy.

December, 2014


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Quotes & More Photos:

“I pray that golden trout still haunt their magic stream.” — Ardis Manly Walker

“The largest and arguably most splendid wilderness area in the [Southern Sierra] is the Golden Trout Wilderness.” — Joe Fontaine

“I’ve never found an area I like as much as the Sierra. The granite, the light, the high elevation, the good weather, the open aspect of views — I haven’t seen that combination anywhere else. To many people, . . . the Sierra has a mystique . . . If they’ve seen it, they know it’s worth saving.” — Ardis Walker

“You could see the forest cut and not growing back, and I realized that too much would be gone if we didn’t do something about it. . . . It was a long battle, and it often seemed that we had lost. I worked on that for forty years, but other people carried [it] out. Thank God we have people like Bob Barnes and Joe Fontaine.” — Ardis Walker

“The plateau of the golden trout with its little streams, grassy meadows, and tiny boiling canyons should be preserved forever and its great old trees kept as cathedrals of the spirit. To do otherwise is to disregard its real value. The region has a vital role to play, one involved with intangible values and dreams of mankind. Here is part of America as it used to be.” — Ardis Walker

“. . . the Congress finds and declares that it is in the national interest that . . . these endangered areas be promptly designated as wilderness . . . to preserve . . . as an enduring resource . . . managed to promote and perpetuate the wilderness character of the land and its specific multiple values for watershed preservation, wildlife habitat protection, scenic and historic preservation, scientific research and educational use, primitive recreation, solitude, physical and mental challenge, and inspiration for the benefit of all of the American people of present and future generations . . . .” — Endangered American Wilderness Act of 1978

“As we topped the pass, we looked to the north over a sweep of scraggly, wind-tortured pine and fir . . . . Far beyond was Mt. Whitney, brooding as always over the plateau. Unchanged from when the mountain men came through, this is still a land of silences, ancient trees, and far vistas.” — Sigurd F. Olson

“We deeply need the humility to know ourselves as the dependent members of a great community of life, and this can indeed be one of the spiritual benefits of a wilderness experience.” — Howard Zahniser

“We simply need that wild country available to us, even if we never do more than drive to its edge and look in. For it can be a means of reassuring ourselves of our sanity as creatures, a part of the geography of hope.” –Wallace Stegner


Maps & Directions:

 

 NOTE:  The GTW is far too large for a useful map of it to appear on this page. USDA’s Forest Service map of Sequoia National Forest is a good aid for trip planning, and the Forest Service suggests the Golden Trout Wilderness map by Tom Harrison.

The GTW can be accessed from Tulare County via Sequoia National Park (Mineral King) on the north, and via Mountain Home Demonstration State Forest on the west. Trails for hikers and horses can be accessed from Hwy 190 (east of Porterville) near Quaking Aspen via Forest Service Road 21S50, which leads to Summit, Clicks, and Lewis Camp trailheads; Lloyd Meadow Road (Road 22S82), which leads to Jerkey and Forks of the Kern trailheads; and Balch Park Road to Mountain Home Demonstration State Forest, Shake Camp trailhead. From the south, access is via Sherman Pass Road via Nine Mile Road to Blackrock trailhead, north of the Black Rock Ranger Station, to hike down to Casa Vieja Meadow. (Horseshoe Meadow above Lone Pine is the best roadhead from the east, in Inyo County.) NOTE: These roads are closed in winter. Many of the Forest Service roads are dirt.

Scenic drives offering views of the GTW: Western Divide Highway (M107) travels 15 miles of the dramatic ridgeline that divides the Kern River watershed from the Tule River watershed, beginning at Quaking Aspen Campground and ending at the junction with M50 (take Hwy 190 east from Porterville to connect with M107 at Quaking Aspen; you can also go south from Porterville on Hwy 65 to Ducor, where you will take J22 east through Fountain Springs to California Hot Springs and Road M50 north). The Sherman Pass Road (22S05) provides access to the Kern Plateau, and a view of Mt. Whitney from Sherman Pass from the south end of the Western Divide Hwy; go east on M50 and M99 past Johnsondale and onto 22S05 over the pass. NOTE: These roads are closed in winter and are often steep, narrow, and winding; check conditions before driving.

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Mountains, Kern Plateau, mixed conifer forest and areas above timberline, wild and scenic rivers, elevation from 4,700′ to over 12,000′
Activities: backpacking, birdwatching, botanizing, camping, fishing (license required; artificial lures with barbless hooks only), hiking, horseback riding, horse packing, hunting (license required), photography, rock climbing, skiing and snowshoeing (seasonal), wildflower and wildlife viewing.
Open: daily, year-round; free Wilderness Permit required for overnight stays; permit required for campfires; mechanized vehicles and mountain bikes are prohibited in the wilderness; note that livestock may be grazing in this wilderness area.
Site Steward:
contact steward for current, detailed information and required permits.
Opportunities for Involvement: donate, volunteer
Links:
Books: 1) Exploring the Southern Sierra: West Side, by J.C. Jenkins and Ruby Johnson Jenkins (Wilderness Press, Berkeley, revised third edition, 1995)
2) The Golden Trout Wilderness, The Forty Year Struggle to Preserve the Ancient Territory of the California Golden Trout, by Larry M. Holochwost and Gene Verbeet (Kern River Valley Historical Society, Walker Endowment, 2015)

Click on photos for more information.

THE STORY OF GIANT SEQUOIA NATIONAL MONUMENT

by William Tweed

     Without doubt, one of the most contested and argued-about pieces of Tulare County in recent times has been the portion of the Sequoia National Forest that since 2000 has been conserved as the Giant Sequoia National Monument. The story of how these more than 300,000 acres came to be a national monument provides an almost textbook example of how land management issues are defined, debated, and eventually resolved in our society. The process can be messy, to say the least.

     To understand the origins of Tulare County’s only national monument, one must know something about the Sequoia National Forest. As documented elsewhere in this website, Tulare County residents fought hard in the early 1890s to withdraw the forest lands of the Sierra Nevada from sale by the federal government and to have them instead set aside permanently as public land. This was done to protect the mountain watersheds that local farmers thought were essential to their agricultural futures. Originally a part of the immense Sierra Forest Reserve, the area was defined and named the Sequoia National Forest in 1908.

     The federal agency known as the USDA-Forest Service has now managed the Sequoia National Forest for more than a century. From the beginning, national forest policy has always called for sustainable utilization of the land, with possible uses including not only watershed protection but also timber production, wildlife management, grazing, mining, recreation, and wilderness. For the first half of the twentieth century, management of the national forest system generally proceeded in a very conservative manner, with relatively little development or logging taking place. After the Second World War, however, national expectations about national forests evolved, and management of forest lands across the nation became more active. Logging, in particular, became much more heavily emphasized on most forests.

     The Sequoia National Forest did not escape this trend. In the 1960s and 1970s, the forest became a major timber producer, a role that was confirmed in 1988 when the Forest Service issued a new management plan for the forest that established an annual timber production target of 97 million board feet. (This number equals approximately 18,300 miles of 1” by 12” boards.) At that time, the Forest Service was already achieving annual sales totals of over 70 million board feet.

     The annual production of so large a volume of lumber required that the Forest Service analyze all the forest’s acreage to determine where it could produce timber. This analysis led the forest’s managers into a consideration of the future of the forest’s thirty-three groves of giant sequoia trees. Until the 1970s, federal managers had left these groves essentially alone, allowing them to exist as de facto preservation enclaves within the larger forest. (Some of the groves had been logged much earlier by private parties prior to their being included within the national forest.)

     Meanwhile, scientific research taking place outside the national forests had reached a surprising conclusion: giant sequoia reproduction required forest disturbance. Put another way, this meant that giant sequoia trees, which grow only from tiny seeds, survived best when their seeds sprouted in bare mineral soil in open sunny places. In times past, the primary disturber of the conifer forests of the Sierra Nevada had been fire, and scientists concluded that fire had played an essential role in allowing young sequoias to sprout naturally and prosper. But logging is another form of forest disturbance, and the Forest Service knew that young sequoias also sprang up after older trees were cut. Out of this fact grew an idea — one that would both allow young sequoias to germinate and help meet the forest’s timber production goals — why not log in the Sequoia National Forest’s thirty-three sequoia groves?

     In 1981, the Forest Service began logging in the groves, and the program lasted for five seasons before it was suspended. During those years, the Forest Service conducted thirteen timber sales covering about 1,000 acres within the groves. The intensity of logging varied from site to site, but in several areas the Forest Service authorized the removal of all standing trees except a handful of large, specimen-sized sequoias.

     Logging within the sequoia groves produced sharply divided public opinion. Some appreciated the economic activity that resulted from the program. (During these years up to 240 persons worked at a sawmill in Terra Bella that received the logs cut on the Sequoia National Forest.) Others were deeply disturbed by the destruction taking place within the groves, places some saw as having near-sacred status. The controversy soon went political, and by 1986 the critics had applied enough pressure to cause the Forest Service to suspend the program.

     When the Forest Service issued a new management plan for the Sequoia National Forest in 1988, however, that document called for yet higher levels of timber harvests. As a result, the battle over the forest’s giant sequoia groves intensified. Numerous organizations filed appeals of the 1988 forest plan and, under considerable pressure, the Forest Service agreed to negotiate a mediated settlement to the dispute. The resulting agreement (signed in 1990) ended logging within the groves but did not significantly reduce timber harvest on the surrounding lands.

     By now, the fight had gone national. The Tulare County Audubon Society actually went so far as to place a full-page ad in the New York Times challenging the management directions chosen by the Forest Service. The next several years saw congressional hearings on the subject (1991), a Forest Service public symposium on giant sequoia management (1992), and a visit to the region by President George H. W. Bush (also 1992), who signed a presidential proclamation guaranteeing that sequoias would not be cut.

     The fight continued, however, with local activists like Carla Cloer, Charlene Little, and Ara Marderosian working with national environmental groups. Increasingly, the goal was to end logging both within the groves and over the larger region that surrounded them. Inevitably, a political fight of this scale reached the highest levels of government. Resolution came in the late 1990s when President Bill Clinton concluded that the preferred outcome would be one that strictly limited logging on the Sequoia National Forest.

     On April 15, 2000, Clinton visited the Sequoia National Forest and signed a proclamation that designated some 327,000 acres (27%) of the Sequoia National Forest as a national monument. Making its purpose very clear, the proclamation specified that the lands in question would no longer be subject to commercial logging and that trees could be cut within the monument only for reasons of safety or ecological management.

     Like the Mineral King controversy of the 1960s and 1970s, the creation of the Giant Sequoia National Monument deeply split the people of Tulare County. The county’s board of supervisors even filed suit to overturn the monument, a case that ultimately failed. Others, who valued the groves for their inspirational beauty, celebrated the new direction as long overdue.

     Many years after the creation of the monument, some local residents still argue about whether it represents the right direction for the management of more than a quarter of the Sequoia National Forest. What emerges from this debate with great clarity, however, no matter which side of the argument one supports, is the great power that the giant sequoia trees and the forests in which they grow exercise over us all.

     Truly, we care about these trees and their future.

March, 2014


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“For centuries, groves of the Giant Sequoia have stimulated the interest and wonder of those who behold them. The Giant Sequoia is a tree that inspires emotion like no other and has mystically entered the hearts of humanity everywhere.” — President George H. W. Bush

“[S]equoias, kings of their race . . . poised their brave domes and spires in the sky three hundred feet above the ferns and lilies…towering serene through the long centuries, preaching God’s forestry fresh from heaven.” — John Muir

“This Nation’s Giant Sequoia groves are legacies that deserve special attention and protection for future generations. It is my hope that these natural gifts will continue to provide aesthetic value and inspiration for our children, grandchildren, and generations yet to come.” — President George H. W. Bush

“Ancestors of Giant Sequoia trees have existed on Earth for more than 20 million years. Naturally occurring old-growth Giant Sequoia groves located in the Sequoia, Sierra, and Tahoe National Forests in California are unique national treasures that are being managed for biodiversity, perpetuation of the species, public inspiration, and spiritual, aesthetic, recreational, ecological, and scientific value.” — President George H.W. Bush

“Sequoias are distributed in a small number of isolated concentrations, traditionally called ‘groves’ in a narrow strip less than twenty miles wide on the west slope of the Sierra Nevada. . . . Sequoias naturally occur on an infinitesimal fraction of the earth’s forested surface…The global rarity of old growth sequoia forest cannot be overstated.”– Dwight Willard

“Two local women, Charlene Little and Carla Cloer, stumbled onto … a logged-out Giant Sequoia forest in 1986, in what they had believed were protected groves. The environmental organizations they alerted mediated for a year and a half with the Forest Service, cattlemen, millowners, and recreationists involved. . . . This logging controversy of the late 1980s was a surprise throwback to the days a century earlier, before national and state parks existed, when Giant Sequoias were heavily logged in the the southern Sierra.” — Verna R. Johnston

“. . . for over 100 years, beginning with the residents of Visalia, California, Americans have sought to save these giant sequoias. . . . We’re doing our part today to make sure that the monarchs will be here after we’re long gone, rooted strong in the web of nature that sustains us all.” — President William J. Clinton

“This is not about locking lands up; it is about freeing them up for all Americans for all time.” — President William J. Clinton

“The giant sequoia groves in Sequoia National Forest are now protected from commercial logging by the new Giant Sequoia National Monument.  . . . Future management of these groves . . . is still largely dependent upon the administrative planning processes of the U.S. National Forest Service. . . . an interested and informed public is still essential to their preservation and restoration over the long term.” — Dwight Willard


Maps & Directions:

 

 

 

 

Directions:

Giant Sequoia National Monument,

Coordinates 36.0400° N, 118.5044° W

 

The Monument is most easily accessible via three main highways (198, 180, and 190).

 

Northern Portion:

From Visalia, take either Hwy 198 east into the National Park and continue north on the Generals Highway to the Monument, or take Hwy 63 north to Hwy 180 east into the Monument.

 

Southern Portion:

From Porterville, take Hwy 190 east into the Monument.

 

Note: The monument is in two sections. The northern section surrounds General Grant Grove and borders other parts of Kings Canyon National Park and Sequoia National Park.  It is administered by the Hume Lake Ranger District.

The southern section, administered by the Western Divide Ranger District, includes Long Meadow Grove, and borders the south boundary of Sequoia National Park and the eastern portion of the Tule River Indian Reservation.

 

Detailed directions, maps, and additional information can be found at this link: The Giant Sequoia National Monument.

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Mountains, forests, sequoia groves, rivers
Activities: backpacking, birding, botanizing, camping, educational activities (Trail of 100 Giants), dog walking (on 6′ leash; scoop poop), fishing, hiking (all abilities on Trail of 100 Giants; parking fee for this trail, $12/vehicle), horseback riding and camping, hunting, mountain biking, OHV (off-highway vehicle) riding and camping, photography, picnicking, scenic drives, skiing, snowshoeing, snowmobiling, snow play, wildflower and wildlife viewing
Open: seasonally (roads subject to snow closure during winter)
Site Steward: U.S. Forest Service, Hume Lake Ranger District (northern portion of Monument), 559-338-2251; Western Divide Ranger District (southern portion of Monument), 559-539-2607
Opportunities for involvement: volunteer
Books: 1) A Guide to the Sequoia Groves of California, by Dwight Willard (Yosemite Association, 2000)
2) Challenge of the Big Trees -The Updated History of Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, by William C. Tweed and Lary M. Dilsaver (University of Virginia Press, 2017);
3) Giant Sequoias, by Harvey Harteveldt, Shellhammer and Steckler (Sequoia Natural History Association, 1981);
4) To Find the Biggest Tree, by Wendell Flint and Mike Law (Sequoia Natural History Association, 2002);
5) King Sequoia: The Tree That Inspired a Nation, Created Our National Park System, and Changed the Way We Think about Nature, by William C. Tweed (Heyday, 2016)

 

Click on photos for more information.

Treasures Beneath Your Wheels

by Laurie Schwaller

     Two beautiful bridges anchor the Generals Highway Stone Bridges Historic District in Sequoia National Park. Standing about a mile apart, the Marble Fork (Lodgepole) and the Clover Creek bridges are fine examples of the National Parks’ famous “rustic architecture” (or “Parkitecture”), which aims always “In the construction of roads, trails, buildings, and other improvements . . . to the harmonizing of these improvements with the landscape.” In their functionality, character, and quality, these bridges fulfill the Park Service’s dual mission of providing access for the enjoyment and protection of the park’s resources while leaving the park’s scenery unimpaired.

     Constructed in 1930-31 as part of a 15-year project to link Sequoia and General Grant (now Kings Canyon) national parks by road, the bridges cross the Marble Fork of the Kaweah River and nearby Clover Creek. They were designed to fit “naturally” into their scenic landscapes, to endure, and to be easy to maintain.

     Both are sturdy concrete and stone arch bridges. Although produced during the major economic and social crisis of the Great Depression’s early years, they are models of timeless design and the work of highly skilled craftsmen, made to last. The first step in their construction was to build a concrete barrel vault one or two feet thick to span each waterway. Next, walls were added on both sides of the barrel vault and along its top.

     Then the concrete walls were covered (“faced”) with native stone. Instead of being cut to regular geometric shapes and laid in careful, even rows, the walls’ masonry was “uncoursed” so that the stones have a natural, “rustic,” unworked appearance and look almost as if they have just been stacked upon each other by some natural process. The uncoursed masonry overlays the modern construction methods and materials (e.g., rebar and concrete), creating the appearance of true stone arches.

     Finally, the space between the walls and over the top of the concrete vault was filled with earth, graded, and then paved to create the 25-foot wide roadway over the bridge.

     The bridges’ “natural” appearance and careful integration into their respective environments are the result of the visionary work of the Park Service’s structural and landscape architects, and the careful craftsmen who were contracted to build them. Each construction plan followed strict guidelines to preserve the natural landscape, and the plans were carefully checked on location to ensure that they would “fit the ground.”

     Extraordinary measures were taken to minimize damage to the park’s scenery. Blasting had to be limited (even though this was a hardship in the often sloped and rocky mountain terrain), and trees and other vegetation were left standing whenever possible. Debris was disposed of as inconspicuously as conditions allowed. Sites where rock was quarried and fill dirt excavated were located out of sight of the roadway in areas that would not be permanently scarred by the removals.

     The construction camps were set up in places that could tolerate hard use and be successfully restored. After construction was finished, damaged slopes were smoothed and rounded and then replanted with native species matching those in the area (often provided by the park’s plant nursery).

     To properly admire these long-lived historic structures in their very different, well-restored landscapes, you must get out of your car. Traveling north through Sequoia National Park, you’ll come first to the Marble Fork Bridge, which carries the Generals Highway over a lively, boulder-strewn branch of the Kaweah River. Just beyond the road turning into the Lodgepole area, you’ll cross the bridge and then immediately turn left into the Lodgepole Picnic Area. Importantly, this fine spot for lunch or a snack also offers easy access to the river and an excellent view of the bridge from the bank, or, when conditions permit, from in the stream itself.

     The Marble Fork Bridge spans a distance of 45 feet and is beautifully proportioned to its intimate forested setting. Outstanding masonry work melds the bridge with its landscape. The native stone was selected to match the surrounding rocks, and precisely cut to the architect’s specifications to create a natural look.

     Drive about another mile ahead and you’ll come to the waterway crossed by the 90-foot span of the Clover Creek Bridge. Here the terrain is wide open, with the stream slicing through sheets and slabs of bare granite. Walk over the bridge to enjoy the big views and marvel at how well this timeless, rugged structure suits its environment.

     A small third “bridge,” spanning Silliman Creek just beyond the Marble Fork bridge, is included in the Generals Highway Stone Bridges Historic District. Technically, this structure, which spans a distance of only 16 feet, is a culvert, not a bridge (which by engineering definition is over six meters in length). Nevertheless, even this minor construction, a reinforced concrete slab, features rubble masonry abutments and facing to harmonize it with the very rocky creek bed it traverses, and so provides another noteworthy example of Parkitecture.

     By the summer of 1935, the great vision of linking the two national parks and their iconic sequoias — General Sherman and General Grant — via a superbly scenic, easy to drive road had been realized, and on June 23, the newly-completed Generals Highway was dedicated to the public. Cars — 669 of them — drove in, from both the Sequoia and the General Grant park entrances, bringing 2,488 people to celebrate the great accomplishment. They met for the ribbon-cutting at the highway’s halfway point: the panoramic Clover Creek Bridge.

     NOTE: See our related articles on enduring “Parkitecture” Treasures: Ash Mountain Entrance Sign, Hockett Meadow Ranger Station, Moro Rock Stairway, and Redwood Meadow Ranger Station.

April, 2021


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“The 1920s ushered in a new era filled with greater opportunities and a desire for travel through the introduction of the automobile. . . . . [National Park Service] Administrators were exceedingly excited about the possible benefits of a connecting road between Sequoia National Park and General Grant National Park, which became Kings Canyon National Park in 1940.” — National Park Service “When Two Parks Meet: The History of the Generals Highway”

“The linking of the two ‘general’ trees gave the highway its official name, the Generals highway. The name was recommended by Sequoia National Park Superintendent John R. White and approved by Assistant National Park Service Director Horace M. Albright on 23 July 1923. The engineers building the road had at first called it ‘Halawanchi,’ a Monache expression for anything foolish, referring to the twisting, climbing nature of the road.” — Historic American Engineering Record, National Park Service

“National Park roadways . . . are planned for leisurely sightseeing with extreme care. They are often narrow, winding, and hilly — but therein may lie their appeal.” — National Park Service Park Road Standards, 1984

“A distinctive feature of park roads from the 1920s to the present is how their design and construction has been deeply influenced by landscape architects. . . . When the Bureau of Public Roads, in agreement with the National Park Service, took over control of the construction of park roads in 1926, Park Service landscape architects retained final approval for all . . . work.” — Historic American Engineering Record, National Park Service

“[T]he visitor often does not realize the amount of planning required during road design to produce the road that seems now to integrate so effortlessly into its surrounding landscape.” — Historic American Engineering Record, National Park Service

“Numerous culverts were required along the entire length of the highway to convey mountain waters beneath the road. The majority of the culverts visible from the roadway were faced with masonry, blending with and adding to the rustic appearance of the highway.” — Historic American Engineering Record, National Park Service

“Stone, the landscape architects of the Park Service believed, was a material that offered high potential for non-intrusive structural design.” — William C. Tweed, NRHP Nomination Form

John B. Wosky, the designer of the Marble Fork and Clover Creek bridges, also designed NPS buildings for decades and played a role in developing the Park Service’s signature rustic architecture. “That style included a specific color of exterior paint, referred to as ‘Wosky Brown,’ on every building.” — University of Oregon School of Architecture and Environment and NRHP Nomination Form

“Bids for the construction of the two bridges and the nearby Silliman Creek culvert were received on July 15, 1930, and the contract was awarded to the W. A. Bechtel Company [which] subcontracted . . . work to C.D. DeVelbiss of San Francisco. DeVelbiss hired Finnish stone cutters from a quarry at Porterville, California. Each exterior stone had to be cut to precise measurements set forth in the architectural plan.” — William C. Tweed, NRHP Nomination Form

“Arches and supports of carefully cut and molded stone pleased the eye and suggested coordination with the rocky streambeds and towering cliffs nearby. They also called for backbreaking and expensive labor. Bechtel and the other companies suffered from drastic employee turnover that slowed the job . . . and exacerbated the cost overrun.” — William C. Tweed and Lary M. Dilsaver

“Eagerly awaited by officials and public alike, the occasion will be an outstanding history-making episode as it will mark the attainment of a long sought goal by park officials — that of connecting the two Big Tree Parks with an easy grade, modern mountain highway; and at a cost of 2 1/4 million dollars [a] tour of outstanding scenic splendor has been provided through both National Parks.” — National Park Service, for the Generals Highway dedication ceremonies at Clover Creek Bridge on June 23, 1935

“The bridges were and are monuments to the engineers and landscape architects who designed them and the craftsmen and laborers who built them. They are among the last manifestations of the age of large, hand-crafted highway structures.” — William C. Tweed, NRHP Nomination Form

“Dollars invested by taxpayers in the 1920s are still paying nice dividends today. Those two arches [the Marble Fork and Clover Creek bridges] ought to be as durable as anything the Romans built. I don’t think there’s much manmade in the park that will be there a thousand years hence, but I’d bet on the Clover Creek bridge.” — William C. Tweed, 2021


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

 

The bridges are just west of Lodgepole in Sequoia National Park.

From Visalia, take Hwy 198 east through Three Rivers to Sequoia National Park (entrance fee). Continue on the Generals Highway past the Giant Forest to Lodgepole (about 21 miles from the park entrance).

Immediately past the entrance to Lodgepole, you will come to the Marble Fork Bridge. Just after the west end of the Marble Fork Bridge, turn left into the Lodgepole Picnic Area; park and walk down to the river for good views of the bridge.

Back in your vehicle, you will cross the Silliman Creek Culvert shortly after you leave the Lodgepole Picnic Area, continuing northwest.

About one mile farther on the highway is the Clover Creek Bridge. Just after the west end of the Clover Creek Bridge there is a parking area on the left side of the road with good views.

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Mountains, Sequoia National Park, historic bridges over Clover Creek, Marble Fork of the Kaweah River, and Silliman Creek (culvert)
Activities: architecture and landscape architecture study, birding, history, photography, picnicking (at Lodgepole Picnic Area), water play (when water flow is low and slow and safe at Lodgepole Picnic Area, Marble Fork; never leave children unattended)
Open: Sequoia National Park is always open, weather permitting, unless closed due to emergency conditions; park entrance fee
Opportunities for Involvement: Donate, volunteer
Links:

 

Click on photos for more information.

THE STORY OF THE FOX THEATRE

by Terry Ommen

  Movie theaters today are often built with little attention to ambiance or architectural sparkle, box-like on the outside and unadorned on the inside. But such disregard for cinematic splendor wasn’t always the case. When Visalia’s Fox Theatre was built in 1930, not only did the movie on the screen thrill the audience; the theater itself was enchanting, and an integral part of the movie-goer’s experience. Back then, just a few coins would buy a ticket to paradise.

     The story of the Visalia Fox Theatre began in January, 1928, when the well-known William Fox film company announced it had acquired all 250 theaters in the West Coast Theatres, Inc. chain. One of these was the Visalia Theatre, a playhouse on the northeast corner of Court and Acequia streets that had been built in 1889 as the National Guard Armory and remodeled several times since then. After examining the tired old building, Fox officials decided to replace it with a modern movie house suited to the glitzy golden age of motion pictures.

     Fox bought land on the northwest corner of Main and Encina streets. Los Angeles architects Floyd Stanbery and Clifford Balch drew the building plans, and by April, 1929, the site was cleared and ready for the contractor, Beller Construction of Los Angeles. Howard Sheehan, Fox’s Vice President, known for his keen eye for “the new, the better and the beautiful,” made all the design decisions.

     For nine months, Visalians watched Sheehan’s Spanish-style building take shape, and when it was finished, they marveled. The tall clock tower attracted the most attention. The Visalia Times-Delta reported that it looked “like a lighthouse above a seaport.” Mounted on its dominating height were three clock faces, each over six feet in diameter, ringed with neon lights, and each facing in a different direction. The wonderful clock, touted as the largest of its type ever built, captivated the community.

     The new building’s interior was equally dramatic, with an East Indian theme contrasting with the Spanish exterior. Sheehan wanted visitors to experience the feeling of entering the garden courtyard of an Indian ruler, stepping from the “streets of Visalia to the mystic shrines of the gods.”

     But there was more to the inside than just elaborate decor. In the new Fox Theatre, built for “talkies,” the most advanced Western Electric audio gear was installed. Even the walls were shaped with acoustics in mind. And the projection room, according to Fox officials, was the “most superbly equipped booth in the state.”

     On February 27, 1930, at 6:30 p.m., with Klieg lights beaming skyward, the Visalia Fox Theatre doors opened for the first time to the public. The 1,460 seats filled quickly, as the audience was welcomed with music from the new $20,000 organ. Those in attendance enjoyed several motion pictures, including “The Lone Star Ranger,” starring George O’Brien and Sue Carol; Movietone News; a Mickey Mouse cartoon; and “Night Owls,” a Laurel and Hardy comedy. Opening night was a sensation at the beautiful $225,000 theater.

     For decades to come, the Fox served as an important Tulare County social center under a variety of owners. Not only were films shown there, but many performers entertained live on its stage.

     By the 1970s, however, single screen theaters were losing money, and more and more of them were being replaced by multi-screen or multiplex houses. In 1976, the Mann Theater Corporation, owner of Visalia’s Fox Theatre at the time, announced that the Fox would be remodeled and converted into a triplex.

     Despite this change, the aging landmark continued to struggle financially, and maintenance problems began to accumulate. In late 1996, Cinamerica-Mann, the company leasing the Fox, surprised the community by announcing that they were closing the theater doors. They had built a new 12-plex in the Sequoia Mall and were giving up on the old movie house. Soon, the vacant Fox was for sale.

     This series of decisions reverberated throughout the community. In its 66 years, the grand landmark theater had amassed a loyal fan base, and many were concerned about its future. The Tulare County Symphony began eyeing the building as a possible new home. The Visalia Times-Delta weighed in editorially and supported efforts to make it an arts center. Visalia Mayor Mary Louise Vivier publicly said she wanted the theater preserved and restored. Downtown merchants worried about the impact of the vacant entertainment center on downtown business.

     When by the end of 1996 no serious buyer had come forward, a local grassroots group called “Friends of the Fox” formed. Organized and led by Rami Cherami, a teacher in the Visalia Unified School District, the non-profit group began working on a plan to acquire the theater, restore it, and reopen it to the public.

     Then came the “Miracle on Main Street.” In December, 1997, the owners of the theater thrilled the community by donating the Fox to the Friends. The new owners spiritedly continued fundraising for its restoration. By 1999, with the help of many donations and hundreds of volunteer hours, the Friends had been able to complete many major renovation projects and to fix most of the Fox’s cosmetic needs. The Fox was again ready to receive a theater audience.

     November 20, 1999, was the date set for the “Grand Re-Opening,” featuring well-known pianist and composer Marvin Hamlisch as the guest performer. The long-awaited evening was truly a grand occasion, and a grateful and excited community flocked through the doors of the historic theater made enchanting and new once more.

     Since 1999, the Fox has been operating regularly, thanks to the Friends of the Fox, who continue to solicit financial support for the numerous expensive restoration projects yet to be completed.

     In 2011, the Friends’ Board of Directors and Paul Fry, Theatre Manager, made the decision to pursue National Register of Historic Places listing for the iconic Fox building. Chris Brewer, the architectural historian hired to complete the long application process, reports that National Register status seems assured.

     Visalia’s fabulous Fox has stood at Main and Encina since 1930. A treasured historic building that was saved by citizens of its community for future generations, it stands as a tribute to those groups and individuals who have worked so tirelessly to protect and preserve it. Thanks to them, the Fox will continue to be a magical place where memories are made for many years to come.

November, 2013


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Quotes & More Photos:

“Saving old buildings and neighborhoods is an enormously effective way to provide continuity in the places where we live.” — Dwight Young

“These old buildings do not belong to us only, they belong to our forefathers and they will belong to our descendants unless we play them false. They are not in any sense our own property to do with as we like with them. We are only trustees for those that come after us.” –William Morris

“We shape our buildings; thereafter, our buildings shape us.” — Winston Churchill

“A country without a past has the emptiness of a barren continent; and a city without old buildings is like a man without a memory.” –Graeme Shankland

“It’s not good because it’s old, it’s old because it’s good.” — Anonymous

“Back in 2003, Porterville native Ruth Dresser made a pair of unique donations to the Visalia Fox Theatre: a 1919 Wurlitzer pipe organ insured for $1 million and a Baldwin grand piano.” —Visalia Times Delta, September 5, 2013

“The image of a community is fundamentally important to its economic well-being. If all places look alike, there’s no reason to go anywhere.” — Ed McMahon


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

 

Address: 300 W. Main Street, Visalia, CA

Latitude/Longitude: 36° 19′ 48.72″ N, 119° 17′ 41.28″ W

36.3302, -119.2948

 

Note: W. Main Street is one-way to the east in the vicinity of the Fox Theatre.

 

From Hwy 198 in Visalia:

Take the Hwy 63 north (Court St.) exit and go north (right) to Center Ave. (one block north  of Main St.).

Turn left (west) onto Center, go three blocks, and turn left (south) onto Floral St. for one block.

Then turn left (east) onto Main St. The Fox Theatre is ahead on your left.

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Valley, downtown Visalia, historic theater
Activities: events, history, photography
Open: whenever events are scheduled
Site Steward: Friends of the Fox, 559-625-1369
Links:
Books: A Walk Around Visalia, by George Pilling (Sound Stones, 2011)

Click on photos for more information.

The Story of the Dinuba Southern Pacific Depot Museum

by Laurie Schwaller

   In the mid-1800s, people from all over the world began settling in the great fertile valley of Tulare County. Most hoped to make their living by farming or ranching. They needed reliable water supplies to grow their crops and cattle, and efficient transportation to get their produce to market. Soon they were forming irrigation districts to lead water from the rivers to their land. Thus, in the early 1880s, the 129,000-acre Alta Irrigation District was established in the northern end of what was then a much larger Tulare County.

     Meanwhile, communities sprang up and grew, and as construction of the Southern Pacific Railroad moved south down the valley in the 1880s, all the little towns’ boosters vied to become stops on the railroad line. Joining forces, the boards of trade in Dinuba, Sanger, and Reedley managed to change the route of the Southern Pacific to come through their communities, and when the trains began to run in February of 1888, Dinuba built a depot to accommodate them.

     That depot burned down in 1911, but it was promptly replaced. The handsome new depot served the town until the last stationmaster retired, in June, 1978. Fortunately, the Alta District Historical Society (ADHS), had been formed before then, in 1962, initiated by Dinuban W. N. Davis. Its purpose was to encourage and promote the study of the history and culture of the Alta District and surrounding environs, and to collect, classify, and publish related historical information, data, facts, and folklore.

     Recognizing the depot’s historic value, ADHS purchased it in 1979. However, as a condition of its sale, the building had to be moved. After an extensive search, in November of 1982, the society paid $40,000 for a large corner property, now known as Heritage Square, at Ventura and K streets in Dinuba, and in January, 1984, moved the depot to its new home. Having played such a critical part in the area’s history, the depot was to become the repository for that history — a museum for the Alta District, whose boundaries roughly followed those of the still-operating historic Alta Irrigation District and included the towns of Dinuba, Cutler, Orosi, Yettem, Monson, and Reedley.

   In July, 1984, Dinuban Evelyn Dopkins Corr donated the 1912 “White House” to the ADHS. She, too, required that her building be moved, but she included a $10,000 donation to cover the cost, so in January, 1985, this large historic home joined the Depot at Heritage Square.

     From 1976 through 1989, through volunteer and youth program efforts, as well as dues, donations, memorials, raffles, food booths, dinners, auctions, fireworks sales, and other fundraising efforts, ADHS was able to pay for substantial renovation work on the White House and the Depot, and numerous improvements on Heritage Square.

     Fundraising and construction projects have continued apace ever since. The White House gained a library, named in honor of donor Evelyn Dopkins Corr, in 1990. In 1991, Rose Ann Vuich of Dinuba (born in Cutler), the first woman to be elected a California State Senator (in 1977), donated $50,000 to ADHS, which greatly contributed to additional major work on the White House.

   This fine example of American Foursquare/Prairie architecture now serves as a cultural center for the community, and houses, in addition to the library, historical exhibits, art displays, and the ADHS offices. It hosts ADHS meetings and cultural and community celebrations, such as the annual Christmas at the White House.

   Exhibits have included photography, quilts, Depression glass, wedding gowns, art from local schools, and Japanese, Armenian, Filipino, Mennonite, Cowboy, Korean, and Native American cultures. An exclusive highlight is the striking private collection of textile art and art on paper created by Dinuba resident Katchidor “K” Boroian, which he donated to ADHS in 1983. The White House can also be reserved for public and private functions.

   The first display to be installed in the restored and refurbished Southern Pacific Depot Museum building was the Rutan Brothers Aviation Exhibit, in November, 1997. World-famous aviation pioneers Burt and Dick Rutan grew up in Dinuba, and graduated from Dinuba High School. Among many other innovations, Burt designed, and his brother Dick and partner Jeana Yeager piloted, the Voyager, the first plane to fly around the world without stopping or refueling. Burt also designed the sub-orbital spaceplane SpaceShipOne and the BiPod, a hybrid flying car.

     The Rutan brothers arrived for the 1997 grand opening of the Depot in Burt’s experimental “Boomerang” plane. Since that grand opening almost 20 years ago, many exhibits on a wide range of subjects have been installed. Community members have donated hundreds of interesting items, including those comprising a veterans’ display, a Native American display, the Orosi Room, a kitchen from the early 1900s, a Rose Ann Vuich display, and a blacksmith shop.

     Recently, ADHS began searching for more exhibit space. In 1997, Burt Rutan donated to the museum another of his experimental aircraft, the “Solitaire” sail plane, “a product of the genius who lived among us.” The Society hopes to find a place in which to permanently display this exciting gift where it can be seen by the public.

     Additionally, the Society partners with schools and other organizations, making the Heritage Square facilities available for events, such as the Dinuba Festival of the Arts sponsored by the ADHS, the Chamber of Commerce, and the city.

     ADHS has also been working with the school district, the city, and local service clubs to bring third-graders on field trips to Heritage Square. The service clubs finance the bus transportation, and volunteer docents guide the students through the exhibits and the blacksmith shop. The youngsters get introduced to 100-year-old technology such as wringer washing machines and to old-fashioned toys and games like jacks and horseshoes, then join in singing historical songs played by Brad McCord and Ron Jefferson on guitar and harmonica.

     Another innovative ADHS outreach project is volunteer Nancy Hoyt’s delightful “Museum in a Trunk.” Nancy visits classrooms with a trunk full of treasures to introduce students to the history and cultures that have created the community that they live in today.

  “Remembering the past, working for the future,” the ADHS strives “to preserve the cultures that have joined talents and customs to form the Alta District, and to educate and develop appreciation of their importance to present and future generations.”

 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    August, 2015

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Quotes & More Photos:

“The railroad depot was the social and commercial center of many small towns and villages across America. The fortunes of many cities would be made or broken by the passing of two steel rails through their limits.”–William J. Manon, Jr.

“The railroad provided a market for goods, grain and cattle and it brought the mail and other news of the outside world. It was also the primary mode of transportation in those pre-automobile days.” — William J. Manon, Jr.

“[T]oday, railroad depots are once again emerging as community centerpieces. After years of neglect, the buildings are being reclaimed, and now enjoy new lives as retail centers, museums and even transportation centers.” — William J. Manon, Jr.

“That’s why we have the Museum, . . . to remind us of how we came, and why: to start fresh, and begin a new place from what we had learned and carried from the old.” — Lois Lowry

“Museums provide places of relaxation and inspiration. And most importantly, they are a place of authenticity. We live in a world of reproductions – the objects in museums are real. It’s a way to get away from the overload of digital technology.” — Thomas P. Campbell

“She was sworn in at this desk, used it for her four terms and received it as a gift on her retirement. With her bell she wrought many changes in Senate procedures. Her work and her heart were always for her district.” — ADHS Rose Ann Vuich plaque

“The election of Rose Ann Vuich, the farm kid from the Central Valley, marked the beginning of positive change when subsequent women legislators joined her in shaping the past quarter century. She will forever remain as a symbol of great leadership to all women.” — Terry McHale

“Burt [Rutan] had a gift for being able to create model airplanes that were really works of art. His bedroom was a world full of Exacto knives, balsa wood, and glue. Lincoln School was our ‘airport,’ and helping Burt with takeoffs was the biggest thrill you could have.” — Richie Hachigian, Burt Rutan’s neighbor in the 1950s

“We knew that our friend was someone special, but we never guessed his creative genius would someday lead to aviation history.” — Richie Hachigian, Burt Rutan’s neighbor in the 1950s

“We can tell ourselves we will never forget and we likely won’t. But we need to make sure that we teach history to those who never had the opportunity to remember in the first place.” — Dan Rather


Maps & Directions:

 

Address: 289 South K Street, Dinuba, CA 93618

From Visalia, travel west on Hwy 198 to the Plaza Drive exit, just prior to Hwy 99. Exit north onto Road 80/J19/Alta Avenue. Proceed north about 15 miles to Dinuba. Continue north to W. Tulare Street. Turn right (east) and go to South K Street. Turn right (south) and proceed one and one half blocks to the museum at 289 South K Street, on the right.


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Valley, downtown City of Dinuba
Activities: Tours of museum, cultural center, blacksmith shop, and grounds; special events; facility rental
Open: First Saturday of each month, 10:00-2:00; Tuesdays and Wednesdays, 9:00-noon and 1:00-3:00; or by appointment.
Tours can be arranged through the Alta District Historical Society (ADHS) office, which is open on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, 9:00-noon and 1:00-3:00: call 559-591-2144 or email altahistorical@yahoo.com.
Admission free; Donations greatly appreciated.
Site Steward: Alta District Historical Society–ADHS, 559-591-2144;
Opportunities: Donate, membership, volunteer
Links:
Publications: Dinuba Historical Tour Map (available at the museum)

 

Click on photos for more information.

Cutler Park

by Laurie Schwaller

     On June 3, 1919, the people of Tulare County received a wonderful gift. John Cutler, Jr., and his wife, Mary, donated to the county approximately 70 acres of splendid oak woodland along the St. John’s River, stipulating that “Said lands shall be used and maintained forever by the [County] as and for a public park and public pleasure ground, and for no other purpose.” Thus our county acquired the land for its second park, for free, just ten years after purchasing the 100 forested acres of Mooney’s Grove for $15,000.

     The donated land was part of the Cutler family’s 1854 home ranch, where John, Jr.’s generation had been born and raised. He gave the gift as a memorial to his parents, John and Nancy Cutler, pioneer settlers and leading citizens of Tulare County, requiring that “Said lands and premises shall forever thereafter be named . . . Cutler Park.” The deed also emphasized the new park’s importance as a preserve for posterity, specifying that “None of the oak trees now growing on said premises shall ever be cut down, destroyed, or removed from said premises, so long as the same shall remain in a healthy, growing condition, excepting only such trees as it shall be found necessary to cut down or remove for the purpose of erecting buildings or structures on said premises for the convenience and pleasure of the public.”

     Land to the center of the St. John’s River was included, to provide the public with boating and swimming opportunities. The county envisioned the new park as a picnic ground as attractive as Mooney Grove that would relieve the pressure of heavy use on its first park. It even considered moving some of its growing population of zoo animals from Mooney to Cutler. But first, it set to work to fence the new park, build an attractive entrance gate, and improve accessibility to the property.

     By July, 1920, two 12-foot driveways were under construction, leading into the park through the impressive new entrance and looping through the grounds. A well had been dug, brush cleared, trees pruned, and with comfort stations and picnic tables installed, it was expected that “The new park will be a delightful camping spot for motorists passing on to the mountains during the summer.”

     A year later, a large water tank, pump, and waterlines were installed, enabling 400 oak saplings, uncovered in the brush clearing, to be watered and cultivated for posterity. The Pomona Grange organized a big ceremony and all-day picnic on October 1 to celebrate the dedication of Cutler Park to the public. The whole county was invited to attend, with a special invitation to the old surviving pioneers to come and talk about early life in the area and their memories of John Cutler, Sr.

     Superior Judge W. B. Wallace, who had taught many of the Cutler children at the little school near the parkland, gave the dedicatory speech. Chairman Newman of the Board of Supervisors then formally accepted the park for the county and promised funding for its development and maintenance. “The gift of this fine grove of oaks constitutes one of the greatest acts anyone can do,” he said. “As we grow older as a county we find that more playgrounds are needed and must and shall be provided.”

     The next day, the Visalia Morning Delta announced that the County Supervisors had cut the tax levy for park purposes in the new county budget from two and one-half to two cents. The funds raised would not be sufficient to carry out the park’s development program, with the possible exception of a few swings and some road work. The paper noted later that week that as of the first of September, 100,000 people had visited Mooney Grove in 1921, and 37,000 had come to Cutler Park (out of a total county population of just over 59,000).

     Despite its continuing lack of facilities, the park continued to serve many outdoor recreational interests. In addition to picnicking and river play, it hosted statewide archery tournaments, training exercises by the Visalia Infantry Regiment, the sheriff’s pistol practice, and many Girl Scout and Boy Scout day camps and overnight Camporees.

     At last, in April, 1951, the county supervisors adopted a master plan for Cutler, with a number of proposed enhancements. Unfortunately, since park funding had been slashed, the planned improvements would be delayed.

     By 1954, none of them had been made. (Furthermore, the park was now described as comprising only 50 acres, far less than the 70 acres donated in 1919.) A Visalia Times Delta article in August described the park’s condition as “so poor as to render the area offensive to sight.” Declaring Cutler “unfit for public use due to lack of facilities and its generally run-down condition,” the Ivanhoe Chamber of Commerce, American Legion Post, Garden Club, Elbow Creek Grange, and Visalia Chamber urged the Supervisors to get a plan approved and funded and get to work on the park.

     Earl Ingrim, County Planner, outlined several proposed long-term developments, but emphasized that, unlike crowded Mooney Grove, “a commercial and carnival-type park suited primarily to mass recreation facilities,” Cutler should feature casual, family-type recreation.

     In December, 1954, the Supervisors unanimously adopted the amended plan, which included adding a youngsters’ fishing pond and upgrading the roads. By September, 1956, the Times Delta was able to report that “Improvements Make Cutler Park Popular Recreational Spot.” The roads had been paved, nineteen acres of lawn planted for a children’s play area, and a third picnic arbor completed. And the new park superintendent, Merle Harp, had more plans for Cutler: irrigation sprinklers, barbecue pits, new playground equipment, more arbors, and eventually a bath house and rest rooms near the river.

     In six months, his work was underway, and by 1959, Cutler boasted horseshoe pits, 82 picnic tables, five arbors, twelve fire pits, the ball diamond, swings and merry-go-rounds, a new shop building, and parking space for 210 cars (but no pond or bath house). It was one of our county’s most popular parks.

     Sixty years on, it still appeals to people of all ages. Eleven hundred cars filled Cutler on Easter Sunday in 2017. The mile-long loop of the park’s road through the picnic areas under the big trees and along the river on the levee hosts strollers, joggers, cyclists, and cars taking slow scenic drives. Children race to explore the two big modern sets of play equipment. In 2018, the County, working with Kaweah Delta Water Conservation District, built a beach to enhance enjoyment of the river. Rafters and waders, picnickers and bicyclists, students running cross-country meets and their elders racing in the Senior Games post photos of their good times on the park’s Facebook page.

     For those who relish the simple pleasures of being outdoors in beautiful, historic, natural, family-friendly surroundings, Cutler continues into its second century as a well-loved Tulare County treasure.

     CAUTION: The river may look calm and peaceful, but it can be running very fast, especially when water is being released from Terminus Dam at Lake Kaweah. Enjoy it carefully, and never leave children unattended.

June, 2019


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Quotes & More Photos:

Born in Indiana in 1819, John Cutler became “one of Tulare county’s most venerated pioneers.” He earned his medical degree, came overland to California in 1849, and settled in El Dorado county, where the local miners elected him to represent [the] county in the state legislature. In 1852, Dr. Cutler came with a settlers to the Four Creeks area in newly-formed Tulare County and took up land and built up his holdings until he became one of the county’s largest landowners. In 1853, he was elected to “the most important office in the county, that of county judge,” serving from 1853 to 1858.” — Annie R. Mitchell

“Dr. Cutler was a profound student of the Bible and of Shakespeare and could quote at length from either source. . . . he did not live in the past but was well read and constantly alert to the events of the community, state and nation. This interest in education carried over again into official life for he served an appointive term as county school superintendent and served as trustee in his own school district.” — Annie R. Mitchell

“When the Santa Fe Railroad came through the valley in 1897, Dr. Cutler deeded a right of way through his property and the railroad named the new community Cutler. In 1919 his son, John Cutler, Jr., donated seventy-six acres of the home ranch as a memorial park for his parents. Cutler Park has many oak trees and the Saint John’s River flows through it, making it a beautiful spot for picnickers.” — Annie R. Mitchell

“[O]n this . . . quarter section, in 1854, . . . Mr. John Cutler, Sr., located [after] arriving in Tulare County with the first pioneers. He was here at the time of the organization of the county and took part in the deliberations under the Charter Oak, two or three miles from Cutler Park.” — Visalia Morning Delta, 02/07/1919

“[T]he county’s vast groves of oaks are rapidly disappearing — now nearly all gone — and such groves as there should [sic] be preserved for future generations. Not many years ago Visalia was known as the ‘City of Oaks’ and today finds the oaks all gone save a few here and there.” — Visalia Morning Delta, 05/11/1919

‘”It is the wish of . . . all of us,’ said Mr. Cutler, ‘that this park shall be always filled with laughing, happy faces, with men, women and children to whom and of whom we of recent years have just begun to realize are entitled to the great playgrounds nature provided and of which we have played such havoc but now preserve.'”– Visalia Morning Delta, 10/02/1921

“Superior Judge W. B. Wallace, making the address of the day, ably expressed the sentiments of all the people when , . . he said, ‘This will always be known as Cutler park and justly so, but the name appearing on the gate there is not alone symbolic of the Cutler family but of all those sturdy, noble, heroic pioneers whose work, energy and perseverance started Tulare county on the upward grade from the barren plains which once were traversed by naught but cattle.'” — Visalia Morning Delta, 10/02/1921

“[Judge Wallace] praised the character of Judge Cutler . . and directed a fitting tribute, also, to John Cutler, Jr. . . . as having made the greatest gift to Tulare county the county ever has received. ‘Would that other wealthy men would but follow his example,’ he said.” — Visalia Morning Delta, 10/02/1921

“Throughout California’s history, people have lived among the oaks, raised families in homes shaded by oaks, worked and played around these generous natural and cultural icons. Oaks have played a crucial role in supporting the health and well being of people, plants, and animals across the state for decades.” — Janet Cobb


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

15520 Ivanhoe Dr., Visalia, 93292

From Hwy 198 in Visalia, take Hwy 63/North Court St. north to Oval Park. Turn right onto N.E. 2nd Ave., then right again onto Hwy 216/E. Houston Ave. and follow it east past Golden West High School and then past 5th Ave. The park entrance will be on your left (north side of Hwy 216).


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Valley, riparian Valley oak grove, St. John’s river access
Activities: biking, birding, disc golf, dog walking (on leash, scoop poop), hiking, photography, picnicking (arbors available via reservation), playgrounds, special events (fee for permits), water play
Open: Year-round, daily, except always CLOSED on Tuesday and Wednesday; check seasonal hours: Winter (Nov. 1 – Feb. 28), 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.; Spring (Mar. 1 – May 31), 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m., except 8:00-7:00 on Sat. and Sun.; Summer (June 1 – Sept. 8), 8:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m.; Fall (Sept. 9 – Oct. 31), 8:00 – 5:00, except 8:00 – 7:00 on Sat. and Sun.; entrance fee $5.00 per vehicle.
Site Steward: Tulare County Department of Parks and Recreation/General Services Agency, 559-205-1100; tularecountyparks@co.tulare.ca.us. Contact Site Steward for current fees
Opportunities for Involvement: donate, volunteer

Click on photos for more information.

COLONEL ALLENSWORTH STATE HISTORIC PARK

by Nancy Bruce

     Allensworth is the only town in California that was founded, financed, built, populated, and governed by African Americans. This pioneering venture in the ongoing struggle for freedom and opportunity resulted from the vision and determination of Lieutenant Colonel Allen Allensworth. Today, a hundred years after its heyday, visitors to the historic townsite are still inspired by the Colonel’s ideals and accomplishments and by his town that refuses to die.

     Born into slavery in 1842, Allen Allensworth learned to read and write as a young man. He eventually escaped slavery by joining the Union forces during the Civil War. He enlisted in the U.S. Navy, and quickly rose through the ranks. In 1886, after civilian careers in teaching and business, and earning a doctorate in theology, he re-entered the military as the U.S. Army’s first Black chaplain, guiding the spiritual well-being and moral education of the soldiers serving in the 24th Infantry, one of several army units comprised of all African Americans (the renowned Buffalo Soldiers). Twenty years later, Lieutenant Colonel Allensworth retired, the first African American to achieve such high rank. His vision and vigorous leadership continued into the next phase of his life.

     In a series of lectures he delivered, Allensworth stressed the importance of self-determination and urged African Americans to develop economic, social, cultural, and political self-sufficiency. During his extensive travels, he noticed thousands of Blacks migrating to California in order to free themselves from systemic prejudice — the South’s segregation policies and the North’s discriminatory policies and practices.

     He moved his family to Los Angeles, the seeming land of opportunity for his dream. But it was in the southern San Joaquin Valley that he found all the right elements for pursuit of that dream — affordable land, rich with good soil, ample water, and a railroad stop that promised transportation and freight business.

     He joined forces with other like-minded individuals, including Professor William Payne, Rev. William Peck, Rev. John W. Palmer and Harry A. Mitchell, to form the California Colony and Home Promoting Organization. With Colonel Allensworth as president, the group purchased 800 acres and filed a township site plan in August 1908 for a town called Allensworth. It would be an all-Black community where families could prosper free from the crippling effects of discrimination and unfair governance.

     The town’s founders highly valued education, scholarship, self-governance, and hard work. Those who shared this vision were attracted to Allensworth and contributed to its growth. Within a year, thirty-five families called Allensworth home.

     Artesian wells supplied water to the growing town and farming operations, and the Allensworth Rural Water Company was formed to provide community water services. The town built a beautiful schoolhouse and hired Professor William Payne as teacher. Mrs. Josephine Allensworth, the Colonel’s wife, started a library with books donated by Colonel Allensworth and other residents. It was Tulare County’s first free library.

Allensworth Hotel

     The town expanded to include a post office, several businesses, a hotel, churches, and two general stores. The American Dream seemed to be thriving in Allensworth, and the Colonel proposed the establishment of a Vocational School, a “Tuskegee of the West,” to provide higher education.

     But, starting in 1912, a series of circumstances created setbacks for the Allensworth community. The artesian wells dried up and a legal battle ensued with the Pacific Farming Company over water rights. Though the people of Allensworth eventually prevailed, water shortages continued to plague the area, a serious problem for the town’s agriculture-based economy.

     A second setback occurred when the Santa Fe Railroad built a spur line to Alpaugh, just 7 miles away, and discontinued its stop at Allensworth, taking away the lucrative freight loading business and greatly reducing income for Allensworth.

     Then disaster struck in September, 1914: Colonel Allensworth died suddenly when he was struck by a speeding motorcyclist as he crossed the street in Monrovia, where he was to speak at a church.

     Shocked at the loss of their dynamic leader, the community nevertheless rallied and two new leaders took up the fight for a vocational school, a venture that promised a new source of income for Allensworth. Things seemed to be going well until the State legislature declined the project, handing a bitter defeat to the town.

     Some people held on living there, trying new ideas and innovations to keep the town alive, but gradually most people moved on and only a handful of dilapidated buildings remained. A water crisis occurred in the mid-nineteen sixties when dangerous levels of arsenic were found in the town’s drinking water supply and a mass exodus began.

     All hope of reviving the town seemed to be lost. Buildings were torn down as residents fled. But in that turmoil, two brothers saw the face of opportunity. George Pope and his younger brother Cornelius “Ed” Pope had grown up in Allensworth. As the town was being dismantled, they talked about raising public awareness of the African American experience in California and the possibility of preserving the community.

     Pain, anger, and devastation following the 1968 assassination of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King created an aching void in the heart of Ed Pope and galvanized him into action. “I had to do something . . . . And I remembered Col. Allensworth and the town he founded.”

     Pope helped prepare a proposal to restore Allensworth as an historical site and he pitched it to his employer, the State Parks department. Why not make Allensworth a park to celebrate Black achievement?

Buffalo Soldier Re-enactor and Visitors

     A groundswell occurred as the African American community stood up and began advocating for the creation of a State historic site. The NAACP, Urban League, and Black Historical Societies from far and wide pledged their support. In the nineteen seventies the State planned to set up an historic marker, but those involved wanted much more than just a marker. They got busy. They lobbied for support from the local county Supervisors, State Senator Mervyn Dymally, and all the way up to Governor Ronald Reagan.

     In 1972, the Allensworth Historic District was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. In 1974, California State Parks acquired the 240-acre parcel of the historic townsite, and Colonel Allensworth State Historic Park was born! Since then, many of the town’s significant buildings have been lovingly restored. Though often quiet, the place comes alive for special events throughout the year that are well attended, full of activities, and supported by churches and community groups from all over California and the West.

     Allensworth, a community built by African Americans, deeply rooted in values of resourcefulness, dignity, and self-determination, is the town that refuses to die!

June, 2016


Slideshow:


Quotes & More Photos:

“Somewhere, sometime, your dream has been to have a home” – Colonel Allen Allensworth

“Comb out from your mind the degrading aspects of slavery, there is a life you will make for yourself” – from “Allensworth: A Piece of the World”

” Even though California did come into the Union as a ‘free state,’ immediately thereafter laws were passed that relegated Afro-Americans to a status a little above that of a slave. Blacks could not vote[,] . . . join the militia[,] . . . attend the same schools as Whites[,] . . . frequent the same places of public accommodations as Whites[,] . . . testify against Whites. . . . Allensworth represented for its inhabitants a refuge from the White-dominated political structure and an opportunity to gain access to the land which had been denied them for so long.” — California DPR

“Out of this community came people who believed at a time when they shouldn’t have believed that anything is possible . . . It was a moment of optimism that permeates to this day that not only is change possible, but that America can live up to its stated creeds.” — Dr. Lonnie Bunch

” . . . many individuals purchased lots but lived in other areas, intending eventually to settle in Allensworth. By 1912, Allensworth’s official population of 100 had celebrated the birth of Alwortha Hall, the first baby born in the town. The town had two general stores, a post office, many comfortable homes, . . . and a newly completed school.” — Kenneth A. Larson

” . . . residents believed that education brings success and made the school the largest building in town, then taxed themselves for an additional teacher beyond the one paid for by the state. They built the first free public library in Tulare County”— Associated Press

“The wheat fields, the barley and oats . . . are as fine as I have witnessed anywhere in the country. The Allensworth people are a cheerful, happy people, and they are on the road to great prosperity.” — Chas. Alexander in “The Sentiment Maker” newspaper, Allensworth, California, May 15th, 1912

“Over the 12 years it thrived, the town elected California’s first black justice of the peace and the first black constable. Women had an equal voice in town affairs. Farmers in the Valley shipped their crops from the Santa Fe Railroad stop here. ‘They earned $5 a day loading grains’, said park interpreter Steven Ptomey, ‘at a time when $12 a week was the average wage statewide, so that was a lot of money.'” — Associated Press

“‘I call the Allensworth pioneers “Genius People,” because they had a vision that would uplift an entire race of people,’ said Alice Calbert Royal, born here in 1923 at the insistence of her grandmother . . . ‘What I saw in this school . . . was the beauty and culture of the African American experience at the turn of the century, which is so totally opposite what they teach in the textbooks, even today.'” — Associated Press

“. . . the colony drew pilgrims like Cornelius Pope, who recalls his sense of revelation upon entering the two-room schoolhouse, where everyone was black and photographs of Abraham Lincoln and Booker T. Washington hung on the walls.. . . ‘She taught me how to read and write,’ he said of Alwortha Hall, his teacher, who was named after the town. ‘It was the first true happiness I’d ever known.'” — The New York Times

“In more recent times, Allensworth activists have fought back encroaching commercial development — like a turkey farm and an industrial food grease dump. Just last year a couple of mega-dairies . . . threatened the park. . . . After months of negotiation, Allensworth was saved — again.” — California DPR

‘You can relocate cattle,’ said Nettie Morrison, the mayor of the adjoining hamlet named for the colony. ‘You can’t relocate history.'” — The New York Times

“Colonel Allensworth State Historic Park was established for the primary purpose of providing to all Californians and all Americans an example of the achievements and contributions Black Americans have made to the history and development of California and the nation. Its aim is to perpetuate for public use and enjoyment the township called Allensworth, dedicated to the memory and spirit of Colonel Allen Allensworth, a distinguished Black pioneer of California.” — California Department of Parks and Recreation


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

GPS Coordinates: 35.8627° N, 119.3904° W

From Visalia, take Hwy 99 south to near the town of Earlimart. Take Exit 65/ Avenue 56, then turn west toward Alpaugh and go 7.4 miles on County Road J22 (W. Sierra Ave.) At Hwy 43, turn left (south) and proceed 2 miles to the intersection of Palmer Ave. Turn right (west) onto Palmer Ave., cross the railroad tracks, and proceed to the park entrance.

Colonel Allensworth Park Brochure Map

Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Valley, historic townsite
Activities: bicycling, camping (15 sites, max. trailer length 27 ft., max. camper/motorhome length 35 ft.), educational activities, events (Black History Month, May Jubilee, Juneteenth, Annual Rededication), history, photography, picnicking, tours (arrange in advance), volunteering
Open: Monday-Sunday, 9:00-5:00; Visitor Center, Monday-Sunday, 10:00-4:00; and as scheduled for special events
Site Steward: California Department of Parks and Recreation, Colonel Allensworth SHP, 661-849-3433
Opportunities for Involvement: donate, volunteer
Links:
Books: 
1)  Allensworth, The Freedom Colony, by Alice C. Royal with Mickey Ellinger and Scott Braley  (Heyday Institute, 2008)
2)  Battles and Victories of Allen Allensworth, by Charles Alexander (Sherman, French & Company 1914, e-version UNC-CH 2000)
View online at
3) It Happened at Allensworth, by Alice La Murle Smith (Mountain Printers, 1997, limited edition)
4) Out of Darkness: the Story of Allen Allensworth, by Evelyn Radcliffe (Inkling Press, 1998)

Click on photos for more information.

The Story of the Ash Mountain Entrance Sign,
Sequoia National Park

by Laurie Schwaller

   Of the tens of millions of photographs taken in Sequoia National Park each year, perhaps the most popular man-made subject is the iconic Indian Head sign that welcomes visitors to the park about a quarter mile up the road from the Ash Mountain entrance station. But why does the sign depict an Indian instead of a Big Tree? And what does this Indian have to do with a sequoia?

  Part of the answer might be traced to Stephan Friedrich Ladislaus Endlicher. A leading Austrian botanist, ethnologist, and linguist, Endlicher, in 1847, scientifically classified the coast redwoods and published Sequoia as their genus name. However, he left no record of the reason for this name, leading to much speculation ever since.

  When the massive redwoods of the Sierra Nevada were discovered in the early 1850s, they were originally given the scientific name Wellingtonia gigantea, but after further study revealed their similarity to the coast redwoods, the Sierra’s Big Trees became known as Sequoia gigantea. (The coast redwoods are now known as Sequoia sempervirens, and ours as Sequoiadendron gigantea.)

   In 1868, Josiah Dwight Whitney, California’s state geologist (for whom Mt. Whitney is named), published The Yosemite Book. In its chapter on “The Big Trees,” Whitney wrote, “The genus was named in honor of Sequoia or Sequoyah, a Cherokee Indian . . . known to the world by his invention of an alphabet and written language for his tribe.” In a footnote, Whitney explained that Endlicher had seen an article about Sequoyah in a magazine, “The Country Gentleman,” which led him to use the name Sequoia. However, that magazine’s first issue did not appear until 1852, three years after Endlicher died, and scholars have been unable to document Whitney’s conclusions.

   More recently, it has been argued that Endlicher named the genus “Sequoia” because it is derived from the Latin for “sequence,” and the new genus fell in sequence with the other four genera in his suborder. But unless long-lost papers of Endlicher’s turn up stating his reasons for the name, these theories will remain speculation.

   Nevertheless, the idea that this great American tree was named for a great Native American has been widely repeated since Whitney’s time. And that’s why the Sequoia National Park entrance sign features an Indian, although he looks nothing like the real Sequoyah.

   Portraits of Sequoyah depict him in a red, striped turban, a white shirt, and a blue jacket or coat, often wearing a red cravat and his silver medal, holding a copy of his syllabary, and smoking a small pipe with a long slender stem. So, where did the image of the Indian wearing the feathered head-dress on the Sequoia sign come from?

   In 1931, while working in Sequoia as a National Park Service Landscape Architect, Merel S. Sager designed an entrance sign for Ash Mountain featuring an Indian, possibly Sequoyah. This sign, like the current one, was carved out of redwood, but was only about a third as big — and it was soon replaced.

Indian Head Nickel
Muno Signed his Work, “Geo Muno 1935”

  By 1935, the next Sequoia National Park landscape architect, Harold G. Fowler, decided to improve the entrance sign. To execute his idea, he looked to the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) enrollees employed in Sequoia at the time. (Hundreds of thousands of unemployed young men across the nation were enrolled in the CCC, established by President Roosevelt’s New Deal in 1933 to provide relief from the Depression by putting them to work in conservation projects on public lands.)

  In CCC Company 915, Fowler found George Walter Muno, a native of nearby Lindsay. Muno had demonstrated woodworking skills in his high school industrial arts class, had taken a wood carving class offered to the CCCers, and had carved the High Sierra Trailhead marker at Crescent Meadow.

  Muno agreed to carve the big new sign. Up in the Giant Forest the two men found a piece of fallen sequoia wood large enough to hold Fowler’s idea. Then Fowler outlined on it in blue chalk the image he wanted Muno to carve. The model for it was in his pocket — the iconic profile of an American Indian on the obverse side of the “Buffalo Nickel,” first issued by the U.S. Mint in 1913.

  Muno spent several months in Giant Forest, carving the Indian head and routing out the foot-high letters on the massive redwood slab, that was ten feet long, four feet high, and a foot thick. Meanwhile, the park machinist at Ash Mountain made the beautiful curved metal bracket to hold up the sign and CCC crews prepared the supporting log pylon and masonry. The pylon, a fifteen-foot sequoia trunk, four feet in diameter, rests on a two-tiered boulder masonry platform approximately ten feet square. Early in 1936, all the pieces were put together and “Sequoyah” began welcoming visitors to Sequoia National Park. Many stopped to have their pictures taken with the monumental Indian.

Steve Esson at Work in Sign Shop
Shop Staff Returning Restored Sign

   In 1978, the Ash Mountain “Indian Head” Entrance Sign was listed on the National Register of Historic Places for its significance in the fields of art, landscape architecture, and social humanitarian endeavor. The nomination form concluded that, “Excepting required maintenance, no alterations should be allowed.”

  However, the sign has been altered more than once since it was erected. Originally unpainted, it was stained a redwood color in the 1950s and Sequoyah’s face was painted. In 1964, the sign was moved about 100 yards, due to construction work on the entrance station, and a second log pylon, which had originally stood across the road from the Indian sign’s pylon, was destroyed.

  From January to May, 2002, the sign was removed from its support for major restoration work, carried out by Steve Esson, Park Sign Maker, assisted by painters Bill Robertson and Jim Dennis. First, its paint was stripped off and the sign was allowed to dry out; it shed about 100 pounds of water weight that had accumulated over 65 years outdoors. Rot damage was removed. Cracks and insect damage were repaired. Epoxy was carefully applied to fill the voids and seal the 450-pound slab while maintaining its weathered character.

  After being painstakingly repainted, the sign was re-installed on May 24, 2002. And so “Sequoyah” — whether or not he was known to Endlicher, or considered by Sager or Fowler — continues to greet the millions of visitors streaming into the park at Ash Mountain, many of whom will stop to record their encounter with this famous face of Sequoia National Park.

                                                                                                                                                                                June, 2016
UPDATE: On November 29, 2017, the iconic “Indian Head” sign had to be removed once again for restoration work to be done at the Park’s sign shop at Ash Mountain headquarters. Water damage has been found on the top of the sign, along with a dangerous crack through its center. The shop is estimating that the known repair work needed will take four to six months, but more damage may yet be discovered. Meanwhile, an interpretive sign has been installed by the base of the famous sign, explaining what’s happening with “Sequoyah.”
UPDATE: The sign was re-installed on May, 18, 2018!

Note: See related article on Sager’s enduring work: Moro Rock Stairway.

 


Slideshow:


Quotes & More Photos:

The growing popularity of automobile travel led to the building of the Generals Highway in 1926 opening up the Giant Forest to increased visitation. The Ash Mountain entrance became the main gateway to Sequoia . . . . — National Park Service

Merel S. Sager pioneered “National Park Service rustic” architecture. He began working for the Park Service in 1928 and became Chief Landscape Architect. His works for General Grant National Park and Sequoia National Park in the 1930s included the Moro Rock Stairway and several structures at Giant Forest Village-Camp Kaweah Historic District.

“The sign is . . . an example of monumental wood sculpture . . . common to government work of the 1930’s, especially that done by the CCC in the national parks and monuments.” — NRHP Nomination Form

“After graduating from Lindsay High in 1931, George Muno did odd jobs for local farmers until the Civilian Conservation Corps was founded in 1933 to aid young men between the ages of 18 and 21.” — Mary Anne Terstegge

“George Muno began with KP duty then served successively as dining room orderly, road worker, truck driver, truck master, and tool, equipment and supply clerk. Because of his swimming ability, George was given the assignment of diving below the surface of the river to plant dynamite prior to bridge construction.” — Mary Anne Terstegge

“[Muno] also served as packer and aide to Dr. Francois Matthes when the professor made an extensive geological study tour of Sequoia National Park; this included a trip to Mt. Whitney.” — Mary Anne Terstegge

The famous Buffalo/Indian Head nickel was designed by sculptor James Earle Fraser. Coincidentally, Fraser’s best-known work, “The End of the Trail” statue, has been standing since 1920 in Visalia’s Mooney Grove Park.

“. . . when I was asked to do a nickel, I felt I wanted to do something totally American — a coin that could not be mistaken for any other country’s coin. It occurred to me that the buffalo, as part of our western background, was 100% American, and that our North American Indian fitted into the picture perfectly.” — James Earl Fraser

The Native American visage sculpted by Fraser for the coin was a composite, combining features from several portraits he had done of North American Indians, none of whom were Sequoyah, although one was a Kiowa named Big Tree. Presumably, Fowler added the head-dress, something Sequoyah never wore.

Sequoyah, aka George Gist, born in Tennessee, never attended school or learned to read or write English, but became a talented blacksmith and silversmith, and then fought under U.S. General Andrew Jackson in the War of 1812. In business and in the military, he saw the tremendous advantage of the “talking leaves,” the pieces of paper covered with writing that carried clear messages across distance and time.

Sequoyah determined to create a written Cherokee language. After 12 years, despite many false starts, and laboring under ridicule and accusations of witchcraft, he demonstrated a phonetic syllabary of 85 symbols, each representing a unique syllable and sound. In 1821, the Cherokee Nation adopted Sequoyah’s system. Soon thousands of Cherokee people learned to read and write in their own language. Over 20,000 people speak Cherokee today, and Sequoyah’s syllabary is still in use.


Maps & Directions:

 

Coordinates: 36°29′15″N 118°50′9″W / 36.48750°N 118.83583°W / 36.48750

 

From Visalia: take Hwy 198 east through Three Rivers to the National Park entrance station (fee).

The historic Ash Mountain (Chief Sequoyah) Entrance Sign is on the right, about 1/4 mile up the road.

 

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Foothills, Sequoia National Park entrance sign beside Generals Highway
Activities: art, history, photography, wildlife and wildflower viewing
Open: Sequoia National Park is always open, weather permitting, unless closed due to emergency conditions; park entrance fee
Site Steward: National Park Service, Sequoia National Park; 559-565-3341
Opportunities for Involvement: donate, volunteer; Sequoia Parks Conservancy membership
Links:

Click on photos for more information.

The Story of the Bank of Italy Building – A Visalia Landmark Since 1923

by Paul Hurley

     For most of the 20th century, the tallest building in Visalia was also its leading bank. The Bank of Italy building is now a landmark on the National Register of Historic Places. It is still a working bank, although it is no longer the Bank of Italy nor the tallest structure in downtown Visalia. Since its inception as the Bank of Italy in 1923, the stately brick edifice at the northwest corner of Church and Main streets has been home to several other banking institutions, but it has remained true to its origins: customers can still enjoy the charms of the original construction — its marble floor, neoclassical arches, vaulted ceiling, and decorative appointments.

     The Bank of Italy building (also known by its successor institution, the Bank of America) has a historical provenance that predates the building itself. The Bank of Visalia, Tulare County’s first incorporated bank, was founded in 1874 and occupied a converted saloon building – the Gem Saloon – at the northwest corner of Church and Main streets. That old building gave way after a couple of years to a new bank that was also the city’s tallest structure and a local landmark. The bank’s clock tower presided over downtown and was visible from miles away.

Amadeo Peter Giannini
L. Scatena and Co. and A. Galli Fruit Co.

     The Bank of Visalia was the county’s leading financial institution for decades, and was connected with some the most prominent individuals of early Visalia, whose names persist on the city’s streets and institutions to this day: The founding directors were W. J. Owen, Tipton Lindsey, Cuthburt Burrell, R.E. Hyde and A.H. Broder. Hyde was president and J.W. Crowley was the cashier.

     The story of the Bank of Italy, both the bank and the building, begins with a visionary entrepreneur named Amadeo Peter Giannini. The son of immigrant parents, Giannini made his fortune as a produce broker and retired from that career at the age of 31. As a director on the boards of several banks, he made a revolutionary observation: banks at that time served only the rich. He intended to provide banking services for the growing working and middle classes. To that end, he founded the Bank of Italy in San Francisco in 1904. Thanks to its innovations and booming business resulting from the San Francisco earthquake of 1906, the Bank of Italy flourished. By 1921, it had 24 branches throughout California.

Bank of Italy in San Francisco, 1904
San Francisco Earthquake, 1906

     In that year, the Bank of Italy bought the Bank of Visalia (which had been renamed the National Bank of Visalia in 1908) and the Visalia Savings Bank and Trust Co., and combined them into a new Bank of Italy branch that opened in the old Bank of Visalia building on April 16, 1921. The Visalia Delta welcomed the new business with an editorial noting that the Bank of Italy placed “at the disposal of the community the entire $300,000,000 resources of that wonderful organization.” Later that year, Giannini himself visited Visalia and announced plans for a new building.

     Bank of Italy branches constructed in this period were typically designed in a Classic Revival style, with elaborate fixtures and appointments. Seven Bank of Italy buildings built during this period later were listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The same spirit was invested in the Visalia branch.

     Construction required the banking operation to move to temporary quarters. Happily, the S. Sweet furniture business had recently moved from Center Avenue to a new store on Main Street. The Bank of Italy moved to the old furniture store to make way for the demolition.

     Excavation began in late 1922, and by early 1923, 186 piles had been sunk into the ground to provide the foundation for what would be Visalia’s largest and tallest building, with five stories, a basement and the capacity for expansion.

     R. F. Felchlin & Co. of Fresno, famous for its classic design of public buildings including the 1918 Bank of Italy in downtown Fresno, provided the architectural, engineering, and contracting services.

     The designers and builders sought to make an impressive statement that reflected their vision of stability, classic proportion, and elegance. Today, both the exterior facade facing Main Street and the east facade facing Church still present a vision of a stately public building, including fluted pilasters, tall windows and imposing cornices around the roofline.

     The ground floor rests on a granite base rising into a sandstone facade “evoking Greek Doric classical order,” as the NRHP registration form attests. Among the decorative touches are sculpted leaves, rosettes and a row of semicircular medallions at the top of the building.

     Even more impressive is the interior. Visitors are greeted with a long, vaulted space that runs nearly the length of the building. Six octagonal pillars rise to the ceiling, which is decorated with moldings and panels that include animal motifs and classical designs.

     The building included the latest in early 20th century technology, some of which still remains: Two elevator shafts were constructed, although the second elevator was not put in until the 1940s. A brass mailbox and mail chute were installed. The main lobby was illuminated with impressive chandeliers and had 12 windows for customer service, with brass grilles, alphabetized to organize those waiting in line by their last names.

     Construction of the building took six months, with more than 25 contractors and about 100 laborers working on the building every day. The entire project cost $375,000.

Wall and Ceiling Decoration

     The new Bank of Italy was dedicated on Sept. 1, 1923, amid great fanfare, with an outpouring of congratulatory letters and testimonials from dignitaries. It officially opened for business on Sept. 24, 1923.

     It became the Bank of America in 1930, after Giannini merged the Bank of Italy and the Bank of America in 1928 and then renamed his whole financial enterprise. Many Visalians still refer to the landmark structure as either the Bank of Italy or the Bank of America building, even though B of A sold it in 1972 for $360,000, about what it cost to build, and moved across Church Street in 1976.

     Visalia Community Bank moved into the historic building in 1979. The current tenant, Bank of the Sierra, moved in in 1995.

     In 1981, Pat Clevenger and Betsy Bradley of the Visalia Historical Preservation Board began the process of nominating the Bank of Italy building to the National Register of Historic Places. It received the designation on April 1, 1982.

     Visitors to the Bank of Italy building today can see most of the same features that impressed customers in 1923. The handsome exterior is virtually unchanged. Inside, the chandeliers and the brass-grilled wickets are gone, replaced with modern lighting and features. But remaining are the tall windows, the marble floor and columns, and the mail chute, among many other elegant touches.

     On the outside of the building is a brass plaque noting the building’s historic status. It contains the name of only one person: Amadeo Giannini.

February, 2017


Slideshow:


Quotes & More Photos:

“Preservation is simply having the good sense to hold on to things that are well designed, that link us with our past in a meaningful way, and that have plenty of good use left in them.” –Richard Moe

“Sense of place gives equilibrium; extended, it is sense of direction too.” — Eudora Welty

“How will we know it’s us without our past?” — John Steinbeck

“. . . [H]e founded the Bank of Italy in San Francisco in 1904 as an institution for the ‘little fellows’ — the hardworking immigrants other banks would not serve. He offered those ignored customers savings accounts and loans, judging them not by how much money they already had, but by their characters.” — PBS

“In the days after the disaster [San Francisco’s 1906 earthquake], . . . [w]ith a wooden plank straddling two barrels for a desk, he began to extend credit ‘on a face and a signature’ to small businesses and individuals in need of money to rebuild their lives. His actions spurred the city’s redevelopment.” — Daniel Kadlec

“. . . he expanded the Bank of Italy across California, breaking with an American tradition of independent local banks by providing his egalitarian banking services to the ‘little fellows’ in the Yugoslavian, Russian, Mexican, Portuguese, Chinese, Greek, and other immigrant communities. By the mid-1920s, he owned the third largest bank in the nation.” — PBS

Once the basic needs of existence and survival are met, humanity needs more to enhance its experience. There is a need to enrich the everyday experiences of living and working with a sense of history, time and art.” — A Preservation Handbook for HRPandD

“Old places have soul.” — Sarah Anderson

“We regret much of what we’ve built; we regret much of what we’ve torn down. But we’ve never regretted preserving anything.” — Daniel Sack

“Historic resources are finite and cannot be replaced, making them precious commodities that many people hold in high regard today.” — A Preservation Handbook for HRP&D


Maps & Directions:

 

Directions:

Address: 128 E. Main St, Visalia, CA 93291

Phone: (559) 740-4200

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Valley, downtown Visalia, historic building
Activities: Architecture, history, photography. (Note: This is a working business.
  Please do not disturb business activities.)
Open: Monday through Thursday, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.; Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Site Steward: Bank of the Sierra, (559) 740-4200

Click on photos for more information.

 

 

Bartlett Park: The Park that Moved

by Laurie Schwaller

     Just eight miles east of Porterville, there’s a big, beautiful, shady park named in honor of William Pitt Bartlett. This park offers amenities for everyone: plenty of picnic tables, group arbors, playgrounds, a little fishing lake with a picturesque fishing platform for kids and seniors and folks with disabilities, a disc golf course, fields for sports, volleyball poles, horseshoe pits, restroom facilities, scenic views, a lake right above it, a river running through it, and lots of room to roam.

Family Picnic

     But it’s not where it used to be. The original park site now lies under the waters of Success Lake, which covered it in 1961. The “new” Bartlett Park stretches along the river below Success Dam.

     In 1923, the citizens of Porterville wanted to secure the best easily-accessible swimming area along the Tule River for recreation and relief from summer’s heat. In response, the city’s Chamber of Commerce began a fundraising drive in early January of that year and collected the purchase price for the desired land before the month was out. The 34-acre parcel extended for a quarter to a half a mile along both banks of the Tule on the north side of what was then called Success Highway (now State Route 190), near the little dot then on the map named Success.

     Tulare County had established two county parks by that time — Mooney Grove, which it had purchased in 1909, and Cutler Park, donated to the County in 1919 by the family of Judge John Cutler. These were managed by the County’s Board of Forestry, which in 1913 replaced its previous Park Commission. Prominent Porterville businessman and gardener extraordinaire William Pitt Bartlett headed the Forestry Board in 1923.

Boating at Mooney Grove
Cutler Park Entrance, 1926
1890 Murry Park Bridge

     The Board had agreed to develop and maintain Porterville’s new river park if the Chamber purchased it and then donated it to the County. As soon as this was accomplished, Bartlett went to work, directing the development of the land to his specifications. By the last day of April, the Odd Fellows were initiating Tule River Park with a picnic, and the next week, a group of Porterville boys was at the park all day being instructed in forest lore, woodcraft, wildlife, and first aid, and participating in athletic events and hikes on the trails.

     The park land was heavily forested, with sycamore, cottonwood, willow, and other trees and shrubs. The first year’s improvements included clearing brush, scooping out a swimming hole, erecting two buildings containing 16 dressing rooms each, putting in two driveways, and constructing picnic tables and seats. The park proved very popular, so in 1924, a caretaker’s cottage was added, along with a pavilion, tables and seats set in concrete to accommodate 400 people, more parking areas, fencing, and arbors over which to train the wild grapes to shade the picnic tables. When the river went dry that summer, the Forestry Board cleared its bed for 400 feet and built a rock dam that would fill the river to a depth of six feet in its middle.

     Bartlett’s design for the planting made the park unique. Only native plants — trees, shrubs, flowers, and vines — were used. In 1925, a new cemented swimming pool was opened, along with more dressing rooms. Another well was drilled, a water system was installed, and electric lights were put in so that the park could be safely enjoyed into the night.

Fremontia Flower

     In 1929, in response to a petition signed by many organizations, businesses, and citizens of Porterville, the Board of Supervisors changed the name of Tule River Park to Bartlett Park, as a “perpetual memorial to W.P. Bartlett, pioneer citizen . . . [who] was largely instrumental in developing this beautiful park.” Just a few months later, Bartlett, age 74, died.

     But Bartlett Park continued to serve the residents of Porterville and all of Tulare County for the next three decades, until the tremendously damaging flood of 1955 generated huge demand for a dam on the Tule River. By 1957, planning for the new dam made it clear that beloved Bartlett Park would be inundated by Success Reservoir. Two years later, the County was awarded $16,975 and the right to remove from the park’s premises “the items of improvement and equipment,” which by then included the caretaker’s residence, a laundry and garage, a pump house with pump and pressure system, more than 4,000 feet of pipe, picnic pavilions, storage sheds, a tool shed, and a concession stand.

     Meanwhile, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers had prepared a license agreement to transfer to the County the administration of recreational purposes at the two new reservoirs it was creating — Success Lake and Lake Kaweah. By mid-1960, the Corps and the County had agreed that the County would lease and develop Area 11C below Success Dam into a 110-acre County park, to be named Bartlett Park at the urging of the County Historical Society and the City of Porterville.

     Success Dam was completed in June, 1961, and dedicated in May the following year. The Army Corps finished its work in Area 11C in February of 1961 and permitted the County to begin construction there. In its cost estimates to develop the new Bartlett Park, the County itemized funds for rest rooms, a bath house, fire pits, pipe, picnic arbors, roads, and wells, but listed nothing for trees and shrubs, since staff had determined to follow Bartlett’s example and use only native plants: oaks, sycamores, cottonwoods, and willows.

     The new Bartlett Park was soon as popular as the original. In 1965, more than 136,300 people visited its delightful grounds. Then, in early December, 1966, another disaster struck. Heavy rains washed out the levee along the spillway of the dam, causing major flooding that destroyed 78 picnic tables, pipelines, 500 feet of road, part of the parking lot, large and small trees planted in the spring, and 10 acres of new lawn.

     Undeterred, the County went back to work on the park. By 1969, its developed portion was being doubled, necessitating the hiring of an additional groundsman to assist the two who were maintaining the 50 already-developed acres, including 45 acres of lawn. Two more restrooms were being added, bringing the total to four. In the last 50 years, the ponds, playgrounds, and baseball field were added, and almost the entire property has been groomed and made accessible. This is our third-largest County park, but many residents have never heard of it. Bartlett Park is definitely worth discovering!

August, 2018

              

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Quotes & More Photos:

“Parks are works of art just as a painting or sculpture is.” — Thomas Hoving

“Here [the] lure of ‘ye old swimmin’ hole’ combines with inviting shade of trees, suggesting picnics and day dreams. Oaks, alders and large grapevines form rustic retreats. Two large swimming-pools have been formed in the bed of the stream. Along each is found dressing-rooms for men and women. Tables, seats and fern nooks are found at vantage points.” — Los Angeles Times, January 31, 1926

“With plenty of shade, and high enough in the foothills to escape the valley heat, the park is attracting hundreds of visitors every Sunday from all parts of Tulare county.” — Los Angeles Times, January 26, 1925

“To him, trees did not look well in shorts. He wanted to see them in full foliage as flowing robes touching the ground, so planted and kept to provide places of seclusion where one might feel as if they were among the virgin growth of the hills, where beauty and peace reign.” — Terra Bella News, June 12, 1942

“As the leading member of the Porterville Park Commission, he supervised the development of Murry Park and influenced the city in the beautification of many streets, and as a member of the Tulare county Forestry Board, he planned the development of Mooney Grove, Cutler Park, and the Tule River Park, which now bears his name.” — Terra Bella News, June 12, 1942

“The Tulare County planning commission has called a public hearing . . . . on the proposed rezoning of the Success and Terminus dam sites to permit recreational area developments.  The largest development will be a 110-acre downstream site to be named Bartlett Park . . . . ”  Los Angeles Times, August 17, 1960

“The Tulare County planning commission has called a public hearing . . . . on the proposed rezoning of the Success and Terminus dam sites to permit recreational area developments. The largest development will be a 110-acre downstream site to be named Bartlett Park . . . . ” Los Angeles Times, August 17, 1960

“A federal grant of $36,337 has been awarded to the city for development of 35 acres in Bartlett Park at Success Dam . . . through the Land and Water Conservation Fund, . . . . The money will be used for development of turf, sanitary facilities and improved access and play areas for children.” – Los Angeles Times, September 7, 1967

“You can’t tell a kid that it’s time to exercise; that’s a turn off…you have to say, “Let’s go to the park and have some fun! Then you get them to do some running, play on the swings, practice on the balance beam, and basically get a full workout disguised as play.” – Arnold Schwarzenegger


Maps & Directions:

 

Bartlett Park Address: Located 8 miles east of Porterville at 28801 Worth Dr.

From Visalia, take Hwy 198 east. Turn right (south) onto Road 204/Spruce Rd. Turn left onto Hwy 65 south toward Porterville. Take Hwy 190 east toward Springville.

At the roundabout, exit left (north) onto Rd. 284. At the T intersection, turn right (east) onto Worth Dr. Park entrance is ahead on your right.

Link to Bartlett Park Map

 


Site Details & Activities:

.

Environment: Valley, near Porterville by foothills; 127-acre park with disc golf course, ponds, river, trails, picnic tables and shelters, developed playgrounds, horseshoe pits, softball field, restrooms
Activities: biking, birding, disc golf course, dog walking (on leash, scoop poop), fishing (restrictions apply), hiking, horseshoes, photography, picnicking (group picnic shelters can be reserved), playgrounds, softball, wildflower and wildlife viewing
Open: Summer (June 1 – September 8): 8:00 a.m. -8:00 p.m. except closed on Tues. and Wed.; Fall (Sept. 9 – Oct. 31): 8-5:00 on Mon., Thurs., and Fri.; 8 – 7:00 on Sat. and Sun.; closed Tues. and Wed.; Winter (Nov. – Feb.): 8-5:00, except closed Tues. and Wed.; Spring (Mar. 1 – May 31): 8-5:00 on Mon., Thurs., and Fri.; 8-7:00 on Sat. and Sun.; closed on Tues. and Wed.   (This park was closed in 2023 due to major damage from extreme flooding.  Reopening was announced March 13, 2025.)
Site Steward: Tulare County Department of Parks and Recreation; 559-205-1100; same number for reservations. Contact Site Steward for current fees.
Opportunities: donate, volunteer

 

Click on photos for more information.

 

 

THE STORY OF BALCH PARK

by William Tweed

     The largest trees in the world grow in the mountains that dominate the eastern half of Tulare County. Most of these trees can be found in two large federal reservations – Sequoia National Park and the Giant Sequoia National Monument, which is a part of the Sequoia National Forest. But nestled amongst these vast and famous places is a unit of the Tulare County park system – Balch Park. How is it that Tulare County came to protect this beautiful piece of land?

     The story goes back to the late 19th century and a pioneer entrepreneur named John Doyle. Taking advantage of the generous land sales statutes of the times, Doyle took control of the 160 acres of sequoias in the middle 1880s. He intended to develop the property, which he called “Summer Home,” as a mountain resort. Doyle hoped to sell up to 125 lots to families seeking relief from the summer heat of the San Joaquin Valley.

     The lot sales never happened, however, and Doyle maintained control of the entire tract until he finally sold it in 1906 to the Mt. Whitney Power Company. This corporation, which was developing hydroelectric facilities on the Tule River, intended to cut the sequoias and use the lumber to build a flume to carry water to a new power plant. (Just a few years earlier the company had done the same thing on the Kaweah River, where it cut sequoias at Atwell’s Mill to build a flume to provide water to Kaweah Power Plant Number One.)

Fishing Hands Free
Dragonfly by Pond
Checking the Tackle Box

     Now fate intervened. A major figure in the power company was engineer John Hays Hammond, and it was Hammond’s wife, Natalie Harris Hammond, who, after visiting the property, convinced her husband not to allow the harvesting of the 200 large sequoias on the site. So the Mt. Whitney Company cancelled its logging plans and held on to the property. Eventually it was purchased privately in 1923 by Allan C. Balch of Los Angeles, president of the San Joaquin Light and Power Company. (San Joaquin Light and Power had taken over the Tule River power plant project from the Mt. Whitney Company; today, its facilities are part of the Pacific Gas and Electric system.)

     Allan Balch and his wife Janet purchased the property with the express intent that it be given to the County of Tulare as a public park, and that donation was finalized in December 1930. In subsequent years, an attempt was made to transfer the property to the State of California for addition to the surrounding Mountain Home Demonstration State Forest, but the terms of the Balch donation made such a transfer impractical.

     Eventually, the county parks department installed a number of recreational improvements on the property, making it a comfortable place to camp, and confirmed the identity of the site as “Balch Park.”

     Now, more than eighty years after Tulare County took title to Balch Park and its campgrounds, the small park offers exactly what John Doyle dreamt about so long ago: a “Summer Home” in the green, cool forests of the Sierra for those seeking relief from the heat of summer. For that we can thank Natalie Hammond and Allan and Janet Balch.

September, 2012

 

 


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Quotes & More Photos:

“. . . the “premises hereby conveyed shall forever be and remain in their present state and condition so far as may be possible and, subject to this controlling purpose, shall be made available for the use, pleasure and enjoyment of the general public.” — from Deed conveying title of Balch Park from A. C. and Janet Balch to Tulare County, December 10, 1923

“Come to the woods, for here is rest. There is no repose like that of the green deep woods.” – John Muir

“. . . [we] felt the power of the trees, trickling into our bodies, mingling like the smokes of two campfires, like spirits reunited after being separated for much too long. It was always hard to leave the grove.” — Joe Medeiros

“Mr. and Mrs. A.C. Balch deserve full credit as the godparents of Balch Park, but John J. Doyle was its natural Father. . . he was instrumental in getting them to buy his old Summer Home from the Power company for the purpose of donating it to the County as a park.” — Floyd L. Otter


Maps & Directions:

Address: 48200 Bear Creek Drive, Springville, CA

Latitude/Longitude:

N36° 14.0971′, W118° 41.709′

36.2349516 ,-118.6951494

From Visalia:  Take Hwy 198 east to Hwy 65 south.  Follow Hwy 65 to Strathmore and turn left (east) onto Road 276 toward Springville.  At the junction with Hwy 190, turn left (east) toward Springville. 

In Springville, turn left (north) onto County Road J37, and then go right (east) onto Bear Creek Road (M-220) and follow it up the mountain to Balch Park.

To return via Porterville:

Retrace your route back to Springville and then take Hwy 190 west to Porterville.  At the junction with Hwy 65, go north back to Hwy 198, and then west on Hwy 198 to Visalia.

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Mountains, lakes, giant sequoias, mixed oak and conifer forests at over 6000′ elevation. Balch Park is completely contained within Mountain Home Demonstration State Forest.
Activities: birdwatching, botanizing, camping (first come, first served, no reservations, no RV hookups, check-in at 8:00 a.m., check-out at noon), dog walking (on leash; scoop poop) fishing (license required), hiking, historic sites, museum, photography, rock climbing, wildflower and wildlife viewing
Open: approximately mid-May to mid-November, depending on weather
Site Steward: Tulare County Parks and Recreation, 559-205-1100. Contact Site Steward for current fees ($20/night in summer, 2024)
Phone 559-539-3896 for current information when the park is open (approximately mid-May to mid-November, depending on weather).
Books: 1) A Guide to the Sequoia Groves of California, by Dwight Willard (Yosemite Association, 2000)
2) The History of A Giant Sequoia Forest: the Story of Mountain Home Demonstration State Forest, by Floyd L. Otter and David Dulitz, 2007 (see Save the Redwoods League – Mountain Home Demonstration State Forest)
3) The Men of Mammoth Forest: A Hundred-year History of a Sequoia Forest and its People in Tulare County, California, by Floyd L. Otter, 1963 (see Save the Redwoods League – Mountain Home Demonstration State Forest)
4) King Sequoia: The Tree That Inspired a Nation, Created Our National Park System, and Changed the Way We Think about Nature, by William C. Tweed (Heyday, 2016)

 

 

Click on photos for more information.

The Story of Bravo Lake Botanical Garden

by Paul Hurley

     From tiny seeds, great things grow.

     In Woodlake, the Bravo Lake Botanical Garden has grown fruits and vegetables, flowers, trees, and samples of the San Joaquin Valley’s agricultural bounty since 2003. Its 13 acres of plantings extol the area’s botanical diversity, teach people about the value of natural resources, and promote community pride.

     “We sort of knew that we wanted to create the first agricultural botanical garden in California,” said its co-founder and director, Manuel Jimenez.

     Manuel and his wife and garden collaborator, Olga Jimenez, both lifelong Woodlake residents, trace the origin of the botanical garden to 1972, when they first began beautification projects and planting community gardens in Woodlake, with the help of youth volunteers. “Our premise was that we would grow kids by planting gardens,” Manuel said.

     The Jimenezes had almost 30 years of experience planting community gardens when the city of Woodlake approached them in 1999, wondering if they would be interested in a barren stretch of ground near Bravo Lake that had been the Visalia Electric Railroad right of way. “The city had an empty area that was available,” Olga said, “and we had been doing beautification projects in different parts of the little town.”

     The couple launched into the large project with their Woodlake Pride youth as grass-roots collaborators with the city of Woodlake. They sought funding from service clubs, including the Woodlake Rotary. They received donations of plantings from nurseries, notably L.E. Cooke for fruit trees and Monrovia Nurseries for ornamentals. They visited other botanical gardens throughout California. They appealed to local businesses and farms for financial and technical support, including carpenters, plumbers, and electricians for infrastructure. Grading and grooming the site took a couple of years.

     They planted tens of thousands of annuals with the help of a labor force composed mostly of volunteering teenagers. When they began planting, they solicited experts to lay out specific areas of the garden. They planted 1,700 rose bushes in 130 varieties. The garden began to take shape, not just as a ground for growing plants but as a complete ecosystem.

     “The botanical garden was just a piece of dirt that was barren,” Olga said. “Now, if you go and visit it, you will see that not only have we got plants growing, kids growing, but we also have a variety of birds that have come to visit us. We have cottontails that are there, and turtles, and doves, and lizards. Things that were never there. And since we put the plants down, we see a lot of variety of wildlife just existing in our area.”

     The garden officially opened in 2003, and welcomes the public on weekends. Visitors walk a 1.2-mile trail that takes them past fruit trees and vegetable patches, ornamental shrubs and rose gardens, row crops and flower beds. Young people plant between 10,000 and 20,000 specimens a year.

     The garden is organized to show off not only the plants that grow in California, but the abundance of its agriculture and the heritage of farming in the San Joaquin Valley. “Once we did that, the next phase was to begin to include the key things that we thought were important for the community to learn, and that was conserving the natural resources that we have,” Manuel said.

     Water conservation was a priority, so the Garden installed several different efficient irrigation systems. They encouraged wildlife, and gradually observed snakes, frogs, birds, small mammals, and insects using the garden.

    We share our resources with the wildlife,” Manuel said. “So we plant fruit trees, you know. Fifty percent is for us, and fifty percent is for the wildlife. We let them feed.

     At the gardens, we let nature take its course.”

     The Bravo Lake Botanical Garden is a place for hands-on learning. People are encouraged to taste the produce. “You don’t have to visit 10 farms to see 10 crops. Our goal is eventually to plant everything that’s grown in the state. And so, I believe that people do seek to visit a facility like ours.”

     As complete as the garden is, it is not finished, Olga said. “I know that the seed, that it comes from the seed, but then the good Lord provides the water and all these beautiful plants that come up,” she said. “So, it’s been a learning experience, having this garden, and I’m sure that there’s more to be learned.”

October, 2012

 2017 Update: The City of Woodlake has changed the garden’s name to Woodlake Botanical Garden, and management, maintenance, plantings and purpose of the garden may be subject to change.



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Quotes & More Photos:

“You’re only as happy as your surroundings. And by planting gardens, we thought that people would be happy, and they were. They saw the gardens, and they would stop and say, you know, ‘This is beautiful.’ And they would tell the kids, ‘This is an awesome project that you guys have.'” — Manuel Jimenez

“And I think I haven’t found one lazy child yet, or one bad kid yet, and I’ve been doing this volunteer work over at the botanical garden for almost nine years.” — Olga Jimenez

“People from a planet without flowers would think we must be mad with joy to have such things around us.” — Iris Murdoch

“Tu, que caminas acaso con pensamientos perturbados, en entra aqui y reposa; y que la dulce serenidad de las cosas que brotan y la paz celestial, se reflejen en tu alma. You who walk, maybe with troubled thoughts, come, enter here and rest; and may the sweet serenity of growing things, and the heavenly peace be mirrored in thy soul.” — Doxis M. Palmer

“If we do not permit the earth to produce beauty and joy, it will in the end not produce food, either.” — Joseph Wood Krutch

“The legacy that I’d like to leave Tulare County and its residents is mostly the beauty, the beauty that can be.” — Olga Jimenez


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

 

Address: Naranjo Blvd. just east of Hwy 245, Woodlake, CA 93286

 

Latitude/Longitude:

36-24’28” N, Longitude: 119-05’49” W

36.4077273, -119.0970507

 

From Visalia, take Hwy 198 east to Hwy 245 (Valencia Blvd.).  Go left (north) on Hwy 245 about 5 miles into Woodlake, and take the first right turn on the roundabout to go east on Hwy 216 (Naranjo Blvd.).  Woodlake Botanical Garden is quickly on your right (south); parking is available along the street and in a parking lot.

 


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Valley, in Woodlake, community agricultural botanical garden
Activities: birdwatching, botanizing, dog walking (on a 6′ leash; scoop poop), educational activities, photography, picnicking, produce tasting (during events), walking (1.2 mile trail, wheelchair accessible), wildlife viewing
Note: To schedule a group tour of the gardens, contact Manuel Jimenez at 559-280-2483
Open: The rose garden on the west side of the parking lot is open daily, year-round. The eastern, gated part of the garden is open Thursday, Friday, & Saturday 9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. Note: Please check the Garden’s Facebook page for any changes to Open days and for current hours and announcements of special events – (https://www.facebook.com/WoodlakeBotanicalGardens/)
Site Stewards: Woodlake Pride, Manuel and Olga Jimenez, 559-280-2483; City of Woodlake, 559-564-8055
Opportunities for Involvement: Donate, volunteer
Links:

Click on photos for more information.

 

 

The Story of Zalud House Museum

by John Greening

    On the corner of Hockett and Morton streets in Porterville sits an elegant historic home whose past involves tales of gambling, scandal, murder, bootlegging, and visitations from the spirits of those long dead. A tour of the house features these and other stories of the Zalud family members, prominent early Porterville residents who suffered a series of tragedies that by the 1960s left only one member still alive.

    The builders of the home, John and Mary Jane Zalud, were born in Bohemia, now part of the Czech Republic, in Central Europe. As children each immigrated with their families to the U.S. In 1875, John and Mary Jane wed in San Francisco. Later, they moved to Tulare, then, in 1888, to Porterville with their family of two daughters and a son: Anna (born in 1872), Pearle (1884), and Edward (1877).

1875 Wedding Photo of John & Mary Jane Zalud
Photo Display of Zalud Children
Zalud House Shortly after Construction, 1891

         In Porterville, John opened a saloon on Main Street next door to Scotty’s Chop House, where food was served. Connecting doors joined the two establishments and both were open 24 hours a day. A card room in the back of the Zalud Saloon proved to be a lucrative source of income. After some high stakes card games, John won several south county cattle ranches. These included a 3000 acre spread near California Hot Springs, where the family often stayed.

    The Zaluds’ elegant Porterville home was built in 1891, featuring a mansard roof. This roof style was popular in Europe, particularly in France in the 1860’s, and may have reminded John and Mary Jane of their European homeland. In California at the time it was not a common style and was therefore very distinctive.

Pearle after Grammar School Graduation – circa 1895

Pearle’s Porterville High School Graduation Picture, 1902

    In 1912, Mary Jane died of tuberculosis. The grieving family cancelled their travel plans until, in 1913, John and the children, and Anna’s husband, William Brooks, made the first of their several trips to different parts of the world, including Bohemia, Germany, France, China, Japan, Great Britain, and Australia. The Zalud house today is filled with their photographs and memorabilia from those extensive travels.

    In 1917, a second, shocking tragedy stunned the family: the murder of son-in-law William Brooks. Rumored to be a man with “an eye for the ladies,” in Oakland he supposedly made advances to a Mrs. Juliette Howe, who refused him. Afterward he spread dark rumors about her morality and she subsequently had a nervous breakdown. Nearly a year later, while in Porterville on business, Juliette heard the devastating rumors circulating again. She bought a pistol, intending to kill herself. But when Juliette saw William sitting in a rocking chair in the Pioneer Hotel, she shot and killed him instead. She showed no remorse. At her subsequent trial, the killing was ruled a justifiable homicide because William was adjudged partially responsible. The rocking chair, including bullet holes, now rests in an upstairs bedroom in the Zalud house.

    Tragedy struck again in 1922. When Prohibition was established, John was forced to close his saloon. However, son Edward bought all the liquor and moved it into storage out of town. For the next several years, he ran a small bootlegging business in addition to working on the family ranches. During an afternoon ride in 1922, he was thrown from his horse, kicked in the head, and died, at age 45. This accident was the third tragedy in ten years for the family. Ed was friends with some of the area’s more notorious tough men, and since his death several versions of what happened or what might have happened that day have been recounted. Was it simply an accident, or was something more nefarious going on? After Edward’s death, John and Pearle spent most of their time with Anna, at her home in Los Angeles.

Rocking Chair in which William Brooks was Shot
Formal Portrait of Edward Zalud
Infrared Photo of Zalud House

    Over the next twenty years, Porterville saw little of the Zaluds, although each spring and fall John and Pearle returned to check on the house and garden. In 1944, after her father’s death, Pearle began to spend more and more time at the Zalud house, and she lived there year-round from 1962 on. She lived downstairs and never married, but was convinced that the spirits of her family members came to visit her in the old family home. Today, on a special tour with a local paranormal investigation team, you can enter the house at night and find out whether they will visit you, too.

    Pearle had a few close friends, but was not an active community member, although she did host the 1968 reunion of the class of 1902 in her home. She loved to sit in her garden and particularly loved its roses, but toward the end of her life she allowed the garden to become hugely overgrown.

    Anna died in 1962, leaving Pearle as the sole survivor of the family — with a substantial inheritance. When Pearle died in 1970, she left an estate of $1,500,000, with the ranch properties going to various long-time friends. However, she willed fifteen acres in town, the house and all its belongings, and several hundred thousand dollars to the city.

    The land was to be used for a children’s park and rose garden, named for her beloved brother. Edward Zalud Park, at El Granito and Grand streets, has now been enjoyed by decades of Porterville families. The house was to become a museum in memory of her parents, and the money was to be used as an endowment to maintain it.

Pearle’s Bedroom Downstairs in Her Later Years
Dressing Table in Pearle’s Bedroom
Magnolia Blossoms in Garden

    Unfortunately, it took several years for the city to gain undisputed control of the house and the land for the park. Joe Witt, his brother Marcus Witt, Jr., and Marcus’s son claimed that they had become friends with Pearle in Los Angeles, and that she had written a new will, leaving them everything. Finally, this version was ruled to be bogus, and in 1973 the three were convicted of fraud and forgery, and the city took possession of the house and land.

    After several years of repair work, including the replacement of its foundation, the Zalud House Museum was opened to the public on May 2, 1977. In 1986 the meticulously maintained house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

   With a superb collection of historic photos, keepsakes from trips around the world, works of art, closets full of vintage clothing, and seasonally decorated rooms filled with furnishings used by the family, the Zalud House today enables visitors to immerse themselves in the lives and lifestyle of a prominent Valley family of a hundred years ago. Here, their triumphs and their tragedies, and perhaps their spirits, live on.

April, 2015


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Quotes & More Photos:

“The John Zalud house is . . . a very fine example of Second Empire styling and the only one of its type in the town of Porterville . . . It is undoubtedly the finest nineteenth century residential structure in Porterville.” — National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) Nomination Form

“Italianate influence is obvious in the exuberant detail of upper level fenestration. The front porch is also extravagantly decorated with finely ornamental woodwork.” — NRHP Nomination Form 

“The Zalud House is a one and one-half story brick dwelling . . . with mansard roof and double walls of brick with air space in between to accommodate San Joaquin Valley weather. Its integrity is excellent, as the structure is virtually unaltered.” — NRHP Nomination Form 

“The house also has unique properties as a museum because, unlike many other historical homes, it was owned and occupied exclusively by the original family, has undergone no major redesigns, and the furnishing and artifacts on display there are almost all Zalud family possessions.” — Darla Welles

“With few exceptions, the interior is structurally and aesthetically a mirror image of its Zalud family days. Most of its rich furnishings are family items, and wallpaper-paint restoration done in 1976 duplicates the original.” — NRHP Nomination Form

“Floors throughout are hardwood covered with oriental and Persian rugs collected by the Zaluds.” — NRHP Nomination Form

“Most significant feature of the dining room is a floor-to-ceiling rosewood wall completely hand-carved in a bamboo pattern commissioned by the Zaluds while in China.” — NRHP Nomination Form

“‘With that house, we received one of the largest collections of clothing of that era (mostly women’s gowns and hats from the 1890s to the mid- 950s) to be found anywhere in the country today.” — Gil Meachum

“The elder Zaluds started the garden in 1892, gradually creating a beautiful formal cultivated area. . . . It was described in garden magazines and newspaper stories and pictured in the ‘Pictorial Guide to American Gardens.'” — Annie Mitchell

“Both John Zalud and his wife Mary Jane were good cooks, and John loved to prepare breakfast for his family, and often made them jelly tarts as desserts.” — Jeff Edwards

“In memory of my parents, John and Mary Zalud, pioneers of Porterville, California, I give our home . . . and all of the contents of said home, to the City of Porterville . . . to be used for an ART CENTER and Exhibits of Art . . . [S]aid home is to be kept in good repair and not demolished, and the art contents therein shall not be removed from their present site . . . . ” — from the Will of Pearle Priscilla Zalud

 


Maps & Directions:

Directions:

 

Address:  393 N. Hockett St., Porterville, CA 93257

 

From Visalia, take Hwy 198 east to Hwy 65 south to Porterville.

Take the West Henderson Avenue exit east to J29/North Main Street.

Go right (south) on North Main to Morton Avenue.

Turn right (west) onto West Morton Avenue, then left (south) onto North Hockett Street.


Site Details & Activities:

Environment: Valley, historic home in urban Porterville
Activities:  architecture study, guided tours, Old Fashioned Christmas Candlelight Tours in December, paranormal tours, special events (garden area can be rented for weddings, etc.; contact Parks and Leisure Heritage Center Office, 559-791-7695), viewing historic furniture, furnishings, art objects, and apparel
Open:  Thursday-Saturday, 10:00-4:00 (except closed the month of January); admission fee: $3/adult, $1/child
Site Steward:  City of Porterville, Parks and Leisure Department, 559-782-7548
Opportunities for Involvement:  Donate, volunteer
Links:
Zalud House Museum – (Facebook)

Zalud House Museum – NRHP Asset Detail
Zalud House Museum – Porterville Parks Department
Books:
1) Porterville: Facts-Legends-Fires, by Jeff Edwards (Edwards Publishing, 1996)
2) Porterville Main Street Book II, by Jeff Edwards (Edwards Publishing, 1991)
3) Sites to See: Historical Landmarks in Tulare County, by Annie Mitchell (Panorama West Publishing, 1983)
4) Zaluds of Porterville, by Jeff Edwards (Edwards Book Publishing, 1989 [first edition 1977])