Showing posts with label Queen City of the North. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Queen City of the North. Show all posts

Saturday, August 9, 2025

Shasta, California's Historic 1860's Courthouse.


Filmed on location.


In this episode of Exploring Shasta County History, I explore the interior of Shasta, California's Historic 1860's Courthouse, and its history, which still stands in the present-day town of (Old) Shasta. This wasn't the first courthouse in Shasta County's history, due to Major Pierson B. Reading's Adobe housing county records, and it wasn’t the first courthouse in Shasta either. It was actually the second courthouse in this ghost town. Come learn more in this episode of Exploring Shasta County History.



Resources:

Pacific Coast Dispatches - The Sacramento Bee newspaper of Sacramento, August 27, 1874

The Gallows - The San Francisco Examiner newspaper of San Francisco, August 27, 1874

Execution of Baker and Crouch - The Appeal-Democrat newspaper of Marysville, California, August 27, 1874

Hanged By the Neck Until Dead - The Searchlight newspaper of Redding, September 17, 1903

Here's More About Romantic History of Old Shasta - The Searchlight newspaper of Redding, March 10, 1940

Museum Impress Fourth Graders - The Record Searchlight newspaper of Redding, April 24, 1965

My Playhouse Was A Concord Coach, an anthology of newspaper clippings and documents relating to those who made California history during the years 1822-1888, by Mae Hélène Bacon Boggs. Published by Howell-North Press ©1942

Shasta County, California A History by Rosena Giles, published by Biobooks, ©1949.

Shasta: The Queen City by Mabel Moores Frisbie and Jean Moores Beauchamp, published by California Historical Society, ©1973. 

Friday, September 6, 2024

Shasta Masonic Cemetery, Established: 1864

 




The first recorded burial here was William Benedict Hull, known as "Willie", he was born at Shasta on May 3, 1863, and died at Buckeye on August 23, 1863, at the age of three months and twenty days. He was the son of Shasta County Sheriff, Sylvester Hull, also known as "Vet", and his wife, Martha Fidelia (Whiting) Hull who are also buried here. This historic cemetery was established the following year in 1864 and is located at 11471 Mule Town Road at Shasta, in Shasta County, California, and just southwest of the town of Shasta and three miles from the City of Redding. Come discover the lives which these pioneer residents led and see their final resting place in this video. Among the early pioneers who are buried here is Lloyd Lee Carter, a son of a local pioneer newspaper man who captured the notorious outlaw and highwayman, Charles Lyman Ruggles, of the infamous Ruggles Brothers after the Ruggles' Brothers deadly heist of May 14, 1892, on Middle Creek Road near Shasta Carter caught some fame after capturing the notorious bandit with two of his friends. Filmed on location July 4, 2024.



Resources:


1850 U.S. Census

1852 California State Census

1860 U.S. Census

Fire At Shasta - The Sacramento Daily Union newspaper of Sacramento, February 28, 1860

A Dwelling Burned - The Shasta Courier newspaper of Shasta, March 3, 1860

Board of Supervisors - The Shasta Courier newspaper of Shasta, February 16, 1861

Died - The Shasta Courier newspaper of Shasta, September 26, 1863

Died - The Shasta Courier newspaper of Shasta, March 11, 1865

Died - The Trinity Journal newspaper of Weaverville, January 27, 1866

Administrators Sale of Real Estate - The Shasta Courier newspaper of Shasta, November 17, 1866

1870 U.S. Census

1880 U.S. Census

California U.S. Voter Registration 1885

The Republican Free Press newspaper of Redding, September 10, 1892

Sylvester Hull Dead - The Red Bluff Daily News newspaper of Red Bluff, November 24, 1899

Death Of a Pioneer - The San Francisco Call newspaper of San Francisco, November 24, 1899

Mr. Hull's Funeral - The Red Bluff Daily News newspaper of Red Bluff, November 25, 1899

The Ruggles Brothers' Reward - The Sacramento Daily Union newspaper of Sacramento, September 7, 1895

1896, California Voters Registration

1899, City & Business Directory of Shasta County

1900 U.S. Census

Death Ends Pain of Editor Carter - The Free Press newspaper of Redding, August 3, 1901

W.L. Carter’s Obsequies - The Free Press newspaper of Redding, August 3, 1901

Daniel P. Bystle Answers the Call - The Free Press newspaper of Redding, June 8, 1903

A Shasta Pioneer Called by Death - The Searchlight newspaper of Redding, June 9, 1903

1910 U.S. Census

1920 U.S. Census

1930 U.S. Census

1940 U.S. Census

Our Storied Landmarks – Shasta County, California, written by May H. Southern, published by Balakshin Printing Company, ©1942.

My Playhouse Was A Concord Coach, an anthology of newspaper clippings and documents relating to those who made California history during the years 1822-1888, by Mae Hélène Bacon Boggs. Published by Howell-North Press ©1942

Shasta County, California A History by Rosena Giles, published by Biobooks, ©1949.

Place Names of Shasta County by Gertrude A. Steger revision by Helen Hinckley Jones, ©1966 by La Siesta Press, Glendale, California

Shasta State Historic Park Brief History and Tour Guide, published by Shasta State Historic Park, ©July 1985

A Newspaper of Prosperity and Longevity: the Shasta Courier written by Jeremy Tuggle - The Record Searchlight newspaper of Redding, August 3, 2016

Furnacville & Ingot: The Home of the Afterthought Mine written by Jeremy Tuggle, June 23, 2021

Friday, July 5, 2024

JOHNSTON LECKY GRAVESITE AT SHASTA.

Note: this gravesite is located on private property in Shasta.


The headstone of Johnston Lecky (1809-1849) at Shurtleff Hill in Shasta. Courtesy of Shasta Historical Society.


The town of Shasta was established in 1848 as a sprawling tent community called Reading Springs which was surrounded by gold rush pandemonium as miners pitched up tents establishing the new settlement. A natural spring flowed near the community adding to its original name of Reading Springs. Reading Springs was named in honor of Major Pierson B. Reading (pronounced like the color red) the first European-American settler in Shasta County, California. The population at Reading Springs increased between 500 and 600 residents in September of 1849, near the end of Johnston Lecky's life on October 8, 1849. During the interim the name Reading Springs was changed to Shasta on June 8, 1850. It was named Shasta by Armstead C. Brown an early pioneer settler. Brown named the town Shasta because it was the nearest town to Mount Shasta. Siskiyou County wasn't formed yet in California until 1852. As Shasta grew, the early settlers made it a ramshackle community, but the town flourished.

On March 6, 1851, the town of Shasta became the county seat of Shasta County. Shasta was now a bustling city, and a future post office and a courthouse would be constructed soon. Locals would come to call it the Queen City of the Northern Mines or simply, the Queen City of the North, due to the many accommodations it boasted during its heyday. Johnston Lecky is well remembered by local historians in the area and what's known of him is that he caught the gold fever and came out during the California Gold Rush. Johnston Lecky became the first recorded death and burial in the history of Shasta County, California. He was a native of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. His burial is located on Shurtleff Hill in the present-day town of Shasta. I was fortunate to create and Johnston Lecky to my Find A Grave.com, account today, and honor him with a proper memorial. This posting is an extension of that memorial found at: Johnston Lecky (1809-1849) - Find a Grave Memorial.

Resources:

The 1944 Covered Wagon, published by Shasta Historical Society, page 40.

The 1945 Yearbook, published by Shasta Historical Society, page 2.

Solitary Graves - The Oakland Tribune newspaper  of Oakland, December 8, 1946

Report On Cemeteries and Lone Graves written by Beth Shuford. The 1965 Covered Wagon. Published by Shasta Historical Society, pages 40-42.

The "Cemetery Book" and Some of its Stories written by Beth Shuford. The 1973 Covered Wagon Published by Shasta Historical Society, pages 60-70.

Shasta County, California A History by Rosena Giles, published by Biobooks, ©1949, page 188.

Shasta's Growth, Prosperity and Decline, Part One written by Jeremy Tuggle. Published July 5, 2018.

Shasta's Growth, Prosperity and Decline, Part Two written by Jeremy Tuggle. Published July 5, 2018

Johnston Lecky Gravesite Photo. Courtesy of Shasta Historical Society.

Friday, December 25, 2020

Christmas Day At Shasta In 1854

After a night of celebration at the community Christmas Tree inside the Methodist Church at Shasta on Christmas Evening (Christmas Eve), local Shastan's both young and old retired to their homes that night expecting the arrival of Santa Claus, and remembering Jesus Christ, which is the real reason why we celebrate Christmas. The next day many residents anticipated the glorious tradition of gift exchange. Christmas Day, on December 25, 1854, began unusually quiet in the Queen City of North. Everyone was inside their homes enjoying this festive holiday with family and close friends. Shasta was lacking it’s usual populated streets, and business transactions, as well as the playful shouting of the youth in town, that day. The Shasta Courier newspaper edition of December 30, 1854, contained the following account:

"Christmas Day - This day passed off rather tamely in this place. No excitement - no fun - no frolicking - no snow balling - ('twas a regular Atlantic May day,) no sweet-heart visiting - (cause, the absence of material out of which sweet-hearts are composed,) no ginger-cakes - no taffy pulling's - no nothing! The day previous, however, was all life - half-a-dozen horse races having occurred in the streets. As near as we can recollect, we observed, while standing on the St. Charles porch for an hour, no less than six dogs pass with remarkable speed, and yelling lustily, the tail of each dog having appended thereto an old tin cup. This cruel, but intellectual amusement, seemed to be relished hugely by everybody, ourselves among the number, the passage of each dog have been received with vociferous cheering." (SIC)



Above: this article is taken from the Shasta Courier newspaper edition of December 30, 1854.



Merry Christmas to all...



Thursday, December 24, 2020

Christmas Eve At Shasta In 1854


Above: this article is taken from the Shasta Courier newspaper of Saturday, December 30, 1854.

Just how was Christmas Evening (Christmas Eve) spent in Shasta in 1854? Thanks to the Shasta Courier newspaper from Shasta we have have this article which was printed by them on Saturday, December 30, 1854:

Christmas Tree - The Christmas Tree on Christmas Evening, in the Methodist Church, was a most beautiful sight, and gave the little folks a vast amount of pleasure. Their little eye’s sparkled, and their little mouths made merry noise, as beautiful little Santa Claus distributed the various little presents. There little eyes were not only made to dance with the sight of beautiful toys, but their little mouths were feasted with all manner of cakes, candies, nuts and other “goodies”- after which, with arms filled with the fruit of the Christmas Tree, they repaired to their homes, where in the arms of good Morpheus, they doubtless spent the remainder of the night in beautiful dreams. We also, about the same time, retired to a pair of lonely blankets, with the words upon our lips, “Would I were a boy again!” (SIC)

The next day the town celebrated Christmas in their homes. Merry Christmas to all. To be continued...



Saturday, December 12, 2020

SIMEON FISHER SOUTHERN AND THE HAZEL CREEK AREA

Simeon Fisher Southern, a native of Stephensburg, Kentucky, was born to Stephen Fisher Southern and Rebecca (Duncan) Southern, on September 6, 1822. As a boy, Simeon grew up on his father's farm as a farmhand assisting his father when he wasn't attending school. Southern was often referred to by the nickname of "Sims". He became well-educated during his adolescents. He became a well-respected man during his lifetime.  Later in life, he departed Kentucky, leaving his family behind, and traveled America living in the following states: Arizona, Louisiana, New Mexico, and Utah before venturing west to California where he settled at Shasta about 1854. 

Then in, 1855, Southern partnered with Charles F. Louis, another resident of Shasta, to own and operate the Eagle hotel which became the newest hostelry in the Queen City of the North, Shasta. His business ethics made his hostelry flourish with success against the more upscale hotels along Main Street during this era. It wasn't long before he found time to court an elegant woman named Sarah Emma Lafferty, also a Kentucky native, and the daughter of Thomas Lafferty and Elizabeth (Smith) Lafferty. By January of 1856, Simeon appears to have been operating the Eagle hotel by himself without the assistance of Charles F. Louis. 




Above: an advertisement for the Eagle hotel at Shasta proprietors: S.F. Southern and C.F. Louis. From the Shasta Courier newspaper edition of September 22, 1855.


Simeon and Sarah's romance continued to blossom, and they were married on February 26, 1856 at Shasta by E.K. Shed, Esq., a close personal friend and business partner of Simeon Southern. Earlier that year, Southern and Shed purchased the St. Charles hotel on Main Street at Shasta. This was Southern's second hostelry that he owned, a third hostelry was leased by him which was called the Empire hotel. It was located on Main Street at French Gulch and he operated this hotel with S.F. Black until 1858 when Simeon and Sarah decided to relocate from Shasta to Dog Creek in the Sacramento River Canyon. 

After settling at Dog Creek, Southern went into partnership with J.S. Cameron in operating the Dog Creek House, a little inn which proved successful due to the travelers of the Sacramento River Road, heading north and south bound through the canyon. Southern was elected as Justice of the Peace of the Sugar Loaf Township, which included Dog Creek and Hazel Creek. Simeon and Sarah later moved north to Hazel Creek where Southern erected a log cabin style building combined with a trading post on a plateau overlooking Hazel Creek which he owned and operated.

Sarah assisted her husband in the hotel as well. Simeon Southern eventually enlarged his building into a two-story wooden structure with luxurious and comfortable rooms for his guests. He also kept livestock at Sweetbrier in 1860, which he ended up owing $5.91 in delinquent taxes that year. He also built a mule corral on the hotel property at Hazel Creek.

Hazel Creek received its name from the many Hazelnut bushes which grew along the channel of the creek. Southern was not the first resident of Hazel Creek there were other people before him. In 1855, Hazel Creek was the site of lucrative gold strikes. Now Southern was enhancing the area. There were still mining claims nearby which were extensively mined when the Southern's moved there in 1859.



Above: people on the upper balcony and on the lower balcony and ground floor pose for a photograph at Southern's Hotel and Stage Station on H:azel Creek, date unknown. Courtesy of Shasta Historical Society.


In 1867, the miners at Hazel Creek were finding very course pieces of gold sometimes mixed with quartz and weighing from an ounce to fifty dollars in value while ground sluicing the area. One of the advantages these miners had compared to other mining localities was the amount of free water from Hazel Creek which made the extraction process easier. The area was considered as very deep diggings in a rocky area which made it harder to mine the ore. Most of the miners spent their findings at Southern's trading post usually on new mining equipment and supplies they needed.

Two years later in July of 1869, an excerpt of an article from the Shasta Courier newspaper reported the following account regarding Hazel Creek: "Hazel Creek which empties into the Sacramento on the east side just opposite of Southern's Store, is paying better this season then it has for a number of years. McKenzie & Garret, Johnson & Co., Keaton brothers, and a number of others are making from $3 to $5 per day, to the hand. The gravel and dirt on this creek is of a burnt reddish hue and contains any amount of porous quartz, some of which is very rich in free gold."

In 1871, Southern's hotel became a prominent stage stop along the Sacramento River Road for the Greathouse Company of Shasta. This company was owned by George L. Greathouse, a brother-in-law of Sarah (Lafferty) Southern. Sometimes it was referred to as Southern's Station. About this time, it was reported that the Hazel Creek mines in the area were playing out and miners were getting unfavorable results. Southern, who had some mining claims of his own in the area proved the local media wrong about Hazel Creek, and it was then, that the Shasta Courier newspaper wrote the following column in October of that year:

"FROM HAZEL CREEK - S.F. Southern came in town Wednesday from Hazel Creek bringing undoubted evidence that the mines of that section are "giving out", in the shape of some well-filled purses of gold dust and a number of nice specimens." (SIC)

Another interesting column about Simeon Southern appeared in the Shasta Courier newspaper edition of October 18, 1873, which reports the following: "S. Southern, of Southern's station, came down this week to do a little trading with our wholesale merchants. Times have been hard in Sim's locality lately, and he could only bring down about ten pounds of gold dust this trip.

During their union together Simeon Fisher Southern and Sarah Emma (Lafferty) Southern had the following children born to them: 

1. Ada Southern (1858-?)
2. William F. Southern (1859-1935) 
3. Ida Mae Southern (1864-1928))
4. Mae Hazel Southern (1867-1943) [Note: She became the first President of the Shasta Historical Society in Redding.]
5. Sarah A. Southern (1868-?)
6. Elzey Thomas Southern (1870-1932)
7. Fannie Emma Southern (1872-1948)
8. Nellie Belle Southern (1875-1908)
9. Jeanette Isabel "Belle" Southern (1877-1908)
10 . Simeon Fisher Southern Jr. (1879-1893)

During the latter part of September, in 1880, the 19th President of the United States Of America, Rutherford B. Hayes and his party consisting of First Lady, Lucy Ware (Webb) Hayes, General W.T. Sherman, and General Phillip Sheridan registered to stay at Southern's hotel after visiting Redding from Chico which won Simeon Southern's hostelry some praise in national media coverage due to the president's campaign tour in California.

The presidential party were on their way north from Redding to Yreka but they decided to make a stop overnight at Southern's hotel. The whole family met the entire presidential party that day. Simeon "Sims" Fisher Southern died on December 6, 1892 at Hazel Creek. 

In 1902, Southern's hotel and Stage Station were sold to timbering interests by Sarah (Lafferty) Southern, who controlled her husband's estate at the time. She sold out to Knight & Shelbey who erected the first sawmill in the Hazel Creek area. The area became known as Sims after Sarah's husband and Hazel Creek retained its name. Sarah (Lafferty) Southern then relocated south to Redding, when she survived her husband by twenty-seven years before she died. 



Above: this is the Sims Schoolhouse at Sims with its students and teacher posing for a photograph. Courtesy of Shasta Historical Society.

At Sims, Knight & Shelbey had a small logging operation on location. They were transporting logs by horses and steam donkeys to their water-powered sawmill. Water was taken from Hazel Creek to operate it. A year later, in 1903, a new company came to fruition called Sims Lumber Company which had purchased the sawmill property and logging interests from Knight & Shelbey. 

During the decade of the 1910's Sim's became a campground for the California Highway Commission who was overseeing a series of surveys in the area for the north valley highway systems. It brought renewed activity to the area. In 1911, Southern's hotel and Stage Station became a tourist attraction due to its lucrative and vast mining history in the area. The demise of this hotel was not recorded, its unknown how long it stood. Sims Lumbering Company continued logging operations at Sims until 1913 when they sold out to George Ralph & Sons. 




Above: built out of box cars and situated along the railroad tracks was the Southern Pacific Railroad Depot at Sims. Circa 1910. Courtesy of Shasta Historical Society.





Above: Sims became the campground for the employees of the California Highway Commission during their survey's of north valley highway systems in 1913. The California Highway Commission was established in 1895 as the main state highway bureaucracy in California. It was the predecessor of the California Transportation Commission which organized and replaced it in 1978. Courtesy of Shasta Historical Society. 

The Ralph's enhanced the area with a new logging railroad to their sawmill  They also erected a water tank for their small steam locomotive which needed to fill its engine with water to transport the logs to and from the sawmill. In 1919, the Shasta Mill & Lumber Company purchased this sawmill and continued production in the area.

Between 1933 and 1939, Sims was called Camp Sims by the Civilian Conservation Corps which utilized the area as a camp ground for their crews. A plaque was placed at Sims which state the following: "With its wooded valley and beautiful river setting, Sims, was a haven to the boys from Company 978 who came from the busy cities of San Francisco, Oakland and other Bay Area communities. Camp Sims, like other CCC camps was administered and built by the U..S. Army. But it was the Forest Service who was in charge of actual work projects. Besides fire fighting, the boys from Camp Sims gained a real reputation for building three fire lookouts-Sims, Bradley, and Sugar Loaf, constructing part of Everett Memorial Highway, and building Panther Meadows [on the upper slopes of Mt. Shasta.]"

In 1933, a bridge was built to provide fire protection on the east side of the Sacramento River at Sims.  Today, Sims is designated as a historic site in Shasta County which features an easy walking trail and fishing access. Sims Road off Interstate 5 in the Sacramento River Canyon also retains its name in honor of Simeon Fisher Southern. 


Above: this plaque states the following: "This tablet marks the location of the famous Southern Hotel and Stage Station the original building was a log cabin built in 1859. During a half century many noted people who made early California history were entertained here in this hotel. Dedicated to the memory of Simeon Fisher Southern and his wife Sarah Lafferty Southern pioneers of the gold trail 1849-1855. Erected by their daughters May H. and Fannie E. Southern, May 30, 1931. This photograph was taken by Jeremy Tuggle on October 17, 2020.




RESOURCES:


Married - The Shasta Courier newspaper of Shasta, March 1, 1856

Births - The Shasta Courier newspaper of Shasta, April 9, 1859

1860 U.S. Census

Delinquent Taxes - The Shasta Courier newspaper of Shasta, December 8, 1860

California Voters Register, 1866

Hazel Creek - The Shasta Courier newspaper of Shasta, August 31, 1867

Soda And Hazel Creeks - The Shasta Courier newspaper of Shasta, October 19, 1867

Upper Sacramento Items - The Shasta Courier newspaper of Shasta, March 20, 1869

Upper Sacramento Items - The Shasta Courier newspaper of Shasta, July 10, 1869

1870 U.S. Census

Items - The Shasta Courier newspaper of Shasta, February 18, 1871

From Hazel Creek - The Shasta Courier newspaper of Shasta, October 14, 1871

Brief Mentions - The Shasta Courier newspaper of Shasta, October 18, 1873

1880 U.S. Census

The Presidential Party Among the Hydraulic Mines - The Sacramento Daily Union newspaper of Sacramento, September 25, 1880

President Hayes At Yreka - The Humboldt Times newspaper of Eureka, September 28, 1880

Sawmill Is To Be Erected At Sims - The Courier-Free Press newspaper of Redding, February 13, 1913  

California, Pioneer and Immigrant Files, 1790-1950, for Simeon Fisher Southern.

May H. Southern’s scrapbook’s. Nine binders. Unpublished personal and researched material compiled by Southern. Available at Shasta Historical Society. 

Our Storied Landmarks – Shasta County, California, written by May H. Southern, published by Balakshin Printing Company, ©1942.

My Playhouse Was A Concord Coach, an anthology of newspaper clippings and documents relating to those who made California history during the years 1822-1888, by Mae Hélène Bacon Boggs. Published by Howell-North Press ©1942

Shasta Historical Society Pioneer Record: Simeon Fisher Southern, dated May 8, 1943.

SP-035, SOUTHERN, Simeon F., Pioneer Plaque Program File, available at the Shasta Historical Society.

Shasta Historical Society - Genealogical Records 7-59: Southern, Simeon Fisher.

Shasta County, California A History by Rosena Giles, published by Biobooks, ©1949

Place Names of Shasta County by Gertrude Steiger, published by La Siesta Press, ©1966

U.S., Appointments of U.S. Postmasters, 1832-1971

Wednesday, December 5, 2018

Mae Helene (Bacon) Boggs (1863-1963); A Pioneer, A Historian and A Preservationist


Above: Mae Helene (Bacon) Boggs standing in the door way of one of the south-side ruins at Shasta in 1930. Courtesy of Shasta Historical Society. 


Mae Helene Bacon was born to Charles Bacon and Sarah Elizabeth (Smith) Bacon on February 16, 1863, she was a native of Pike County, Missouri. Mae’s father eventually died and then in 1871, Sarah decided it was time for them to live with her brother in Shasta, California. Sarah and Mae boarded a boat which took them to St. Louis on the Mississippi River. At St. Louis they connected with a covered wagon which took them to California. 

At the age of eight years old this journey became an adventure that Mae never forgot during her lifetime. Upon their arrival in Shasta, they immediately moved into the residence of Williamson Lyncoya Smith, an early California pioneer who arrived at Hangtown in Placer County on August 6, 1850. Two years after his arrival in California the pioneer ventured north to Shasta where he settled that year. Williamson was Sarah’s brother, and Sarah enrolled her daughter into the school at Shasta. This is where she continued her schooling and Mae Helene Bacon became a well-educated person. 

Eventually, Mae’s uncle became the division superintendent of the California-Oregon Stage Company which operated in Shasta between 1853 and 1888. Then, Williamson Smith also purchased stock within the newly established McCormick-Saeltzer Company of Redding which incorporated as a business on May 7, 1877. Williamson became a founding owner of this general merchandise store. When Smith died of heart failure on May 31, 1902, it was Mae who obtained her uncle’s interest in the McCormick-Saeltzer Company, and she became a heavy stockholder inside the company, this move made her wealthy. 



Above: Williamson Lyncoya Smith (1830-1902). His ashes are kept in the San Francisco Columbarium in San Francisco. Aside from being employed by the California-Oregon Stage Company in Shasta he also purchased stock in 1877 establishing the McCormick-Saeltzer Company of Redding. Mae Helene (Bacon) Boggs obtained his interest. Courtesy of Shasta Historical Society. 


In 1900, Mae relocated from Shasta to San Francisco and then she met and married Angus Gordon Boggs on August 6, 1900, in that city. Angus Boggs was a prominent hard working and wealthy citizen of San Francisco. According to the 1910 U.S. Census of San Francisco, he was a promoter of mining stock in the area, and he kept supporting his wife until his death on January 20, 1920, at the age of sixty-two. Mae Helene (Bacon) Boggs inherited her husband’s estate, and she became wealthier. 

On Easter Day, April 20, 1930, Mae Helene (Bacon) Boggs of San Francisco returned to her childhood home in the town of Shasta with her friends Edna (Behrens) Eaton of Redding and her son the late Shasta County Superior Court Judge, Richard B. Eaton. At first glance she was heartbroken to see her hometown in disrepair and in ruins. Shasta had been neglected over the years; it was formerly the county seat of Shasta County from March 6, 1851, to May 19, 1888, when the City of Redding became the county seat that day. 




Above: The first McCormick-Saeltzer Company store of Redding was located at the south-east corner of Butte & California Streets in Redding. Then in 1888, the owners moved into the building which is pictured above. The second building which was located between Yuba and Placer Streets in Redding. This photo was taken circa 1920. Courtesy of Shasta Historical Society. 


Boggs fondly remembered the town in its glory days and wanted to act fast to preserve its historic district. Her first priority was establishing a historic monument dedicated to the Knights of the Whip, the stage drivers that held the ribbons of the stage on the dusty roads in Shasta County and pay tribute to them. Then on, August 6, 1930, her vision became a reality as a monument was dedicated on the north side of Main Street in Shasta, and a duplicate on Bass Hill. She received additional help from the Native Sons of the Golden West and the newly created Shasta Historical Society, which was established on January 18, 1930, in Redding. Together they played an important role in preserving Shasta’s historic district. 

Mae Helene (Bacon) Boggs began embracing a passion for historic preservation as she began restoring the former “Queen City of the North” for future generations to enjoy. She began purchasing land in Shasta which contained historic structures on the property. With the help of the above organizations Boggs began the restoration within Shasta’s historic district which included the south side ruins, during the late 1930s. In 1937, the California State Parks Commission assisted them in their effort to preserve the historic town of Shasta, and from this partnership the Shasta State Historic Park came into fruition.

Of course, much more work was underway in Shasta by the above groups and Boggs herself. It wasn’t until June 12, 1950, that Shasta Historic State Park was opened to the public in the historic town of Shasta. The State Park office in Shasta was located in the (old) brick courthouse which was built in 1862 on the north side of Main Street. The courthouse was restored and preserved as well as it became an intriguing museum with a vast collection of archives and special collections that they received upon donations of local relics related to Shasta’s history. 

In 1942, Mae Helene (Bacon) Boggs published a book called; My Playhouse Was a Concord Coach: An Anthology of Newspaper Clippings and Documents Relating to Those Who Made California History During the Years of 1822-1888. This book was an extensive body of work documenting California’s rich and compelling history through newspaper articles and written material. Of course, the early history of Shasta County was not overlooked in it. In San Francisco, Boggs rallied for women’s rights, and she became a well-known person in northern California. 



Above: the interior of the second McCormick-Saeltzer Company building of Redding, circa 1921. It was located between Yuba and Placer Streets in Redding. This building stood until January 13, 1940, when it was destroyed by fire. Courtesy of Shasta Historical Society. 

The name of the future dam site was heavily debated some of its early name proposals which were suggested by the Federal Government were the following: Coram Dam, Kennett Dam and McColl Dam. It was Mae Helene (Bacon) Boggs who named the dam- Shasta Dam, and she also named the adjacent lake, Shasta Lake. She named these important places after the town of Shasta. Shasta Dam was engineered by Frank T. Crowe the owner of Pacific Constructors Incorporated, and construction began in 1938 and it’s construction was completed in 1945. When the Bureau of Reclamation held their grand opening for Shasta Dam, they invited Mae to attend the ceremony. 



Above: L-R: Earl Lee Kelly, Director of the California State Department of Public Works, Mae Helene (Bacon) Boggs, and John C. Paige, Commissioner of the U.S. Department of Public Works. This photograph was taken on September 12, 1937. Courtesy of Shasta Historical Society. 


At the present (Old) Shasta may be referred to as a ghost town by some people, yet it is a place of living history. Boggs had lived to see her dreams become a reality as she died at the age of one hundred years old on August 1, 1963, in San Francisco. She was a tremendous friend and benefactor of the Shasta State Historic Park. The Shasta State Historic Park now includes numerous historical landmarks and a working museum which employs its own park rangers under the California State Park System. 

Due to the efforts of the pioneers before us who made Shasta their home and succeeded in thriving businesses in that town, the town has reached a thriving population of 1,771 people over time, living amongst this state park. Shasta is accessible by Highway 299 West in Redding which intersects Main Street at Shasta and leaves Shasta heading towards Weaverville. From Weaverville it’s accessible from Highway 299 East and intersects Main Street at Shasta leaving Shasta towards Redding. It’s a short fun-filled family trip if you choose to go, and a visible reminder of the early gold rush days in Shasta County. 

Today, there are numerous places named after this philanthropist and pioneering woman, Mae Helene (Bacon) Boggs. One of them is a government building at 2460 Breslauer Way in Redding called the Mae Helene (Bacon) Boggs Building. There are also two special collections of local historical relics named after her, most notably they are the Boggs Collection in the Redding Library, and the Boggs Collection at the Shasta State Historic Park Museum. 



RESOURCES: 


W.L. Smith Is Taken To The Crematory - The Free Press newspaper of Redding, June 2, 1902 

Erecting The Memorial In Old Shasta - The Courier-Free Press newspaper of Redding, April 17, 1931

My Playhouse Was A Concord Coach, an anthology of newspaper clippings and documents relating to those who made California history during the years 1822-1888, by Mae Hélène Bacon Boggs. Published by Howell-North Press ©1942 

In Memory Of A Famous Knight of The Rein by Harry P. Bagley, the Sacramento Bee newspaper of Sacramento - October 17, 1942 

SP-033 Smith, Williamson Lyncoya Pioneer Plaque 

Shasta Historical Society Pioneer History - W.L. Smith dated January 20, 1943 

Mrs. Boggs Dedicates Her Life To Pioneers by Ward Bushee, the Redding Record Searchlight newspaper of Redding - December 27, 1949

Mae Helene Bacon Boggs 1863-1963 Pioneer-Philanthropist-Centarian written by Judge Richard B. Eaton, The Covered Wagon 1964, published by Shasta Historical Society, pages 42-45. 

Shasta: The Queen City by Mabel Moores Frisbie and Jean Moores Beauchamp, published by California Historical Society, ©1973. 

Shasta State Historic Park Brief History and Tour Guide, published by Shasta State Historic Park, ©July 1985 

Boggs gave California art collection to Shasta State Park by Jack Frost - Record Searchlight newspaper of Redding, January 14, 2013 

For a Famous Name, We Owe Thanks to Mrs. Boggs. By Marc Beauchamp - Record Searchlight newspaper of Redding, August 26, 2009 




Friday, August 24, 2018

THE HONORABLE JUDGE, AARON BELL (1832-1903)



Pictured above is the honorable Judge, Aaron Bell with his iconic white long beard which gave him the nickname of Billy Goat Bell. This photograph was taken by John C. Franklin, early 1890s. Courtesy of Shasta Historical Society.


Aaron Bell was born in Center County, Pennsylvania on December 2, 1832 to Christiana (Evans) Bell and John Bell Jr., he was the eldest of five children followed by: Edmund Bell, Jesse Bell, Jane Bell and Joseph Bell. Arron became well-educated and he graduated from Duff's Commercial College in 1851, at the age of nineteen, where Aaron majored in law. However, additional perks in California attracted him to venture west during the following spring when he was lured by the placer mines of that state. Aaron Bell arrived in San Francisco in April of 1852.

After a short stay in the city he departed San Francisco heading north towards El Dorado County, where he had learned that the mining scene was booming. He made plans to settle in Hangtown, which is now Placerville. This is where he mined for gold. He became popular amongst his peers while working at the placer mines. Eventually, Bell was chosen to become a deputy to various county positions in that area over a sixteen year span. During his residency there he also became a City Clerk of Placerville. The District Court of El Dorado County admitted him into the Bar in 1864, and he became a professional lawyer. After he was admitted into the Bar he practiced law in Sacramento.

As Bell's career took off he began pursuing cases pertaining to the United States land law. Then in 1871, the pioneer relocated from Sacramento to Shasta where he accepted a paid position as Registrar of the United States Land Office, which was located on Main Street. He still practiced law in Shasta opening an attorney’s office inside the above building. This was a year before the California & Oregon Railroad, a division of the Central Pacific Railroad, established a new town upon Poverty Flats called Redding on June 15, 1872. Bell held this position in Shasta for several years. At Shasta, on January 1, 1874, he married Julia Fipps, a local school teacher, and together they lived in a house on a hill in Shasta at the end of McDonald Alley. Together they began raising a small family of their own.



Above: An advertisement for Aaron Bell, Attorney At Law. His office was located in the United States Land building on Main Street in Shasta. This advertisement is from the January 20, 1877 edition of the Shasta Courier newspaper.


Then on, May 5, 1877, the Shasta Courier newspaper of Shasta reported the following about Bell:

"Aaron Bell, Register U.S. Land office, went below (that means Frisco.) Friday evening to atttend the meeting of the Grand Lodge I.O.O.F., also the reunion of the El Dorado pioneers." (SIC)

In July of 1879, Aaron Bell received the nomination for Judge of the Shasta County Superior Court on the republican ticket at Shasta. If he won this election he would become the first Superior Court Judge of Shasta County. At that time, Shasta was the county seat, and it was a position he sought after, however, he knew he had to resign as Registrar of the United States Land Office. Then on, Saturday, July 26, 1879, the Shasta Courier newspaper reported the following about Aaron Bell:

 “Aaron Bell having received and accepted the nomination for Superior Judge, has forwarded his resignation as Register of the Shasta U.S. Land Office to Washington.- Bell has made a splendid Register, his record as a Government officer is straight as an arrow, and his decision on contested points of land law have invariably stood the test when submitted to the exacting and learned heads of the land department at Washington. We regret to lose him from the place which he has so ably filled, but the position to which he aspired is one which demands the same qualities he has shown in the discharge of the duties of the office he resigns.” (SIC)

Aaron Bell was succeeded by William E. Hopping who became the new Registrar of the United States Land Office. Bell chased his dream of becoming the first Shasta County Superior Court Judge and took part in many campaign speeches along the way. Bell had experience as a lawyer but not as a judge, and his opponent was none other than democratic District Court Judge, Alexander M. Rosborough, a native of South Carolina. Both men were well-respected and popular. After the election ended the registered voters voted, and then the votes were counted. When the final vote was tallied the results showed that Bell swept his competition with an impressive 1,041 votes while Judge Rosborough carried 539 votes. The Honorable Judge, Aaron Bell began serving the position, honorably, until the year 1890.

During the week of January 1, - 10, 1880, Dr. George Silverthorne and Timothy Conklin made a real estate transfer to Judge, Aaron Bell, for a water ditch known as the Horse Creek Ditch in the Pittsburg mining district for a consideration of $200.00. Apparently, Bell owned some mining claims nearby which demanded the use of water to be conveyed from Horse Creek to his mining claims. The water helped him extract the lucrative ore he sought after. During 1881, Judge, Aaron Bell was affiliated with the Hogue Worley Ditch Company who owned a number of water ditches in the Pittsburg mining district. One of the ditches they owned was the Hogue Worley water ditch located on the west side of Horse Creek in the that mining region.

A year later, Judge, Aaron Bell located two placer mining claims which yielded him lucrative results while he worked them during his lifetime. He named first one the Shasta and the second one the Maine. The Shasta was located on May 26, 1882, while the Maine was located on June 13, 1882. Both of these placer mining claims were in the Shasta mining district near Shasta. Five years later, on September 4, 1887, the town of Redding was incorporated as a city and then in 1888 a major county wide vote was held as Shasta the Queen City of the North defended its position as the county seat of Shasta County. Eventually, Shasta was dethroned of the position it held and the City of Redding won the election. Then on, May 19, 1888, the City of Redding became the county seat of Shasta County. It was Judge, Arron Bell who ordered the removal of the county seat to Redding after the vote was held.

In November of that year, Judge Bell began advertising his house and property in Shasta for sell in the Republican Free Press newspaper of Redding. He relocated to Redding with his wife Julia, and their children, Jessie Bell, George Bell, and Harvey Bell, to their new location at the corner of Placer and West Streets in Redding. They were happy to be in their new residence, this building was much larger than their former Shasta residence and it contained nine rooms. During November of 1890 Bell’s term as the Superior Court Judge of Shasta County ended. Bell was succeeded by republican candidate, Edward Sweeney, who became the second Shasta County Superior Court Judge. He returned to practicing law and he opened an attorney’s office inside the Northern California Bank building in Redding. Bell continued dealing with cases pertaining to the United States Land law, as well as additional cases.

Then on, December 17, 1899, his middle child George Bell died at the age of twenty, it was a tragic loss to his family. George was buried in the Redding Memorial Park. Prior to 1899, Bell relocated with his wife Julia to a newer home in Redding when he donated his nine room house on the corner of Placer and West Street to be used as a school for students of the first Shasta County High School in Redding, this high school had no relation to Shasta Union High School which was established in 1923, completely different. Classes were held in his former home until 1901/1902 when a newer building was completed and stood until 1942. It’s not known where Aaron Bell moved to after donating his property to be used as a school. The Bell’s remained in Redding.

Bell became a Director of the Board for the Pioneer Gold, Silver, and Copper Mining Company which was established by Henry C. McClure, a miner, who lived at Copper City, on July 2, 1902. The rest of the Directors of the Board for the above mining company included: Henry C. McClure, Orson E. Nash, Thomas Green, and John R. Hall. They would begin extensive work on the well-known Recorder and Town Creek mines at Bully Hill in the Pittsburg mining district which assayed from $3.50 to $7 in gold and silver that year. Aside from being a lawyer and a mining man, the honorable Judge, Aaron Bell enjoyed a number of fraternal society’s as well. In April of 1855, he joined the Order of the Odd Fellows in El Dorado County, when he relocated to Shasta in 1871 he transferred into the Shasta Lodge of Odd Fellows No, 57, then in December of 1878, Bell joined and became a charter member of the Ancient Order of United Workmen, Shasta Lodge and on May 18, 1881, he joined and chartered the Shasta Council, No. 582, of the American Legion of Honor. In 1882, Bell had been elected as Vice Commander of the American Legion of Honor for California. After holding the position of Vice Commander of this organization he was elected in April of 1883 as Grand Commander of the American Legion of Honor for California the highest office a member can hold within that fraternal society. It was an honor he enjoyed having.

The honorable Judge, Aaron Bell died on Saturday, March 21, 1903 in his Redding home after a brief illness. His funeral was held on Monday, March 23, 1903, and out of respect for Shasta County’s first Superior Court Judge, local government offices and businesses remained closed as his funeral was conducted by the Odd Fellows with assistance from the Ancient Order of United Workmen. It was one of the largest funerals ever held in Redding up-to-this-date. He was buried in the Redding Memorial Park.

To conclude this article, the Shasta Courier newspaper on Saturday, March 28, 1903 reported the following about the deceased pioneer: “The estate of the late Aaron Bell is estimated at $10,000, mainly in stock in the McClure and Mt. Shasta Mining Companies.” The honorable Judge, Aaron Bell also at one point in his life owned a box, shingle and lathe factory which did remarkable business in Shasta County as noted in his pioneer plaque file at the Shasta Historical Society in Redding.




Above: An Aaron Bell letterhead. The Office of Aaron Bell, Attorney At Law, in the Northern California Bank Building in Redding. A note to Mr., David Elting of Edgewood. Dated January 11, 1893 in the hand writing of Aaron Bell. From the collection of Jeremy Tuggle.




RESOURCES:


1866-1884 & 1890 Shasta County Great Registers

The Shasta Courier newspaper of Shasta - September 13, 1879


History and Business Directory - Shasta County - 1881 by B.F. Frank and H.W. Chappell. Redding Independent Book and Job Printing House, Redding, California, ©1881.

Dethroned - The Shasta Courier newspaper, Saturday, May 26, 1888

The Pioneer Gold, Silver and Copper Mining Company - The Daily Free Press, Monday, July 2, 1900

BP-026 Bell, Aaron Pioneer Plaque File on file at Shasta Historical Society.

Shasta Historical Society Pioneer History - Aaron Bell

The Covered Wagon, 1996.

Thursday, July 5, 2018

Shasta's Growth, Prosperity And Decline, Part One.




Shasta as it appeared in 1856. Courtesy of Shasta Historical Society.



The town of Shasta was established in 1848 as a sprawling tent community called Reading Springs which was surrounded by gold rush pandemonium as miners pitched up tents establishing the new settlement. A natural spring flowed near the community adding to its original name of Reading Springs. Reading Springs was named in honor of Major Pierson B. Reading (pronounced like the color red) the first European-American settler in Shasta County.

According to celebrated California historian, John S. Hittell, the first white woman was seen at Reading Springs in 1849. She was married and she had seven children of her own. Her name wasn’t remembered because it wasn’t recorded by the forty-niners. The population at Reading Springs increased between 500 and 600 residents in September of 1849.

The very first cabin was erected by Milton McGee the following month on High Street, after that other pioneers followed suit erecting additional bungalows on the hillsides near Main Street. The tents were taken down each time a new bungalow was completed. Then on, October 20, 1849, two cousins by the names of Harrison J. Shurtleff and Doctor Benjamin B. Shurtleff arrived together at Reading Springs from Boston, Massachusetts and they settled on a hillside near Main Street. Doctor Benjamin B. Shurtleff became the first surgeon and physician at Reading Springs. Eventually, he establishes the first pharmacy on Main Street and becomes one of the foremost leading citizens in the community.

On February 18, 1850 Shasta County was created as one of the original twenty-seven counties of the new State of California which was still transitioning from being controlled by the Mexican government to becoming a brand new state controlled by the American government. California wasn’t admitted into the Union as the thirty-first state until September 9, 1850. Shasta County is older than the State of California, and that is a true fact.

During the interim the name Reading Springs was changed to Shasta on June 8, 1850. It was named Shasta by Armstead C. Brown an early pioneer settler. Brown named the town Shasta because it was the nearest town to Mount Shasta. Siskiyou County wasn’t formed until 1852. As Shasta grew, the early settlers made it a ramshackle community but the town flourished.

One of the first merchants in town was a man by the name of R.J. Walsh who had a store on Main Street. There were many pioneer entrepreneurs establishing businesses in the new town site and they profited well, like Walsh did. One of the new businesses was the two-story St. Charles hotel which was built by John Mackley. The upstairs contained one large room with 250 cots, and no private rooms, while the downstairs portion of the building contained billiards with gambling tables.

A saloon was also included downstairs. In 1851 this hotel was owned and operated by Karl Augustas Grotefend. Even though the St. Charles hotel was the leading hotel in Shasta, Grotefend, was not concerned about the Globe hotel and the Trinity House (another hotel) being in operation at the same time.

On March 6, 1851 the town of Shasta became the county seat of Shasta County. Shasta was now a bustling city, and a future post office and a courthouse would be constructed soon. Locals would come to call it the Queen City of the Northern Mines or simply, the Queen City of the North, due to the many accommodations it boasted during its heyday.


CONTINUE TO PART TWO HERE.


RESOURCES:

A Jail And A Courthouse - The Shasta Courier newspaper, Saturday, November 19, 1853

Hong Kong - The Shasta Courier newspaper, Saturday, December 3, 1853

Our Storied Landmarks – Shasta County, California, written by May H. Southern, published by Balakshin Printing Company, ©1942.

Shasta County, California A History by Rosena Giles, published by Biobooks, ©1949.

In the Shadow of the Mountain A Short History of Shasta County, California, by Edward Petersen ©1965

Place Names of Shasta County by Gertrude Steger, published by La Siesta Press, ©1966.

Shasta: The Queen City by Mabel Moores Frisbie and Jean Moores Beauchamp, published by California Historical Society, ©1973.

Shasta State Historic Park Brief History and Tour Guide, published by Shasta State Historic Park, ©July 1985

Did Arsonists Raze and Re-Raze Shasta? by Jeremy M. Tuggle, the Record Searchlight newspaper, July 25, 2016