HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF THE UPPER MOJAVE DESERT
P. O. Box 2001, Ridgecrest, CA 93556

Vol. 23 No. 1 January 2008 _________________________________________________________________________


JANUARY MEETING – BICKEL CAMP, ETC., UPDATES, Charlie Hattendorf

The Society’s January meeting will feature Charlie Hattendorf of the Friends of Last Chance Canyon (FLCC). The meeting will take place on Tuesday, January 15 at 7:30 PM at the former USO/County Building at 230 W. Ridgecrest Blvd. in Ridgecrest.

Charlie will give us an update on Bickel Camp and Burro Schmidt’s Tunnel, along with information about Bonanza Gulch and its pumice mines, which will be one of the sites on the Saturday, January 19, tour (see article on next page). Charlie will also discuss plans that the FLCC has for helping limit impact to the Burro Schmidt’s Tunnel area.

Charlie was born and raised in Southern California, and after traveling and living in various places around the country and the world, in 1986 settled in Ridgecrest with his wife Mary to raise four children. He works on base at China Lake and maintains interests in history, prospecting and rock collecting. He is also the President of the Friends of Last Chance Canyon, a group of people interested in sustaining and protecting areas within the El Paso Mountains.

The HSUMD meets on the third Tuesday of the month. All are welcome to attend. For more information on this or future meetings, call the Society at 375-8456 or Society President Bill Nevins at 375-4764. Andrew Sound


PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE

What A Year 2007!

With the great support received from our members and community 2007 has been a very interesting, rewarding, and successful year for the HSUMD. Thank You.

We have refurbished the Historic USO/County Building to the point it is capable of housing our monthly meetings and other events. The refurbishments are not entirely completed, but we recently had the boiler repaired, have improved the main auditorium acoustics/sound system and two rooms had carpeting installed. These improvements were accomplished through the efforts of: Larry Mosby, Don Joe McKernan, Roger McEntee, Wes Staples and Windows, Walls and Floors.

Our schedule for refurbishment completion is January 2009 and will need your continued support to make this possible.

Some of the tasks to be completed are: rework windows, install doors, sand/paint wood floors, paint up-stair rooms, install electrical outlets, install light fixtures, build landscape planters, lay bricks, install stage lights/curtains, build exhibit room displays, install gift shop cabinets,and many more. We will continue to have Monday night work parties, 6-9 PM, and need additional workers. If this time is not convenient, please contact Bill (382-1880) to arrange a different time.

The HSUMD fundraising committee is planning to continue its great work with additional events this year. Please support fundraising events. Our monthly speaker meetings have been well attended and we thank the many speakers and Jim Kenney for coordinating the events. Since the meetings are now held in the HSUMD building we have plenty of room, please come and join us. If you know of a speaker who would be interested in participating please contact Jim. If you are interested in being on the HSUMD board please contact any of the board members.

Thanks again for your support. 2008 will be a great year for the HSUMD.
Bill Nevins


S
ATURDAY TOUR, Jan. 19, BICKEL CAMP, BONANZA GULCH, BURRO SCHMIDT’S TUNNEL

Tour Saturday, Jan 19. We will tour the Bonanza Gulch, Bickel Camp, and Burro Schmidt's Tunnel in the El Paso Mountains, led by Charlie Hattendorf, our January speaker. We will leave the USO building parking lot at 9:00 a.m. The roads in the El Paso are rutted and sandy, so vehicles should have ground clearance and sturdy tires. Bring layered clothing, hiking shoes and such, cameras, lunch and water. The tour should be finished by the middle of the afternoon. If you have any questions, please call Jim Kenney, 760-371-2458. Jim Kenney


CHILI COOK OFF AND DINNER, FEB. 2

The Historical Society will salute 2008 with its own “chili cookoff” and chili dinner fundraiser on Saturday, February 2nd, at 5:30 p.m. at the the historical USO Building, 230 W. Ridgecrest Blvd. It will include five cooks competing for the best chili and showmanship.

Tickets at $10.00 each are on sale at the Maturango Museum, Chamber of Commerce, Red Rock Books and from fundraising committee members. Kathy Armstrong


DINNER, DANCE RESCHEDULED FOR FEBRUARY 9

The dinner and dance that was postponed last November has been rescheduled for Saturday, February 9th. Dinner will start at 6:00 pm followed by the "Cross Currents" band playing until 9:00. Please purchase your tickets at either the Red Rock Book store or Maturango Museum. Tickets are $10.00. If you have already purchased a ticket and this date is not convenient please call Bill for a refund. It would help us plan the event if you can purchase your ticket before February 5th. Only 100 tickets will be sold. Please come and enjoy a great dinner and music.
Bill Nevins
FUNDRAISING NEWS

We are very proud of the restoration accomplished in saving this historic landmark in Olde Towne, Ridgecrest.

Thanks to this community’s support, our generous donors, our volunteers and hardworking project chairpersons, we achieved the majority of established goals. And, hopefully, you’ve observed, first hand, its greatness!

Our dedicated fundraisers have planned, or are planning, a number of events necessary to complete the objectives for this year and do our final move-in.

Watch for the following fund raising activities: auction dinner, wine tasting, spaghetti dinner, talent show, yard sale and spook house.

Call us if you have fund raising suggestions. Chairperson Kathy Armstrong, 375-2643. Kathy Armstrong

Membership dues for the new year are now due and payable. See form on page 5.)


OUR 2007 CHRISTMAS PARTY

Our historical USO Building was never so festive as during our Christmas holiday! Hopefully, you noticed the large wreath on the door and and red, white and blue lights on the front of the building.

Inside, our 12 foot tumbleweed snowman received as much attention as our 9 foot tree decorated with “old” Christmas ornaments. Our great contributors were: Jenny Miller with icicles, garland and topper and ornaments which she purchased at the Balsam St. Sprouse-Reitz store in 1959. Helen McCall gave us many ornaments from the 1970’s. Joy Young gave her mother’s 1960’s collection from Pasadena. Marci Nevins parted with collectables of unknown age. Gwyn Jensen added many 1940 handcrafted ones to our tree. Bev Carlton has sent us a unique set of angels which needs its own special tree.
If you have old ornaments to donate, we’re tagging each with its age and donor and we’ll display them on our tree/trees each Christmas season! Kathy Armstrong


BORAX MINE TOUR

I'm just starting to get a schedule together for the Spring Borax Mine Tour. There is the potential for a Sunday afternoon tour, which would include being on site to watch the mine blast out the ore from the pit. This is not yet confirmed but I thinking of late March/early April. Comments would be appreciated. Call Jim Kenney at (760) 371-2458. Jim Kenney


WILLS AND TRUSTS

Please remember the Historical Society in your wills, trusts and other gift giving. We are a 501 (c) 3 organization.


OUR WEBSITE

Our website, which has been in place since August 9, 1996, continues to have many “hits.” Hosted by our Webmistress, Janet Westbrook, it is averaging 17 hits per day, or over 500 per month. We would appreciate any comments on its appearance and content and also, any suggestions to improve it. Please e-mail your comments to hsumd@ridgenet.net Thanks


HISTORICAL ARTICLE

(Following is an article prepared by our great local historian member, John Di Pol, drawn from his personal library. Ed).


BROWN - A TOWN AND A SCHOOL


With the start of construction of the Los Angeles Aqueduct in 1908, a railroad soon followed. The main lines of the Santa Fe and Southern Pacific had reached Mojave in 1876, but the path north to the Owens River were the routes (should I say “ruts” ) of the freighters and stage lines. The city of Los Angeles had a real problem: how to move a massive amount (some say a quarter of a million tons) of construction material and hundreds (thousands eventually) of workers. The solution: the SP built a standard gauge line north, ducked Red Rock Canyon by swinging around the east end of the El Pasos, then looping down into the Indian Wells Valley and points due north to Little Lake and Owens Lake to meet the narrow gauge Carson & Colorado RR at Lone Pine (Owenyo).

Major construction camps were established along the RR line. The camp at Siding 18, later to be called “Brown”, after the name of a hotel built there by George Brown, was located nine miles north of the present-day Inyokern. There tent barracks and messing facilities for hundreds of aqueduct workers, as well as medical facilities, large warehouses, large corrals for hundreds of mules and horses, and more, were built. With the completion of the rail line in 1910, settlers had begun to arrive into the Indian Wells Valley. Prospectors were also coming through Brown to reach the mining “excitements” in the Panamint and Argus mountains. In addition to the hotel, Brown soon had a post office, large general store and a larger saloon. And, more importantly, was the need for schools.

The settlers took the initiative under the leadership of Henry F. W. Schuette (“Hank” Schuette’s father) and Will Callaway to form the first school district at Leliter (Siding 17) in 1911, followed by the Orchard, Los Flores and Magnolia (Inyokern) school districts. “Hank” Schuette compiled a history of the schools in the Indian Wells Valley, so that story won’t be repeated here. Suffice to say that circa 1920 the four schools (districts) were consolidated in Inyokern and a new school created in Brown with a new teacher, Ethel Mary Standard.

Ethel Mary Standard known to her students and their parents as ‘Mrs. Standard,” but to history she was “Tiny”. Born Ethel Mary Hibbard, she graduated from Pomona (CA) high school in 1907, enrolled in Mills College near San Francisco in 1910, graduating with a Bachelor of Science degree in 1915. After graduation she taught in Pomona Junior High School for 2 1/2 years. She met and married Earl Standard in 1918, lived in San Bernardino, then up to the Indian Wells Valley for her husband’s health in 1920 and the Brown School.

She taught for 31 years - all grades up through the Eighth - in a one room school initially. The enrollments were small: seven students, five students, 11 students etc., in different grades year after year. Her teaching methods were very different and novel from the normal practices then and now. One might say unorthodox, but they were very effective. So much so, that her reputation soon grew beyond our desert boundaries. School authorities came from the county seat, Bakersfield, across the Sierras to study her methods. She was very innovative in having her students highly interactive with the instruction, rather than solely being passive listeners. A specific subject would be studied the entire day for several days rather than a bit of several subjects each day and so on.

In an unpublished manuscript, Mrs. Litha Crowell Mattis of Ridgecrest describes her four years in grades Five through Eight at Brown School starting in 1942. A new school building had just been completed. Still only one classroom, the others being a kitchen, library/dining room and multipurpose. Why a kitchen? The students formed teams to cook their own lunches. (Tiny furnished the food). School started in the fall of 1942 with enrollment of 13, which had declined to five by Christmastime. The largest enrollment that Tiny handled was 27 (spread up to Eighth Grade) in 1944 when the China Lake naval base was under construction. Mrs. Mattis’ examples of Tiny’s teaching methods make







most interesting reading and are highly complimentary.

Tiny continued on until 1951. By this time she was teaching descendants of her early students. Before she retired, however, she accomplished a goal that she long sought. From the beginning she called her school the “Mount Owen School”. She also petitioned the Postal Service for many years to change the name of the post office from ‘Brown” to “Mount Owen”. And Mount Owen it became on May 15, 1948.

Tiny and her husband retired to their home place in Grapevine Canyon. There are no physical features still standing at the Brown townsite. One can walk around and see some evidence of foundations and some scraps. But if you stand very still and quiet you may faintly hear a school bell ringing.

Ref: DESERT COUNTRY, Bob Powers, 2002; Unpublished manuscript, Litha Crowell Mattis, 2007;
KERNS DESERT, Erma Peirson, 1956; MOJAVE DESERT RAMBLINGS, Sewell “Pop” Lofinck 1966.

DUES

Dues are the calendar year. Twenty dollars for singles and families, thirty dollars for business members. We are behind in reminding you about the dues because we did not have a newsletter for December 2007.

Renewal of membership may be made by sending in the form on page 5 along with your check to Andrew Sound, Treasurer, P. O. Box 2001, Ridgecrest, CA 93556.

Dues cover the cost of operating the Historical Society, publishing and postage for the newsletter, rent (nominal for our soon to be released facility on Station St.), utilities and membership in several history-related state organizations.