The ‘Robinson Crusoe’ of Lake Tahoe

It was Captain Dick’s thirst for whiskey that did him in. One of 19th-century Lake Tahoe’s most colorful figures was an old British sailor with a hardy constitution and missing toes. Captain Richard Barter was hired to tend a stagecoach tycoon’s summer villa on the shore of Emerald Bay. During the snowbound winters, the only…

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The Hermit of Emerald Bay

It was Captain Dick’s thirst for whiskey that did him in. One of 19th-century Lake Tahoe’s most colorful figures was an old British sailor with a hardy constitution and missing toes. Captain Richard Barter was hired to tend a stagecoach tycoon’s summer villa on the shore of Emerald Bay. During the snowbound winters, the only…

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Los Angeles landmarks, in sumptuous tones

When George Townley came to Cal State San Marcos as a young Briton on a study abroad program it changed his whole sense of style. His home university in the north of England was often gray and dull, said Townley, now 22. “So this like vibrant, tropical kind of west culture really stood out. It…

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Joan Kroc’s super-sized giving

Ray Kroc turned a hamburger stand in the California desert into a fast-food empire that changed the way Americans eat. Less is known about his wife, a dashing piano player named Joan whose life was arguably every bit as cinematic. Joan Kroc took control of her husband’s $3 billion McDonald’s fortune after his death in…

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Best of the California Sun: 10 must-read stories from the past week

The California Sun is a daily newsletter that hand-curates the most compelling stories about California from dozens of publications across the internet. Here are 10 of the most popular stories in the newsletter from the past week: 1 “It’s a place always balancing between heaven and hell.” In Slab City, the Mojave Desert outpost of…

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California’s cringeworthy city flags

Many Californians are unaware that at least 160 cities across the state have official flags. That could be because most appear to have been the product of bureaucratic afterthought — epitomized by a style known derisively as a “seal on a bedsheet.” The scourge of ugly municipal flags drew wide attention a few years ago…

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When California gave rise to a black utopia

Just north of Bakersfield is the only town in California to have been founded and governed solely by African-Americans. Established in 1908, Allensworth was spearheaded by a former slave and Army veteran, Col. Allen Allensworth, who envisioned a promised land where blacks could live free of discrimination and “create sentiment favorable to intellectual and industrial…

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Joaquin Murrieta and the Western legacy of anti-Mexican violence

A couple months ago, a group of horsemen rode along a dusty San Joaquin Valley highway during an annual commemoration of Joaquin Murrieta, one of California’s most enduring folk heroes. Little is truly known about the Mexican miner who traveled to Gold Rush California in search of fortune and ended up an outlaw. According to…

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Why you should become a member of the California Sun

It’s been nearly a year since we started this experiment called the California Sun. Now we’re about to find out whether we can make it sustainable. Creating the newsletter has been a pleasure. We’ve been thrilled to hear from readers who appreciate, as one put it, our “obsessively curious, artfully curated homage to this peculiarly…

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The 5 best places to bask in California’s fall colors

New England has the architecture, but California has the landscapes. That, according to the fall color connoisseur John Poimiroo, makes the Golden State America’s premier autumn destination. As evidence, he cited a photograph of the Eastern Sierra’s Bishop Creek Canyon aflame with color in a past September, shown above. “I’ll take any photograph you can…

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