HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF THE UPPER MOJAVE DESERT

Vol. 18 No. 2 A UNITED WAY AGENCY February 2003


FEBRUARY PROGRAM - MANZANAR

For this month's meeting, the speaker will be John Slaughter, the National Park Service's Facility Manager at Manzanar National Historic Site. He will speak on the various histories associated with Manzanar. He will cover the Prehistoric Native American population, Orchard Farming Community, LADWP Purchase, WWII Japanese American Internment, Inyo County Road Crew Maintenance Yard, and National Park Service Restoration progress.

He will also talk about some of the present partnering efforts with local groups to help in the preservation/restoration process and opportunities to join in the challenge of preserving the various resources associated with this historic site.

John is a Burroughs graduate and has been a Ridgecrest resident since 1982. He and his wife Sharon (a first grade teacher at Gateway school) have five children.

The February meeting will be at 7:30 PM on Tuesday, February 18 at the Maturango Museum. Everyone is welcome to attend. Bring a friend. For more information, call Bruce Wertenberger at 375-2369 or leave a message at 375-8456. Andrew Sound


SOJOURNER AND TRAILBLAZER

For some persons, once you get that urge to visit places afar, the traveling brings a personal satisfaction and delight in relating details of the excursion. For instance, Joseph Reddeford Walker who rode horseback many thousand of miles in the mid 1800's traveled to just see what was beyond the horizon.

One significant difference between him telling about his travels and how we relate our travels today is that he committed most of the details to memory and perhaps a few written notes. (It has been mentioned that he lost whatever travel notes he made while crossing the Kern River). As evidenced in historical articles and texts about him, his acknowledged memory of a terrain once seen and its water sources made him a sought after leader for expeditions both East and West.

It is interesting to note that Walker's fame at determining the best route through an uncharted land has resulted in cartographers naming quite a few landmarks in his honor. Places such as Walker Pass, Walker Lake, Walker River, and even a mine he discovered here in Kern County's Walker Basin. Ever heard of the Joe Walker Mine located about 7 miles southeast of Havilah? It produced about $600,000 of gold and silver in the late 1800's and some 900 ounces in the 1950's.
Lou Pracchia


HAELSIG STORY (CONTINUED)

In the January newsletter it was mentioned that through a fortuitous occurrence relating to the Brown historical article by Julie Stayton, Richard Haelsig was mailing the society a compact disc (CD) containing photos of the town of Brown. Gus Haelsig was Richard's grandfather's brother and owner of the 1913 Haelsig store in Brown. In all, Richard Haelsig sent 31 images including 28 photos and other printed items about the Haelsig family. This is a most welcome acquisition to our archives.
Lou Pracchia

MEMBERSHIP RENEWAL A REMINDER AND AN APOLOGY

Our membership year is on a calendar year basis, therefore, as of January 1, all annual memberships need to be renewed. Memberships are $15 per year per FAMILY unit. If you have not already done so, your check should be sent to Mr. Fred Weals, Treasurer, c/o Historical Society, P. O. Box 2001, Ridgecrest, CA 93556.


Membership fees help pay for the newsletter costs, utilities for our office building, production of our exhibits and various other expenses. Thanks for renewing promptly. Please help fill our mailbox! Let's keep our Treasurer busy!

(APOLOGY: In earlier newsletters, I inadvertently indicated the membership fee was $15 per person. That should have read per family unit. My apologies for the confusion this caused. Ed.)


BUSINESS MEMBERS

We appreciate the support of our business members: the Swap Sheet, Granite Construction Sand and Gravel, Farris at the Heritage, and the Indian Wells Valley Insurance Co. Please patronize these business members whenever possible. We also encourage any of our members who are eligible to become business members, to do so.


OUR WEBSITE

As many of you are aware, we have a website which is updated monthly by our talented Webmistress, Janet Westbrook. Not only does it have information about our Historical Society, but it has our current and past newsletters for the previous several years, plus much other information, such as a historical timeline for the area. Janet has a counter on the website which accumulates the number of hits or times people have accessed the site. In calendar year 2002, we received 5,819 hits for an average of 112 hits per week.

If you haven't done so recently, take a look at what we have on-line for the world to see! The URL is on the back page of this newsletter.

NEW MEMBERS

Recent new members include Harold and Joanne Washmuth, Gwyn Jensen, Anna K. McDuff and the Reverend Brad Karelius.
A hearty welcome to all of you!




HISTORICAL ARTICLE - BROWN

(The following article is from material written by HSUMD member Julie Stayton in the 1960's as a class assignment. The material,which appears as written, is based primarily on interviews and reference material. The material which follows is a continuation of the article which appeared in the January 2003 newsletter and is the conclusion of the four part series. Ed.)

BROWN - 1920 to 1966 (Conclusion)

People came for their mail at all hours even when the Post Office was closed. They would find Mrs. Powers, and she would get their mail for them. Since she was spending a lot of extra time at the Post Office, she decided that she might as well open a store there. She began her store with five to ten dollars of merchandise. People laughed saying, "You call this a store?" Slowly the store grew till it covered half of the room. People came from all around to buy slab bacon that Mrs. Powers received in huge cartons.

Mr. Gordon Standard came to Indian Wells Valley as a small child in 1914 and lived in Brown with his parents for two years in the early 1920's. His father homesteaded earlier, but while in Brown, he worked for Earl Standard. The Harley Standards rented and lived in the nicest home in town. The home even had hardwood floors. While there, Gordon went to his aunt's school.
In 1937, Mr. Standard again moved to Brown with his wife Marie. They lived in a home north of the store building which was burned by vandals after they moved away. Mrs. Marie Standard became Postmaster May 2, 1940, and she also sold cold drinks and fuel. While living and working there in 1943, the Standards had Kenneth Wortley tore (sic) down the old store and the building beside it. Wortley and Standard built the Post Office building of bricks, now the only building in Brown. Mr. Standard also dug a well west of the new building. The water from the well was good, and they used it in their home.

Mr. Standard bought 160 acres of Brown from Mary McKinnan in 1944. Mr. Standard also obtained a job with the Naval Ordnance Test Station in 1944, and Mrs. Standard was relieved one year of the Postmaster job by Mr. Cornelius J. Conley. Again, Mrs. Standard took the job in 1945 which she kept till 1948 when the Standards moved on the Navy Station. On May 15, 1948, the name of the Post Office was changed to the Mount Owen Post Office, and on June 15, Mrs. Eve Sterling became Postmaster. The Sterlings lived in the back of the Post Office and used one front side for postal services. On December 31, 1950, the Post Office was closed, and mail was sent to Mojave. In 1938, the train no longer stopped in Brown. All the mail then came by Western Truck line.

From 1936 to 1940, Richard Lewis lived with Tiny and Earl Standard. He went to school in Mount Owen School, and Mr. Lewis stayed with the Standards till he joined the service in the 1940's,

A California guide book says that in 1939, Brown had a population of 51. The Gordon Standards say there could not have been more than 15. In 1947, there were twelve residents. The Mount Owen School had fifteen pupils that year; however the store was vacant. Brown's setting consisted of the unpainted store and Post Office, the keeper's cottage, a tiny cluster of box car homes of families of the section crew, and the modern little school.

One of the more attractive houses in Brown was a small homestead owned by the Emdes. The Emdes had resided in the house periodically to maintain the homestead claim. After they left, various people lived there including the Harley Standards, and the Ladies Aid of the valley used the building for meetings. Later, however, railroad transients staying in the house used flooring and frame wood as firewood and thereby destroyed the structure. Much of Brown is owned today by Marshall Goulet and Graham Haswell of Ridgecrest. They sold part of their land to Mr. Sam Merrill.

Today, Brown tells few stories of its past. As one walks past debris where people have dug for relics of the past, one wonders what lives were touched by this town. The remnants of the past are so few that it is difficult to believe there was ever a town there. Tracks, the Emde rock foundation, the brick building damaged by vandals, two cement foundations, Tamarisk trees, desert brush, little cellars, and an observation well are all that remains.

(This concludes the main article composed by Mrs. Julie Stayton in the mid-1960's. Noting that the article was composed nearly 40 years ago, any references to how things currently appear, or to land ownership would not necessarily apply today.

There is also supplementary material by Mrs. Stayton consisting of biographical sketches of some of the Brown area residents which may be published in the newsletter in the future.

Our thanks to Mrs. Stayton for permission to publish the foregoing series of four articles on Brown, California. Ed.)