Lockeford Historical Society

Lockeford Historical Society Lockeford Historical Society is open to all persons for membership.

Cpt John C Frémont wrote of cottonwood trees near Pyramid Lake on Jan 6, 1844. "regarding them as harbingers of a better...
01/08/2023

Cpt John C Frémont wrote of cottonwood trees near Pyramid Lake on Jan 6, 1844. "regarding them as harbingers of a better country." Botanists later named them after him: "Populus f
Fremontii." http://bit.ly/2AzOGRz

EV Sociability Run·10hDec. 8, 1908 - "As this was the first electric automobile to travel in this section it was quite a...
12/09/2022

EV Sociability Run

·
10h
Dec. 8, 1908 - "As this was the first electric automobile to travel in this section it was quite a curiosity to the inhabitants." pioneer, Oliver P. Fritchle in Cecil County, Maryland during his 2,140-mile cross-country tour in an .

On Sep 4, 1863, Territorial Enterprise, Mark Twain expressed his preference for the name Lake Bigler over Lake Tahoe. ht...
09/05/2022

On Sep 4, 1863, Territorial Enterprise, Mark Twain expressed his preference for the name Lake Bigler over Lake Tahoe. http://bit.ly/13gnBz7
"I hope some bird will catch this Grub the next time he calls Lake Bigler by so disgustingly sick and silly a name as "Lake Tahoe.""

08/04/2022

History of Copperopolis Ca.

Copperopolis
Town History - Gold Discovery, Early Citizenry, Legends
Historic Sites - Local Ruins, Relics, Buildings & Scenery
• Congregational Church
• Armory
• Copper Consolidated Mining Company Office

Travelers' Tips - Directions, Museums, Lodging, &c

Town History

Hiram Hughes was fed up with the Silver Rush. Leaving the mines of Nevada’s Comstock Lode, he returned to Calaveras County in 1860 and began prospecting for gold along Gopher Ridge. Noticing a resemblance in the rock formations here to those of the Washoe region in Nevada, he staked a claim on Quail Hill that May. Hiram worked the claim, turning up small amounts of gold and silver, and a lot of reddish-colored ore referred to by the local miners as “iron rust.”
Later that year, Hiram’s ten-year-old son, William Napoleon Bonaparte Hughes, discovered vast amounts of the iron rust ore on nearby Hog Hill. Curious to determine what the stuff was, Hiram sent a sample to San Francisco to be assayed, where the ore was found to contain a high copper content worth $120 per ton. Father and son immediately claimed as much of Hog Hill as possible and named the claim Napoleon, after the boy. When word of the discovery became known, speculators, miners, and merchants headed for Grasshopper City, later called Telegraph City, and the copper rush was on.
Copperopolis, originally known as Copper Canyon during its first year of existence, was also founded in 1860, at the site of the second big discovery of copper ore in the region. William K. Reed, Dr. Allen Blatchly, and Thomas McCarty discovered and located a rich claim they called the Union. It was situated about five miles northeast of the Napoleon claim and within a year was producing vast amounts of copper ore. Before long, several other claims had been established, including the Keystone, Consolidated, Empire, Webster, Kentucky, and the Calaveras. Located in the famous Copper Canyon District, the claims, the men they employed, and the businesses needed to provide what the miners needed, are what formed Copperopolis. With such a great influx of miners into the region, it wasn’t long before a mining district was formed and a set of mining laws adopted for the area. This took place on August 3 of 1860, and the laws allowed each miner to file one claim by location on a lead or vein of 150 feet in length and 300 feet in width. A miner discovering a new vein was entitled by the right of discovery to an extra claim of the same extent.
The town grew rapidly, enjoying immense prosperity from 1860 to 1867. The center of town, known as “The Plaza,” was located across from the Armory. From there, Main Street runs about one and a quarter miles northwest to the end of town, paralleling the rich copper lead. During the copper boom, this road was lined solid with buildings of all shapes and sizes, offering the population anything they might desire. Many of the brick buildings were constructed from bricks hauled in from Columbia, where the buildings were being torn down so the miners could mine the ground underneath.
Copperopolis owed much of its prosperity to the Civil War, as tremendous amounts of copper were needed for shells and bullets. But getting the copper to the Union forces was in itself a tremendous task. In 1863, William Reed built a toll road over which ox teams hauled $1.6 million in copper ore that first year. The ore was then taken to Stockton, shipped downriver to San Francisco, loaded onto sailing ships, and taken around Cape Horn, to finally arrive at smelters in Boston, New York, and Philadelphia. The copper was then available for use by the Union Army. The war also brought a lot of publicity to Calaveras County as the region (which included Copperopolis, Telegraph City, and Campo Seco) became the second largest copper-producing district under northern control during the Civil War. Due to this publicity, mining shares of the principal claims skyrocketed. In 1863, shares in the Union Mine sold for $25,000 or $170 a foot. By 1864, the Union Mine was valued at $2 million. When the war finally ended; however, and the price of copper fell from 55 cents per pound to 19 cents, the mine’s future didn’t look so bright. To make matters even worse, mining costs and shipping expenses were increasing, and by 1867 the copper mines lay idle. It was just too expensive for me.
By 1870, only 170 persons were living in Copperopolis. During the 1880s; however, the population increased somewhat as the Union and Keystone mines became active once again after being purchased by a Boston conglomerate. Work was done on the shafts and one hundred-ton furnace was erected. The mines of Copperopolis continued to produce over the years, with boom periods occurring during the two World Wars. The U. S. Bureau of Mines credits the mines of Copperopolis with 72,598,883 pounds of copper from 1861 to 1946. That’s over $12 million worth of copper.
Copperopolis may not have been a gold town, but it was a mining town. The mines, tailing piles, tracks, old buildings, and cemeteries here are extremely interesting to wander about. There are also several ruins in the area, small stone structures in varying stages of rubble, which give rise to speculation about the purpose they once served. Home, saloon, mercantile, outlaw roost, mine office, storehouse. Who knows, but it’s fun to guess. Luckily for visitors today, several of the town’s historic structures have undergone restoration, enabling us to catch a glimpse backward in the time of old Copperopolis.

06/29/2022

We will miss Lani Eklund, a very special Lockeford resident for many years. She was very active during the time that she lived here. We are sending our condolences to the family.

Larnice ‘Lani’ Swann Eklund passed away aged 84 on June 18th, 2022, at San Joaquin Hospice House, Stockton, California. She was born in New York City, New York August 24th, 1937, to Audrey and Eugene Swann.
Lani Eklund loved her life. She was grateful for all her opportunities and those who entered and enriched her life. Meeting her husband Richard in Turkey (while teaching at Incirlik Air Force Base Dependent School) and marrying him in Beirut, Lebanon on April 26th, 1965 was, she said, the “epitome of serendipity.” She felt truly blessed with three children – Christian Ryan (married to Susan Green) of Richmond, Virginia; Kendt of West End, North Carolina; Kerri Ana of Lodi, and grandsons Ryan and Owen Eklund of Richmond, Virginia.
She had a varied career in teaching – a profession she loved. Long after retirement, she would remark upon reading a magazine article or seeing a television production that it would make a great “hook” for a unit or lesson in Language Arts or Theater. She taught first grade in parochial and public schools in Michigan and for the Department of Defense base school in Turkey. Upon returning to the states, she worked in Pennsylvania at the Laboratory School at Lock Haven University and in State College public schools in primary grades. When the family moved to Virginia, she taught at the Middle School level and at Mount Vernon High School, where she was nominated Teacher of the Year for Fairfax County Public Schools. She enjoyed presenting writing workshops for writing across the curriculum for the Virginia Writing Project and a publishing firm. She taught at Bear Creek High School and Lodi Middle School after moving to California.
Lani spent many years working with the American Association of University Women. She served at the national level for “Year of the Woman” and as an organizer of the Virginia Conference for International Women’s Year.
Retirement was a difficult concept for Lani. While still teaching, she and Richard, along with daughter Kerri, began the restoration of the historic Locke House and Barn in Lockeford. Their goal was to preserve the house's heritage and open it to the public as a bed and breakfast. Once fully retired from teaching, she was amazed and delighted at how much she enjoyed being an innkeeper in a rural community.
Community meant service to her. She served on the first Municipal Advisory Council of Lockeford and helped establish the Lockeford Historical Society. She continued her professional growth as an innkeeper. She served on the Council of the California Association of Boutique and Breakfast Inns and became a San Joaquin County Master Gardener.
When she and Richard finally retired from innkeeping and moved to Lodi, California, she continued her dedication to community service with roles on the Lodi Arts Council.
She is survived by her husband Richard, daughter Kerri, sons Christian and Kendt, and grandchildren Ryan and Owen. She is also survived by brothers and sisters Gaylorn Swann, Jodi Bartek, Pamela Kanaby, DeAndre’ Hessberger, and Christopher Swann. She was preceded in death by her brother Craig Swann.
Her family and friends will hold a Memorial Celebration. In lieu of flowers or gifts, please provide donations to the American Cancer Society, the League of Women Voters, the National Organization for Women, the Sierra Club, or the Humane Society/SPCA.

The first formal migrant party to cross what's now Nevada's Great Basin en route to California left Independence, MO on ...
05/11/2022

The first formal migrant party to cross what's now Nevada's Great Basin en route to California left Independence, MO on May 8, 1841. They arrived at the base of Mt Diablo in California on Nov 4, 1841. The first of many undocumented Americans in Mexico. This is before the gold rush of 1848. They followed the Stanislaus River after traversing the Sierra Mountains. They started to climb the mountains on Oct. 15th so there could have been snow in the mountains and arrived at the base of Mt. Diablo on Nov. 4th of that year.
This article is from Nevada History on Twitter.

Please join us for our annual program highlighting the history of the Harmony Grove Church this May 21, 2022, at 11am fo...
05/08/2022

Please join us for our annual program highlighting the history of the Harmony Grove Church this May 21, 2022, at 11am for our Homecoming.
This is presented by the Harmony Grove Advisory committee which is made up of Lockeford residents of past and present and the San Juaquin County Parks Dept.
This year the program will be presented by Ms. Hamilton and John Aldridge of Oregon and John Ladridge of Texas. They are descendants of the John Aldridge of Texas. They will tell about the family coming west to California. The trek started from Brazos, Texas to Mission San Luis Rey, San Diego County, California.

For those that might be interested in local history, see the inside of the church which was established in 1859. It is located at 18110 North Trethewey Rd. Lockeford, Ca.

02/15/2022

They Happened Upon a Mountain Lake
On February 14, 1844, on Valentine’s Day, Frémont and Charles Preuss, climbed the dividing ridge of the Sierra crest where they “discovered” Lake Tahoe, about 20 miles to the north. History records them as the first Euro-Americans to see the magnificent lake, but celebrated trapper, Stephen C. Meek, claimed to have been the first Caucasian to see the Truckee River when he set traps on it in 1833. It seems unlikely that Meek would not have followed the relatively short Truckee River to its source, Lake Tahoe. Ironically, if Frémont had been successful in ascending the Walker River drainage, he would have never seen Lake Tahoe.John Fremont

Indicative of the stress and danger they were facing in their mid-winter mountain crossing, Preuss didn’t even mention Lake Tahoe in his daily notes and Frémont also treated the event very casually. Frémont’s comments offer a glimpse of that moment: “With Mr. Preuss, I ascended today the highest peak to the right [Red Lake Peak]; from which we had a beautiful view of a mountain lake at our feet, about fifteen miles in length, and so entirely surrounded by mountains that we could not discover an outlet.” But on other occasions, Frémont did fall under the spell of the High Sierra.

Lieutenant John Charles Frémont

He wrote, “Scenery and weather combined must render these mountains beautiful in summer; the purity and deep-blue color of the sky is singularly beautiful; the days are sunny and bright, and even warm in the noon hours; and if we could be free from the many anxieties that oppress us, even now we would be delighted here; but our provisions are getting fearfully scant.”

Two more weeks of struggling through rugged canyons and deep Sierra snow finally brought the weary expedition into the Sacramento Valley, and on March 6, Lt. Frémont and his men stumbled into Sutter’s Fort, where John Sutter treated them like royalty. Despite their ordeal, not one man had been lost.

Mountain Lake, Lake Bonpland, Da ow a ga, Bigler, Lake Tahoe
In his 1845 report, Frémont called the largest lake in the Sierra Nevada “Mountain Lake,” while Preuss’ map of 1848 identifies it as Lake Bonpland, in honor of the legendary French botanist Amie Jacques Alexandre Bonpland. Although the name Tahoe, derived from the Washoe tribal name, Da ow a ga (“edge of the lake”) was in common use by the 1860s, the lake was officially renamed Bigler in 1854. (John Bigler, third governor of California, had personally led a rescue party from Placerville over Echo Summit to save a group of snowbound emigrants in 1852.) Bigler was the official name until 1945 when the lake was at last legally established as Lake Tahoe.

John Charles Frémont enjoyed remarkable fame in the 19th century.
The Full story is from the Sierra College Press.

Looks like a slow commute day on the Carquinez Bridge, c.1927. The bridge cost $8 million to build. It was the first maj...
02/05/2022

Looks like a slow commute day on the Carquinez Bridge, c.1927. The bridge cost $8 million to build. It was the first major crossing of the San Francisco Bay and a significant technological achievement in its time. Upon its completion, the span became part of the Lincoln Highway.

Fabulous view of old Angles Camp, c.1900s. Zoom in, and you can see the "Electric Shoe Repair Shop" at the right, at tha...
01/27/2022

Fabulous view of old Angles Camp, c.1900s. Zoom in, and you can see the "Electric Shoe Repair Shop" at the right, at that cut out of a boot. What was an Electric Shoe? Mark Twain wrote about Angles Camp in his book "The Celebrated Jumping Frog," published in 1865.

Here is to the beginning of a Great Year.
01/02/2022

Here is to the beginning of a Great Year.

Art by James Hautman

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Lockeford, CA
95237

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