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California ghost town famous for riches and rowdiness prepares to welcome guests
Dotting a rugged slope in the Inyo Mountains are the remains of one of early California’s great engines of prosperity. During its 1870s heyday, Cerro Gordo, or “fat hill,” was a rollicking silver town of 4,800 people and 1,600 mules, ruled by the six-gun. It generated so much trade that the Los Angeles News editorialized…
Read MoreHow the 1906 earthquake made Chinatown a force in San Francisco
“Let us have no more Chinatowns in our cities.”— Oakland Enquirer, April 1906 After the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, fires lasted for days and laid waste to most of the burgeoning city, including all of Chinatown. Chinese laborers had arrived to California in large numbers as part of the 1848 Gold Rush and the western…
Read MoreThe antiwar protest that still echoes in San Francisco today
In April 1967, roughly 50,000 people packed into San Francisco’s Kezar Stadium in the largest protest march and rally the West Coast had ever seen. The Spring Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam, including a related protest in Manhattan’s Central Park, was notable for melding together disparate civil rights, labor, and counterculture movements…
Read MoreA 1906 film of San Francisco was “upscaled” to 4K and the result is stunning
On this day in 1906, the motion picture pioneer Harry Miles climbed aboard a San Francisco cable car and cranked a movie camera. The film by the Miles Brothers movie company captured a view of the thoroughfare — bustling with horse-drawn wagons, bicycles, and newfangled automobiles — as it would never be recorded again. That’s…
Read MoreIn California, Civil War reenactors brandish the Southern cause
Every few weeks or so, the crackle of musket fire echoes across the golden fields of California as men clad in uniforms of the Union and Confederate armies face off in pretend battles. Never mind that the state is located more than 150 years and a world away from the main theaters of the conflict:…
Read MoreThe California secession defeated by booze
Rebellions have been quashed through bloodshed, blockades, and subterfuge. Rough and Ready fretted over its liquor supply. Nestled in the foothills northeast of Sacramento, The Great Republic of Rough and Ready was established on this day in 1850 by gold miners fed up with taxation and lawlessness. The tiny new nation — whose peculiar name was borrowed from…
Read MoreWhat the Grateful Dead did for the Lithuanian Olympic basketball team
Basketball is an obsession in Lithuania, and in 1991 the newly independent nation wanted nothing more than to showcase its talents on the world stage at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics. But the Baltic nation of fewer than 3 million people, still recovering from Soviet efforts to crush its rebellion, had no money. Then, in an…
Read MorePhotos of the 1918 flu pandemic in California
We’ve been through shutdowns like this before. In September of 1918, a global flu pandemic made entry into California. As with the coronavirus, the first cases were detected among travelers — a man who had returned to San Francisco from a trip to Chicago and seamen aboard a vessel that arrived to the harbor in…
Read MoreThe decades-long feud between Earl Warren and Richard Nixon
Earl Warren was born in Los Angeles on this day in 1891. As a Bay Area prosecutor, California attorney general, California governor, and Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, Warren was the rare sort of public official who was broadly admired across the political spectrum. But he had his enemies, notable among them another…
Read MoreIllustrations of Los Angeles in Wes Anderson hues
The British artist George Townley creates gorgeous illustrations of Southern California’s architectural gems, work that was highlighted in the California Sun a couple years ago. Townley, 23, became enamored of California while attending Cal State San Marcos on a study abroad program a few years back. Using a stylus in Photoshop, he created drawings of…
Read MoreHow the Sutro Baths sparked a backlash against racism in California
The Sutro Baths, a glass palace of swimming pools to rival those of ancient Rome, opened in San Francisco on this week in 1896. The recreation center was dreamt up by Adolph Sutro, a silver mining magnate and San Francisco mayor who was inspired by the idea that the finer things in life should be available…
Read MoreIn 1897, a black waiter challenged racism at San Francisco’s Sutro Baths – and won
Sutro Baths, a glass palace of swimming pools to rival those of ancient Rome, opened in San Francisco on this week in 1896. The recreation center was dreamt up by Adolph Sutro, a silver mining magnate and San Francisco mayor who was inspired by the idea that the finer things in life should be available…
Read MoreOne of earth’s oldest living things lurks unheralded in the California desert
About 11,700 years ago, the last Ice Age was petering out, woolly mammoths still roamed the earth, and a tenacious little shrub sprouted in the Mojave Desert. Known as King Clone, the plant is still alive today and is regarded as one of the oldest living things on Earth. A creosote, the desert shrub achieved…
Read MoreHow Dr. Seuss almost quit before he started
Theodor Geisel was born on this day in 1904. Better known as Dr. Seuss, the creator of Sam-I-Am, the Grinch, and the Cat in the Hat spent most of his adult life in La Jolla. Nearly 30 years after death, his work remains a juggernaut of juvenile fiction. His 45 books have amassed well more than half…
Read MoreHow John Steinbeck faced anti-Semitic attacks
John Steinbeck, born in Salinas on Feb. 27, 1902, wrote a series of articles as a young man for the San Francisco News about labor unrest in his hometown. A bloody crackdown on striking lettuce workers in 1936 inspired in Steinbeck a quest to give voice to the oppressed and resulted three years later with his masterwork…
Read MoreThe mysterious Battle of Los Angeles
It was only three months after the attack on Pearl Harbor, and the West Coast was gripped by fears that the Japanese would storm the beaches at any moment. Then, on Feb. 24, 1942, an alarm was issued: Something strange had been spotted over the skies of Los Angeles. A total blackout was ordered. As…
Read MoreWhen the Chumash Indians met the Spanish settlers
Pictured above is a rare contemporaneous depiction of a pivotal event in California history. Painted by Chumash Indians in the Santa Monica Mountains, the imagination-stirring scene is widely believed to tell the story of the first meeting between the tribe and Spanish settlers led by either Juan Bautista de Anza or Gaspar de Portola in…
Read MoreThe men who fell from the Golden Gate Bridge — and survived
“I knew that to have a prayer, to survive, I had to hit the water feet first.”— Slim Lambert In the 1930s, it was pretty much expected that any major construction project would result in a handful of deaths. But with the country in the clenches of the Great Depression, men eagerly lined up for jobs…
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