Gerle Creek History</h1><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p> <a href="http://alerttahoe.seismo.unr.edu/firecams.html">Big Hill and Bunker Hill Live Web Fire Cameras <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>These historical pages are a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> continuing historical work on the place names, people, locations, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> maps, mountains, lakes, streams, resorts, companies, Dams, mills, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ranches, roads, trails etc. in the larger area surrounding Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek in Eldorado National Forest on the Georgetown Divide in El <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dorado County, California. Follow this page as I add to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> historical information collected over the years from my library of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> maps, pictures, interviews, exploration, documents and research. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Work in progress. Please do not hesitate to contact me with <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> information to share or for just questions about Gerle Creek and the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> surrounding areas of Eldorado National Forest and El Dorado County, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California........ <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="mailto:mgbrattland@gerlecreek.com">MG Brattland</a> Author <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> deer hunting<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="mgbmckinstry91.jpg">McKinstry Peak, Fall 1991 </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.mapquest.com/maps/map.adp?searchtype=address&formtype=latlong&latlongtype=degrees&latdeg=38&latmin=59&latsec=16&longdeg=-120&longmin=23&longsec=03"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gerle Creek Area</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">Last updated on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <!--webbot bot="Timestamp" s-format="%m/%d/%Y" s-type="EDITED" --></font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><span class="MsoNormal"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>If you want to contact the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> author of this web page, you can do so by e-mail to Michael G. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Brattland at <a href="mailto:mgbrattland@gerlecreek.com"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> mgbrattland@gerlecreek.com</a> ......I live in El <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Cajon, California in the San Diego suburbs......my complete address <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> information is elsewhere on one of my other the web sites, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.ford6v.com">www.ford6v.com</a> under the purchase page for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the technical bulletin I wrote on Ford multiple <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> carburetion............</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="historypages/georgetowndividemaps.htm">Maps of the Georgetown Divide....from 1865 to the present <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> day...........</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://shinglespringsrancheria.com/history/history-home.html"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Native American History of the Georgetown Divide Area including <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gerle Creek and the surrounding areas during the summers</a></font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Quick Index <a href="#A">A</a> <a href="#B">B <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> <a href="#C">C </a> <a href="#D">D </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="#E">E </a> <a href="#F">F </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="#G">G </a> <a href="#H">H </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="#I">I </a> <a href="#J">J</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> K <a href="#L">L </a> <a href="#M">M</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> N <a href="#O">O</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="#P">P</a> Q <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="#R">R </a> <a href="#S">S </a> T <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> U <a href="#V">V </a> <a href="#W">W<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> X Y Z <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="#Bibliography">Bibliography</a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i><b><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerlecreek.jpg" name="A"><span class="style4">AE Brown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Cabin</span>-</a>1875s,Long Meadow and Butler Meadow</font></b></i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><i><b><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB">A.E. Brown was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in fact Albert E. Brown, born April 21, 1859</font></b></i><b><i><font face="Californian FB">, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Cool, El Dorado County. His father was</font></i></b><font face="Californian FB"><i><b> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Provost D. Brown, early El Dorado County pioneer and cattle rancher <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of Cool and Pilot Hill. (Sioli, 1883)He built a cabin in Long Meadow <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> as well as just West of the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="historypages/pacificdist1950map.jpg">Old Ditch Tender's road, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>halfway between<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="airportflats1895.jpg">Airport Flats/GCSHT and the California Water Company <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>built <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> diversion dam still visible at the head of the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerlecreekditch.jpg">Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek Ditch </a>at the Northern end of Gerle Lake, where the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> natural creek now enters the Northern end of the lake, which was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> built 1873/1874 to divert water to <a href="http://">Hanna's Camp<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>for further diversion via ditches and creeks to Georgetown. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="aebrowns1895.jpg">AE Brown<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> was another of the many valley ranchers and farmers who claimed <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> meadow land up in the Sierras for use by their livestock in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Summer months. His ranch building on the road to<a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/gerlecreekmap1950.jpg"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a><a href="gerlecreekmap1950.jpg">Gerle Creek Ditch Diversion Dam <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>is plainly located on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> original Geological Survey Map. The pictures below are of AE Brown's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> cabin still standing on the West end of Long Meadow.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">Provost D. Brown, one of eight <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> children of Abraham J. and Mary (Provost) Brown of Brownsville, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Middlesex County, New Jersey. He was born September 1st, 1824. His <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> early life was spent as a student and working on his families farm <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in New Jersey. With the news of gold discovered on the American <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> River in Coloma, he needed a practical means to reach the gold <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> fields, so invested his savings in a company of 38 persons who <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> purchased a sailing ship. The company purchased rations and then <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sailed the ship with the company members aboard to San Francisco via <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Southern tip of South American, arriving in June, 1849. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> They immediately sailed their ship up the Sacramento River to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Sacramento City, where they sold off all the rations they brought <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> including the ship to the highest bidder, keeping six month's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> rations for themselves. Brown intended to get into the merchant <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> business, but illness changed his plans, leading to opening a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> restaurant known as the Knickerbocker. Like so many businesses <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and early gold rush towns, it was lost to one of Sacramento's early <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> floods and the second attempt at a eating establishment was also <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> lost to a fire. Not to be deterred, he got into the freight hauling <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> business from Sacramento to the mines at Long Bar on the Yuba River. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Once he had saved the requisite funds, he again purchased a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> restaurant and a interest in two mining claims. After major efforts <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> expended digging ditches to support the mining work on his claims, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the floods of `1852 removed their hard earned work including the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> many diversion dams and ditches, he and others had built. Still <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> undeterred, he continued his mining efforts, eventually becoming <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> quite successful, taking away $17,000, quite a sum of money for the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> mid 19th Century. As friends were in a habit of doing during this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> time, he loaned an associate money which was used to purchase a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ranch called the Tennessee Ranch in El Dorado County. In the end, he <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> assumed responsibility for this ranch to save his investment, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> renaming it the Knickerbocker Ranch, which remains today in the area <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> South of Cool. After more work and money invested in the ranch, he <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> lost it and returned to the mining support business, hauling <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> materials to the mines. He eventually began to farm and acquired 320 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> acres of property between Cool and Pilot Hill which he obtained land <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> patents from the General Land Office in 1881.(Sioli, 1883)</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">Provost D. Brown married in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1856, having two sons, Charles C. born June 31, 1857 and Albert E. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> born April 21, 1859. His first wife died. He remarried a second time <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> only to have his second wife die as well. He married his third wife, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Nellie S. Bancroft on December 7, 1878, who was from Clipper Gap. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> This union resulted in two more children born October 2, 1879, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Phillip D. and Effie N., born February 19, 1882. (Sioli, 1883)</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">Provost Brown and his sons were <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> successful farmers, who raised cattle as well as grain and fruit. (Sioli, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1883)</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">The Georgetown Gazette of April <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 16, 1880 reported "Mr. Brown (of Pilot Hill) is one of our most <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> enterprising farmers and fruit growers, being located in a district <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> composed of as fine agricultural land as exists in the foothill <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> belt. Mr. Brown has planted 1500 choice fruit trees on his <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> farm this season-embracing prunes, plums, peaches, apples, pears, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> walnuts, Japanese persimmons, etc. He also has a vineyard of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 10,000 bearing grape vines, besides a few hundred bearing fruit <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> trees. Mr. Brown came to this State thirty years ago, and is <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> now in the vigor of manhood. He has unbounded faith in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> foothills becoming the active scene of the greatest fruit and wine <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> producing region in the world, and that too in the near future."<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </font></i></b><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>(Gernes; Deibert, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1999) </i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">The Georgetown Gazette, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> February 5, 1891 reported that Provost's sons, Chas. and Albert <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Brown owned the PD Brown Ranch in Pilot Hill and that they were <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> continuing to plant fruit trees, including 2000 new ones which were <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> mostly of the pear variety. </font></i></b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i>the paper reported on February 26, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1891 that A.E. Brown had begun spraying the trees in his orchards to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> protect them from inspects. This type of activity was very new.(Gernes; <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Deibert, 1999) </i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="aebrownscabin1.jpg"><span class="style4">AE <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Brown's Cabin1, </span></a><span class="style4"> </span> <a href="aebrownscabin2.jpg"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="style4">AE <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Brown's Cabin2,</span></a><span class="style4"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="aebrownscabin3.jpg"><span class="style4">AE <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Brown's Cabin3</span></a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="mapofaebrownscabins.JPG" width="650" height="437" /> </font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.cagenweb.com/eldorado/tales/provost_david_brown_perseve.html"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> For additional reading on PD Brown and family by Joanne Burkett </a> </font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <b><i><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><br /><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <br /><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="style4">Airport </span> </font></i></b><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><span class="style4">Camp or Camp Gerle, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gerle Creek Rest Camp, Airport Flats US Army Air Corps Rest Camp <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> (R&R)-Gerle Creek</span>, now Airport Flats US Forest Service Campground, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Eldorado National Forest, El Dorado County, Ca</font></b></i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.org/cabins/Chronology%201938-1988%20Holmes.pdf"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> See Also John Holmes Chronology of Gerle Creek Summer Home Tract and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Airport Flats-1938-1988</a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><i><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><b>Here is a 1931 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> article from the "MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT" which gives the basis for the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "Rest Camp" built by the US Army Air Corps at Gerle Creek in 1931 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> which hereafter gained the name "Airport Flats" in later years <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> locally, but was referred to as "Camp Gerle" by the US Army in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> historical records of <a href="http://www.20fwa.org/history.htm"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 20th Fighter Wing Association </a> as shared by<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="mailto:sevignya@cvc.net">Arthur Sevigny, the association <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> historian</a>. This first article was contributed by <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Monte Hendericks, a volunteer historical researcher with the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Eldorado National Forest, whose primary interest is military <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and civilian plane crash sites on the Eldorado National Forest. Have <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> a look at this link for more information on<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.aviationarchaeology.com/B17Chome.htm">aircraft <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> mishap sites on Eldorado National Forest. </a> Many thanks to Monte <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> for sharing this essential record. </b></font></i></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="R&R%20Camp%20at%20Gerle2a.jpg" width="174" height="494" /></b></i></font><img border="0" src="airportcamp1931b.jpg" width="206" height="495" /><img border="0" src="airportcamp1931c.jpg" width="199" height="502" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">The second clipping </font></i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </b><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>is a Sacramento Union article <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> from June 12, 1931, reporting on the work and plans for the "Army <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Camp" at Gerle Creek, followed by a third clipping from the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT" of July 31, 1931 on the Airport Camp at Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek..........Camp Gerle in US Army parlance. </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">According to Arthur Sevigny of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the 20th Fighter Wing Association, the historical records show that <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the 77th fighter Squadron (part of the 20th Pursuit Group at Mather <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Field and possibly the rest of the 20th, including the 55th Pursuit <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Squadron were at Camp Gerle , El Dorado, California from August 3 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1932 till August 25th, 1932 . This would have been during the second <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> summer of the existence of the Camp Gerle built at Airport Flats on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gerle Creek by the US Army. As indicated in the articles below,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="historypages/tinker.htm">Major <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Clarence L.Tinker</a><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="TinkerMAJGCCNov30toOct32.jpg" width="196" height="283" /> was at the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> time, the commander of the 20th Pursuit Group at Mather Field, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Sacramento, California. Major General Tinker was lost during the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Battle of Midway Island while on a bombing mission on Wake Island. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Tinker Air Force Base, Oklahoma would later be named for Major <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> General Tinker. </font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">The following two pictures of a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> cottage <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="CampGerleMajortinkerhouseaug1932b.jpg" width="507" height="325" /> </font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">along <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> with two tent platforms </font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB"> <img border="0" src="CampGerleaug1932b.jpg" width="515" height="315" /></font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">at Camp Gerle were <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> from the collection of photos from the late Mrs. Tinker, which were <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> shared with Dr. James L Crowder, author of a book on the Major <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> General Tinker's life during an oral history interview in August <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1983. </font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">During this period, the 20th <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Pursuit Group at Mather Field flew</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB"> <img border="0" src="p12b55thpursuitsquadron1931matherfield1a.jpg" width="450" height="350" /></font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><i><strong><font face="Californian FB">P12B, pictured above. This <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> photo of a un-identified pilot and his aircraft from the 55th <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Pursuit Squadron was taken in 1931 at Mather Field and kindly <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> provided by the </font></strong><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.20fwa.org/history.htm">20th Fighter Wing <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Association </a>. </b></font></i></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><i><font face="Californian FB"><b>The following document is the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 55th Pursuit Squadron official history for the period of 1930 till <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1932, On page 2 of the history, the command devoted a paragraph to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the background on the Gerle Creek Rest Camp and the squadron's usage <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of it. This document was provided by the 20th Fighter Wing <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Association historian,</b></font></i></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><img border="0" src="55thhist19311932page1.jpg" width="450" height="679" /><img border="0" src="55thhist19311932page2.jpg" width="450" height="647" /><img border="0" src="55thhist19311932page3.jpg" width="450" height="692" /><img border="0" src="55thhist19311932page4.jpg" width="450" height="677" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>According to Les Clementsen of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Stone Cellar (Clementsen,'04), by the mid 1930s, the Airport Camp or <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Camp Gerle at Gerle Creek was a<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.cccalumni.org/history1.html">Civilian <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Conservation Corps (CCC) </a> Side Camp with a local man named Joe <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Flynn in charge of it. In his regular Mountain Democrat <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Column, Three Amigos from September 4, 1998, Joe Flynn indicates in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the summer of 1940 he was in charge of the Airport CCC Side Camp <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> with 30 to 40 men working for him. The following paragraph is quoted <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> fromJoe Flynn's own words from his 2004 oral history describing <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> some of the details of his work at Airport Camp/Gerle Creek <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Side/Spike Camp for the CCC during the summer of 1940:</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="auto-style9" style="width: 885px"><em>"In 1939 I was at <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Snowline(CCC Camp). In 1940 I ran the spike camp of 40 men at Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek, we called it the airport camp, and built the road from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Schlein Ranger Station into Loon Lake. We didn't finish it. Gerle Creek CCC Camp was interesting <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> because I had to be the foreman during the day and be the camp <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> manager at night. I had another foreman, Ray Ellis, who had the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 10-man fire crew. I had to do the rationing. I had to feed those <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> boys on 43 cents a day. The cook and I made out the menu. The cook <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> was a 16-year-old boy from Mississippi. He was a good cook. He had <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> hot biscuits every morning and nice yeast rolls every night. They <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> would just melt in your mouth. He was pretty good on desserts. Most <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of my crew were Cajuns from south of New Orleans down the river. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> They had never seen a rock in their life and we were drilling in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> good hard granite. When I first went up to Gerle Creek, Ed Smith, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the old Supervisor who was a Army mess sergeant in WWI said, "You're <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> not ever going to let those boys go hungry. The Army sometimes <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> doesn't always get food there in time and they give you pretty <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> skimpy rations." So we went down to the fire warehouse in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Placerville and loaded a truck up with canned goods. Up by Schlein Ranger Station, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> which was two to three miles from the camp, they had an old powder <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> house so I put this canned food and stuff in the powder house, along <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> with the powder that was used for the road building. Whenever times <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> got tough, 1'd sneak up there and get some canned food to supplement <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Army diet."</em></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Joe Flynn was a local El Dorado County <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> resident who went off to the Army Air Corps to fly during <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> WWII, returning after the war to study at Oregon State and returning <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to work for the Forest Service eventually becoming the Forest <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Supervisor of Eldorado National Forest. After retiring from the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Forest Service he would continue in active public life eventually <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> being elected as a El Dorado County Supervisor. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="flynn_joe.pdf">For more detailed history about Joe Flynn, see the Joe Flynn USFS <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Retires Reunion Living History Project Feb 9 2001, Nordstrom <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Whited Interviewer oral history done through UCB. </a> Below is <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> a May 7, 1940 article from the Nevada State Journal, Reno, Nevada <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> reporting on the planned June 1940 re-opening of the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://forestarmy.blogspot.com/2007/12/ccc-side-camps.html"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> CCC Side Camp </a>at Airport on Gerle Creek at what is now known as <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Airport Flats.<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://members.aol.com/famjustin/cccside.html">A CCC Side <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Camp.</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="ccccampgerle1a.jpg" width="184" height="495" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Prior to 1931, the Airport <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Flats area was a naturally open area in the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="2[1].jpg">trees at a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> natural fording point of Gerle Creek </a>(picture of the McDowall <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Family Ford pickup sitting in front of the Ford on Airport Flats, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1962) on the Georgetown/Wentworth Springs road to Wentworth Springs. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> From 1873, it was the point where the ditch tender's road branched <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> off to the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerleckdivdam.jpg">diversion dam</a> (<a href="gerleckdivdam2.jpg"> Pic#2,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerleckdivdam3.jpg">Pic#3)</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> at the head of the <a href="gerleckdivdamditch.jpg">Gerle Creek Ditch <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>(<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/gerleckdivdamditch.jpg"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1873 Map</a> )on Gerle Creek. Have a look at this<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/gerledivdam1936.jpg">d</a><a href="gerledivdam1936.jpg">ual <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> picture kindly volunteered by Lint Brown </a>using the 2001 photo of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Diversion Dam taken by myself alongside a very nice 1936 picture <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> taken by friends of Linton A. Brown Senior showing Lint Brown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Senior and a friend at the same dam 64 years earlier.<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="laketahoemap1915.jpg">In <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1927,</a> a<a href="gerlecreekbridge.jpg"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> log bridge</a> </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>[This excellent picture was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> taken in 1959 by John Holmes, showing the collapsed Gerle Creek log <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> bridge at Airport Flats. Those two boys swimming in Gerle Creek are <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Bill and Charlie Holmes. Of further significance is the flow of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> water in this picture. The creek flowed much higher prior to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> removal of the Old Loon Lake Dam in late 1962 and is evident by the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> fact that both of the Holmes boys are swimming in deep water as <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> opposed to the flow today which is shallow at best. Many thanks to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> John Holmes for sharing this very historic picture of this special <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> log bridge long ago gone......] </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>was built within about 20 feet <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of the present modern single lane concrete bridges at Gerle Creek,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerlecreekmap1950.jpg">Airport Flats.</a> The first lane of the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="3[1].jpg">concrete bridge <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> was built in 1963 </a> (Picture taken in 1962-63 by McDowall <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Family) and followed with the second lane in 1969. This<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerlecklogbridge.jpg">log <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> bridge with concrete foundations </a>served well from 1927(Supernowicz, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1983) till the severe Winter of 1951/1952 when<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerlecreekbridge.jpg">the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> log bridge was lost </a>in the Spring runoff. There after till the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> concrete bridge was built in '63, cross creek traffic returned to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the <a href="gerleckford.jpg">natural ford South of both bridges</a> about 100 feet. Here is a 1<a href="2[1].jpg">962 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> picture of the Airport Flat access to the ford across Gerle Creek<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>(McDowal Family Photo)<a href="eldoradonfmap1916.jpg">The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> primary reasons for this cross creek traffic of Gerle Creek</a> was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the road to Wentworth Springs went this way; access to the two <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> barracks buildings built adjacent to the swimming hole off the flats <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> on the Southside in the early 1930's by the US Army Air Corps; <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> access to the road from the flats to the Gerle Creek Ditch and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Diversion Dam, a mile down Gerle Creek from the flats, as well as <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> accessing<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="aebrowns1895.jpg">AE <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Browns Ranch</a>( early maps clearly list this name as "AE Brown" <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> while some other sources suggest that his name was "AC Brown") <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> halfway down the ditch keepers road off the flats as well as the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> land used by Alex Forni after 1885.. This ditch and diversion <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> dam were constructed during the summer seasons of 1873/74 and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> finished late in 1874 for the California Water Company diversion of<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="loon070353.jpg">Loon Lake<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>water to Georgetown. The barracks buildings were <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> used both by the US Army Air Corps till the end of World War <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> II, when the custody of the two barracks buildings, the large water <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> tank and a large garage building in the center of the flats were <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> transferred to the Forest Service. </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Here are two historic pictures <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of two of the several buildings originally built by the Army in 1931 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> on Airport Flats and called by the US Army, "Camp Gerle." The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> first picture is of one of the barracks buildings, which in later <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> years was all that really remained at Airport Flats and was called <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the "Guard Cabin" or Airport Flats Ranger Station by the Forest <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Service. This picture was taken by W.Maule of the US Forest Service <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in 1959 as a means of documenting existing structures on the forest. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> This building was not torn down until the late 1960s. The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Forest Service survey crew who surveyed the new road up in our area, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> lived in this barracks during the Summers of the 1967 and 1968. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> During the Summer of 1968, due to the general disrepair of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> structure, the Forest Service brought in a trailer and parked it <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> next to the barracks, which was used by the crews. Dave Orchard <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> worked on this survey crew in both 1967 and 1968 while Jim Barnard, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> son of the Barnard family who had built a cabin on Lot 36 at GCSHT, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> worked on the same survey crew with Dave Orchard during the Summer <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of 1968, staying down on the Flats.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="airportflatsbarracks1959.jpg" width="516" height="354" /></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">I</font></i></b><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>f <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> you look close at the picture on the lower left, just sticking up <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> above the Forest Service pickup truck bed, one can see what appears <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to be part of the pipe which comes out of the water tank which was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> over to the left and not in the picture. An additional barracks <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> about the same size was also located between this building and the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> creek, very close to the 'swimming hole" which has been a favorite <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> spot of everyone who has ever used the Airport Flats area from day <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> one. This barracks was already torn down in 1958, but remnants <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of it could be seen walking the short trail from the Water Tank down <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to the swimming hole.<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="4[1].jpg">Another picture <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of the same building</a> on the flats from a little different angle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> taken in 1962 by the McDowall Family</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p style="width: 622px; height: 620px"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" height="622" src="../images/airportcampbuildingsummer1968.jpg" width="624" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>This is a Summer of 1968 photo showing David Orchard of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Carmichael, Ca, at the time, a current Stanford University student <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> who worked the Summer of 68 and after as the head of a Forest <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Service survey crew based at Airport Camp during the Summer. He and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> his crew lived in the original Airport Camp building on Airport <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Flats. They were survying the new road all the way down into <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Rubicon River Canyon to the dam at Hell Hole. A member of the survey <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> crew took this picture of Dave with his camera.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>The third photo, also taken by <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> by W. Maule of the Forest Service in 1959, shows the "Old <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Barn" as it was referred to by the Forest Service as well as one <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> small out building. This Old Barn was located right next to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the current large fire pit in the Motorhome camp site <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> immediately on the left on entry into the Forest Service campground <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> at Airport Flats. Whether this building was one of the original <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> constructed by the Army in 1931 or was later constructed, one cannot <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> be certain, other than looking at the condition, it would appear to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> be of older age and reflecting nearly 30 years of age and use by the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> time this picture was taken. The Forest Service tore down this barn <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> during 1961.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="airportflatsbarn1959.jpg" width="527" height="390" /></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Both of these photos were made <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> available from the US Forest Service archives at Pacific House <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ranger Station by Krista Deal, Pacific District Archaeologist. Many <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> thanks to Krista for this important contribution to the local <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> history of our area.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>During the Fall of 2003 the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Forest Service was doing a selective logging and a general <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> cleanout of underbrush and small trees in the Gerle Creek area to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> make the area more fire safe. In the logged area almost directly <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> across from the old lower road along the Southwest side of Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek which takes off from the Wentworth Springs road about 300 feet <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Southwest before the road goes across Gerle Creek at Airport Flats, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> about 75 feet into the forest, the Forest Service has flagged a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> general area with red ribbon about 600 square feet. Within this area <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> are two old original concrete and granite stone foundation corners, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> plus remnants from the beginnings of a building, including an old <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> metal bucket. I have taken the following photos of these foundations <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and the site. </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="restcampfoundation1003a.jpg">Gerle Creek Foundation1a, </a> <a href="restcampfoundation1003b.jpg">Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek Foundations1b, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="restcampfoundation1003c.jpg">Gerle Creek Foundations1c, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="restcampfoundation1003d.jpg">Gerle Creek Foundations 1d,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="restcampfoundation1003e.jpg">Gerle Creek Foundations 1e, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="restcampfoundation1003f.jpg">Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek Foundations 1f, </a> <a href="restcampfoundation1003g.jpg">Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek Foundations 1g</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>After over 40 plus years, I <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> have never ever heard anyone discuss these old foundations nor have <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> I ever known about their existence. History wise at different <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> times, I have heard that the summer home tract at Gerle Creek was in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> fact laid out in this area originally, but was eventually moved to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> its present location. I have also long heard over the years that the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> tract was originally laid out along the lower road along the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Southwest side of Gerle Creek and was eventually moved to its <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> present location due to the fact there was no interest in the tract <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> at that time and for the fact that the mosquitoes were so much worse <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> down along the creek. Is entirely possible that both of these old <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> rumors were true and the layout of the tract included the area where <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the foundations are presently and along the road on the Southwest <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> side of the creek.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>My final thought about this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> foundation would be that it could very well be apart of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Commanding Officer's cabin for Major Tinker which was to be built as <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> part of the "Rest Camp" at Airport Flats as laid out in the above <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> article, which was referred to by the US Army as Camp Gerle. Looking <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> over the foundation remnants thoroughly, I found no markings or <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> impressions. Knowing that people commonly put names or dates in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> initial parts of buildings etc., I found nothing along this line. I <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> would hope that the Forest Service has plans to more thoroughly <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> investigate this site.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>After World War II, the Forest <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Service barracks buildings at Airport Flats served a variety <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of purposes including housing fire fighting crews, El Dorado County <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> prisoners during the summer months of 1951 or 1952 who were brought <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in and housed here while out cutting certain kinds of plants and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> vegetation. This did not work out and was only tried one Summer <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> season. Later the Forest Service had custody, during the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> evenings, they would sometimes show movies outdoors using a large <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> screen setup on the open area of the flats with rows of benches for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> people to sit. Carolyn Beam, owner of<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="ditchcamp1941a.jpg">South <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Fork Mill </a> (many thanks to Lint Brown for sharing his fathers <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> photo) remembers this well as a child during the very early 50s at <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> South Fork Mill when she and others were invited to attend these <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> evening movies at Airport Flats. Later in the mid 60s, it housed the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Forest Service survey crews who surveyed the new paved road from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Highway 50 to Loon Lake and Lawyers Cow Camp(Gurleys or Gerles). Of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the two large barracks buildings, the one closest to the Gerle Creek <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> swimming hole was gone by the late 1950s, leaving one large barracks <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> building on the edge of the open flats area, the large water tank <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> immediately next to it and a large tall garage building for storing <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> equipment out in the center of the flats in what is now the motor <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> home parking area of the Airport Flats Forest Service Campground. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> These were all gradually torn down by the early '70s.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">By </font></i></b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b>1937, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="francisbridge2.jpg">El <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dorado County</a> constructed a<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="francisbridge.jpg">new <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> concrete bridge to cross Rocky Basin Creek </a>right on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Southeastern edge of Francis Cow Camp and with it a short mile of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> new road which eliminated the existing road section on the Western <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> side of Gerle Creek between Airport Flats and Francis Cow Camp and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the need to ford Gerle Creek at Francis Cow Camp. </b></i></font><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i><font face="Californian FB">So with the popularity of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> automobile changes in the road were necessary that were not as big <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> an issue when driving a wagon with a team of horses, which led the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> politicians and many users of the Wentworth Springs road to find a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> better way. This better way was to abandon the crossing at Airport <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Flats and Francis and build the road which today goes along the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Eastern side of Gerle Creek and is the only one most people ever <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> knew existed. It did require crossing at Rocky Basin <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek which must have been an easier under taking for the automobile <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> than those two fords as the County only finally built the current <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> concrete bridge over Rocky Basin in 1937......The old original <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> section of the Wentworth Springs Road between Airport Flats and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Francis Cow Camp continues to be used by the GCSHT folks to access <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> their hydraulic ram pumps on the West side of Gerle Creek. </font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">n the Georgetown Gazette as <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> reported in the Mountain Democrat of September 5, 1914, "El <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dorado County Supervisor Morgan had the boulders in the second <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> crossing of Gerle Creek(Jacobsens) blasted out to make the creek <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> passable for autos or light teams going to Wentworth Springs. Some <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> improvements have been made on the road in the vicinity." In 1914, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the first crossing of Gerle Creek would be at Airport Flats, the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> second at Francis Cow Camp and the Third Crossing at Jacobsens, none <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of which had bridges then.</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">As early as 1914, the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> politicians were at work to resolve this issue which plagued all <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> travelers to Wentworth Springs before the creeks returned to their <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> normal Summer flow.</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">“Supervisor P. F. Morgan spent <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> several days of last week at Gerle Creek laying out a new piece of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> road so as to eliminate the dangerous crossings of the creek at <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Francis Ranch. When the piece of road is complete, it will <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> enable automobiles to go to Lake Tahoe via Georgetown, Wentworth and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Rubican Springs without difficulty. At this season of the year the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> water is high in Gerle creek and automobiles are unable to ford the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> stream.” Georgetown Gazette July 8, 1915</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>[Have a look at this<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="aebrowns1895.jpg">USGS map <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of 1895 </a>where you can clearly see that the Georgetown-Wentworth <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Springs road cross Gerle Creek at what is now Airport Flats so that <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the ditch keeper road then turns off to the South to the diversion <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> dam and halfway to the diversion dam the road makes a sharp right <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and dead ends at AE Browns ranch or house.]</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>This map also clearly shows<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="airportflats1895.jpg">how <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the road proceeds to Francis Cow Camp</a> where it fords the creek <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> just above Rocky Basin Creek and then continues on to Wentworth <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Springs via<a href="jacobsens1895.jpg"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Jacobsens and Gerles.</a>This revision and addition to the Wentworth <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Springs road reflected local ranchers and resort owners needs to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> access their properties in the early spring of each year. Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek could be a pretty ferocious flow of water to get across in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Spring and the new Rocky Basin Creek Bridge and new road on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Eastern side of Gerle Creek resolved this. The<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="francisccford.jpg">old <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ford at Gerle Creek at Francis Cow Camp</a> and the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="oldroadfrancis.jpg">original but unused lead in road to the ford<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>is still <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> visible and just a little bit North of the entry point of Rocky <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Basin Creek into Gerle. The original road </b></i><b><i>[</i>shown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> clearly on the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="eldoradonfmap1916.jpg">1916 Eldorado National Forest Map <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>until 1937] <i>crossed at the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Airport Flats ford/the Log Bridge (after 1927) and then <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> followed (on the Western side of Gerle Creek) what became the GCSHT <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> road to the associations water ram pumps and past this location <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> fording Gerle Creek directly across from Francis Cow Camp. From <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> there the road remained the same as depicted today. </i></b></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style4">Airport Camp Ford of Gerle Creek</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style4"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" height="559" src="10HartsgrandchildrenatGerleCrkford.jpg" width="379" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>This is a Papenfus-Hart Family (GC Lot 39) photo of the Hart <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> grandchildren playing and wading in Gerle Creek in the Ford of Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek on the Airport Camp side, discussed above. Late 1960s photo</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style4">Airport Camp Swimming Hole</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Just behind and on the Southside of the old Airport Camp Barracks <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> building is the swimming hole which has been used by people <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> frequenting this area since the beginning of time. It is a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> very natural swimming area and from the late 1940s, 1950s and into <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the early 1960s had a basic diving board made most probably <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> during the Army Air Corps R&R Camp days of World War II or later <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> during the Forest Service usage as a fire camp from the end of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> WWII into the 1950s.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" height="297" src="04markhartswimminghole.jpg" width="379" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Mark Hart, Airport Camp/Flats Swimming Hole, Gerle Creek, down <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and behind the old Airport Barracks location. Diving board was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> a basic affair put together by old Airport Camp users from the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Forrest Service or even earlier, from the US Army Air Corps and CCC. The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> carpet was installed on the diving board by Gordon Brattland Lot 24 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> so the children would not get splinters.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" height="214" src="oldcabinpictures0019.jpg" width="320" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>I am clapping my hands to hurry Karen Brattland up on the diving <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> board while our father, Gordon Brattland observes from the swimming <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> hole. Brattland Family photo 1959</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style5"><font face="Californian FB">Airport Camp Rain Gauge 1946 to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1976</font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="COLOR: #1f497d; FONT-FAMILY: Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="COLOR: black">J</span></span><font face="Californian FB">im <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Goodridge of the California Division of Water Resources kindly <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> offered the background and history on the old rain gauge and tower <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> which sat on a small mound in the center of the current Forest <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Service campground at Airport Flats in the early years. Looking for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> a picture of the old tower if anyone can help....... </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="COLOR: #1f497d"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal"><span style="COLOR: black"><i><b>"The US <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Weather Bureau, Substation History for California, 1958, lists <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gerle Creek Camp or Gerle Creek Airport Camp. The gage was a 200 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> inch Sacramento type gage on a 15 feet tower. Located at 38°59'N, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 120°23'W, Elevation 5500 Feet, 23 miles ENE of Georgetown. The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> record apparently started in 9/46/46 . The observer was listed as <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the US Forest Service. Their Forest and Range Field Station may be <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> able to cone up with the early records or they may be in the Central <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Districts files, I do not recall but it may have been one of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> gages we measured once a year. The records were no doubt published <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in Climatological Data or the older Hydrologic Bulletins.I recall <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> preparing a summary of Storage Gage Data when I worked at the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Central District many years ago. The old type rain gage was 8 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> inches on the top and cone shaped. I would hold the equivalent of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 200 inches of precipitation in all but contained a few gallons of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> anti-freeze. We would weigh the water once a year. This was the only <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> way we could calculate the water balance on mountain watersheds at <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> that time. </b></i></span></span></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="COLOR: #1f497d"><i><b><font face="Californian FB">I <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> noticed that the Gerlie Creek gage was listed in the 1975 index of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Climatological Data but not in the 1976 index.</font></b></i></span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: Californian FB"><i><b>" <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Jim Goodridge 2009</b></i></span></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal"></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style4">B-17C Crash Site Tell's Peak Upper Bassi Ranch-See <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Upper Bassi</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style5"><font face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.bacchiranch.com" name="B">Bacchi Ranch</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="auto-style1"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="historypages/bacchirancheldoradonf1931map.jpg">1931 Forest <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Service Map Showing Bacchi Ranch</a> just East of Quintett on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Northside of the Georgetown Wentworth Springs Lake Tahoe Road</span></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style5"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="historypages/bacchirancheldoradonf1931map.jpg"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" class="auto-style7" height="394" src="historypages/bacchirancheldoradonf1931map.jpg" width="839" /></a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style5"><font face="Californian FB">Barts Creek and Valley</font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="wentmcken.jpg"><span class="style4">Bennet's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Range</span><font color="#000080"><span class="style4"> Bennet Lake</span>-</font></a><font color="#000080">1875-1889<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </font>The farmers house on the road identified as road to Bennet's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Range from Gerle's heading up to McKinstry or Bennet Lake.</b></i></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Noted on the earliest of maps <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in the meadow area half mile West of McKinstry or Bennet Lake. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Reading the Surveyor's Field notes for the original survey for this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Township completed in September, 1889, the survey wrote that the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> cabin or farmer's house in McKinstry Meadow, below and slightly to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the West of McKinstry or Bennet Lake which on the earlier survey <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> belonged to Bennet, now belonged to Forni. The surveyor's notes also <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> spelled Bennett with two "Ts" versus one "T." The Forni name is <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> misspelled in the Surveyor's original hand written field notes. As <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to who Bennet or Bennett was, it could have been MP Bennett of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Placerville who was an attorney and became an elected judge in El <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dorado County. We know that he had a particular interest in this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> part of the county as he wrote a detailed letter published in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> newspapers supporting the investment of public monies to finish the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> road from Wentworth Springs to Lake Tahoe</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><span class="style4">Berts Lake</span> On Chipmunk <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Bluff above Schlein's cabin off the road to Loon lake</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style4"><a href="historypages/eldoradonf1931map.jpg">Bisbee Lake or Horse Shoe Lake</a> or <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="Fig-6-Loon-Lake1.jpg">Bixley Lake</a> or <a href="historypages/map1937a.jpg">Bigsby Lake</a> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Bowman (1873) first mentions this lake calling it Horse Shoe <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake in his report to the California Water Company <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> shareholders page 170, para 2. In the 1880 report to shareholders of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California Water Companay, Guildersleeve (1880, Ashburner Appendix <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> page 1A) refer to this lake as Bixley Lake. Sioli 1883 page <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 120 regurgitates <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> this same general report information from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> both Bowman and Guildersleeve while identifying the lake as Bixley Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> which comes from the 1880 report exclusively. Obviously in the 7 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> years between the reports, this lake acquired a different name <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> which has morphed over the years into several similar sounding names <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> including Bixley, Bisbee and Bigsby Lake. The first surveying of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> this area which created the original Survey Plats, was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> finished by the late 1870s and used to publish maps from 1895, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> may have assigned the Bixley name to the lake but by 1931 it was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> displayed as Bisbee Lake on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1931 and 1943 USFS Maps while the 1937 hand drawn map by Judge Johnson used by <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> himself as a regular camper, hiker and fisherman to the Wentworth <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Springs area called the lake Bigsby Lake. These things change due to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> new information and are corrected over time. A review of the 1931, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1943 and 1949 USFS maps show in pretty clear form why someone <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> would have originally called this lake Horse Shoe Lake due to it's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> shape. The surveyor notes sometimes have clues in this regard but <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> unfortunately the original survey plat for Loon Lake is bare as a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> map with just section lines and almost nothing else, not even the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> lake information and there are no surveyor notes which I <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> have been able to obtain. This has been a problem in resolving some <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> other historical location information in the Loon Lake area as well. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> I might add that Bowman and many others got a number of names <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> different or spelled differently including Gurley versus the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> correct Gerle during their inspections on the Divide.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>With the construction of the new Loon Lake Dam in 1962, Bisbee <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake became a part of Loon Lake with it's original location along <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the face of what is now the Francis Fill above Francis Cow Camp on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the most Western edge of Loon Lake. Thanks to Tim Green of Loon Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> for his interest in this project and to Lint Brown for his map <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> graphics work from his book Sixteen Summers on the Ditch with a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> descriptive diagram of Loon Lake and it's many lakes as against Loon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake today.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p style="width: 435px"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CJWkybayobQ">Blair Brothers <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Saw Mill Pollack Pines, California</a> thanks to George <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Mihan</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i><b><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="historypages/wikander.htm"><span class="style4">Buck Island Lake</span></a></font></b></i><a href="historypages/wikander.htm"><span class="style4"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Wikander Cabin</span></a><p><b><i><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB">According to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> GeorgeWharton James, the lake was named by the Hunsaker Brothers of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the famous Hunsaker Springs (Rubicon Springs). "The lake is <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> very irregular in shape, about a third of a mile long, and a quarter <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of a mile wide in its widest part. Near one end is a small <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> island. Hunsaker found the deer swam over to the island to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> rest and sleep during the heat of the day, hence the name." <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> James, 1915, pg 220.</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>In the words of Judge Wilbur <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Johnson...........</b></i><b><i>"Picture 6 Vic Wikander and his <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> wife, Alice. </i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i>While honeymooning they <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> visited Buck Island, over the hill from Rubicon to the west. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Victor worked out a 99 year lease of the smaller island at Buck <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Island, I presume with the U S Dept. of the Interior.</i></b></font></div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i> </i></b></font></div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i>In the 1920's Rubicon Springs <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> continued to be accessible by motor car and Victor began to take <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in the materials needed to improve the leased island. He carried <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> everything over the hill to Buck Island by back pack, a little <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> over a mile but up quite a grade. (NB: The last motor vehicle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> into Rubicon (until the Jeep) was a Cadillac touring car <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> operated by an enterprising fellow from The Lake (Tahoe). On the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> way out the Caddy slid off the road at one of the switchbacks <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and was abandoned. This occurred around 1928-1930 and the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> vehicle remained, somewhat intact, for quite a few years. From <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> this, the current name, "Cadillac Hill", was coined.)</i></b></font></div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i> </i></b></font></div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i>As time passed, Victor built a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> rowboat, first of all, and then 3 cabins. A main cabin and 2 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> smaller cabins as guest houses. He flew 3 flags; The Stars and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Stripes at the main cabin and the flags of Finland and Ireland <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> at the guest cabins.</i></b></font></div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i> </i></b></font></div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i>He laid out paths cabin to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> cabin and other points of interest on the island. He gathered <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> stones, 4 - 6 inches in diameter. and lined the paths. Using the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> rowboat, he gathered sand from the far west side of the lake and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sanded the paths.</i></b></font></div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i> </i></b></font></div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i>He also built a catch-all <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> storage shed near the main cabin and a boat house with skids to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> house the rowboat over the winters. Sometime, during later <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> years, he stopped using the boat house. He just pulled the boat <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> out of the water and left it in the open. One time, I asked, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "Why?" He said that, in the boat house, the boat dried and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> seeped leakage by the next season.</i></b></font></div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i> </i></b></font></div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i>He spent all summer every year <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> at the island. His wife joined him when school was out. He also <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> went in regularly in winter. His wife never joined him on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> winter trek. He put a door high in the gable of the main cabin <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to avoid digging snow down to the front door. Each summer <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> season he would provision the cabin for the winter trek, food <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and fuel. One year he fell and broke a bone in the ankle area, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> possibly the lower end of the fibula. He crawled into the cabin <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and set the break as best as possible and bound it with strips <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of cloth. He spent the next few weeks holed up in the cabin <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> waiting for the break to knit. What a guy!</i></b></font></div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i> </i></b></font></div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i>His island was close to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> north shore of Buck Island Lake, about 50 yards or so. The water <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> there was shallow and in winter it froze enough for him to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ski/snow shoe across. In the spring he could wade . At most, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the water depth was about 5 feet at one point. Thus, he never <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> really had to "swim" to the island.</i></b></font></div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i> </i></b></font></div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i>He spent many idyllic years at <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the lake until the 1950's when age began to take its toll. He <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> passed away in Oakland, Alameda Co. CA, on August 7, 1958. His <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> wife, Alice, survived another few years until the early 1960's. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> End of an era! (no children)."</i></b></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">A Lint Brown and his <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> father-1953 Fishing Trip to the Rubicon</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoPlainText"><b><i><font face="Californian FB">"I</font></i></b><font face="Californian FB"><i><b> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> finally got around to relooking at the photos from the July 1953 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> backpack trip with my father and Bob Neeley. We started at <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Wentworth Springs, hitching a ride with Joe Hacker in his Jeep, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> who carried us up somewhere around Spider Lake and dumped us out <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> where the road got really bad-we started hiking, passing Buck <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Island Lake on the way to our first night's camp at Rockbound <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake. </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoPlainText"><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>We <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> continued the loop: past Rubicon Springs, over Barker Pass to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Five Lakes Creek, and back down the Rubicon through Hell Hole <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and Hales Camp, photos of which you have already seen. (By the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> way, Joe Hacker and his wife Isabelle were both expert fly <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> fishers, both of whom my father admired for their skill; they <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> frequented the Crystal Basin in the 1950s.)</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoPlainText"><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Attached are three photos you have not previously seen. (Lint <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Brown Sr Photos 1953 provided by Lint Brown)</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoPlainText"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="BuckIsland1953.jpg" width="400" height="283" /><img border="0" src="BuckIsland1953detail.jpg" width="416" height="285" /><img border="0" src="WikanderSign1953.jpg" width="399" height="287" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoPlainText"><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> first is the one I hoped to find, a shot of Buck Island Lake, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> taken by my dad as we passed by on the way to our first night's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> camp at Rockbound Lake. The second is a blowup of a portion of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> that first photo, which shows a cabin that is almost certainly <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Vic Wilander's. This photo was taken on July 15, 1953, the first <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> day of our 6-day trip. As you can see, we were not very close to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the cabin--I am not even sure we noticed it at the time. The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> scanner sees things our eyes miss...</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoPlainText"><font face="Californian FB"><i><b> Third <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> is a shot of a couple of trail signs, taken on July 16, 1953 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> along what is now known as the Rubicon Trail, between Buck <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Island Lake and Rubicon Springs. The top sign, a USFS model, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> pins down the location. But the real find here is the handmade <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> lower sign: "To Buck Island Lake--Wikanders." It's easy to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> imagine that Vic himself crafted that rustic sign. But why? Who <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> would have been coming to visit them from that direction?</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerlecreek.jpg"><span class="style4">Bugle Lake</span></a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Headwaters for Ellis Creek which flows out of and down into the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Northeast end of Loon Lake. In the days prior to the new Loon Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dam, the creek entered Pleasant Lake which is now a part of Loon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake. The lake is directly above Wentworth Springs on the Northside <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of Jerrett Peak.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="bunkergerle.jpg"><span class="style4">Bunker <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Hill</span><font color="#000080">-</font></a><font color="#000080">1875-Eldorado <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> National Forest, Placer County, Ca The mountain top which was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> acquired inorder to put a lookout on top, was purchased by the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Forest Service May 5, 1936.</font></b></i></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Early wood low to the ground <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> lookout structure pictured in Supernowizc 1983 History of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Eldorado National Forest of the 1930's was replaced by Joe Bauman <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> who built the present day <a href="bunkerhilllo1957b.jpg">stone lookout tower and living quarters in the 1942 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>( Forest <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Fire Lookout Association <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.lookouts.us/Sorted_By/California.htm"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> http://www.lookouts.us/Sorted_By/California.htm</a> .)This is a Lint <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Brown photo from 1957.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style4"><a href="airportcamp1931c.jpg" name="C">California Water Company-1874</a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>The early details of the California <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Water Company and all their activities in this area are covered in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> great detail by Bowman, 1874; Gildersleeve, 1880 and finally <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> summarized in Sioli's history of El Dorado County in 1883.This <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> company, originated and capitalized in San Francisco, was central to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> early development of resources in the Georgetown Divide area, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> building a Loon Lake log dam initially along with a ditch to connect <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gerle Creek to Hanna's Camp by 1874. This trial dam was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> followed by building the granite stone dam to replace the original <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> nine foot high log dam at <a href="loonlakedam1940.jpg">Loon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake in 1881-1882</a> using Chinese labor which stood till<a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/loon103062b.jpg"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> <a href="loon103062b.jpg">removed in 1962 </a>for the current earth filled dam built in 1963. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The companies need to support their ditch and flume structures <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to bring the water from Loon Lake to Georgetown also necessitated <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> their building the South Fork Mill,( between 1874 and 1880) a water <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> powered saw mill at Hanna's Camp, which still stands today.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p> The California Water Company of 1874, became the California <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Water and Mining Company 1880, Loon Lake Power and Water Company, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1904, merging with the California -Nevada Electric Power Company to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> become Truckee River General Electric Company in 1912.. The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> water company merged once again with the Sierra Pacific Power Company from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Nevada in 1914. Between 1930 and 1935 the old water company became the Georgetown Divide Water Company. and in 1946 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> , the Georgetown Divide Utility District was formed as a result of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> local voters, whom later purchased the water system from the Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Divide Water Company in 1952 and passing the utilities rights <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to water from the upper part of the system including Gerle Creek and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Loon Lake to Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD in 1961. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The summary of the California Water Company timeline above and much more detailed discussion can be found in Lint <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Brown's "Sixteen Summers on the Ditch", Feb 2003 in the chapter on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the "Georgetown Divide Water History," pages 1 through 6.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB"><span class="style4">Charles Creek.</span>..Named for one <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of the Gerle Brothers, Charles W. Gerle (born 1823) or </font></i></b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> possibly<i><b><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"> the baby son Charles <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> or Charlie Gerle of the other Gerle brother, Christoper Cyrus or C. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gerle, born December 1870 and died February 1,1871. The creek is just to the West of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Gerle Ranch in the meadow.</font></b></i></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style4"><a href="ClausseniusPlaceSlabCreek.JPG">Clausenius <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Site, Slab Creek, Box Mill</a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal">Georgetown Gazette May 12, 1910</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal">“<i>The editor, J.C. Horn and son Hulbert, made <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> a trip to Clausssenius’ place on Slab Creek, Saturday, returning <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Sunday. We found Mr. Clausenius and his help busy turning out box <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> shook for which he has a ready sale at the mill. The fruit men <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of this and adjoining counties know that Mr. C. turns out excellent <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> work, and many of them go up there for their box shook. In the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> box factory is an automatic sawing machine which makes at least 20 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> cuts to the minute, so one can imagine the number of boxes that can <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> be produced in a day. The place is nicely located in tall <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> pines at an elevation of 4400 feet near Headquarters, with an <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> abundance of free, pure mountain water and good fishing and hunting. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Some of the sugar pine trees in the place measure as much as eight <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and nine feet in diameter…They have named their place “The Park”, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and it must be seen to be appreciated…”<o:p></o:p></i></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p>The spellings of Clausenius above <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> vary due to editor Horn’s own writing at the time in 1910. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Claussenius Site is 2 miles South of Pino Grande on old Michigan Cal <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> now Sierra Pacific property, about 10 air miles miles west of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Union Valley Dam.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b><font color="#000080"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="style4"><a name="D">Dellar's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Cabin</a></span>-1889-Eldorado National Forest, Placer County, Ca </font></b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </i></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>According to the Surveyor's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> field notes who completed the original survey plat on the Township <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> including Dellar Meadow and Dellar's cabin in September, 1889, he <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> wrote that Deller's first name was Louis.....Louis Dellar. In fact <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> his full and complete name was Louis J. Deller, spelled with a "e" <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> vice an "a," who was born in California in 1854 according to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> official 1910 US Census. In reviewing the records of the Deller <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> family on the 1860, 1870, 1880, 1890, 1900, 1910, 1920 and 1930 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> census' respectively, it would appear from the hand written census <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> entries from 1860 that Deller was originally either Dellar, Doller, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Daller, Duller or Deller. I believe over the years that Andrew <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Deller, Louis J Deller's father elected to use the "Deller" <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> spelling after 1870 as the census listing for 1870 lists the Deller <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> family name as Deller. I think that in common use, so many people <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> spoke the name as Deller, that the original spelling was changed by <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> usage and family need to Americanize their name. The Surveyor <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> spelled Deller's last name both on the original plat and in his <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> field notes as Dellar which could very well have been the correct, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> original family name when Andrew and Eva immigrated to the US around <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1849 from Germany.. For this reason and through the years, the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> map makers have continued to use the original spelling, In <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Mountain Meadow, just above Dellar Meadow where L. Dellar <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> cabin was depicted in the final surveyors work and original survey <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> plat of the area in 1889, there are another set of ruins on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> South edge of Mountain Meadow, identified by the Forest Service , <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> right on the Dellar Trail or Stockmans Trail which went on around <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Bunker Hill down into the Rubicon Canyon and across to the other <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> side. These ruins could possibly have been an earlier cabin <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> belonging to the Deller family or some other early user of this very <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> beautiful meadow. Krista Deal of the US Forest Service believes <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> these cabin ruins date from approximately the 1850's. The Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gazette got the Deller name spelled as the family was to prefer in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> their article of 1882 below.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>A report from the June 23, 1882 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> edition of the Georgetown Gazette on the movement of livestock <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> through Georgetown to the ranches in the Sierras..........</b></i><b><i>"A <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> great many droves of stock and dairy cattle, sheep and goats, have <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> passed through Georgetown during the present month for their ranges <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> above, and many more are yet to pass before the month ends. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Among those who have already passed up with dairy stock are: Forni <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of Gold Hill, Sam Forni of this place(Georgetown), filippini & Co., <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Bacchi of Garden Valley, Schelari and Gerley(mispelled) of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Uniontown, Deller and Son near this place (Georgetown) and others <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> whose names we have not in mind. Besides this, no less than a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> dozen large bands of sheep and goats have passed through town. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Much stock is also passing up by routes south of this place." (Gernes; <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Deibert, 1999)</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>In the above article in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown Gazette, the editors when they referred to Deller and Son <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> would be referring to Louis J Deller as the "Son" of Deller and Son, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> while the " Deller" was Louis' father, Andrew Deller. Andrew <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Deller was married to Eva, both born in Baden, Bavaria, Germany <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> according to the US Census' of 1860, 1870 and 1880. Andrew was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> born in 1812. Eva, his wife was born in 1830. They came <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to the US around 1849 as their oldest child, Emma, was born in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Louisiana in 1849, while Louis J. was born in California in 1854 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> according to the 1860 census. The family arrived in California <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sometime after 1849. The oldest child Emma was not listed in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1870 census which could mean she died or had been married off. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Andrew and Eva Deller had two other children, Lenora born <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> approximately 1860 and Adaline or Addie born in 1865. In the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> late 1890s Louis married Rose, born June 13, 1872 and had three <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> children, Anna born in 1897, Andrew J. in 1899 and Aninita in 1904. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> When Louis's parents, Andrew and Eva passed away in the 1880s, he <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> took over the ranch in Greenwood township (Pilot Hill) in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1880s. The Mountain Democrat in the Feb 10, 1912 edition of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> paper reported the real estate transfer of the Deller Ranch in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Greenwood to H.B. Stacy. This may have been only part of their <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> property, as they were still running cattle per the following <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> article in the Summer of 1912</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal"><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>“Andrew <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Deller and Wesley Lovejoy of Cool passed through town Monday with <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ninety head of cattle for their summer quarters in the higher <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> mountains (Dellar Cabin & Meadow, below and on the east side of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Bunker Hill). These youthful cowboys are aged 12 and 10 years <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> respectively and were fitted with sombreros, chaps and all the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> equipment of the older cowboys. Louis Deller and Steve Lovejoy, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> fathers of the boys, went up later in the day with supplies.” <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> June 27, 1912 Georgetown Gazette</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>Louis J. Deller was not listed <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in either the 1920 or 1930 census, while his wife Rose was. I <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> believe he probably passed away by 1920. By 1930, Louis' son Andrew <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> J Dellar had married Florence and moved to Sacramento where he <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> raised his family. Andrew and Rose had two children, Richard L. born <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in 1923 and Lorraine W. born in 1925. On the 1930 census, Andrew J. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Deller was listed as a butcher in Sacramento, while his mother Rose <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> was working in Sacramento as a servant. According to the 1930 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> census, the Deller family lived in the city of Sacramento. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Rose Deller, Andrew's mother, died in Sacramento on August 15, 1966.</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://content.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/kt9h4nc8rw"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="style4">Desolation <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Valley </span> </a>"Indian Hatie told the Rupleys about trouble between the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> white men and the Indians when she was a little girl. One day her <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> mother hid her in the woods and told her not move. She came back <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> day and said the white men had driven off the Indians. the Indians <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> started back for Carson Valley, but there was a storm....in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Spring they were found frozen to death. They say that is how <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Desolation Valley got its name." (Yohalem, pg 214)</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" height="644" src="../images/dobbasranch1885.JPG" width="996" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="mso-bidi-font-size:11.0pt;color:blue"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="dobbasranch2.pdf"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman"" class="auto-style5"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dobbas Ranch</span></a></span><a href="dobbasranch2.pdf"><span style="font-size:12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman","serif";<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] -->mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman""><span style="font-size:18.0pt;mso-bidi-font-size:11.0pt;color:blue"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span></span><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman"" class="auto-style3"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="mso-bidi-font-size:11.0pt;color:blue"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> at the head of</span></span><span style="font-size:12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman","serif";<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] -->mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman""><span style="font-size:18.0pt;mso-bidi-font-size:11.0pt;color:blue"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span></span><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="color:blue"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="font-family: "Times New Roman","serif"; mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Pleasant Lake on Ellis Creek-1870s</span></span></a><span style="font-family: "Times New Roman","serif"; mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman"">-middle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of section 33 of Township 14/15-Chembino <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> J. Dobbas or CJ Dobbas or Jim Dobbas of Greenwood was a butcher, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> rancher and owner of the City Market on Main Street, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown. Chembino would eventually sell the City Market to one of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> his Gerle Creek neighbors, AA Francis of Georgetown and Francis Cow <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Camp, another of the many Georgetown merchants and butchers. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Chembino Dobbas was born in Switzerland in 1841, immigrating to El <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dorado County after 1860.<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --><o:p></o:p></span></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="font-family: "Times New Roman","serif"; mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/history/williamtellbutchercompanycdobbas1864-1%20copy.jpg"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="color:blue">Chembino being a butcher was an early <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> employee with the William Tell Butcher Company of Garden <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Valley and Georgetown along with John Petar, Joseph Sartor, Charles <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Petar and Joseph Dobbas. </span></a>The company eventually <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> split up January 11, 1864 when each of the above employees left <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> William Tell and went into business for themselves when Ciprino <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Pedrini and Company sold the William Tell Butcher Company to John <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Petar. This change was announced in the local El Dorado County <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> newspapers as well as the Sacramento Daily Union via legal notices. <o:p></o:p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="auto-style2" style="mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Chembino married Amanda B Lovejoy of Greenwood on June 5, 1873 in El <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dorado County. Amanda was born in Maine in 1854. Amanda's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> family came to California from Maine and settled in Greenwood, El <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dorado County where her father LH Lovejoy was a very prominent El <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dorado County businessman who tried his hand in a number of pursuits <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> such as lumberman, miner, farmer, toll road operator, blacksmith, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> before acquiring Doctor Thomas' line of stage in 1869 from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown to Sacramento by way of Pilot Hill and Salmon Falls in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> partnership with Page, one of his inlaws, who eventually moved into <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> politics and leaving the stage company to Lovejoy (Sioli, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1883). He was born in Sidney, Kennebeck County, Maine on December <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 18, 1820 and arriving in California in 1853, moving to El Dorado <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> County in 1854. Her mother Clara G (Page) Lovejoy was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> born in Maine in 1829, marrying LH Lovejoy in 1848. LH Lovejoy's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> family came west and joined him in El Dorado County in 1862. Besides Amanda, they had four other children, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> including three boys, Thatcher, Fred, Stephen and one additional <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> girl named Maud. Fred, Stephen and Mary, the three youngest of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the five children were born in California, while Amanda and her <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> older brother Thatcher were born in Maine.<o:p></o:p></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="auto-style2" style="mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Chembino and Amanda Dobbas had two sons, Herbert born in California <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in 1874 and Arthur born two years later in 1876, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> also in California.<o:p></o:p></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="auto-style2" style="mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> From a October 1883 edition of the MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT which reprinted <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> a note from the GEORGETOWN GAZETTE<o:p></o:p></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="font-family: "Times New Roman","serif"; mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "</span><span class="auto-style1" style="font-family: "Arial","sans-serif"; mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman"; color: #222222">Jim <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dobbas and family passed through town (Georgetown) Tuesday on their <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> way to Greenwood. They have been at Pleasant Lake, near<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="background: #8BD8FF">Loon Lake</span> during the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> summer, where Mr. D. has a stock ranch. Jim looks as seedy as a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> '49er."</span></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal">Some clarification on the location of Dobba’s <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ranch, from August 3, 1887 reprinted in whole in the paragraph below. This refers to declaring part of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Georgetown – Lake Tahoe Wagon Road (now mostly known as the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Rubicon Trail) a public road. Thanks are due to Cindy Baker of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> PAR Environmental Services of Sacramento, California who found this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> interesting paragraph below from El Dorado County records as <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> part of her research on the old El Dorado County Road from Wentworth <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Springs via Rubicon Springs to Lake Tahoe now called the Rubicon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Trail and kindly shared it.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="mso-fareast-font-family: Calibri; mso-fareast-theme-font: minor-latin; mso-ansi-language: EN-US; mso-fareast-language: EN-US; mso-bidi-language: AR-SA"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 'The petition of E. L. Crawford and 19 other citizens and taxpayers <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of Georgetown Township and taxable therein for road purposes, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> praying that the Board of Supervisors declare as a public highway <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> that certain trail or highway in Georgetown and Lake Valley <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Townships described as follows: commencing at Wentworth Springs <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> running up the Valley of Gurly Creek in S. S. E. course 1 ¼ miles to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> a point about ¾ mile north of Loon Lake, thence S.E. 1 mile to Ellis <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Canon about 1 mile north of <span class="auto-style4">Dobba’s Ranch at the head of Pleasant <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake,</span> thence nearly the same course to the pass near old trail about <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 2 miles, then about 2 miles nearly S.E. to and leaving Spider Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1/4 mile south, crossing the Little Rubicon at the outlet of Buck <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake, thence nearly E. ¾ mile to a point about 1/3 mile north of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Rock Bound Lake, thence Northerly to Potter’s ford on the Rubicon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> River about ¾ miles, thence down the westerly bank of the Rubicon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> River ¾ mile to Hunsuckers Spring connecting with the Hunsucker <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Grade, having been considered and it appearing that said trail or <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> highway should be declared a public highway, and there being no <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> objections made thereto, it is ordered that the said trail or road <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> as herein before described be and the same hereby is declared to be <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> a public highway and ordered to be recorded as such" (El Dorado <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> County Board of Supervisors Minutes n.d.:300; County Road Book:210).</span><p class="MsoNormal"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The Dobbas Ranch on the Northeast side of Loon Lake and at the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> head of Pleasant Lake where Ellis Creek comes into it. The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ranch probably made use of the considerable low level open meadow and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> mountain marsh around Pleasant and Loon Lakes which was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> conducive for cattle use during <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the summer particularly before the California Water Company <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> installed the temporary log dam on the outlet of Loon Laketo Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek as well as Pleasant Lake up stream from Loon Lake on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ellis Creek which fed Gerle Creek and Loon Lake in 1873 to see if <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> they could develop more storage water and support their business <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> needs for water throughout the summer dry season in Georgetown and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the lower western half of El Dorado County. These log dams increased the size of Loon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and Pleasant Lakes in the summers after <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1873, thereby proving the California Water Company business model <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> for increased water supplies which would have decreased Chembino's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> grazing area. With the completion of the granite block dam at <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Loon Lake by 1883, the property which Chembino had been using was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> more restricted in the summer months due to the much larger Loon and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Pleasant Lakes.<o:p></o:p></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="auto-style2" style="mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Chembino or Jim Dobbas was a member of the Masons in Pilot Hill and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> very active in their affairs. Amanda Dobbas was very active in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the local Grange and was an officer in the local chapter. In the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> early 1890s, Chembino and his wife, the Greenwood Butcher, kindly <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> donated a lot in Greenwood for the building of a new Catholic Church <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> since local Catholics had been meeting in the Winkelman Hotel for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> church services since 1880. The church was finished and dedicated in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1891 (Gardner, 1993, 2002); Upton, 1940). Author Georgia <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gardner made a slight error listing "Mr. And Mrs. Arthur <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dobbas, the town butcher" as the parties who donated the lot, when <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Arthur was barely age 17 in 1891 and certainly not married. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Chembino moved his family and business to Rocklin, California, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> becoming a partner with a distant cousin to his wife's father, who <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> was also a butcher, named Lovejoy, opening the Dobbas & Lovejoy Meat <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Market. 1893 was not a kind year for Chembino Dobbas as <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> you will read. On April 20, 1893 the Georgetown Gazette reported <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Chembino was seen limping while walking on the streets of Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> due to a horse cart accident on a road near Pilot Hill. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Unfortunately the business was lost in the terrific fire which <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> burned almost the entire northern half of the town of Rocklin on May <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 25, 1893. Not long after this, Chembino died very unexpectedly <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> during a Sunday evening walk of a heart attack on August 13, 1893 in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Rocklin. His wife Amanda remarried in 1894, marrying Charles W. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lovejoy from Auburn, California.<o:p></o:p></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="auto-style2" style="mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <o:p><span class="auto-style5"><a href="../images/BunkerHillQuadrange7.5min1953.pdf">Dobbas <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Cow Camp French Meadows</a> </span>During research I discovered that <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dobbas family had a second ranch called Dobbas Cow Camp which was located <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> under the lake near the dam at French Meadows in southern Tahoe <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> National Forest, Placer County on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> banks of the Middle Fork of the American River which existed until the<a href="../images/MiddleForkAmericanRiverProjectRelicenseMap%203-1930.pdf"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> construction of the French Meadows Dam in the mid 1960s</a>. The ranch is clearly shown on early maps. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> I find it most interesting that both of the Dobbas Sierra cow <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> camps/ranches were lost to new dam construction of the early 1960s. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> This location was more accessible for the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dobbas family especially with their butcher business moving to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Rocklin in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the later years of the 19th Century. Arthur Dobbas and family <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> settled in Auburn which made their summer cattle operations in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> French Meadows quite accessible via Auburn and Foresthill. The power plant licensing proposal <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> map (above link ) showing historical locations within the French <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Meadows lake and dam area uses the 1930 map of the area to outline <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the locations for this new power project.</o:p></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="auto-style2" style="mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> A<o:p>ccording to an<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="../images/dobbascattlemanarticle1963.pdf">Oxnard <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> PRESS-COURIER Newspaper article of August 30, 1963,</a> Bernard Dobbas was the owner of Dobbas Cow Camp <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in French Meadows and had been holding up the building of the French Meadows Dam and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake due to mitigation issues associated with items the contractors <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and the utility were to provide inorder to take his 1 1/2 acres in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Meadow along with the historic cow camp buildings the family had <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> originally erected there. Bernard was the grandson of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Chembino or Jim Dobbas and the son of Arthur Dobbas. Bernard was born in 1913 and was a star <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> basket ball player at CalDavis besides being a life long cattleman <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> like his father and grandfather. Bernard's father Arthur was born in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1876. Although the article <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> says he had been running cattle at the cow camp since 1939 which <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> would be around <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the time he graduated from CalDavis, infact he, his father and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> grandfather had been cattlemen and butchers since the middle of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 19th Century in El Dorado and Placer Counties, making use of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> area surrounding this meadow for summer grazing like his father <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> before him and his grandfather and father did on Pleasant Lake.</o:p></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="auto-style2" style="mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <o:p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" height="311" src="../images/dobbascowcampfrenchmeadows.jpg" width="729" /></o:p></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="auto-style2" style="mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <o:p></o:p></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="auto-style2" style="mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <o:p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" height="612" src="../images/doylesranch1873.JPG" width="635" /></o:p></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="auto-style2" style="mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <o:p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/history/historypages/amosbowmap1873a.jpg"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="font-size:12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman","serif";<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] -->mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="font-size:18.0pt;mso-bidi-font-size:11.0pt;color:blue"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="../images/bowmanmap1873DoylesRanch_edited-1.tif">Doyles Ranch, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> </span></span><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="../images/bowmanmap1873DoylesRanch_edited-1.tif"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="font-family: "Times New Roman","serif"; mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="color:blue">Southeast of Loon and Pleasant Lakes-1873</span></span></a></a></o:p><span style="font-family: "Times New Roman","serif"; mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><a href="../images/bowmanmap1873DoylesRanch_edited-1.tif"> </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> His ranch is identified on the Amos Bowman Map of the Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Divide holdings of the California Water Company, published in 1873 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> as well as on the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~320~30027:47B,-D--E--Calif-,-W--Nevada-?qvq=q:california%20wheeler%20Atlas;sort:pub_list_no_initialsort,pub_date,pub_list_no,series_no;lc:RUMSEY~8~1&sort=pub_list_no_initialsort%2Cpub_date%2Cpub_list_no%2Cseries_no&mi=40&trs=67&printerFriendly=1"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> G. M. Wheeler Atlas Sheet 47 B, D, E Calif, Nev 1876/79</a> . <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The info on the Wheeler Atlas was kindly volunteered by </span><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman"" class="auto-style3"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Doug </span><span style="font-family: "Times New Roman","serif"; mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="auto-style3" style="mso-fareast-font-family: Calibri; mso-fareast-theme-font: minor-latin; mso-ansi-language: EN-US; mso-fareast-language: EN-US; mso-bidi-language: AR-SA"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Walker of the El Dorado County Historical Society and El Dorado <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> County Museum. </span>The ranch was located on the trail between the southwest part of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Loon Lake over to Tell's Ranch right at the crossing of the South <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Fork of the Rubicon River, called "Little South Fork" on the map. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The ranch location is but a 1/2 mile above present day Stone Cellar. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="../images/doylesranch1873.JPG">Doyle's Ranch</a> is a long <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> time research effort to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> learn more about who Doyle was.<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <o:p>Doyle, whoever he was, most certainly had a lower ranch on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown Divide, but any information or identification of that <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> location or background on Doyle, continues to elude me. The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> search for Doyle is ongoing and anyone with any information on who <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> he might have been, please drop me a note. The 1873 map was obtained from the UC <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Berkeley Water Resources Library from their collection on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California Water Company. The California Water Company of San <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Francisco originally hired Amos Bowman, a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Canadian engineer to do a full survey of the company holdings on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown Divide resulting in a formal report which included this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> map to the Board of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Directors in 1874. His 1873 map is the definitive map of early El <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dorado County, California and along with Sioli are the two major <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sources of early history in the county.</o:p></span></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="auto-style2" style="mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman"; width: 639px; height: 641px;"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <o:p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" height="643" src="../images/bowmanmap1873DoylesRanch_edited-1.jpg" width="642" /></o:p></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="auto-style2" style="mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="auto-style11" style="mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="Doyle's%20Ranch-1873%20Eldroado%20National%20Forest.pdf"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Doyle's Ranch</a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="auto-style2" style="mso-fareast-font-family: "Times New Roman""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="style4"><a name="E">Ellis <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek</a></span> Probably named for Jock Ellis, a Squaw Valley dairyman and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sheep herder whose name is on Ellis Peak, Ellis Lake and Ellis <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Valley in Placer County above the Georgetown-Lake Tahoe road. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> See also<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~320~30027:47B,-D--E--Calif-,-W--Nevada-?qvq=q:california%20wheeler%20Atlas;sort:pub_list_no_initialsort,pub_date,pub_list_no,series_no;lc:RUMSEY~8~1&sort=pub_list_no_initialsort%2Cpub_date%2Cpub_list_no%2Cseries_no&mi=40&trs=67&printerFriendly=1"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> G.M Wheeler Atlas 47B,D,E Sheet Calif, Nev 1876/79</a> for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ellis Peak. Jock <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ellis had a dairy on the West side of Ellis Peak for many years <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> before he gave it up to shift to raising sheep. Ellis would sell <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> during the summer months all the butter, milk and cream he could <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> generate to those passing on the Georgetown-Lake Tahoe road as well <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> as the Lake Tahoe community. (James, 1915)This creek flows out of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Bugle Lake into Loon Lake. In the days prior to the new Loon Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dam in 1962, the creek entered what was then Pleasant Lake. Pleasant <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake is now part of the new Loon Lake. Where Ellis Creek crosses the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown-Wentworth Springs-Rubicon Springs-Lake Tahoe 4WD road is <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> where the new (since the 1980s) Jeepers 4WD trail joins from Loon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake Dam.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="aafranciscowcamp.jpg" name="F"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="style4">Francis <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Cow Camp</span>-</a><a href="aafranciscowcamp.jpg">AA <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Francis-1872s</a>,Eldorado National Forest, El Dorado County, Ca</b></font></i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>In 1872, Allessandro A. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Fransioli, one of several Swiss-Italians to establish ranches in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> area, constructed a log bunkhouse at Francis Cow Camp. Born in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Canton Tieno, Switzerland, May 29, 1817, Alessandro came to America <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> with his father Joseph, arriving in California in 1852. Like many <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> others before them, they became miners on the Georgetown Divide with <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> some success. Allessandro's father Joseph returned to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Switzerland where he died at age 68, leaving his son alone in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California. Allessandro continued to engage in mining, before <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> leaving the Divide for San Francisco where he became a fruit and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> cigar merchant in 1857. In 1858, he returned to the Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Divide, changing his focus and got into the butcher business. He <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> eventually purchased the business from the firm he was working for, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> continuing in the business very successfully for another 25 years. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Additionally, he owned a saloon and livery business in Georgetown. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Alex Francis also owned a sheep ranch near Folsom. Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gazette Jan 14, 1881 </b></i><b><i>He had 1500 sheep on this ranch <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> as well, again reported in the Georgetown Gazette June 3, 1881(Gernes; <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Deibert, 1999). </i></b><i><b>In a late 1880 edition of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Georgetown Gazette, a quarter page advertisement for the</b></i><b><i> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "Bonanza", on Main Street, Georgetown was displayed. "Verbiage <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in the ad included the following recommendation from the proprietor, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> A. A. Francis...."Nothing but the finest brands of Liquors, Cigars <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and Tobacco kept. Best French Brandy "The Pete" Whisky, Gin, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> rum, bitters of all kinds, Mountain Brewery Lager for sale by the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> bottle or gallon. Club Room with Pool Table." In a late <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1890 advertisement in the Georgetown Gazette, AA Francis ran a near <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> quarter page ad for his butcher business called "City Market, Main <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Street, Georgetown, A. A. Francis . The editors of the Gazette <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> referred to Francis as Georgetown's Butcher. Later in a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> editors note from the July 19, 1900 edition of the Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gazette, it was reported that....."Alex Francis has decorated his <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> place of business with a handsome new sign - Arcade Saloon - from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the brush of Trask, the artist."(Gernes, Deibert, 1999) In <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1870, "Alex" Fransioli married Florina Forni, daughter of another <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> local Swiss-Italian immigrant. They had seven children. He <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> eventually retired in 1897. (Jerrett, 1963; Errington, 2000) <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> However the retirement was due in part to the fire of 1897, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> whereupon, he soon reopened his butcher shop after finding it <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> difficult to "remain idle" (Morgan;Rambeau; Wurm, 2003). <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Review of these early maps shows that AA Fransioli's name was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> shortened or misspelled to read AA Francis, which may have been <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> related to how he was commonly referred. For a picture of Alex <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Francis, see Rambeau, 1998, page 21 for a group photo of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> I.O.O.F. lodge in Georgetown, 1889. There is a group picture showing <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> members Alex Francis, Charles Forni, Dan Jerrett, Gus Orelli and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Charles Wentworth, all significant men in the history of Gerle Creek</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Here are some 1973 pictures of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Francis Cow Camp, picturing my wife Pat, sister Karen looking over <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the historic cabin and the ranch site including the original cattle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> loading ramp made of logs.......<a href="aafranciscabin1.jpg">Pic#1,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="aafranciscabin2.jpg">Pic#2,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="aafranciscabin3.jpg">Pic#3, </a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>I recently obtained a copy of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Georgetown Historical Walking Tour Brochure which includes a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> wonderful illustration of AA Francis' Georgetown home 1880 which is <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> on Church Street in Georgetown. Jacqueline Morgan did the drawing <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> while Sheryl Rambeau was the historian and author, with Bonnie Wurm <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> doing the layout in the original brochure, 2003</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="aafrancishouse2.jpg" width="406" height="307" /></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>(Morgan; Rambeau; Wurm, 2003)<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><span class="style4"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="Francis_Lake.jpg">Francis Lake </a></span> Named for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Francis family Georgetown Gazette.<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="Fig-6-Loon-Lake1.jpg">Lake is about halfway between the old <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Mary's Lake in the West end of Loon Lake (Francis Fill Dam) and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Francis Cow Camp on Rocky Basin Creek where it drains into Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek.</a> The actual picture of Francis Lake is from the Wikipedia <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> note on Francis Lake.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><i><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><b>Recent Francis <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Cow Camp Ranch building pictures of the remains of the ranch <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> buildings taken October, 2001.<a href="franciscc.jpg"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Pic#1,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="franciscc2.jpg">Pic#2, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="franciscc3.jpg">Pic#3 </a> Francis CC after collapse winter of 90-91, July 91,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="franciscc91.jpg">Pic#4</a></b></font></i></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <b><i><font face="Californian FB"><span class="style4">Forni-Van Vleck-Orelli-Bassi-Swift-Rupley <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Families-</span> A little history and background researched and written by <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Jonni Hill-Tanner. This edited e-mail historical review of local <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ranching families was the result of the exchange of between Jonni <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and I on a wedding notice from the pages of the Mountain Democrat. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> This e-mail is from April 4, 2004. You will find this a very <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> interesting read and in the near future, apart of the book she has <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> written on our local mountain ranching families...................</font></i></b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">"In regards to the Forni/Van <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Vleck connection: This came from the mouth of both the Forni and the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Van Vleck families...First of all...where to start? Samuel Q Forni <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> was the father of Virginia (Forni) Bassi, wife of Giosue (pronounced <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Jisuway) Bassi who was the owner and builder of what is now the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Upper Bassi. 160 acres of the upper Bassi was purchased from John <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ramelli in 1867 and an adjoining 160 acres was purchased from Daniel <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lombardi in 1889 completing what is now known as the Upper Bassi. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Alex Forni was Samuel's nephew, making Virginia, obviously, his <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> aunt. Alex's father was Dennis, Samuels brother. Dennis and another <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> brother had gone to the area between what is now El Dorado and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Plymouth and bought a lot of land for ranching there. They didn't <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> stay in the Georgetown area like Samuel or for that matter, a lot of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Orelli's. Alex must have liked the area where his Uncle Sam <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> lived better than where his father was at. Alex returned to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown area and bought out most of the Fillipini-Pedrini <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> holdings from Rinaldo Fillipini, both in Garden Valley and also the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Tells Peak Mountain Ranch which is now the Van Vleck. (Just a side <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> bar incase you don't already know this: Ciperano Pedrini changed his <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> name here in America to William Tell because he wanted his name to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sound a little more American...That is where the name Tell's Peak, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek and the Tell's Peak Mountain Ranch originated. Prior to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sale of the property to the Van Vlecks in 1933, this is the name to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> reference for the property.) At the time of purchase of the high <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> country ranch the acreage was approximately 2,240. Alex was a very <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> successful cattle rancher and the Forni beef was some of the best in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the county. Alex had a meat market in Placerville located <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> somewhere on the west side of main street near to what is now the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> bell tower. The Forni's owned the Tells Peak Mountain Ranch for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> almost 18 years when Alex died on September 30, 1927. Alex's widow <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Nettie and his only child, son Loren, then just 20, tried gallantly <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to keep the Forni holding in tact. They were too wide spread as they <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> also had sizeable holding somewhere in between Galt and Latrobe in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Sacramento Valley. This has to tie into the Orelli connection as <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the one of the Orelli's also had a sizeable ranch in that area too <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> as well as the Swift family. In 1932, Nettie made the decision to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sell the high country ranch but it was a very bitter sale. She <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> didn't want to relinquish it but too many of Alex's business dealing <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> were made on his word and reputation and when he was no longer there <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to insure success, too many of his investors wanted to take their <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> money and run. They didn't have much faith in a widow and a wet <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> behind the ears kid of 20. Nettie made the sale of the upper ranch <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> very hard on the Van Vlecks. They were unable to take possession of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the main ranch buildings until late in 1933 and it almost turned <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> into a war of wills. Oren Van Vleck, Stanley's father, built a small <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> cabin out in the back meadow so they at least had a line shack to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> use until the completion of all the negotiations of final sale on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the property. I saw the remains of the cabin which was there in a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> pile when I first came to the ranch and that was when I first heard <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> some of this history. Dennis Forni, Jr...only Grandson of Alex, who <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> lives right on Forni Road in Placerville, right behind the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> fairgrounds property which, by the way, was Forni land at one time <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> too, told me the Forni side of the story and showed me pictures of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> him as a two year old sitting on the front grass in front of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ranch house. The pictures are more than interesting because they <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> show the ranch house before the big picture window was installed <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> years later by the Van Vlecks. Stanley inherited the upper ranch <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> when his father passed away. He(Standley) had one too many failed <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> marriages and his last divorce prior to 1974 was his financial <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> downfall. He had to sell off a lot of property to settle the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> divorce. One of his decisions was to sell the ranch that had been in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Van Vleck family for almost 40 years to William J Pendola out of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Grass Valley for the tidy little sum of $2 million dollars. </font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB"> The Orelli is a relationship <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to the Bassi connection. Virginia Forni's mother, Florinda was an <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Orelli before her first marriage to Joseph Fripp. He died and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Florinda married Sam Forni. Virginia had three sisters. Louisa, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Josephine (Swift)...hence the Swift connection, Adelaide (Fredricks), <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> one brother...Amelio who is buried in the Georgetown Cemetery and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> one Half brother Joseph Fripp. Virginia died in child birth at the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ripe old age of 24 leaving Gisoue with three small children. Daniel, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Josephine(Campenosi) and Kitty Angelina (Davis). Gisoue sent his <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> children to live with relatives in Oakland and he never remarried. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Daniel returned as a young adult to help his father but the two <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> girls remained in the bay area. Daniel married Annie Grother of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lotus. They had three kids. Joshua, Lillian (Viccini) and Marcella (Maninwaring). <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> To the best of my knowledge Marcella is still alive but I do know <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> her son Dan and his wife Roberta. I have been in touch with them and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Bert has offered to provide all the old pictures and information to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> me on the Bassi part of the story. </font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">The Swift connection to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Bassi came into the picture when Daniel sold the upper Bassi to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Michigan California Lumber Company and a cousin, Rufus Swift was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> able to acquire the lands back in a land trade. Rufus had three <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> daughters who inherited the property on his death. Phyllis Swift <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> (Williams, Fox) who has now passed away continued her fathers <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> business and used the upper Bassi like her father did. The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Upper Bassi is now in control of the 13 grandchildren of Rufus <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Swift. </font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">The Rupley/ Askew information <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> you mentioned about the quiet wedding at the home of Alex <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Forni might be a connection from Alex's wife Nettie. Somewhere in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> all my things I have her maiden name and some of the connections she <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> had to all of this history. I will have to go in search for all of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> that. Jonni " </font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style5"><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.org/cabins/lot24.htm" name="G">GCSHT-1953/1957- Lot 24-GA Brattland Family Cabin-1958-Old and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Current Pictures</a></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Georgetown Gazette(GG)- Mountain <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Democrat(MD) Newspaper Reports on interesting events on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown Divide from 1860 to the Present..............Gernes, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Diebert, 1999</b></i></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">GG June 19, 1890 "Theodore <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Schlein, while engaged in building a new flume for the California <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Water Company at South Fork on Wednesday 11 inst., the flume , not <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> being securely braced, went down precipitating Mr. Schlein upon the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> rocks, severely injuring his hip and side. He was brought down <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Saturday for treatment. He is under the care of the Odd Fellows."</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">GG June 10, 1898 "Among <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the stockman who passed through our town the past two weeks for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> their alpine ranges were: Murphy Bors. of Weaver Creek, for their <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> range at Mckinney's(Lake Tahoe); G. Bassi for silver Creek: Sam and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Amelio Forni, for Forni's(Stone Celler, Butler Meadow, Fornis's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ranch(Tell's Ranch, Fillipinni's eventual Van Vleck). Wm. Bachin and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Son from Garden Valley; McCollough from near Folsom, for South Fork; <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Rodoni Bros: Butler from near Folsom, with sheep: Jake Drairer from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Cool."</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><span class="style5">Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Wentworth Springs Rubicon Springs Lake Tahoe Road</span></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">This road was described by <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> James in 1915 as a "stern road, that would make the "rocky road to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dublin" look like a "flowery bed of ease. The Georgetown Road <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> is an important and historic feature of the Tahoe Region, for it <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> connects Georgetown with Virginia City, and it was the former place <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> so many Tahoe pioneers came." James, 1915, pg 220,347.</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>In a short informational note <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in the Tahoe Tattler in the Fall of 1881, the current owner of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Rubicon Springs reports on plans for the road........"Hunsucker <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Bros' proprietors of the Rubicon Springs, say they will have a road <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> open to Georgetown next year, to give visitors a better chance to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> see the wonders of that wonderful place and to expedite the ways and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> means of getting out the famous soda water. Up to date the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> demand has been much greater than the supply."(Gernes; Deibert, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1999)</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>Later in the Georgetown Gazette <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> edition of July 1st, 1885, the editors offer their thanks to to Mr. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Hunsucker for this personal effort in getting the road from the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Rubicon Springs to Lake Tahoe in serviceable <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> condition.............."Good! the new road from Rubicon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Springs to Lake Tahoe is in splendid order, and Mr. Hunsucker <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> deserves much credit for the good job in its construction. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Johnny Poor, who is running the stage on that road now sends a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> four-in-hand down the road as though it was level ground. At <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Springs the thermometer during July 5, 6, and 7th stood during <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the warmest part of the day at 85 degrees. Since the 4th the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> health and pleasure seekers are coming in more freely. There <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> remains only a short piece of road to be made between the Rubicon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and Wentworth's to complete the wagon road from Georgetown to Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Tahoe."(Gernes; Deibert, 1999)</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>Even with the best efforts of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Hunsuckers and Wentworths, the road remained unfinished in 1887 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> when the editor summarized the history and need for the road to be <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> finished by the county in the July 16, 1887 edition of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown Gazette..............."During the past twenty years there <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> has been expended, by the citizens of the Georgetown Divide in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> opening a wagon road to Tahoe, no less than $10,000. It is now <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> completed to Wentworth Springs, 42 miles from Georgetown, and from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake Tahoe to Hunsucker's Springs (Rubicon Springs) about 10 miles. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> leaving about 10 miles between those points to be opened. the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> road has always been free to anyone who desired to travel it, and no <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> person ever received back any of the money expended. To complete the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> road will cost at least $3000. To raise that amount by private <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> subscription has been found impossible; yet a portion could be <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> raised, and if some assistance had been rendered by the County, the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> road could have been opened this year."(Gernes; Deibert, 1999)</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>In a further very short note or <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> tidbit in the July 12, 1888 edition of the Georgetown Gazette, the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> editors reported........"Arrangements have been made for completion <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of the Georgetown and Tahoe wagon road."(Gernes, Deibert, 1999)</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>During the Summer of 1888, the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gazette reported on the progress of the Lake Tahoe road completion <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in the August 2, 1888 edition as follows.........."The wagon road <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> now being completed from Georgetown to Lake Tahoe will make this the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> most direct and best route for people coming from the lower Counties <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> who have not visited this great lake. Georgetown being a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> central point is a very convenient place for procuring supplies for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> a mountain trip, and we believe that goods can be brought at as low <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> figures here as in any mountain town." (Gernes, Deibert, 1999)</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>Finally, in the late Fall of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1888, the final part to the Georgetown to Tahoe wagon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> road was completed and reported upon in the October 4, 1888 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> paper..........."The wagon road is now completed through to Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Tahoe from Georgetown, so that loaded teams can pass over to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> lake. With tow daily stage lines plying between Placerville <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and Auburn, making Georgetown an important junction, it is believed <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> that by next Spring business will justify a daily line between <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown and Lake Tahoe." (Gernes; Deibert, 1999)</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>The continuing condition of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown to Lake Tahoe Road via Wentworth Springs and Rubicon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Springs was in yearly need of work to keep it in passable condition. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the attraction of Lake Tahoe and its resorts as well as Wentworth <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and Rubicon Springs made it necessary to keep the pressure on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> county supervisors for road maintenance. The following letter was, I <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> am sure, a sincere request for support for the county infrastructure <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> but it should also be noted that Judge Bennett was running for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> re-election at the time of this letter. This letter may have also <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> been a means of reminding the citizens of Georgetown of his name and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> his obvious civic interest in the county. He was subsequently <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> re-elected shortly here after. In a letter to the editor of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Georgetown Gazette of September 14, 1896 by Judge M.P. Bennett <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of Georgetown, he wrote......"Most residents of the county are <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> familiar with the natural advantages of the Placerville road, the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> liberal hospitality of the Inns along the way, and the climax of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> scenic grandure, when from the western summit of the Sierras, Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Tahoe, fifteen hundred feet below, breaks into view....there has <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> been for many years a road from Georgetown to Wentworth Springs and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> despite some pretty steep hills, it is a good mountain road. I <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> first traveled it in the summer of 1877 and it was a most delightful <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> renewal of my early impression through the mighty <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> timber....Wentworth Springs....owned by Nathan Wentworth whose well <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> built hotel is in a beautiful valley, in which a number of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sparkling, health-giving springs are an attraction that annually <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> bring thither numerous tourists from this county as well as <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Sacramento and Placer counties. Many stop here and venture no <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> further because the wonderful beyond, like all the fabled wonders of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> antiquity, is approachable through only the most perilous way. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> From Wentworth Springs to the Rubicon Springs, is not exceeding ten <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> miles, measured in feet and inches, but a mile of good road is a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> mile, and how far a mile of this is, I do not dare to state. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Some portions of it are called "Sluicebox" and one of our party <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> designated it "Devil's Sluice Box" to go with "Hell Hole", not far <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> off. To make this road passable, from three to five hundred <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> dollars should be spent on it and the investment would be a most <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> judicious business proposition for El Dorado county.....As <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> McKinney's stands for progress on the western shore, so does Tallac <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> with its beautiful new hotel building, at the south end of the Lake, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> but there is woeful want of land communication between the two <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> places. A good road is constructed from Tahoe City to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> McKinney's, and from Tallac to Brigham's, and a wagon has been <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> through from McKinney's to Mr. Frost's Rubican Park, but from that <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> place to Dr. Brigham's, a distance , I think, of probably five or <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> six miles, there is no wagon road....We have in Lake Tahoe one of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the greatest natural wonders and beauties of the world....does not <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> fairness to the North Divide...demand that the approach to the Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> over the Georgetown road be made safe and comfortable?....(signed) <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> M.P. Bennett"(Gernes, Deibert, 1999)</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB"> I recently came across this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> local <a href="http://liddicoat.net/Rubicon/index.htm"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown-Placerville Liddicoat Family history </a>showing their <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> early involvement with using Jeeps on the road from Georgetown to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake Tahoe via Wentworth Springs and Rubicon Springs with wonderful <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> pictures of Wentworth Springs in 1946 along with detailed pictures <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of their Jeep travel on the road including historic pictures of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Rubicon Springs and the bridge before the steel bridge and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> after..........This website is a must review for a look back 60 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> years plus at Rubicon Springs and road to Lake Tahoe.</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><font color="#000080"><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="pacificdistrictmap1950.jpg"><span class="style4">Gerle Creek(Gurley) <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span> </a>T</b></font><b>he creek was named for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/history/bowmanmap1873.pdf">early <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> El Dorado County settler, Christopher C. or Cyrus Gerle,</a> a Swedish immigrant <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> who arrived before 1860(Gudde)but in later records(Mason) it <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> indicates he arrived in California in 1854. The youngest of two Gerle brothers who came to California in 1850's,Christopher Cyrus Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> was born in Sweden in 1833, marrying his wife, Mary Clausen in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Coloma, El Dorado County in 1865. Christoper C. Gerle became a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> naturalized US Citizen on August 19, 1861 at the El Dorado County <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Courthouse in Placerville, California.<br /><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <br /><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <b style="mso-bidi-font-weight:normal"><i style="mso-bidi-font-style:<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] -->normal"><span style="font-family:"Californian FB","serif"">Mary was daughter to Peter (also called Paul) and Mary Clausen, who <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> emigrated from Heliogoland in 1853, was born in Heliogoland in 1849.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span>The Clausen’s had three daughters with the oldest Anna <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> marrying Jasper P. Jurgen’s in their native Heliogoland on October <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 3, 1852.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>The newlyweds <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> decided to leave for California making the trip their honeymoon.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span>Eight other members of the immediate family decided to head <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to California with the newlyweds, including Anna’s parents, Peter <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and Mary Clausen, their sons, Numel and Paul, their other daughters <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Margareta and Mary and Numel’s wife.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span>The other two making the trip were Chris and John Jacobsen <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> who were distant relatives of the family. The Jacobsen’s other <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> brother, Alex Jacobsen, came the next year to California and later <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> married Margareta Clausen in Coloma.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> Jasper <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> P Jurgens and his wife Anna Clausen Jurgens settled in Pinchem on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Weber Creek, El Dorado County</span>(Baldwin, 1975).<o:p></o:p></span></i></b><p class="MsoNormal"><b style="mso-bidi-font-weight:normal"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i style="mso-bidi-font-style:<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] -->normal"><span style="font-family:"Californian FB","serif""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The ship voyage from Hamburg Germany to San Francisco around the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> horn of South America took six months.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span>Once in San Francisco, the group took a river steamer to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Sacramento and eventually on to Mississippi Bar, which is now Fair <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Oaks, California, staying there until 1854 and then continuing their <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> journey to Weber Creek and Pinchem in El Dorado County (Baldwin, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1975).<o:p></o:p></span></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal"><b style="mso-bidi-font-weight:normal"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i style="mso-bidi-font-style:<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] -->normal"><span style="font-family:"Californian FB","serif""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Peter Clausen was born in England 1806 and his wife Mary was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> born in Heliogoland in 1815.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> While our US Census records show the Peter Clausen indicated <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> he was from England, this may be due to the British capturing Heliogoland <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in 1807 during the Napoleonic Wars, with Heliogoland remaining a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> possession till England returned the island to Germany in 1890.<o:p> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> It could also mean he was in fact born in England and moved to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Heliogoland as well.</o:p></span></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal"><b style="mso-bidi-font-weight:normal"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i style="mso-bidi-font-style:<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] -->normal"><span style="font-family:"Californian FB","serif""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Peter Clausen was a boot maker and cobbler by trade.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span>He and his wife setup a cobbler shop in Coloma where he <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> worked for years before retiring and moving back to Weber Creek, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> where he passed away in 1884, with his wife Mary Clausen passing <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> away 4 years later in 1888 (Baldwin, 1975).<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span></span></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Christopher C. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gerle and his wife, Mary initially had two boys, Peter C. Gerle, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> born Wednesday December 22, 1869 and dying Wednesday, February <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1,1871 and a second boy, Charles (Charlie) Gerle, born <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Wednesday December 14, 1870 and dying Wednesday February 1,1871, on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the same day as his brother. </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Their deaths were reported in the SACRAMENTO DAILY UNION in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the death notice section, "<span class="auto-style2"><font class="auto-style1" size="4"><strong><em>At <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Coloma, Feb. 1st, Peter C, son of Mary and Chris Gerle 2 years, 1 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> month and 11 day. At Coloma, Feb. 1st, Charlie, infant son of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Mary and Chris Gerle, aged 7 weeks</em></strong></font></span>." </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Both are buried in the Pioneer Cemetery in Coloma with their uncle, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Charles W. or William Gerle. Christopher C. Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and his wife Mary later moved to Plymouth, in Amador County, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California, in 1877 (Mason) having a third son George and three <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> girls, Mary, Charlotte and Maggie. The 1880 census indicates <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Christopher was working as a laborer in Plymouth. By 1881, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Christopher was working as a Mason in the Empire Mine in Plymouth <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> (Mason) . <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=W59BAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA327&lpg=PA327&dq=Empire+Mine+Plymouth+California&source=bl&ots=ryitQoBcxy&sig=tjrJIFVDuz4LK7Xwu0mk7T5zvuQ&hl=en&ei=f-1ES7bHMJWsMfXxuPEB&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=6&ved=0CBgQ6AEwBTgU"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The Empire Mine in Plymouth </a>is not to be confused with the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Empire Mine of Grass Valley. The Empire Mine became the Pacific Mine <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in the early 1880s with new ownership. Christopher C. Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> died in Plymouth, Amador County February 26, 1885 at age <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 51 as reported in a death notice in the March 9, 1885 issue of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> SACRANTO DAILY UNION. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Gerle&GSfn=charles&GSmn=William&GSbyrel=all&GSdyrel=all&GSst=6&GSob=n&GRid=6723232&">Charles W. Gerle was the oldest brother, born in Sweden in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> July, 1823 and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> dying March 4, 1907,</a> Charles W. or CW Gerle became a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> naturalized US Citizen on March 9, 1858 at the El Dorado County <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Courthouse in Placerville, California. Charles W. Gerle arrived in Coloma in 1851 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> according to the 1860 census while his younger brother, Christopher <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> C. Gerle arrived three years later in 1854. Both were living <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> together as bachelors in 1860 and identified themselves as miners in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1860 census. Eventually Charles W. Gerle lived in Coloma with <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Minnie Johnson, who was previously married to an Englishman and had <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> two boys Juan Johnson and Charles W. Johnson in Sweden, with a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> third child George Marian. Johnson, born in Coloma in 1878. Later George <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and the other children took <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ipZd1-j5bM&feature=my_favorites&list=FLyzI5aVvTGVUd-uy5LFZkUw">Charles Gerle's name, inheriting the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ranch property of Uniontown Coloma Pilot Hill. The Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gazette would always refer in later years to George M Gerle of Pilot <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Hill.</a></b></i></font><p class="MsoNormal">“C.W. Gerle (Charles <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> William Gerle of Uniontown/Gerlees Ranch on Gerle Creek) was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> plaintiff and David Croft et al. was defendants in an action to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> recover Gerle’s mining claim and $100 damages July 1, 1861. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The jury determined that Gerle owned the claim, but did not award <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the $100 damages”<o></o><o:p></o:p></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal"><o> </o>From Justice Court Records of Coloma, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> stored in the California State Library California History Room’s <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Collections between 1859 to 1888 compiled by Paul Nesbitt, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> PhD…published in the April 22, 1988 issue of the MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Newspaper page A-8<o></o><o:p></o:p></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --><!--~-|**|PrettyHtmlStart|**|-~--><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ipZd1-j5bM&feature=my_favorites&list=FLyzI5aVvTGVUd-uy5LFZkUw">According to original Land <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Patent records, Charles W. Gerle filed on 4 pieces of property <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> within MD 11N, 09E, sections 10 & 3, of which 3 pieces were in 10 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and 1 piece in 3 in Uniontown, El Dorado County, Ca.</a>. The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> attached map outlines these sections which are basically Northwest <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> or down the South Fork of the American River from Coloma and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Uniontown. Their ranch was most certainly on the North side <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> associated with the land along the section line between 3 and 10. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The land is flat and was close or on the river directly. The Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Brothers needed that water for their livestock. When they <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> drove their cattle to their cabin (Gerles) on Gerle Creek, they <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> drove it Northeast up to Georgetown and then on the road to Gerles <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> on Gerle Creek each Summer. These land patents were issued in 1874, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1879 and 1892 to Charles W. Gerle by the General Land Office.</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="Gerle%20Brothers%20Ranch%20Uniontown.JPG" width="655" height="460" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ipZd1-j5bM&feature=my_favorites&list=FLyzI5aVvTGVUd-uy5LFZkUw">The Gerle brothers ranch in Uniontown Coloma <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>outlined above is <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> now contained within the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.blm.gov/ca/st/en/fo/folsom/cronan.html">Cronan <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ranch Regional Trails Park </a>in Pilot Hill California now <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> administered by the BLM. Currently one of the walking and biking <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> trail loops within this very large park along the Northside of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> South Fork of the American River is referred to as the "Gerle Loop" <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> reflecting the three Gerle brothers original settlement there in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1850s. Anyone with information on the Gerle brothers who <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> would like to share should contact <a href="mailto:jbarnes@blm.gov"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> James Barnes, the BLM Archeologist </a>in charge of the current <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> research in this area.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">According to the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="mdsept301916[1].jpg">Mountain <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Democrat of Sept 30, 1916,</a> the Gerle Brothers bought their ranch <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> property (Gerles/ Wagner Brothers/Lawyers Cow Camp) on Gerle Creek <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> from the Indians in the early sixties(1860s). By 1877, Christopher <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Cyrus Gerle and his family had moved to Plymouth in Amador County. Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Family sources indicate that Christopher may have lost his portion <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of the Gerle Ranch in Uniontown and on Gerle Creek in a poker game <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in Carson City to his own brother Charles W. Gerle, which would <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> account for his move with family to Plymouth. Another possible <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> reason for this move is it came shortly after Christopher and Mary <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> lost their two infant sons which may have also convinced them to move as <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> well to make a fresh start. In 1889, the California Water and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Mining Company purchased the Charles W. Gerle's interest in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the property and had the land surveyed. The survey reported that the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> property was swampland and overflow lands which made it the property <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of the State of California. In 1895, CM Fitzgerald, the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> superintendent of the California Water and Mining company, was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> granted a patent to the 440 acres of property in section 36 of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> T.14N, R. 14E.. He then deeded it to his company and who in turn <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> deeded to each of the other companies who have taken ownership <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> since.</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p> The remaining part of Gerle's Ranch on Gerle Creek....the eastern <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> part was still owned by Charles W Gerle and remained in his family, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> being passed to his wife Minnie and son George M Gerle after Charles <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> death in 1907. Later after the death of George M Gerle in 1917, George's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> wife Aileen became the owner of Gerle's Ranch property on Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek, eventually deeding the ranch property in 1935 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to George's two younger brothers, Thomas H Gerle and Grant G. Gerle(Chris <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Hankins, 2010) <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Thomas passed away in 1949 while Grant Gerle died in 1956. In 1964, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Bruce Wadsworth of Georgetown bought the eastern part of the Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ranch , 330 acres, on Gerle Creek and held it until it sold in late <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 2008/early 2010 to the Sacramento Municpal Utility District or SMUD.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>The Georgetown Gazette reported <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in their August 20, 1880 edition about Charles Gerle's trial in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> justice court.........."The trial of Chas. Gurley (misspelled), for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> drawing a rifle on James Smith, took place in Justice McLains court <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> last Saturday. Dist Attorney Ingram represented the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> prosecution, with Jas. Smith and Chas. Harris as witnesses for the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> complaint, while Gurley testified for himself. The weight of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the testimony told against Gurley, but the matter was compromised by <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gurley pleading guilty to simple assault and paying a fine of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> $50.00."Gernes; Deibert, 1999</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>A report from the June 23, 1882 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> edition of the Georgetown Gazette on the movement of livestock <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> through Georgetown to the ranches in the Sierras.........."A great <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> many droves of stock and dairy cattle, sheep and goats, have passed <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> through Georgetown during the present month for their ranges above, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and many more are yet to pass before the month ends. Among <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> those who have already passed up with dairy stock are: Forni of Gold <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Hill, Sam Forni of this place (Georgetown), Filippini & Co., Bacchi <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of Garden Valley, Schelari and Gerley(mispelled) of Uniontown, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Deller and Son near this place (Georgetown) and others whose names <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> we have not in mind. Besides this, no less than a dozen large <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> bands of sheep and goats have passed through town. Much stock <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> is also passing up by routes south of this place." (Gernes; Deibert, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1999)</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b> The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~320~30027:47B,-D--E--Calif-,-W--Nevada-?qvq=q:california%20wheeler%20Atlas;sort:pub_list_no_initialsort,pub_date,pub_list_no,series_no;lc:RUMSEY~8~1&sort=pub_list_no_initialsort%2Cpub_date%2Cpub_list_no%2Cseries_no&mi=40&trs=67&printerFriendly=1">Gerle Brothers</a> used their<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="jacobsens1895.jpg">Sierra <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ranch on Gerle Creek</a> (Gurley; Lawyer's Cow Camp; & Wagner <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Bros.) from the early 1860s to raise hogs and cattle during <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Summer months, hauling the pork products over the Sierra's on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Georgetown/Wentworth Springs/Rubicon Springs/Lake Tahoe Road to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sell in Virginia City, Nevada. The earliest maps including <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/bowmanmap1873.pdf">Bowman's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1874 Map </a>of the whole Georgetown Divide show their ranch and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the creek identified with Gerle misspelled and written as it <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sounded; "Gurley." Gerle's Ranch dates from the early 1860s and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> became a very important way stop on the road to Lake Tahoe from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown, remaining so well into the 20th Century after the ranch <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> property was sold off in 1889.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><span class="style4"><a href="../images/gerlemeadowbridges.JPG">Gerle Meadow/Neck <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Meadow</a> </span>The<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="../images/gerlecreekJune252011%20009.jpg">Old Bruce Wadsworth cabin <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>at the back of the very southern section of Gerle/Neck Meadow up against the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> base of Johnny's Hill, on the south side of Gerle Creek serviced by <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> two wood and steel bridges. The<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="../images/gerlecreekJune252011%20014.jpg">main wood bridge across the meadow</a> and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="../images/gerlecreekJune252011%20012.jpg">the old <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> flatcar bridge recovered from Jacobson's Crossing of Gerle Creek</a>, one 1/8 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> mile up Gerle creek from the main bridge. Gerle Meadow/Neck Meadow <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> is the Eastern part of the Section which originally belonged to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gerle Brothers and now belongs to SMUD, purchased in 2009 from Bruce <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Wadsworth of Georgetown. Bruce owned the property from 1964 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and <a href="../images/gerlecreekJune252011%20010.jpg">built the cabin and the barn structure</a> using a chainsaw saw mill <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> using timber in the meadow. The cabin uses water from a spring off <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the lower North side of Johnny's Hill. This area is one of the most <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> beautiful and serene areas on Gerle Creek. Walking this area will <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> immediately tell you why the Gerle Brothers attached themselves to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> this area. The original Gerle Brother's cabin before the main one ( <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gurleys, Gerlees, Wagner Bros, Lawyers Cow Camp ) to the west on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> meadow was built was in Neck Meadow on the original survey plat from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the 1870s.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b><font color="#000080"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.org">Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek Summer Home Tract(GCSHT)</a>,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerlecreekmap1950.jpg">US <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Forest Service Summer Home Tract,</a></font> first <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> established/located on Southwest side of Gerle Creek opposite from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Swimming Hole on logging spur by the the Forest Service. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.org/cabins/Chronology%201938-1988%20Holmes.pdf"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> See also John Holmes Chronology from 1938-1988. </a> A <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> November 5, 1953 article in the MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT entitled </b></i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <b><i>"Plan New Recreation, Homes on Wentworth Springs Road," </i></b></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b> "A new summer home and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> recreational area is being planned by Eldorado National Forest for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gerle Creek, on the Wentworth Springs Road approximately 40 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> miles East of Georgetown. The site selected embraces an area <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> large enough for 50 to 60 summer homes, one public camp area <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and two organizational areas. Fishing, swimming and hiking <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> will be the principal attractions. The area is only eight <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> miles west of Desolation Wilderness area. Work on the proposal <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> is being carried out under direction of County Supervisor Gene <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Chappie and Ranger George Ramstad." </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b> This original plan and layout <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of the summer home tract lots along the Southside of the creek did <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> not work out. Interest in the lots was basically lacking and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> some of the old stories indicated due to the location directly on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the creek, the mosquitos made it difficult. In any case, with <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> no interest in the original location, the Forest Service went back <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to the drawing boards and re-laid out the summer home tract in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> present location on the North side away from the creek and up on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> hillside above the<a href="airportflats1895.jpg"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Airport Flats area</a><a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/eldoradomap1895.jpg"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>as laid out in the map below. Have a look at this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> original <a href="gcshtmap1953.jpg">US Forest Service Map of the GCSHT, a compass and tape survey, dated <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Feb 1953. </a>By the time the FS offered lots at Gerle Creek, they <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> had eliminated the lots on the Southside of the creek in favor of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the current position up the hill on the Northside of the flats. </b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>For a number of reasons not <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> clear, there were no takers for the summer home tract between the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> original offering in 1953 and when they began again to create <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> interest in the summer home tract. In a January 31, 1957 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> article entitled "SPRING OPENING OF SUMMER HOME TRACT ON GERLE <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> CREEK PLANNED," published in the MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT, </b></i></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>"Plans were announced this week <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> by Ranger Kenneth St. John of Georgetown Ranger station for the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> opening of a<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="airportflats1895.jpg">summer home tract along Gerle Creek. </a> The forest service will <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> offer 40 lots for lease this spring or early summer, said St. John. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The tract, about three and a one-half miles north of South <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Fork on Gerle Creek., will be reached either from the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown-Wentworth Springs road or by the Icehouse road from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Highway 50. The area is 39 miles northeast of Georgetown on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Georgetown-Wentworth Springs road and 28 miles north of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Riverton on the Icehouse road. The lots, each of one-quarter <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to one-third acre in size, will be leased on a standard forest <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> service permit, reissued annually, according to St. John. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> This is the first summer home development area opened along Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> creek."</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>As originally envisioned, it <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> was laid out for lots 1 through 47, but later lots 1 through , 8,9 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and 16 were removed from this original plan. The exact position of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Summer Home tract center is 38 Degrees, 59.205 Minutes North; <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 120 Degrees, 23.010 Minutes West. </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Later in the Summer of 1957, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT reported in a July 11, 1957 article entitled <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "FIVE SUMMER HOME SITE APPLICANTS AWARDED LOTS AT GERLE CREEK," </b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>"Summer home sites along Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek above Georgetown have been awarded to five applicants in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> first allotment of 42 sites in the Forest Service development it was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> announced this week by Georgetown Ranger Kenny St. John. Lots <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> were awarded to Steven R. Camber, Oakland; D.C. Young, Orinda; <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Albert H. Somner, Garden Valley; John Holmes, Sacramento; and Harry <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Heckenliable, Stockton. The five were among a list of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> applicants which has been building up since 1952, it was explained <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and many who had previously applied apparently were no longer <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> interested, accounting for the small number of applicants appearing <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to select sites. Later applicants now on file will be notified <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of a date to be announced later when further selections may be <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> made."</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>I believe that due to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> rather remote location, the unfamiliarity of people in general with <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> this area on the forest and real difficulty in reaching this area in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the early 50s, that interest was lacking for few interested folks <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> who were willing to trek to Gerle Creek. The roads to Gerle Creek <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> then were little more than two tire tracks whether coming from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Riverton or Georgetown. The narrow old log roads took <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> considerable time and navigational skill to make your way to places <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> like Gerle Creek. The initial offering of summer home sites in 1953 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> was coming at a period of time when the country was just 8 years <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> past a major World War and currently was involved in the Korean War. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Recreation opportunities for people were not high on the scale when <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> balanced against the need to reestablish their basic needs including <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> housing and work. Among the other difficulties of Gerle Creek was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the fact that the original log bridge crossing Gerle Creek at <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Airport Flats in 1927 had been washed out in the Winter of 1951/52. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> So besides the isolation presented by the summer home tract at Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek was the fact you had to ford the creek every time you came or <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> went to the summer home tract. In the days before the new Loon Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dam, this was no small feat and nearly impossible during the early <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Spring and Summer, due to the snow runoff. All tract residents as <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> well as other users of Airport Flats barracks buildings, including <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the South Fork Mill ditch keeper had to ford the creek till 1963 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> when the first lane of the new concrete bridge was completed.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>By 1957, 1958 people were ready <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to take up the opportunities presented by the Forest Service <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> offering of summer home tracts. My parents, Gordon and Joy Brattland <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> found out about Gerle Creek as a result of applying to the Forest <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Service for a summer home lot at Wright's Lake. Our family camped <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> regularly at Wrights Lake from the mid 50s and fell in love with the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> isolated setting and the cabins around the lake. The Forest <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Service advised that they had no more lots at Wright's Lake, but <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> they had a summer home tract at Gerle Creek and plenty of available <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> lots. My parents then visited the tract in the early Summer of 1958 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> via Georgetown with my sister and I in tow and selected lot 34 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> next to the Holmes on Lot 33. After completing the paperwork and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> being awarded the lot, the Carey Brothers, who had also wanted Lot <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 34, had begun to build on the lot. When we showed up after being <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> awarded lot 34 by the Forest Service, the Carey family <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> indicated they had earlier actually selected lot 34 and that <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> one of the three Carey Brothers was supposed to go to Georgetown and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sign the required paperwork with the Forest Service, but had failed <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to do so. They were so intent on this lot that my father and mother <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> decided to pick another lot, selecting instead Lot 24. They <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> reported the problem to the Forest Service, who corrected both lease <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> documents, awarding Lot 24 to the Brattland family, while allowing <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Carey family to retain Lot 34.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style5"><font face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.org">Gerle Creek Summer <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Home Tract Association</a></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Original Association<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/pumps.jpg">Hydraulic Ram <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Pumps for the water system picture 1</a> Here is a later picture <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> with my friend Dave Orchard standing in front of the hydraulic ram <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> pump house built over the ram pumps,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/pic52.jpg">picture 2.</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.org/cabins/lot24.htm"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="style4">Lot 24 History</span></a> Brattland Family Cabin</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.org/cabins/lot41.htm"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="style4">Lot 41 History </span> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>McDowall Family Cabin</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gcshtaerialshot1968.jpg">Aerial shot 1968</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i><b><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerlecreekplan.jpg"><span class="style4">Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek Reservoir</span>-</a>Eldorado National Forest, El Dorado County, Ca </font></b></i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>In 1885, Alex F. Forni applied <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> for a patent on 560 acres near what is now Gerle Reservoir in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Butler Meadows area, where he operated a ranch (Errington 2000). <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Review of the earliest map of the area, shows<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="aebrowns1895.jpg">AE <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Browns ranch house </a>and fence in this area, but no mention of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Forni. Butler Meadows is more than likely named for the Samuel <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Butler and his pioneer family who were early cattle ranchers, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> arriving in about 1860. This same area was also an area frequented <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> by Indians, most likely<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://shinglespringsrancheria.com/history/history-home.html"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Southern Maidu,</a> making use of several areas around the juncture <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of Angel Creek and Gerle Creek, "during the Summer months, hunting, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> fishing and gathering seeds, fruits, and bulbs" underneath the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> current reservoir, according to Wilson and Dyson(1962)</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://shinglespringsrancheria.com/history/history-home.html"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> For more information on Native Americans in this area of Eldorado <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> National Forest, try the historical page for the Shingle Springs <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Rancheria</a></font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>For a picture of Charles Forni, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> see Rambeau, 1998, page 21 for a group photo of the I.O.O.F. lodge <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in Georgetown, 1889. There is a group picture showing members Alex <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Francis, Charles Forni, Dan Jerrett, Gus Orelli and Charles <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Wentworth, all significant men in the history of Gerle Creek</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><i><b><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerlecreekdam.jpg">Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek Reservoir Dam</a></font></b></i></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Gerle Creek Reservoir Dam was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> completed in 1962 and is on the East side of Butler Meadows. As an <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> interesting piece of background on this eventual site for this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> storage reservoir for SMUD, in 1916, hearings were held on the water <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> rights of the Truckee River General Electric Company to water from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gerle Creek. These rights had been assumed when they acquired <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> them from the California Water and Mining Company (California Water <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Company). The company wanted to build a dam and reservoir to produce <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> electricity. This claim was disputed and became part of rather <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> complicated and extended federal hearing. The most interesting part <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of the proposal, was the intention to build this dam on Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek at Jacobsens, creating water storage lake in the meadow <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> adjacent to Jacobsens extending back into Gerles Ranch or Lawyers <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Cow Camp. The hearings were reported on extensively, including <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the names of witnesses who testified, including Jacob Jacobsen <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> (Mt Democrat Sept 30, 1916). In the April 17th issue of the Mt <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Democrat in 1917, it was reported the federal government found in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> favor of the Truckee River General Electric Company and confirmed <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> their rights to the water for use of Gerle Meadow for a dam and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> reservoir. By 1924, these rights had been passed along to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown Divide Water Company (Mt Democrat, March 8, 1924). All <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> real action to actually create a dam and reservoir were put off till <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the early 1950s when El Dorado County in the push to resolve their <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> increasing need for water with the post WWII boom revisited creating <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> a a number of dams and reservoirs in the county for electricity <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> generation. From early 1951 till at least 1955, the planning <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of the SMUD Upper American River Project on the divide included the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gerle Creek Dam and reservoir in Gerle Meadows next to Jacobsens. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The Mountain Democrat carried a very extensive and detailed article <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> including a map showing 68 proposed dam sites in the June 23, 1955 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> newspaper, including the actual proposed reservoir site at Gerles <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Meadow, next to Jacobsens and not in its present location. As the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> proposed SMUD Upper American River Project progressed after 1955, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Gerles Meadow site was dropped in favor of the eventual and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> current site in Butler Meadow.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerlecreekresaerial1968.jpg">Aerial shot of the Lake 1968<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><a href="township120nr14emd1a.pdf">Georgetown and Carson Valley <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Road-</a> Very popular road from Georgetown down<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="eldorado1916mapa.jpg">across Union Valley to the Wilson <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ranch near Wright's Lake</a> connecting with the Placerville Road to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake Tahoe (Highway 50) just East of Fred's Place at the Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Junction (Toll House). This road dates from the mid 19th Century up <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> through the late 1950s when the construction of the Upper American <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> River Project of dams and lakes, many of the old roads or parts of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the old road went away.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b><span class="style4">Granlees Ranch (Forshoda) <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Diversion Dam and Ditch </span>........John (Jack) D . <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Granlees owned this summer ranch on Big Silver Creek, Union Valley, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> as well as his main ranch near Slough House along the Cosumnes River. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The Granlees Ranch property near Slough House was sold in the early 1960s to form the basis for the new community<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.ranchomurieta.com/aboutrm/historyindex.html"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Rancho Murieta</a> . The Granlees built a stone diversion dam and ditch to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> divert water from Big Silver Creek to supply water for their ranch and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> cattle in the meadows of Union Valley, located above Granlee's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ranch on Big Silver Creek. The ranch was removed with <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the construction of Union Valley Dam and Reservoir in the early <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1960s. According to the markings in the top of the rock diversion <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> dam, it was most recently rebuilt and repaired in October of 1947. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> My original thought was the diversion dam was built to support <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Millionaire Camp, but according to Krista Deal of the Forest Service <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> at Pacific House, the old diversion dam was built to support Granlees Ranch in Union Valley. The remnants of the original ditch <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> are still there in places down to the lake. <br /><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> For a more comprehensive review of the Granlees/Macklin/Driscoll <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Family history see<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="Granlees%20History-Granddaughter%20of%20early%20RM%20pioneers%20dies%20at%2096.pdf">Naida West's article in the El Grove Citizen On Line February 8, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 2008 entitled, " Granddaughter of Early RM pioneers dies at 96" <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> written on the passing of Mary Anita Granlees Macklin.</a></b></i></font><p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="granleediversiondam.JPG" width="530" height="365" /><img border="0" src="bigsilverdiversiondamoct122005001.jpg" width="531" height="338" /><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Additional pictures............<a href="bigsilverdiversiondamoct122005003.jpg">pic <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 3,</a> <a href="bigsilverdiversiondamoct122005004.jpg">pic 4,</a><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="bigsilverdiversiondamoct122005005.jpg">pic 5,</a><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="bigsilverdiversiondamoct122005007.jpg">pic 7,</a><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="bigsilverdiversiondamoct122005008.jpg">pic 8</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i><b><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="bunkergerle.jpg"><span class="style4">Gurley's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ranch(Gerle) </span> </a><span class="style4">Lawyers Cow Camp, Wagners Cow Camp</span> Early <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1860s,Gerle Brothers-Natives of Sweden-Hog Farmers-Eldorado National <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Forest, El Dorado County, Ca</font></b></i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Summer range location for the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gerle Brothers, early emigrants and farmers on<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="jacobsens1895.jpg">Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek, 2 miles West of Wentworth Springs </a>(USGS Map of 1895) on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Georgetown/Wentworth Springs/Rubicon Springs/Lake Tahoe road, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> next to Gerle Creek. Their ranch property butted up against the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Jacobson Ranch property on the West side of the section, also <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> on Gerle Creek. One of two Gerle brothers who came to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California in 1851,Christopher C. or Cyrus Gerle was born in Sweden in 1833, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> marrying his wife, Mary Clausen in El Dorado County in 1865. Mary <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> was daughter to Paul and Mary Clausen, both emigrating from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> England to Coloma. Her father Paul was born in 1806 while her mother <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> was born in 1815, both in England. Her father Paul was a boot maker. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Christopher C. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gerle and his wife, Mary initially had two boys, Peter C. Gerle, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> born Wednesday December 22, 1869 and dying Wednesday, February <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1,1871 and a second boy, Charles (Charlie) Gerle, born <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Wednesday December 14, 1870 and dying Wednesday February 1,1871, on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the same day as his brother. Their deaths were reported in the SACRAMENTO DAILY UNION in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the death notice section, "<span class="auto-style2"><font class="auto-style1" size="4"><strong><em>At <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Coloma, Feb. 1st, Peter C, son of Mary and Chris Gerle 2 years, 1 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> month and 11 day. At Coloma, Feb. 1st, Charlie, infant son of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Mary and Chris Gerle, aged 7 weeks</em></strong></font></span>." <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Both are buried in the Pioneer Cemetery in Coloma with their uncle, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Charles W. or William Gerle. </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </b></i></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Christopher C. Gerle and his <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> wife Mary later moved to Plymouth, in Amador County, California, in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1877 (Mason) having a third son George and three girls, Mary, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Charlotte and Maggie. The 1880 census indicates Christopher was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> working as a laborer in Plymouth. By 1881, Christopher was working <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> as a Mason in the Empire Mine in Plymouth (Mason) . <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=W59BAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA327&lpg=PA327&dq=Empire+Mine+Plymouth+California&source=bl&ots=ryitQoBcxy&sig=tjrJIFVDuz4LK7Xwu0mk7T5zvuQ&hl=en&ei=f-1ES7bHMJWsMfXxuPEB&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=6&ved=0CBgQ6AEwBTgU"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The Empire Mine in Plymouth </a>is not to be confused with the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Empire Mine of Grass Valley. The Empire Mine became the Pacific Mine <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in the early 1880s with new ownership. Christopher C. Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> died in Plymouth, Amador County February 26, 1885 at age <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 51 as reported in a death notice in the March 9, 1885 issue of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> SACRANTO DAILY UNION. <a href="http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Gerle&GSfn=charles&GSmn=William&GSbyrel=all&GSdyrel=all&GSst=6&GSob=n&GRid=6723232&">Charles W. Gerle was the oldest brother, born in Sweden in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> July, 1823 and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> dying March 4, 1907</a><a href="http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Gerle&GSfn=Christopher&GRid=6723234&">.</a> Charles W. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> or CW Gerle lived in Coloma with Minnie <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Johnson, who was previously married to an Englishman and had two <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> boys Juan Johnson and Charles W. Johnson in Sweden, with a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> third child George M. Johnson, born in Coloma in 1878. The Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Brothers used their Sierra ranch on Gerle Creek (Gurley; <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lawyer's Cow Camp; & Wagner Bros.) to raise hogs and cattle during <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Summer months, hauling the pork products over the Sierra's on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Georgetown/Wentworth Springs/Rubicon Springs/Lake Tahoe Road to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sell in Virginia City, Nevada. The Gerle Brothers and the Wagner <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Bros were long time neighbors in the Sierras during the Summers with <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Murray Camp folks just a mile North of their ranch on the way to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Bennett's Ranch in the McKinstry Lake area, as well as the Jacobsons, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Francis, Wentworths, Dellars and Jerretts. </b></i></font><b><i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB">By 1877, Christopher C. Gerle and his <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> family had moved on to Plymouth in Amador County. Gerle family <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sources indicate that he may have lost his share of the Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> properties in El Dorado County in a poker game to his brother, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Charles W. Gerle in Carson City. According to the Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gazette, reprinted in the Mountain Democrat of Sept 16, 1916, the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gerle Brothers bought their ranch property (Gerles/ Wagner <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Brothers/Lawyers Cow Camp) on Gerle Creek from the Indians in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> early sixties(1860s). In 1889, the California Water and Mining <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Company purchased the Charles W. Gerle's interest in the property <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and had the land surveyed. The survey reported that the property was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> swampland and overflow lands which made it the property of the State <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of California. In 1895, CM Fitzgerald, the superintendent of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California Water and Mining company, was granted a patent to the 440 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> acres of property in section 36 of T.14N, R. 14E.. He then <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> deeded it to his company and who in turn deeded to each of the other <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> companies who have taken ownership since.</font></i></b><font face="Californian FB"><i><b> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The earliest maps including Bowman's 1874 Map of the whole <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown Divide show their ranch and the creek identified <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> with Gerle misspelled and written as it sounded; "Gurley." <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Gerle's Ranch became a very <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> important way stop on the road to Lake Tahoe from Georgetown in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "Sixties", remaining so well into the 20th Century after the ranch <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> property was sold off in 1889 to the California Water Company. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The Wagner Brothers eventually purchased this property and have <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> retained ownership among their family, Wagner and Veer Kamp, of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> majority of Gerle Meadow around the old ranch house to this day.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>In the early part of the 20th <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Century, Archie and Irma Lawyer leased Gurley's Ranch from the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Wagner's about the same time they actually purchased Uncle Tom's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Cabin, at which point it became known as "Lawyer's Cow Camp" after <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1920(Errington 2000). Reviewing the original Eldorado National <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Forest Map of 1916 shows this old ranch still listed as "Gerles." <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Later, the historic ranch was returned to the Wagners, who referred <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to it as Wagner Bros., Wagners and or Wagner's Cow Camp. The 1950 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Forest Service map clearly shows the ranch listed as Wagner's but in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> later years returned the name to Lawyers when in fact the ranch was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> never owned by Lawyers and long since not leased anymore.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">The US Forest Service acquired <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 80 acres of section 34 of Township 14N, R14E, of the original Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ranch property May 3, 1920. </font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>The Gerle Brothers lived on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> their ranch in Uniontown -Coloma during the rest of the year when <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> not using their high sierra ranch on Gerle Creek.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="lawyerscowcamp1.jpg">Gurley's Ranch1,</a><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="lawyerscowcamp2.jpg">Gurley's Ranch2,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="lawyerscowcamp3.jpg">Gurley's Ranch3,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerlesranchwell.jpg">Gurley's Well,</a><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerlesranch1.jpg">Gurley's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ranch 4,</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><a href="gerlesranchhouse.jpg">Gurley' Ranch 5</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>See Gerle Creek.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style4"><a href="Gerle-Meadows-Snow.wmv">Gerle's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Meadow-Eastern half of Gerle's or Lawyer's Cow Camp</a>-<span class="auto-style1">Now <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> owned by SMUD-Slide video made up for the sale of the property <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> by Wadsworth family in 2010.</span></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture028[1].jpg" name="H"><span class="style4">Hales Camp <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Cabin</span> </a> on the North side of the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="eldoradonfmap1916.jpg">Rubicon River,</a> near Hales Crossing, 4 miles down the Rubicon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> River from Hell Hole Dam. Hales Crossing is located at the Western <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> point of the Charles Creek Trail which began at Jacobsens on Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek and wound its way West and down into the Rubicon Canyon. Lent <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Brown photo</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i><b><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="historypages/southforkmill.htm"><span class="style4">Hanna's Camp-South Fork Mill-California Water Company</span>-</a>Water <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Operated Saw Mill, 1874-1880, South Fork of Rubicon River, Eldorado <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> National Forest, El Dorado County, Ca .</font></b></i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i><font face="Californian FB"><b><br /><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <br /><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="style4">Hartless Mountain</span> is named for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Benjamin W. Hartless, a Garden Valley dairyman and farmer. Hartless <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> received formal land patents from the General Land Office in 1892 on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> land immediately around Hartless Mountain and Uncle Tom's Cabin <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> which he used for Summer grazing of his livestock. The Hartless <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Guard Station, on Hartless Mountain was the original Hartless Summer <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> grazing cabin. Originally born in Rutherford County, Tennessee, Feb <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 15, 1828, he moved with his widowed mother to Carroll County <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Missouri, living there for 6 years, before heading to California. As <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> so many new arrivals to California, Hartless took up mining <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> initially in Nevada City before eventually migrating to the American <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> River as well as Dry Creek , near Georgetown. By 1858, he gave up <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> mining and began farming and running dairy cattle at Garden Valley. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Hartless married a widow, Mrs Wakefield with six children on April <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 23rd, 1871. The children's names were Claudis B., William B., <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Jefferson D., Frank, Thomas and John. Mrs Hartless was a native of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Saratoga County, upstate New York, who arrived in California in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1853. She first made her home in Sacramento County at Brighton <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> before moving on to Negro Bar and then to Garden Valley. Benjamin <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Hartless owned 160 acres in Garden Valley in 1883.(Sioli, 1883)</b></font></i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="hartlessmountaincabinmap.JPG" width="535" height="430" /></font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <b><i><font face="Californian FB"><span class="style4"><a name="I">Ice House Ranger Station 1910</a> </span> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> This building burned and was lost in the 1959 Ice House fire. </font></i></b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="Icehouse%20Ranger%20Station%20circa%201910.jpg" width="628" height="416" /><i><b><font face="Californian FB"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </font></b></i></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><i><b><font face="Californian FB">The history surrounding Ice <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> House and this original building which eventually evolved into <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> a ranger station in the early 20th Century is directly related to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the <a href="http://malakoff.com/goldcountry/mcplacsw.htm">Old Soda <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Works building in Placerville </a>owned and built originally by John <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> McFarland Pearson, the Ice Merchant in Placerville and is laid out <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> at <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://malakoff.com/goldcountry/mcplacsw.htm"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> http://malakoff.com/goldcountry/mcplacsw.htm</a> .</font></b></i></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i><b><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="style4"><a href="gerlecreek.jpg" name="J">Jacobsen's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ranch/Dairy</a></span>- Eldorado National Forest, El Dorado County, Ca</font></b></i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/jacobsens1895.jpg"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="style4">Johnny <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Jacobsen</span> </a>(USGS 1895 Map) applied for a patent on 80 acres of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> land in 1891, on the West side of Gerle's Ranch, where he operated a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> diary in the meadow now bearing his name, adjacent to one of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> crossings of Gerle Creek (Baldwin 1975).<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="johnnyjacobsen.jpg">Johnny <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Jacobsen, or Jacob Jacobsen,</a> (Picture published in Baldwin, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1975) or "Jake" as his friends and ranching neighbors called him in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> later years (Hill 1929), born in 1860 in California, was one of three children (Sophia, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Peter and Jacob) of Alexander and Margareta Clausen Jacobsen. Alex was born in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> province of Schweswig, Germany on May 30, 1830, arriving in California in 1854, who married Margareta <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Clausen of Coloma in 1858 (Sioli, 1883; Baldwin 1975). Alex's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> parents were born in Denmark, where his two brothers John and Chris <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> were born. The Jacobsen's migrated to Heliogoland where they became <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> friends with the Peter Clausen family before returning to Germany. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Alex became a sailor early on signing on to a Dutch ship serving 3 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> years off the west coast of South America (Sioli 1883; Baldwin <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1975). </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Baldwin tells an interesting story about Alex falling in love with <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> an unknown young girl during his trip to America aboard ship in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1853, whose parents did not approve of her relationship with Alex. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> They wanted her to marry a rich merchant and pressed her to break <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> off the friendship. The quarreling and demands from her parents to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> stop the relationship caused the young lady to jump overboard, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> drowning herself, to never be found. This was very difficult <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> on the young man Alex Jacobsen. After his arrival in Weber Creek and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Pinchem, Alex fell in love with Margareta Clausen but the Clausens did not approve of the match either, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> which was probably due to the stormy relationship Alex went through <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> on the ship and the tragic death of this young girl. Alex was very <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> disappointed, but perseverance was the answer which led to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> marriage in 1858 in Coloma (Baldwin, 1975).</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Margareta <font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <b style="mso-bidi-font-weight:normal"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i style="mso-bidi-font-style:<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] -->normal"><span style="font-family:"Californian FB","serif""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> was daughter to Peter (also called Paul) and Mary Clausen, who <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> emigrated from Heliogoland in 1853, was born in Heliogoland.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span>The Clausen’s had three daughters with the oldest Anna <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> marrying Jasper P. Jurgen’s in their native Heliogoland on October <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 3, 1852.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span>The newlyweds <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> decided to leave for California making the trip their honeymoon.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span>Eight other members of the immediate family decided to head <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to California with the newlyweds, including Anna’s parents, Peter <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and Mary Clausen, their sons, Numel and Paul, their other daughters Margareta <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and Mary and Numel’s wife.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span>The other two making the trip were Chris and John Jacobsen <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> who were distant relatives of the family.<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="mso-spacerun:yes">Jasper <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> P Jurgens and his wife Anna Clausen Jurgens settled in Pinchem on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Weber Creek, El Dorado County</span>(Baldwin, 1975).<o:p></o:p></span></i></b></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal"><b style="mso-bidi-font-weight:normal"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i style="mso-bidi-font-style:<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] -->normal"><span style="font-family:"Californian FB","serif""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The ship voyage from Hamburg Germany to San Francisco around the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> horn of South America took six months.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span>Once in San Francisco, the group took a river steamer to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Sacramento and eventually on to Mississippi Bar, which is now Fair <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Oaks, California, staying there until 1854 and then continuing their <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> journey to Weber Creek and Pinchem in El Dorado County (Baldwin, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1975).<o:p></o:p></span></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal"><b style="mso-bidi-font-weight:normal"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i style="mso-bidi-font-style:<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] -->normal"><span style="font-family:"Californian FB","serif""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Peter Clausen was born in England 1806 and his wife Mary was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> born in Heliogoland in 1815.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> While our US Census records show the Peter Clausen indicated <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> he was from England, this may be due to the British capturing Heliogoland <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in 1807 during the Napoleonic Wars, with Heliogoland remaining a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> possession till England returned the island to Germany in 1890.<o:p> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> It could also mean he was in fact born in England and moved to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Heliogoland as well.</o:p></span></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </b></i></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal"><b style="mso-bidi-font-weight:normal"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i style="mso-bidi-font-style:<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] -->normal"><span style="font-family:"Californian FB","serif""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Peter Clausen was a boot maker and cobbler by trade.<span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span>He and his wife setup a cobbler shop in Coloma where he <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> worked for years before retiring and moving back to Weber Creek, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> where he passed away in 1884, with his wife Mary Clausen passing <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> away 4 years later in 1888 (Baldwin, 1975).<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="mso-spacerun:yes"> </span><o:p></o:p></span></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Alex died in Sept 1906 followed by his wife, one <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> month later (Baldwin, 1975). The Jacobsen's settled on Weber <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek, where they conducted a dairy farming business (Sioli, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1883, Baldwin, 1975). </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Lilla Hill, "Our Traveling Correspondent" from the Mountain <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Democrat wrote a series of articles about her summer of 1929 where <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> she rode her horse Hightower from Lake Tahoe to the Hill Ranch in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Kelsey via Desolation Valley, Rock Bound and Buck Island Lakes, down <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Lake Tahoe to Gerogetown road past Wentworth Springs, Gerlee's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> where she spent a night at Jacobsend's, Mr Jacobsens or Jakes Dairy <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> at Gerle Creek. Since Jake was not there, she used the corral for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> her horse and slept on the ground next to the corral for the night, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> reporting it to be cold and damp, before heading out the following <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> day and arriving at Kelsey after 2 long days in the saddle with her <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> only protection being a 32 caliber pistol she carried when riding. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> She described the corral as "fair sized with pasture grass in it." <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lilla Hill's description of the Lake Tahoe to Georgetown Road was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "primitive." (Hill 1929)</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Johnny "Jake" Jacobsen died in 1944 and was buried in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Coloma. </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="Jacobsen%20gerle%20bridge%201922.jpg" width="718" height="424" id="img2" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">This is a 1929 picture (also <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> picture directly below) of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> log bridge built and finished in 1929 crossing Gerle Creek at <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Jacobsen's meadow and dairy. this bridge was reported completed <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in the MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT of September 27, 1929. It reported <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> that by a civilian crew headed up by Mr. Lawrence. This bridge remained in place many <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> years but was lost like a lot of the bridges on Gerle Creek. With <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the loss of this bridge, travelers to all parts of forest East <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of Jacobsen's Dairy were required to ford once again.</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p style="width: 704px; height: 514px"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" height="518" src="../images/gerlecreekbridgejacobsens1929.jpg" width="705" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>After a number of years without <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> a bridge at Jacobsen's Dairy, El Dorado County Board of Supervisors <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in Sept of 1944 approved an appropriation (not to exceed $2000) to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> build a concrete bridge over Gerle Creek at Jacobsen's (Mt Democrat, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Sept 7, 1944). The concrete bridge at "Jacobsen's" as this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> creek crossing is and has been referred to for years, was eventually <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> lost during the Winter of 1963/1964's. The Mayor of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Placerville tried to ford Jacobsen's in late May, 1964 on the way to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> check the road to Wentworth Springs and Lake Tahoe for the upcoming <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Jeeper"s Jamboree only to get stuck in the middle of the creek due <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to the depth and flow of the water from the Spring runoff and SMUD's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> need to let extra water flow out of the new Loon Lake Dam. John <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Holmes from Gerle Creek came to the rescue and pulled the Mayor and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> his jeep out of Gerle Creek.</b></i></font><b><i><font face="Californian FB"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> (Mountain Democrat June, 1964)</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>El Dorado County would later <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> construct a new bridge which used an old railroad flat car which <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> would last till about 1980 when it was washed away during the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Winter. El Dorado County at this point, with the new paved road in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and a means for people to go around the old Wentworth Springs road, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> abandoned any further replacement of this bridge leaving it to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> become the ford it is today and was originally before 1944. The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> railroad flat car bridge was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="jacobsengerlerailroadbridge1980s.jpg">left abandoned after being a casualty <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of the Gerle Creek Spring runoff </a> (<a href="http://www.gerlecreek.org/cabins/lot39.htm">Sandy Hart Papenfus GC <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lot 39 family photo</a>). Bruce Wadsworth, the owner of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Neck Meadow, below Wentworth Springs, which includes the eastern <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> half of the old Gerle's Ranch asked the county if they were going to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> use the bridge and they indicated they were not. So Bruce had an <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> obliging logger with a Cat tractor drag the bridge up the old <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Wentworth Springs road to his property where they installed it in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Neck Meadow over Gerle Creek, which then allowed Bruce <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Wadsworth to reach his cabin at the back of the property. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Previously, he had some log bridges which had taken a beating over <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the years from the Spring Runoff and a Winter on Gerle Creek with no <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> dam in place during the construction of the new Loon Lake Dam. </b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Considering that Johnny <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Jacobson owned the dairy and meadow at the foot of what is annotated <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> on area maps as "Johnny's Hill," Johnny's Hill takes its name <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> from Johnny Jacobsen.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="jacobsencrossbridgejune1964.jpg" width="271" height="526" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">Mountain Democrat June 1964</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerlecreek.jpg"><span class="style4">Johnny's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Hill.</span></a>..named for Johnny "Jake" Jacobsen, Jacobsen's Meadow and old <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dairy Ranch on Gerle Creek.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerlecreek.jpg"><span class="style4">Jerrett <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek and Peak </span></a> </b></i></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Jerret Peak and Creek were <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> named for the Jerrett family, early El Dorado County pioneers. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The Wentworths and the Winslows eventually sold Wentworth Springs to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Robert S. Jerrett of Georgetown, Ca, son of Daniel Jerrett, a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown Grocer and 49er.Robert's brother, Herman Daniel Jerrett, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> wrote two books...."California's El Dorado, Yesterday and Today," <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1915 and a later book entitled "Hills of Gold," 1963. For a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> picture of Dan Jerrett, see Rambeau, 1998, page 21 for a group photo <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of the I.O.O.F. lodge in Georgetown, 1889. There is a group picture <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> showing members Alex Francis, Charles Forni, Dan Jerrett, Gus Orelli <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and Charles Wentworth, all significant men in the history of Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek</b></i></font>. <b><i><font face="Californian FB">Jerrett <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek flows out of the West side of McKinstry Lake and down crossing <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Wentworth Springs Road below the springs into Gerle Creek.<img border="0" src="pic49.jpg" width="450" height="303" /></font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="bunkergerle.jpg"><span class="style4">Joe's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Spring</span> </a>More than likely named for the famous early Eldorado <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> National Forest Ranger, Joe Bauman who was principal to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> establishment and surveying of the Gerle Creek Summer Home Tract as <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> well as current massive, beautiful hand built stone lookout station <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> at Bunker Hill. Here is an actual photo of<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="joespring.jpg">Joe's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Spring in 1990 </a>with my mother Joy Brattland enjoying a drink of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the very good water which is a product of the spring on Bunker Hill.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><font color="#000080"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="style4">Jones <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Silver</span></font>...Named for Fleming and Florence Jones who Summered in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Silver Creek area, running dairy cattle.(Yohalem) Jones Silver <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> cabins, pictures<a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/jonessilver03a.jpg"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a><a href="jonessilver03a.jpg">1, </a> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/jonessilver03b.jpg"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a><a href="jonessilver03b.jpg">2, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> <a href="jonessilver03c.jpg">3,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="jonessilver03d.jpg">4,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="jonessilver03e.jpg">5.</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="jonessilver03f.jpg">6. </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and <a href="jonessilver03g.jpg"> 7.</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="leonardi.jpg" name="L"><span class="style4">Leonardis <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ranch</span> </a>This is a Jonni Hill photograph of the ranch contributed <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to help with the history of important places and people in El Dorado <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> National Forest and County, which was used as a basis for one of her <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> original paintings.<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.highcountrysketches.com/aj.asp">Jonni Hill </a><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> is a noted artist of people and early places in El Dorado County. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Many of her works are displayed in Robb's Resort. Our family <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> personally owns one of her wonderful Native American paintings. You <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> can find out more about her art work at<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.highcountrysketches.com">High Country Sketches</a>.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i><b><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="pacificdistrictmap1950.jpg"><span class="style4">Loon Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span> </a><span class="style4">and Dam</span>-1873/1881/1962,Eldorado National Forest, El <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dorado County, Ca</font></b></i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Identified early on by The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California Water Company as a means to deliver a constant supply of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> water to Georgetown and the many mines and farms during the dry <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> months of the Summer. the California Water Company tested this idea <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> by building a temporary dam of logs, nine feet high (Bowman, 1874) <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to determine whether sufficient water could be retained through the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Summer such that it could be selectively released to overcome the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> shortage of water in the lean summer months. This idea required the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> building of the 4 mile long South Fork Ditch connecting Gerle Creek <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> with to Hanna's Camp on the South Fork of the Rubicon River in order <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to further divert this Loon Lake water via a series of creek beds, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ditches and flumes to Georgetown. This initial log dam was completed <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> along with the South Fork Ditch by the Fall of 1874.This original <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> log dam was then replaced by a second higher log dam, about 20 feet <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in height which remained till replaced in 1882 by the granite stone <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> dam. In addition to the higher log dam on Loon Lake, separate log <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> dams were built on Pleasant Lake and Bixby lakes behind Loon Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> which enabled each to collect more water which flowed from them into <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Loon Lake. Complete details of each of these log dams as well as the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> log dam on Loon Lake was covered in the 1880 California Water <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Company report to the Board of Directors. In this report, the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> recommendation was to build a larger, taller dam at Loon Lake to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> increase the total storage of water to allow the company to sell <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> more water for farming, mining and agriculture. By building the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> larger dam, it would also replace the smaller additional log dams on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Pleasant and Bixby Lakes. Bixby Lake is currently the part of Loon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake behind the Francis Fill Dam.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>July 30, 1881, MT DEMOCRAT, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "Dam at Loon Lake-the Georgetown Gazette says: The California Water <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and Mining Company has commenced the erection of a substantial <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> stone dam at Loon Lake. The wall to be entirely built of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> granite, which is found in inexhaustible quantities, and of the best <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> quality, right on the ground. We understand that that portion <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of the dam which it is intended to complete before Winter, include <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> about 450 feet in length and 20 feet high at the trunk or <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> highest point. A force of experienced quarrymen have been engaged, a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> number of whom have already gone forward. All the tools and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> appliances necessary for the rapid and economical prosecution of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> work, such as derricks, tackle, wire guys, car for transporting rock <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> from the quarry to the dam, cement, supplies for the men, etc; are <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> either on the ground or on the way there."</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Further reporting on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> progress of granite dam construction at Loon lake from the September <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 2, 1881 edition of the Georgetown Gazette..........."The dam being <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> constructed by the Cal. W.&M. at Loon Lkae are composed of Granite <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and the works are of the character to do service for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ages....the winter following the present Company's purchase of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> promising property was one of the severest ever experienced by ditch <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> owners owners in the Mountains of California, and the Manager, Mr. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Findley in common with the leading men of the County, has determined <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> that such a disaster sjall never visit their property again, and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> further they are building dams of such dimensions as to increase the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> water reserve sufficient for all future wants of the divide and the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> city of Sacramento, besides, which the County many have the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> opportunity of supplying in the near future. The object of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> these immense reservoirs located at an altitude of more than 6000 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ft. above the sea, is to store an abundance of water from the vast <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> accumulation of snow, as a reserve for the dryer seasons, when the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> supply from other streams begins to fail."(Genres; Deibert, 1999)</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>The California Water Company in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> their official company report to their board of directors of 1880 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> said much the same thing regarding supplying Georgetown and the City <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of Sacramento, actually including San Francisco in their proposal <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> for water from their Loon Lake water.</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>The Georgetown Gazette kept <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> track of the Loon Lake dam building again reporting on the work <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> progress in the short new report of October 21, 1881.........."There <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> are some forty men engaged on the work of the Cal. W.&M.Co. at Loon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake. C.H. Jones, the Superintendant of construction says that <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> a more faithful and better lot of men he never saw anywhere, and to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the credit of Mr. Jones, we have heard it remarked by several <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of the men, that a better Boss they never worked under. When <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the spring opens a much larger force will be employed, and the works <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> completed during the season. The dam will be 664 feet in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> length on top, and forty feet in height along the widest base."(Gernes, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Deibert, 1999) </i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>It would appear that the Mt <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Democrat and Georgetown Gazette were talking and getting reports <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> from two different people regards the actual size of the dam being <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> constructed at Loon Lake.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>In a short note in the June 23, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1882 edition of the Georgetown Gazette........"We noticed yesterday <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1200 feet of 1 inch wire cable in front of the Cal. Water Co.'s <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> office which goes to Loon Lake for guys to support a large derrick <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> used in moving ponderous blocks of granite from the quarry for the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> everlasting dam which the enterprising management of the Company is <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> constructing at that point." (Gernes; Deibert, 1999)</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>July 22, 1882, Mt Democrat, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> reported "Superintendent Wolf of the California Water Co's works at <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Loon Lake was down on a hurried visit this week. He reports <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> that work on the dam is progressing rapidly; the force <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> increased, a new derrick being put up, making the fourth derrick, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and that he believes the dam will be completed this season."</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>Early winter weather caused <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> some confusion and delay in finishing the dam early in October, 1882 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> as reported in the Georgetown Gazette of October <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 7...................."A portion of the quarry men employed at Loon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake dam came down this week on account of the storm and signalized <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> their intention of quitting for the season, as they believed winter <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> had set in. There being a couple gaps in the dam yet to be <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> closed, and the managing Director Findley being satisfied that there <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> would yet be plenty of good weather in which to complete the work, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> tried to persuade the men to return, but they refused. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Yesterday, Mr. Findley stated for the Lake to utilize the force <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> already there to see that the two gaps are filled and you may depend <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> on it."(Gernes, Deibert, 1999)</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>As a post script to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> personnel situation which Managing Director Findley was facing when <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> some of his quarry men quit with the initial October winter storm, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Gazette reported the following snippet in their October 14, 1882 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> edition of the paper on Findley's character..............."The Loon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake boys tell us that Tom Findley, who was with them the past two <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> weeks, threw his coat and went to work with a vim. Findley is <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the man to meet an emergency every time."(Gernes, Deibert, 1999)</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>In mid May, 1883 the California <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Water Company had to dispatch a crew of men to Loon Lake Dam to make <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> some repairs on the just completed granite dam in the Fall of 1882 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> as reported in the May 26, 1883 edition of the Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gazette............"A party of laborers departed for Loon Lake on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Thursday to repair a portion of the surface of the new dam washed <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> out, owing, it is said, to the waste-way being too small for the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> discharge of surplus water."(Gernes, Deibert, 1999)</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="Fig-6-Loon-Lake1.jpg" width="623" height="547" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="loonlakedam1940.jpg">Later <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in 1881(Sioli,1883), the California Water Company build a permanent <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> replacement granite stone dam finishing it in late 1882 which stood <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>[(This historic photo was taken on June 24, 1940 by Linton <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> A. Brown(1901-1966), father of Linton Brown of Red Bluff, Ca, who <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> has kindly provided these historic photos from his collection on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> South Fork Mill, the ditch system and Loon Lake Dam.. His <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> father was a friend of Art Rasor, the ditch tender for the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown Divide Water Company] till removed by<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="loon103062b.jpg">SMUD's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> contractors in Fall(Sept/Oct) 1962 </a>(another great <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> historic photo provided by Lint Brown and taken by Eugene Poe on Oct <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 30, 1962)and replaced by the present Loon Lake Dam in 1963.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">Here is Loon Lake empty in 1962 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> during the construction of the new and present modern dam, looking <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> from the area of the Loon Lake Boy Scout Camp area (to be) the dam <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> area in the first picture and up to the tunnel at the very Eastern <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> end of the new Loon Lake where the road goes over the top of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> tunnel over the mountain in this picture to the Rubicon Reservoir <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and Buck Island Lake. This road was constructed entirely for the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> construction of the dam at Buck Island Lake as well as the tunnel <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> under the mountain carved from solid granite which brings the water <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> from Rubicon Reservoir down into Loon Lake. The tunnel opening at <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the loon lake end is quite large but is about 8 ft in diameter. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> These pictures show the extensive work done by SMUD's contractors to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> make the new lake area ready for the completion of the New Loon Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dam by 1963.</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="loonlake1962c.jpg" width="659" height="418" /><img border="0" src="loonlake1962a.jpg" width="659" height="400" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" height="494" src="loonlaketunnelearly1970s.jpg" width="457" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b> The hand cut granite blocks <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> removed from the considerable granite rock surfaces surrounding the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> dam area on the North side of the present day Dam, can now be found <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> spread out along the top of the current dam structure as well as the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Francis Fill on Loon Lake. A walking tour of this area and close <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> inspection reveals where all the original granite was hand cut by <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Chinese Labor. Chinese Labor were also principal to the construction <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of the South Fork Ditch with rates for their pay specifically <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> outlined in the Amos Bowman Report to the company directors. For a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> very good, recent 2001 Mountain Democrat article on the modern dam <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and the various powerhouses and underground interconnections, try<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.mtdemocrat.com/archives/index.inn?loc=detail&doc=/2001/August/16-563-R0815_N.txt"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> www.mtdemocrat.com/archives/index.inn?loc=detail&doc=/2001/August/16-563-R0815_N.txt<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>. For a<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.pirate4x4.com/trailreports/loon_powerstation"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> very good picture and descriptive tour of the under Loon Lake Power <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> House, </a>check out this web site......the author took the tour and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> offers a great set of pictures....just fabulous....</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>For the most recent research on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> this area of the Eldorado National Forest, refer to<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="mailto:lariatlane@hotmail.com">Brown, Linton A., </a><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "Memories of South Fork and Gerle Creek Ditches and Old Loon Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dam, El Dorado County, California," Linton A. Brown, Red Bluff, Ca, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 2003. Lint goes into greater detail on the whole original history of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the dam, lake and ditch system, as well as most of the local <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown Gazette discussion of the work on the dam.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="loon070353.jpg">Loon Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dam.</a>..historic July 3, 1953 photo of the dam kindly provided by <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lint Brown.....from archives of California Department of Water <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Resources, Division of Safety and Dams and originally taken by <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Eugene V. Poe as several photos in sequence to get the entire <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> dam....this Jpeg was the result of Lint Brown's efforts to enhance <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and make all of the photos into one Jpeg....a very, very nice <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> photo.........</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Here are links for about 47 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> historic pictures collected by Lint Brown from Ca State Archives <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> which offer a wonderfully historic look at the California Water <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Company built dame of 1882 at Loon Lake....<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture108.jpg">108,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture109.jpg">109, </a> <a href="picture110.jpg">110,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture111.jpg">111, </a> <a href="picture112.jpg">112,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/picture113.jpg"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1</a><a href="picture113.jpg">13, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture114.jpg">114,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture115.jpg">115,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture116.jpg">116,</a> <a href="picture117.jpg">117,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture118.jpg">118,</a> <a href="picture119.jpg">119,</a><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture120.jpg">120,</a> <a href="picture121.jpg">121,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture122.jpg">122,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture123.jpg">123, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture124.jpg">124,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture125.jpg">125,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture126.jpg">126 </a> <a href="picture127.jpg">127,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> <a href="picture128.jpg">128,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/picture129.jpg">129, </a> <a href="picture130.jpg">130,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture131.jpg">131, </a> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/picture132.jpg"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1</a><a href="picture132.jpg">32, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> <a href="picture133.jpg">133,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture134.jpg">134, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture136.jpg">136,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/picture137.jpg"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1</a><a href="picture137.jpg">37, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture138.jpg">138, </a><span class="style3"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/picture139.jpg"> </a></span> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture139.jpg">139,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture140.jpg">140, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture141.jpg">141,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture142.jpg">142, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture143.jpg">143,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture144.jpg">144,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture145.jpg">145,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture146.jpg">146, </a> <a href="picture147.jpg">147,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture148.jpg">148, </a> <a href="picture149.jpg">149,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture150.jpg">150,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture152.jpg">152, </a> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/picture153.jpg"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1</a><a href="picture153.jpg">53, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/picture154.jpg">1</a><a href="picture154.jpg">54, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture155.jpg">155, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> <a href="picture156.jpg">156</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>The following 19 links are <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> copies of official State of California Water Department inspection <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> documents written as a result of various inspections and additional <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> work on the Loon Lake Dam between September of 1934 till mid year <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1953, Georgetown Divide Water District documents, including a couple <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> old newspaper articles on the raising of the dam's height and cracks <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in the dam due to atomic bomb tests in the early 1950s. These <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> documents were also collected by Lint Brown during his research work <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in 2002 on the Ditch Camp at South Fork and shared with me. I have <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> put them up here so that others with a historic interest in our area <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of the forest might enjoy them as I do.....a very interesting read <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> as well....enjoy and many thanks to Lint Brown........</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture089.gif">089, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture090.gif">090,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture091.gif">091,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture092.gif">092,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture093.gif">093, </a> <a href="picture094.gif">094,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture095.gif">095,</a> <a href="picture096.gif"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 096,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture097.gif">097, </a> <a href="picture098.gif"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 098,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture099.gif">099, </a> <a href="picture100.gif"> 100,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a><a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/picture100.gif"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/picture101.gif">1</a><a href="picture101.gif">01, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture102.gif">102, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture103.gif">103, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture104.gif">104, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/picture105.gif">1</a><a href="picture105.gif">05, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/picture106.gif">1</a><a href="picture106.gif">06, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture107.gif">107 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Here are two early 1990's pictures of Loon Lake in front of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> spillway dam during the drought showing the lake at extremely low <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> levels, which show the <a href="41AYearofextremedroughtLoonLk.jpg">concrete box structure built with the new dam<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>which captures water for the supply to Gerle Creek and a picture of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the area of granite walls on the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="40%20Extreme%20drought%20Loon%20Lk%20note%20cars%20upper%20left,%20red%20truck%20with%20trailer%20and%20blue%20suv%20in%20center%20down%20by%20spillway.jpg"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> left side or North side where the quarrymen of the California Water <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Company carved the obliging blocks of granite </a>which made up the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> original stone structure Loon Lake Dam in 1883. These are Papenfus-Hart <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> GC Lot 39 Family photos</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="loonlake.jpg"><span class="style4">Loon Lake</span>,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> identified in Amos Bowman's 1874 Report and Map prepared for the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> directors of the California Water Company and probably so named due <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to the presence of Loon's, a type of bird (Gudde, 1969) and is <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> also the headwaters of Gerle Creek. </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>The following is a report from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Mt Democrat on the fine lakes in the area of Wentworth Springs <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> from the September 23, 1882 issue of the newspaper. </b></i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <b><i>"Our Lake Region-Within a radius of one and one half miles of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Wentworth's Springs are five beautiful little lakes, varying from 15 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to 80 acres in size. The altitude of the Springs is about 6,200 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> feet, or about the same as Lake Tahoe, and those little lakes are <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> from 300 to 500 feet higher than the Springs. Groves of Tamarack <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> surround these lakes, and a beautiful little meadow usually found <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> adjoining. We learn that one of these lakes has been stocked <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> with trout, and that Mr. Wentworth intends to stock the others next <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Spring. Loon Lake, two miles Southeast, and nearly 200 feet <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> higher than Lake Tahoe, is a natural body of pure fresh water of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> some 1300 acres of surface, and in places 40 to 60 feet in depth; <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> but since the construction of the dam, its size has been greatly <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> increased, and will, when the monster granite dam now being built by <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the California W. & M. Co. is completed, embrace an area of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> about 7 square miles. Strange to say, until of late years this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> lake contained no fish. A few years ago some trout were put in, but <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> until recently, it was supposed the fish did not live; now it is <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> known that they have done well, and with the new supply added, it is <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> believed that Loon Lake will become a favorite fishing resort in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> near future-Georgetown Gazette"</i></b></font><b><i><font face="Californian FB"> </font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><span class="style5">Loon Lake Aircraft Crashes <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> /Mishaps</span></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal">Georgetown Gazette July 6, 1922</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="FONT-SIZE: 11pt; FONT-FAMILY: Calibri,sans-serif">“An <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> airplane belonging to a man named Hunt of Sacramento, and occupied <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> by himself and a friend, in making a forced landing, skidded into <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the north end of Loon Lake Sunday afternoon, and into the rocks at <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the edge of the lake. The machine was badly damaged but the men <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> escaped unhurt, and walked to McKinneys(Lake Tahoe), twenty miles <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> away, from there they went to Reno, their destination. Engine <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> trouble was the cause of this accident.</span><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="huntairplanecrashloonlake19221a.jpg" width="843" height="387" /> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>This photo of the Irwin Hunt airplane crash on the North side of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Loon Lake Dam on Sunday afternoon, July 9, 1922, was kindly shared <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> by <a href="mailto:arizonawrecks@cox.net">Chris Baird</a> of<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.arizonawrecks.com/">Arizona Wrecks. </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="FONT-SIZE: 12pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Times New Roman',serif"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="mailto:arizonawrecks@cox.net">arizonawrecks@cox.net</a><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Times New Roman',serif"> <a href="huntairplanecrashloonlake19221a.jpg">Hunt <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Crash Photo 1 </a> <a href="huntairplanecrashloonlake19221b.jpg">Hunt <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Crash Photo 2 </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="huntairplanecrashloonlake19221c.jpg">Hunt Crash Photo 3 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="wikandernsjarticle1950.pdf">Wikander of Buck Island Lake</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="CrashSitePerLAB.jpg">Lint <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Brown Loon Lake Airplane Crash Location</a></span></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>This airplane crash was covered quite well at the time in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> newspapers with articles written in the Woodland Democrat, Woodland, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ca, the Georgetown Gazette, Oakland Tribune and the Reno papers. It <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> was most probably written about in the Sacramento Union and Bee as <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> well. The most interesting aspect of this mishap is that it <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> was witnessed first hand by Vic Wikander of Buck Island Lake. He and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> a friend who had been out hiking were at the time sitting on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> shore of Loon Lake, enjoying their lunch, when this flying machine <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> come down, circled the lake and then made the landing on the lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> which ended up in the rocks on the north shore. This whole story is <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> included in the above Wikander article published in 1950 in the Reno <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> paper. Though the article says this event happened in the Summer of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1925, this oversight was due to the time passed since the event and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Vic's memory of so many years in the past It is quite a read <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and the whole article is available above via the highlighted link. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The pilot, Irwin Hunt, was a famous young dare devil pilot who <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> lived in Woodland and barnstormed around the country. Accompanying <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Hunt was a Warren Gould of Reno. The airplane with both men aboard <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> was en route to Reno to began a series of flying exhibitions in Reno <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and around the country. The airplane suffered some sort of engine <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> difficulty causing Hunt to make a forced landing reported in some of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the papers as landing on the lake and skipping across and coming to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> rest up in the rocks and granite on the north edge of the lake very <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> close to the original granite block dam. The Woodland Democrat <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> reported in the article that they intended to make repairs on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> aircraft, estimated to cost $3500 at the scene of the accident and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> actually fly this airplane out of the crash position on the north <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> edge of the lake and dam. </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Reviewing various sources, we have not be able to tell whether <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Irwin Hunt and his associates ever rebuilt this airplane onsite and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> flew it away, although it was removed in some manner, yet to be <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> determined. </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>As a final note about the photographs, we are curious about who <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the people were that took these photos and who might have provided <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the horses to visit the site. I think it highly unlikely that these <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> visitors trucked their own horses in but rather made arrangements <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> with any number of the many ranches which surrounded this area, from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Wagner Brothers at Gerles Ranch, Jerretts of Wentworth Springs, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Jacobsen's of Jacobsen's Meadow, Francis Cow Camp, the Devore's at <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> South Fork Mill, Forni's of what is now VanVlecks, Orelli's of Robbs <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Valley, Bassi...or even the US Forest Service Ranger at Wentworth <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ranger Station, a mile east of Wentworth Springs, and just barely a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> mile down Gerle Creek from the dam. In those days this ranger <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> station actually had a FS telephone for communication purposes. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The list goes on. My sister, Karen Brattland points out, that these <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> horses <font size="2"><span style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana,sans-serif"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "</span></font><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Verdana,sans-serif">appear <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to be "ground tied" which is an old cowboy thing. You train <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> your horse to stop and stay in one spot by dropping your reins on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the ground--he's suppose to understand that he is tied to something <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> solid and un moveable. Very useful out where there is <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> nothing solid to tie a horse to." This suggests the horses indeed <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> came from one of our local ranches. The people in these photos could <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> very well be some of our locals to this overall area of the Eldorado <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> National Forest and not associated with the airplane <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ownership. Lastly, many of our forest service people still got <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> around the forest during this period on horseback, so they could be <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> from the Forest Service</span></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Credit for the research on this interesting event in the past <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> history of Loon Lake and it's historic dam includes<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="mailto:banjomaker@hendericksbanjos.com">Monte Hendericks, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Eldorado National Forest expert on airplane crashes </a>and crash <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sites here in the Sierra Nevada,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.arizonawrecks.com/">Chris Baird of Arizona <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Wrecks,</a> Lint Brown, author of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i><font color="#000000"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="mailto:lln01@clearwire.net">"SIXTEEN SUMMERS ON THE DITCH, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Memories of South Fork and Gerle Creek Ditches and Old Loon Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dam, El Dorado County, California," </a></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="mailto:lln01@clearwire.net">Linton A. Brown, Red Bluff, Ca, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> February, 2003</a></i></b></font><a href="mailto:lln01@clearwire.net">,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the late Judge Wil Johnson and myself. Earlier in the Summer of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 2008, I came across the old article from the Georgetown Gazzette <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> which peaked all of our interests as we had been following up on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> reports of another airplane crash below Loon Lake Dam in 1931-1932 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> which Judge Johnson remembers visiting and seeing from about 1932. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Later in 1946 as a young person, Lint Brown was shown the remains of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> an airplane crash down below the dam by the late Art Razor of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown Divide Water District in 1946.<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/CrashSitePerLAB.jpg">Lint <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Brown created a very nice graphic map of Loon lake </a>identifying <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the location below the dam where he remembers being shown the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> crashed airplane remains. Les Clementsen of Stone Cellar, has <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> also reported seeing the same crashed aircraft below the dam in his <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> lifetime of working and living in our area. Wikander in the 1950 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Reno newspaper article also talks about the bits and pieces <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> remaining from a airplane crash. Well, in early 2009, Chris Baird, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> an <a href="http://www.arizonawrecks.com/">aircraft crash site <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> historian in Arizona </a>purchased several very old airplane crash <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> photos (photos 1, 2 and 3 above) including the above photo plus <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> several others off E-Bay. The photos came out of an old personal <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> album which had the pictures described as Greimes Airplane Crash. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Greimes was another aerial daredevil who during the 1920 to 1923 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> period lived in California and performed with various dare devil <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> pilots of the day as a wing walker. It was not until 1925 that he <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> moved to San Antonio and learned to fly at Brooks Field. Chris <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> published these photos on a aircraft crash site blog asking if <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> anyone might have any information on this mishap and where it might <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> be. Monte Hendericks reads the same blog, saw the photos and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> immediately recognized the location as Loon Lake from the above <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> photograph which has our Guide Peak next to McKinstry Lake, Eldorado <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> National Forest in the picture. Knowing about the Georgetown Gazette <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> article on the 1922 airplane crash he shared the photos with myself. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> I could immediately see the same location as Monte, as did Lint <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Brown and Krista Deal of Pacific Ranger District. Chris Baird, Monte <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Hendericks and Lint Brown have all done exceptional jobs of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> digging up further documentary information on Irwin Hunt which gives <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> us more knowledge about the pilot. During this period, he was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in a partnership with William Moffett who later died in a Navy <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> airship crash as a Rear Admiral. Naval Air Station Moffett Field, in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Mountain View, California was named for him. Unfortunately for Irwin <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Hunt, in 1925 he had a fatal crash during one of his barn storming <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> events where he was giving paid rides to the public, killing himself <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and his passenger.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>As a footnote, we are continuing in our research on this crash <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and would like to hear if anyone can provide any documentation on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> how this demolished airplane as the newspapers described it was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> removed from the location. I think it was extremely unlikely that if <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> it could be rebuilt on site, that it could have been flown out. </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><img border="0" src="1922-2009.jpg" width="594" height="636" /> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>This is a August 2009 Lint Brown photo matched with the 1922 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> crash site photo. he has recently returned from a search of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> crash site at Loon Lake for old debris. </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><span class="style6">Snow Survey Helicopter from Rogers Helicopters Stranded at <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Loon Lake February 1, 1960 due to Snow Storm</span> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Here is the Mountain Democrat Article of the day discussing this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> event up at Loon Lake. Thanks to Lint Brown, author of "<font face="Californian FB"><b><i><font color="#000000">SIXTEEN <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> SUMMERS ON THE DITCH, Memories of South Fork and Gerle Creek Ditches <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and Old Loon Lake Dam, El Dorado County, California," </font></i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </b></font>and the retired Director of the California Division of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Water Resources for Northern California, who did all the sleuthing <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> on this article when I shared it with him. He had worked with both <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of the two Division of Water Resources employees involved and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> contacted Jack Hannaford about the event. Rather than a simple <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> e-mail response, Jack wrote a nice article about the event which is <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> linked below. Jack makes it clear on what really happened and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> where they stayed since the article suggested they stayed at a cabin <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> at Loon Lake which in the pre 1962-63 enlarged Loon Lake Dam days, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> there never was any buildings there at the lake since the early <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1880s when there was some sort of large barracks building to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> accommodate the many workman who lived at the lake and worked on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> original granite block dam. This building survived till about 1890 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> or so when the Winter snow crushed it. He offers some background on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> what the survey does and the conditions of the snowpack and water <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> content for the Winter of 1959 to 1960. This event happened <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> well before the new road and in the days when it could take 3 hours <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> from Highway 50 or Georgetown to get to Gerle Creek on the roads of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the day, let alone Loon Lake which needed 4wd for the last two miles <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> passing Schlein Ranger Station for the crawl over Chipmunk Bluff and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> down to the South end of the lake during the Summer. In the Winter, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> this was a completely isolated area period.....and very unfriendly <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to anyone not prepared which was not the case here. As a final <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> note about this event, Harry Rogers of Rogers Helicopters, Fresno, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California, went from a very small commercial helicopter service in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1960 to one of the biggest commercial helicopter operators in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> State of California today. His aircraft work around the state and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> country for civilian and government customers...........<a href="hannaford.pdf">Enjoy <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the "Rest of the Story".........</a> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="rogershelicoptersloonlakefeb1960a.jpg" width="422" height="310" /><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="loonlakebsa64c.jpg"><span class="style4">Loon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake Boy Scout Camp </span></a> The Golden Empire Council of the Boy <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Scouts of America in Sacramento, Ca acquired about 5 acres of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> shorefront property directly East across from Loon Lake Dam, where <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> they constructed a Boy Scout Camp beginning early Summer, 1964. Due <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to the <br /><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" class="auto-style10" height="216" src="loonlakebsalodge4.jpg" style="float: left" width="298" />location of the new camp, all materials had to be transported <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> by water to the camp as there was no roads and only a trail along <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the East side of the lake from the Campground to the Boy Scout Camp. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Two full summers, 1964 and 1965 were required to construct the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> present main lodge building on the site, and build the septic <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> system. The camp was envisioned as a base camp where the scouts <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> would then begin their main camping experience from by hiking into <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Desolation Valley Wilderness area. I was one of the two dozen <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> scouts and the oldest(only Scout with a drivers license) who worked full time the entire Summer of 1964 and 1965 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> helping to build the camp, living at the camp from June till August <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of both years.<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/loonlakebsa64e.jpg">I</a><a href="loonlakebsa64e.jpg"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> drove the tractor, the camp Ford dually flatbed truck and boats and barges </a>(A picture of the 16 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> year old author on the camp John Deere Tractor awaiting another <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> barge load, Summer of 1964, taken by my late father, Gordon A. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Brattland) used to haul all the building materials from the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> campground to the camp via the water. The main lodge has special <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> glue lamb beams custom made for this unusual shaped lodged, hauled <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> up by truck to the campground and then hauled intact via barge to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the camp where they were raised using a large Gin Pole by the US <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Navy Seabees from the Sacramento unit who spent two weeks active <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> duty at the camp for this purpose. <a href="loonlakebsa64a.jpg">Loon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake BSA pics 1,</a> <a href="loonlakebsa64b.jpg">2, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="loonlakebsa64c.jpg">3,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="loonlakebsa64d.jpg">4,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="loonlakebsa64e.jpg">5, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="loonlakebsa64f.jpg">6,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Here are some later photos taken during a visit by my father Gordon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and myself during the mid 70s via our fishing boat to the camp which <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> very nicely show the main lodge which was the end result of all the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> work of the Summers of 1964 and 1965.....<a href="loonlakebsalodge4.jpg">Pic#1,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> <a href="loonlakebsalodge1.jpg">Pic#2, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="loonlakebsalodge2.jpg">Pic#3, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/loonlakebsalodge3.jpg">P</a><a href="loonlakebsalodge3.jpg">ic#4</a></b></i></font><a href="loonlakebsalodge3.jpg"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The summer of 1964 and 65 were the two best summers of my early <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> life.<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">This original Boy Scout built <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> camp is now <a href="http://www.deercrossingcamp.com/">Deer Crossing <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Camp</a> and has been now since 1983 a private summer camp which <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> offers the same types of activities originally envisioned by the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Golden Empire Boy Council of the Boy Scouts of America in Sacramento <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> when this camp was built on the lake.</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>For the official history of the Golden Empire Council's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="LoonLakeBSACampHistory.pdf">Loon Lake Boy Scout Camp,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> try this abbreviated part of the overall<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gec-bsa.org/about/history">History of the Golden <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Empire Council </a>itself. If you look at the Loon Lake Staff Photo <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> on page 80 of the abbreviated Loon Lake Camp history, you will see me <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> as a 17 year old in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the top row middle of the official BSA photo.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><span class="style4">Loon Lake Road</span> -Click on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> maps for more details-<font face="Californian FB"><i><b>According to Les Clementsen of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Stone Cellar (Clementsen,'04), by the mid 1930s, the Airport Camp or <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Camp Gerle at Gerle Creek was a<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.cccalumni.org/history1.html">Civilian <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Conservation Corps (CCC) </a> Side Camp with a local man named Joe <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Flynn in charge of it. In his regular Mountain Democrat <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Column, Three Amigos from September 4, 1998, Joe Flynn indicates in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the summer of 1940 he was in charge of the Airport CCC Side Camp <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> with 30 men working for him. Among the projects they worked on that <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> summer was making the road from Schlein's to Loon Lake a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> better road. Joe Flynn was a local El Dorado County <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> resident who went off to the Army Air Corps to fly during <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> WWII, returning after the war to study at Oregon State and returning <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to work for the Forest Service eventually becoming the Forest <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Supervisor of Eldorado National Forest. After retiring from the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Forest Service he would continue in active public life eventually <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> being elected as a El Dorado County Supervisor. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="flynn_joe.pdf">For more detailed history about Joe Flynn, see the Joe Flynn USFS <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Retires Reunion Living History Project Feb 9 2001, Nordstrom <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Whited Interviewer oral history done through UCB. </a> </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p style="width: 390px"><a href="loonlakeroad1943.pdf"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" class="auto-style7" height="224" src="loonlakeroad1943.jpg" width="390" /></a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Loon Lake Road 1943 </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p style="width: 692px; height: 256px"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="loonlakeroad1950.pdf"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" class="auto-style7" height="255" src="loonlakeroad1950.jpg" width="690" /></a> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Loon Lake Road 1950</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style4">Lower Bassi Ranch, Union Valley -1860s-<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="auto-style1">Lower Bassi Ranch in Union Valley was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> removed during the construction of Union Valley Dam and the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> reservoir. The Pacific Ranger District Map of 1950 shows the ranch <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in the upper north east section of Union Valley very near the power <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> house. The first picture is from the 1940s-50s while the final two <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> are probably just before the reservoir area was cleared for the dam <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> around 1960. The pictures below were provided from the Swift Family <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> collection of photos by Michael Kuhl of Swift Ranch, Union Valley, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ca. <a href="historypages/lowerbassiranch.htm">Click on the map to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> view the original 1875 Survey Plat showing Lower Bassi Ranch in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1875.</a> See also Upper Bassi and Swift Ranches.</span></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style4" style="width: 498px; height: 306px"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="historypages/lowerbassiranch.htm"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" height="306" src="lowerbassiranchmaptmap1950.jpg" width="501" class="auto-style7" /></a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style4" style="width: 1059px; height: 335px"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" height="305" src="lowerbassiranch1a.jpg" width="486" /> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" class="auto-style6" height="310" src="lowerbassiranch1b.jpg" width="508" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="font-size:10.0pt;font-family:"Arial","sans-serif""><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1st picture to the left-This is the barn and corrals, which were <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> west of the cabin. Picture was probably taken in late 1940s, early <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1950s. Unable to identify the individual standing next to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> loading chute.<o:p> 2nd picture to the right </o:p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> This photo looks east towards the cabin. Much later, possibly <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> right before they started clearing the area for the lake. Notice <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> that the corral with the feeding troughs and tree in the previous <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> photo are gone.<o:p> </o:p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="MsoNormal"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <o:p> </o:p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style5" style="width: 603px"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" height="323" src="lowerbassiranch1c.jpg" width="568" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style5" style="width: 603px"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="font-size:10.0pt;font-family:"Arial","sans-serif"">This was taking at the same time that the previous photo, this time <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> looking west towards the barn. I believe the fellow is my <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> grandfather Rufus Swift- Photo comments by Michale Kuhl Swift Ranch.</span></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style5"><font face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="historypages/georgetowndividemaps.htm" name="M">Maps of the Georgetown Divide....from 1865 to the present <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> day...........</a></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style5"><b><i><font face="Californian FB"><span class="style4"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="historypages/map1937a.jpg">Marys Lake </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span><span class="auto-style1">Named most <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> probably for Mary E Wentworth. Nathan Wentworth discovered the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Wentworth mineral springs while deer hunting in 1879. (Sheryle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Rambeau, 2010)According to the 1880 Census, Nathan was married to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Mary E. Wentworth and had three children, Lillie. N. Wentworth, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Frank Wentworth and Guy E. Wentworth. Mary's Lake one of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> original seperate little lakes which made up the original Loon Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> before the Loon Lake Dam of 1882 was most probably named for Mary <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Wentworth. </span> </font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="wentmcken.jpg"><span class="style4">McKinstry <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> or Bennet Lake, McKinstry Peak and McKinstry Meadow </span></a> This map <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> is a copy of the original survey plat of the area around McKinstry, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> originally done beginning in 1875 by J.R. Glover, another part of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the survey done by L.D Bond in 1877 and the last part of this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Township 14, Range 15 East completed by C. F. Putnam in July of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1882. As this is the authoritative original survey of this area by <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the US Geological Survey, they did not name McKinstry or Bennet <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake, the peak or meadow on this map. See also<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~320~30027:47B,-D--E--Calif-,-W--Nevada-?qvq=q:california%20wheeler%20Atlas;sort:pub_list_no_initialsort,pub_date,pub_list_no,series_no;lc:RUMSEY~8~1&sort=pub_list_no_initialsort%2Cpub_date%2Cpub_list_no%2Cseries_no&mi=40&trs=67&printerFriendly=1"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> G.M Wheeler Atlas 47B,D,E Sheet Calif, Nev 1876/79</a> . This was more than likely the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> result of not having or knowing this common name for the area which <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Amos Bowman knew about when he did his authoritative survey of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown Divide resources owned by the California Water Company in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1873/1874, who may have had the benefit of dealing with people who <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> were more familiar with this area due to their work and employment <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in this area, associated with the California Water Company. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> McKinstry Lake or Bennet Lake is noted as "lake" on the map in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> section 19, just West of the peak noted as "High Peak" on the map in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> section 20. The peak noted as "High Peak' is not McKinstry, but <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> rather what we call Guide Peak. The surveyors managed to draw it <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> slightly more to the West than it was. McKinstry peak was not <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> highlighted by these original surveyors as it would be on the bottom <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> line of section 18 or the top line of section 19. The larger lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> noted as "lake" on the section 29 section 32 line is what is now <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> known as Bugle Lake, above Wentworth Springs. The "farmers house" <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to the West of McKinstry or Bennet Lake and not named is in fact<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/bunkergerle.jpg">"Bennet's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Range"</a> so named on the township map immediately to the West of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the this sectional. However in the surveyor's notes for this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> particular section of township 14N 14E, it indicates at the time <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> this particular section was surveyed, the "farmers house" annotated <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> on the original survey plat was now owned by the Fornis. The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> surveyor's notes also spelled Bennett with two T's" versus one "T."<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </b></i></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>These two pictures, one taken <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> by the Johnson family in 1936 while the other was taken later, most <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> probably late 1940s by the family of Stanley Mueller, Sr, show the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> US Forest Service sign first up in the tree and later attached to a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> post on the lake's edge, identifying McKinstry Lake as McKinstry or <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Bennet Lake.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="mckinstryorbennetlake1936.jpg" width="533" height="313" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">Wil Johnson Family photo of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> McKinstry or Bennet Lake, 1936, showing Mrs Johnson sitting with her <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> son, the late Judge Wil Johnson beside the lake.</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="McKinstryorBennetLake1940s.jpg" width="537" height="334" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font color="#000000"><b><i><font face="Californian FB">Photo <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> taken by the late </font><font face="Arial"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span style="FONT-FAMILY: Californian FB">Stanley Mueller, Sr. of <ST1:PLACE w:st="on"><ST1:CITY w:st="on"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Alameda</ST1:CITY>, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --><ST1:STATE w:st="on">CA in the late 1940s provided by his granddaughter, Erica <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Boivin. As you can see, the original porcelain US Forest Service <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> naming sign of the lake is in both photos. The Mueller picture of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the 1940's shows the bullet hole in the bottom of the sign which by <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the time of this photo, had been removed from the tree and attached <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to a post. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --></ST1:STATE></ST1:PLACE></span></font></i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>The following description is <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> provided by Erwin Gudde</i></b><i><b>............"The mountain is <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> labeled Mckinstry's Mountains on Bowman's map(1873), and M'kinstry <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> peak on sheet 47-D of Wheeler's atlas. It has been suggested that <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the name may commemorate George McKinstry, Jr., who was one of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> best known of Sutter's men and the first sheriff of the northern <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> district(1846-1847); it seems more likely, however, that the places <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> were named for Elliott McKinstry, a miner at Oregon Bar in 1866, or <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lee McKinstry, a miner in Georgetown township in 1867(Gudde, 1969)". <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Very nice photo of<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="mommckinstry90.jpg">Joy <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Brattland sitting next to beautiful McKinstry or Bennet Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in 1990.</a> </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b><span class="style4">Millionaire <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Camp</span> was a small cabin on the original <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> road to Upper Bassi Ranch from Union Valley, located on Big Silver <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek, 1/4 mile southwest of the fork of Big Silver Creek and Bassi <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek. The cabin is long gone. According to Michael Kuhl <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of Camp Kuhl on Swift Cove, Union Valley (Bullard Place), he does not <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> remember the name of the owner but does remember the name <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "Millionaire" evolved from what the original owner would say <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> regarding his cabin. As the story goes, the owner said he <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> felt like a "Millionaire" every time he stayed at the cabin which <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> stuck as a name. None of the early Eldorado National Forest maps from 1916 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> through the 1940s showed this cabin and place name, including the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> original survey plat from the early 1880s but it does appear on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> larger geological survey map of this whole section published <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in 1953 as well as on later forest service maps. This area has <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> morphed into a very popular camping area from the middle 1960s with <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the construction of the new road from Riverton to Wentworth <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Springs/Loon Lake due to the creation of Union Valley Dam and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Reservoir. Prior to the creation of the Union Valley Dam and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake, it was more of a challenge to get to this area either via the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> road from Riverton to Wentworth Springs through Union Valley <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and South Fork or via the <a href="township120nr14emd1a.pdf">old <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown and Carson Valley Road </a>which cut across through<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="eldoradonfmap1916[1].jpg">Union Valley</a>, and on to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown Junction East of Fred's Place on Highway 50. Richard <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Cooper has very kindly donated a family photograph of his family <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> camping in the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="millionairecampeldoradonationalforest1930.jpg">Millionaire <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Camp area in the 1930s.</a> His family also camped on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> South Fork of the Silver Creek at Ice House besides at Millionaire Camp during those <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> early days before acquiring a cabin in the Tahoe area. The picture <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> shows his family in camp at Millionaire Camp <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> with the family car, a 1932 Chrysler Imperial sedan.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" height="416" src="millionairecampbigsilvercreekeldoradonf.JPG" width="776" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b><span class="style4">Mountain Meadow Spring House <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Foundation.</span> This historic foundation made of stacked granite stones <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> was located by the Forest Service in 1989 during a survey in this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> area prior to some thinning activities. The rock foundation was the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> only remains of what was most probably a spring house or small <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> cabin. It is on the edge of Mountain Meadow, about a 1/4 mile North <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of Deller's Cabin in Deller Meadow. I believe this spring house or <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> cabin was most probably built by the Deller family. The rock <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> foundation is immediately next to the original trail which went up <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> from Deller's cabin in Deller meadow around the backside of Bunker <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Hill down into the Rubicon Canyon and crossed up to the other side. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Robert Jerrett of Georgetown and later the owner of Wentworth <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Springs owned cattle grazing property directly across the canyon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> from this site. This foundation site is a sensitive area and should <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> not be disturbed. It is marked accordingly and unless you know what <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> you are looking for it is all but impossible to find. This rock <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> foundation is about 3 to 4 layers high and has two large red fir <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> growing up within the center of the cabin ruins. The black and white <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> photo is a 1989 photo provided by Krista Deal of the Forest Service <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> showing the ruins as they were uncovered. Many thanks to Krista for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sharing this photo. It took me two Summers and about 4 visits with <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> help to finally find these ruins, even knowing in general where they <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> are since there is now dead fall on top and one actually has to be <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> looking right at them to see them. These ruins at one time were <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> right on the regular trail, but this is no longer the case as the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> alder and forest have taken over. My color photos were taken in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> October 2005.</b></i></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="moutainmeadowcabinruinsoct62005001.jpg" width="501" height="356" /><img border="0" src="mountainmeadow1b.jpg" width="386" height="538" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Additional pictures<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="mountainmeadowcabinruinsoct62005003.jpg">Pic 3,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="mountainmeadowcabinruinsoct62005010.jpg">Pic 10,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="mountainmeadowcabinruinsoct62005011.jpg">Pic 11, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="mountainmeadowcabinruinsoct62005014.jpg">Pic 14, </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="mountainmeadowcabinruinsoct62005018.jpg">Pic 18</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="mountainmeadowmapoct62005.JPG" width="597" height="379" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerlecreek.jpg"><span class="style5">Murry <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> (Murray) Camp</span></a></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>In 1898, William H. Murray <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> filed on 160 acres14N 14E Section 26 Mount Diablo on what is now <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> called "Murry's Camp or correctly, Murray's Camp," just inside the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Placer County line on the road to Bunker Hill, just a mile North of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gerle's or Wagner Bros Cow Camp (Lawyer's Cow Camp). Title transfer <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of the land was issued August 15, 1901. </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">William H. Murray was the son <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of William H. Murray born in New York State in 1838. His <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> mother was Lucy H. Murray born in 1848. William H. Murray, the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> son was born in California in 1869. The Murray family lived in<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.dof.ca.gov/HTML/DEMOGRAP/ReportsPapers/CensusSurveys/Township_and_Place/documents/Pop-Twnshp-Placer_County.xls"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Township #1 in Placer County which is Roseville, Ca .</a></font></i></b><font face="Californian FB"><i><b> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> William H. Murray was married to Kate Murray born 1878. They had 8 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> children, Roy, Bill, Kathleen, Carl F., Mallie, Carl, Harrel and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> James. Both of the Murray families lived in Roseville till the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> senior Murray and family moved to Pacific Grove, in Monterey County <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> early in the 1900s, showing up on the 1910 census living there. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Murray Camp or Murray's Camp was used exclusively for deer hunting. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Murray built a single clapboard sided cabin on the property sometime <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> before 1916, exact date unknown. This cabin is still standing but <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> was moved from it's original location on the camp to it's current <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> location. On the US Forest Service Map of Eldorado National Forest <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in 1916, Murray's Camp was formally identified as "Murry Camp," <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> while the 1931 Forest Service map simply showed the camp identified <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> as "Camp." However, the 1943 Eldorado National Forest Map identified <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the camp as "Murray Camp." The 1950 Forest Service Map <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> returned to the "Murry Camp" identity. The Gerle's, specifically <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Charles and later the Wagner Bros were very close neighbors of Murry <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Camp, eventually leading to the Wagner/Veerkamp family owning most <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of the original 160 acres which William H. Murray originally filed <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> on in 1898.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Besides being the main trail to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Bunker Hill, it was the trail to McKinstry Lake and Bennet's Ranch <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in the meadows near McKinsty Lake. This trail was actually formally <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> identified on the earliest maps as the "Road to Bennet's Range." <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> There are five cabins at Murry Camp situated on Bart's Creek. The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> following pictures of the original log cabins built during the 1900s were taken during a visit Memorial Day, 2004. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> According to Don Bishop, the new or current log barn was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> built in 1946, which replaced an older structure. Don Bishop <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> also shared the following about their cabin: The Old Thomas, Now <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Bishop Cabin was built in either 1934 or 1936 as the information <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> inscribed or etched into the foundation to the left of the front <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> door is partially covered leaving the following for all to view, "F. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> H. Thomas and Family 19..." Before the Thomas family built their <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> cabin at Murray Camp, they setup a large summer camp for several <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> years in the area of Stumpy Meadows according to Don Bishop. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="murrycamp0504a.jpg">Albert Ninas Cabin 1920s,</a> <a href="murrycamp0504b.jpg"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Blair Bros Cabin Murry Camp </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="murrycamp0504c.jpg">Barn <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> at Murry Camp,</a> <a href="murrycamp0504d.jpg">Old <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Thomas Now Bishop Cabin Murry Camp </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="murrycamp0504e.jpg">Murray <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Camp5, </a> <a href="murrycamp0504f.jpg">Murray <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Camp6, </a> and <a href="murrycamp0504g.jpg">Murray <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Family Cabin Now Serpia Family Cabin Murry Camp</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>According to John Baughman, the Albert Ninas Cabin was built in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the mid 1920s by Albert Ninas. Albert was John and Alvin <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Baughman's great uncle. Albert died in 1939 in Auburn, California. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> John's brother Alvin Baughman and he own this cabin now.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><img border="0" src="MurryCamp.JPG" width="530" height="529" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="historypages/georgetowndividemaps.htm" name="O"><span class="style4">Orelli's Ranch</span></a> was located on the Eastern slopes of Robb's Peak <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in the natural meadow of Robbs Valley and is first shown on the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/history/bowmanmap1873.pdf">Bowman <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Map 1873</a> and<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~320~30027:47B,-D--E--Calif-,-W--Nevada-?qvq=q:california%20wheeler%20Atlas;sort:pub_list_no_initialsort,pub_date,pub_list_no,series_no;lc:RUMSEY~8~1&sort=pub_list_no_initialsort%2Cpub_date%2Cpub_list_no%2Cseries_no&mi=40&trs=67&printerFriendly=1"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> G.M Wheeler Atlas 47B,D,E Sheet Calif, Nev 1876/79</a>. The ranch building is now <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> only ruins. The following map shows exactly where the ranch building <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ruins are as shown in the picture below:</b></i></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><img border="0" src="oreliranchrobbsvalley.JPG" width="450" height="308" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Robb's Valley Resort sits on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the property immediately next to the old ranch location. The Orelli's, Charles and Catherina, came to California in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the 1850's from Switzerland. Catherina, a native of Osasco, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Switzerland, arrived in California in 1857 and married Charles <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in Placerville in 1858 (Mountain Democrat, Oct 14, 1911). They were <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> from an area very near the border with France called Canton <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ticino (Baldwin, 1975). Their cattle ranch was located in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> area between Lotus and Rescue in the foothills, where they raised <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "beef and milch cattle" according to Anna Baldwin. In the early <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Summer, they herded their cattle up to the range property in Robb's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Valley. The cattle remained till herded back down to their ranch <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lotus/Rescue in the Fall. This property at Robbs Valley was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "obtained by government permit" according to Anna Baldwin. The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Orelli's made salami, cheeses and other dairy products which they <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sold to various merchants. The Orelli cabin or ranch in Robb's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Valley was noted on the Amos Bowman 1874 Map of the Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Divide for the California Water Company of San Francisco, California <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> as "Orelly."</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">According to the Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gazette of October 9, 1885, "Charles Orelli brought down a ton of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> cheese from his mountain dairy a few days ago, which is pronounced <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to be of excellent quality, it being made from pure un-skimmed milk. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> This lot of cheese is in store at Gus Orelli's and is being <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sold at 16 cents per pound, by whole cheese." </font></i></b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i>(Gernes, Deibert, 1999) </i></b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>For a picture of Gus Orelli, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> see Rambeau, 1998, page 21 for a group photo of the I.O.O.F. lodge <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in Georgetown, 1889. There is a group picture showing members Alex <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Francis, Charles Forni, Dan Jerrett, Gus Orelli and Charles <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Wentworth, all significant men in the history of Gerle Creek. </b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">Catherina suffered from heart <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> trouble throughout her life, which eventually led to her death <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> October 10, 1911, at home near Lotus. She was also related to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Bassi, Forni, Francis and Leonardi families and the Orellis of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown. Her funeral was held at the Odd Fellows Hall in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown with interment in the Georgetown Cemetery</font></i></b><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>( <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Mountain Democ rat, Oct 14, 1911).</b></i></font><b><i><font face="Californian FB">.</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><img border="0" src="orelisranchoctober102006%20007.jpg" width="450" height="338" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><i><font face="Californian FB"><b>Oreli Ranch<span class="style4"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span>ruins Robbs Valley, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> October 2006</b></font></i></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style4"><a name="P">Pino Grande-Michigan California Lumber Company, Saw Mill , <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Logging Railroad & Mill Town-1892-1951</a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" height="269" src="pinograndemilltownsmall.jpg" width="450" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Pino Grande Mill Town-About 1902</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>There has been considerable material written about the lumber <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> mill at Pino Grande which was the hub of the logging, narrow gauge <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> railroad of the Michigan California Lumber Company. For starters <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> read R.S. Polkinghorn's "PINO GRANDE, Logging Railroads of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Michigan-California Lumber Company", Howell-North Books, Berkeley, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California, 1966/Revised/Enlarged Edition Trans -Anglo Books, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Glendale, California 1984.Professor Polkinghorn's books are the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> authoritative documents for lumbering on the central Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Divide-Eldorado National Forest areas during the late 19th Century <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> through the middle of the 20th Century.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hD4jnZ0iP9w">Pino Grande <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Michigan California Lumber Railroad Video 1939-1941...Thanks to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> George Mihal </a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>For a quick read on Pino Grande try the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.co.el-dorado.ca.us/stories/narrow_gauge.html">El <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dorado County Historical listing</a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>or try this slide show on early photos of the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.pacificng.com/imglib/main.php?g2_itemId=3694"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Pino Grande Mill and Michigan California Lumber Railroad</a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><img alt="" height="512" src="pinogrande1916.jpg" width="450" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Pino Grande 1916</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><img alt="" height="329" src="pinogrande.JPG" width="450" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Pino Grande Site-El Dorado County, Eldorado National Forest</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><img alt="" height="670" src="rivertonhotel.jpg" width="836" /></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="auto-style8"><a name="R">Riverton Hotel, Riverton, California</a></span>-Riverton or River Side <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Hotel-Known originally as Moore's Station, named for the owner, John <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> M. Moore, an early California toll road owner and operator. Moore's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> toll road ran between Sacramento and Virginia City, Nevada. Moore <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> was from San Francisco where he was a former member of the San <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Francisco Vigilance Committee (Gudde 1969). <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://landmarkadventures.blogspot.com/2011/05/moores-station-pony-express-route.html">Moore's Station was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> also known in early years as River Side or the River Side Hotel, was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> also a stage and Pony Express Stop from the 1850s</a>. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> River Side Hotel or Moore's Station was described in the personal <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> journal of Jesus Maria Estudillio regarding his travel from San <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Leandro to Lake Tahoe on September 3, 1864, quoted in full by Cross(1954): </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "About half past six we reached River Side (Riverton) (Hotel). <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Here we stopped for the night. No better name could have been <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> given to this place for part of the house is built on the very river <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and swishing waters pass below, making a terrific noise. There <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> is but one house and this is in the one we stopped. If the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> supper was not of the best kind, I can say that we had better beds <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> than at Placerville."</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> In about 1895 when Moore's Station was to become a post office, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> since there already was a post office called Moore's Station in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Butte County in Northern California, an alternative name for Moore's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Station or River Side Hotel was necessary. Hereafter, Moore's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Station or the River Ride Hotel became Riverton and a official <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> post office from 1895 (Gudde 1969). The Riverton Hotel remained an <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> important way point for travelers on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.oocities.org/markarayner/ancestry/johnsons-cutoff.htm">the Placerville <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Carson Valley Road, the Placerville Road, Emigrant Ravine Road, the Lake Tahoe <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Wagon Road , or simply "Johnson" Cut-Off"in the very early days which eventually was known as California State Highway 50.</a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Riverton was the jumping off point for driving into the Crystal <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Basin including Ice House, Union Valley, South Fork, all the many <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ranches, Airport Camp, Gerle Creek, Wentworth Springs and Loon Lake. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The original Riverton Hotel was lost <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in a fire on November 2, 1928, but the owner and proprietor at the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> time, Albert M. Martin vowed to rebuild immediately which he did. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> (Mountain Democrat Nov 2, 1928) Later in the very early 1960s, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Riverton Hotel burned down for the final time and was not <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> replaced, but the name remains to this day along with the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> historical monuments to this important stopping location on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Placerville Road to Lake Tahoe or Highway 50.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The Riverton Hotel was a special place to visit and stay.<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="DaisyBrownRiverton083034.jpg">Lint Brown's parents chose it <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> as their honeymoon location in 1934. Here is a photo of Lint Brown's mother, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Daisy Brown standing in front of the Riverton Hotel and one of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> cottages during her honeymoon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> stay , August 30, 1934, the day after they were married.</a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> For additional historic pictures of the Riverton Hotel, see "THE <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> WIRGHTS LAKE STORY," The Historical Committee of the Wright's Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Summer Home Association, 1962/1994, pages 63 and 64 for three early <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1920's pictures of the hotel, including some of its riverfront <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> cottages along with a picture of the stone highway bridge <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> across the South Fork of the American River.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b><span class="style4">Robbs Peak <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </span>Gudde indicates it was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> named after an early cattle ranchman named Hamilton D. Robb, but <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> that US Forest Service Records suggest it was named after a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~320~30027:47B,-D--E--Calif-,-W--Nevada-?qvq=q:california%20wheeler%20Atlas;sort:pub_list_no_initialsort,pub_date,pub_list_no,series_no;lc:RUMSEY~8~1&sort=pub_list_no_initialsort%2Cpub_date%2Cpub_list_no%2Cseries_no&mi=40&trs=67&printerFriendly=1">US Army <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lieutenant with the last name of Robb who during a investigation of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the area with his detachment, climbed the peak and left a metal can <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> or "tin cylinder" on the peak (Gudde)</a>. See the Wheeler <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Atlas link. The Robb's Peak property, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 5.54acres, was acquired by the US Forest Service November 26, 1913.</b></i></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b><a href="picture032.jpg"><span class="style4">Robbs <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lookout.</span></a>..Lint Brown photo of Robbs Lookout on<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="picture032.jpg">Robbs Peak <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> A </a> <a href="picture031.jpg">B. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>As reported in the Mountain Democrat of July 9, 1936, CCC <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> members from the CCC Spike Camp at Airport Camp on Gerle Creek, will <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> build a new lookout house on Robbs Peak.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i><b><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="rubiconsprings.jpg"><span class="style4">Rubicon Springs</span></a>-1869 Hunsucker Springs <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.co.el-dorado.ca.us/Rubicon/About.htm">Rubicon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Trail</a> See <a href="mailto:history@rubiconspringshistory.org"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Rick Morris'</a> excellent book, <a href="http://www.rubiconhg.com"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "Rubicon Springs and The Rubicon Trail: a history,"</a> 2011.<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~320~30027:47B,-D--E--Calif-,-W--Nevada-?qvq=q:california%20wheeler%20Atlas;sort:pub_list_no_initialsort,pub_date,pub_list_no,series_no;lc:RUMSEY~8~1&sort=pub_list_no_initialsort%2Cpub_date%2Cpub_list_no%2Cseries_no&mi=40&trs=67&printerFriendly=1"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Soda Springs shows on the G.M Wheeler Atlas 47B,D,E Calif, Nev, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1976/79</a></font></b></i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Originally discovered and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> established by the Hunsucker Brothers. In 1869, they filed and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> located themselves on 160 acres here building a log house which was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to become a way station for travelers from Georgetown to McKinney's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> at Lake Tahoe. They were great friends with John McKinney who owned <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> McKinney's on Lake Tahoe. This relationship helped bring people to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the springs via the side wheeled steamer from Glenbrook on Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Tahoe to McKinneys, where they were then brought in over the pack <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> trail to Hunsuckers. Once the Hunsuckers became too old to run their <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> way station, they sold it to Mrs Vade Clark in 1886, who renamed it <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Rubicon Mineral Springs Hotel. She built a more <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> substantial structure, finishing her work in 1889(Presba, 1992) and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> operated what became a sixteen room hotel for the next 15 years <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> marketing the mineral water which she said was "better than whisky." <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dr Winslow Anderson felt much the same way describing the Rubicon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Springs in his 1889 prize essay as "an excellent mineral soda <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> springs, romantically situated in the beautiful Garden Valley, on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Rubicon River. The owner of this beautiful mountainous <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> resort is erecting commodious accommodations for guests and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> visitors. As for the mineral springs, the doctor described <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> them as belonging to the Alkalo-Carbonated class of waters, so <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> valuable in the treatment of the many diseases" (Anderson, 1889). <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Vade Clark eventually sold her hotel back to Daniel Abbot in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1898, but leased back to Vade Clark, who continued to operate <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> it till it eventually sold to Ralph Cowell in the 1908. (James, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1915; Presba, 1992).</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Here are two images of a modern <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> reproduction copy of a original Rubicon Springs advertising brochure <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in pamphlet form. The pamphlet indicates that R Colwell is the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> owner, which means it was published sometime from 1908. My thanks to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Alan Vella from Gerle Creek Summer Home Tract for loaning this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> historic document so that it could be imaged and shared via this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> historical website.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="rubsprsbrochure1a.jpg" width="519" height="273" /></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="rubsprsbrochure1b.jpg" width="518" height="249" /></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>These days the property and the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> mineral springs are owned by the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.jeepersjamboree.com">Jeepers Jamboree in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown,</a> now home to the famous yearly trek (Jeepers <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Jamboree) of 4 wheel drive Jeeps from Georgetown to Lake Tahoe via <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Rubicon Springs. Originally when the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.jeepersjamboree.com/jamboree_history.html"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Jamboree first begin </a>in 1952, the Jamboree found its way to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Rubicon Springs and Lake Tahoe via Wentworth Springs, but by the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> late 1980s, the trek was modified go to Rubicon Springs via Loon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake Dam, trekking the North side of Loon Lake and re-entering the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> trail to Rubicon Springs at Ellis Creek.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Here are four historic pictures <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of Rubicon Springs from July 16, 1953, taken by Linton A. Brown, the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> late father of Lint Brown. They show the old hotel partially <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> collapsed as a result of the record breaking Winter of 1951/52 where <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Sierras had one of the biggest snow falls on record, which led <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to considerable extra runoff and the damage seen in these nearly 50 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> year old photos. One of the photos shows what was left of the<a href="rubiconspgs3.jpg"> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> famous piano </a>in the old hotel; another is a nice shot of the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="rubiconspgs1.jpg">collapsed hotel;</a> another a shot of a<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="rubiconspgs2.jpg">small <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> barn or shed on the edge of the meadow</a> and the final shot, shows<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="rubiconspgs4.jpg">Lint <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Brown and his friend, Robert P. Neeley standing proudly next to an <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> interesting piece of old equipment, </a>with their fishing and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> hiking equipment displayed. Here are two more historic photos of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> SPRR Cabin in Lower Hell Hole taken by Lint Brown Sr in 1951, which <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> was removed with the construction of Hell Hole Dam and Lake in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1960's. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/picture029.jpg">029,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/picture030.jpg">030 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">I recently came across this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> local <a href="http://liddicoat.net/Rubicon/index.htm"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown-Placerville Liddicoat Family history </a>showing their <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> early involvement with using Jeeps on the road from Georgetown to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake Tahoe via Wentworth Springs and Rubicon Springs with wonderful <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> pictures of Wentworth Springs in 1946 along with detailed pictures <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of their Jeep travel on the road including historic pictures of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Rubicon Springs and the bridge before the steel bridge and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> after..........This website is a must review for a look back 60 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> years plus at Rubicon Springs and road to Lake Tahoe.</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.delalbright.com/Rubicon/history.htm"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="style4">Rubicon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Trail History Page</span>.</a>.......a very nice historical time line on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> related history, names and places along the Rubicon Trail to Lake <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Tahoe. For even more detail and a wonderful timeline on the history <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of Rubicon Springs, along with some new and very interesting <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> photographs of the Springs, their vehicles, the people and owners, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> try <a href="http://www.rubiconspringshistory.org/"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> www.rubiconspringshistory.org </a>. This is a new website and is <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> very comprehensive.........</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerlecreek.jpg" name="S"><span class="style4">Schlein's Cabin</span></a>-<font color="#000080"> Eldorado National <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Forest, El Dorado County, Ca US Forest received this property <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> December 26, 1944. The original Schlein cabin was built by <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Theodore Schlein (family records say his full name was George Henry <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Charles Theodore Schlein) and his son, Ernest W. Schlein of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown, but no longer exists on the property. According to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Mountain Democrat of July 9, 1936, CCC members from the CCC Spike <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Camp at Airport Camp on Gerle Creek will build a new ranger station <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> on the old Schlein place on the road to Loon Lake. Theodore Schlein married his <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> wife Anna R. Schlein in 1866. Earnest was born in California in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1867. His father, Theodore Schlein, born 1836 in Hanover, Germany. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> His mother, Anna R. Schlein was born in Pennyslvania in 1849. Her <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> husband Theodore and his older brother William came to America from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Germany prior to 1841. A third brother George Ernest Schlein came to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> America in 1841 at the urging of his older bothers. (Yohalem, 1977; <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> KDeal 2005; Census Records; Georgetown Gazette; GernesDeibert <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1999)They remained in the East for many years before heading West to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the gold fields. By the 1880 census, the entire extended family(all <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> three brothers and their families) were living in Georgetown. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Theodore Schlein's listed occupation in 1880 was as Ditch Agent. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> From newspaper records it was determined he was a ditch agent for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the California Water Company. Theodore's other two brothers, William <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and George Ernest, listed themselves as miners. Theodore Schlein <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and Anna Schlein's younger daughter, Evalina, born in Georgetown in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1875, would eventually marry Robbert S. Jerrett of Georgetown and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> become the mistress of Wentworth Springs during the first half of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the 20th Century during their tenure as owners of that venerable <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> mineral spring and hotel resort.</font></b></i></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <blockquote class="cite" type="cite"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i>Taken from the THE MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT, April 5, 1890, <b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "Theodore Schlein and Al Toland visited Loon Lake last Friday. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> They found snow 16 feet in depth, and judge it had been about 24 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> feet prior to settling. The Loon Lake boarding house has been <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> crushed in as also the South Fork saw mill; in fact very few <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> buildings from Forni's to the summit escaped. The roof of Sam <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Forni's building is caved in and Uncle Tom's Cabin (is) injured <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> more than reported. The snow is 10 feet deep at Bill Vaughn's. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> As Wentworth's was not visited, nothing is known."</b></i></blockquote><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><font color="#000080">Bill <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Vaughn's place was infact 12 Mile House to the East of Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and belonged to the California Water Company. Bill Vaughn, like <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Theodore Schlein, was a ditch agent for the California Water <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Company. By In 1906, Ernest W. Schlein was issued land patents <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> for the property which Schlein's Ranger Station sits on as well as <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the meadow. The property and the Schein family built cabin and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> outbuildings , remained in the Schlein family till it was received <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> by the Forest Service in 1944 via a land swap This property was used <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> by the CCC as well during the late 1930s and 1940s.Here are several <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> pictures of Schleins taken in 1964,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/schleinstation1964.jpg"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> picture 1,</a> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/pic41.jpg"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 2.,</a> and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/pic38.jpg">3.</a></font></b></i></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img border="0" src="schleinwagondavesouza2009small.jpg" width="396" height="269" /><img border="0" src="schleinwagondavesouza2009asmall.jpg" width="370" height="266" /><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">Theodore Schlein's Wagon, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> purchased in Stockton in 1890...owned now by<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="mailto:souzaranch@peoplepc.com">Dave Souza of Souza Ranch<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>on Bear Creek in Garden Valley. Dave purchased this wagon from <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Leigh Hurley who was married into the Schlein Family....Picture and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> historical background, Dave Souza 2009</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><font color="#000080">Spider <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake</font>-Spider Lake is on the Georgetown to Lake Tahoe Road just <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> past Wentworth Springs and a long time isolated fishing destination. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> One must hike or use a 4 wheel drive vehicle to get there. In a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> wonderful article on the front page of the Sacramento Bee, June 3, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1931, it describes the challenging trip by motorcar during Memorial <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Day time frame of 1931 for several Sacramento people who wanted to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> catch a few trout........</b></i><b><i>"SPICKARD FIRST TO SPIDER <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> LAKE, Dealer Pilots Car over Granite Boulders to Reach Fishing <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Paradise......Driving through mud holes, around fallen trees and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> over granite boulders in the sluice box region of the headwaters of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Rubicon River, C. R. Spickard of the local automobile firm of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Spickard & Loughland, and Ray Weatherwax, service superintendent for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the firm, were the first to reach Spider Lake this season. They <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> made the tri[ over the Memorial Day weekend, driving there via <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown, Uncle Toms and Wentworth Springs in five hours Friday <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> afternoon and returning in the same time Sunday night. Road Good for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> a ways. Spickard said the road up the Georgetown Divide was very <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> good to Wentworth Springs, forty-six miles east of Georgetown and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 103 miles from Sacramento. From Wentworth Springs on ten miles to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Spider Lake the going was bad and much difficulty was experienced. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> However, by persistent effort, the two auto men worked their car to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> within a few yards of the lake and pitched camp. Rewarded By <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Trout. After they had broken the trail, two or three other cars <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> followed, but stopped further from the lake. They were rewarded for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> their effort by fine catches of large trout in Spider and other <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> nearby lakes. There is a road that runs from Spider Lake on through <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the granite sluice boxes and down to Lake Tahoe at McKinneys, but it <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> is in such poor condition that but a handful of cars have gotten <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> through to the lake by this route in the past several years." </i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>Stone Cellar Land patents were <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> issued to Amelio Fornifor Township 13N 14 E section 24 in 1888 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> followed by section 23 of the same township in 1894. The 1895 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Geological Survey map clearly is annotate with Forni's name on Stone <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Celler as well as a number of other properties in the Gerle Creek <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> area. </i></b><i><b>Les Clementsen owns Stone Cellar and has for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> many, many years. Like Robb's Resort, Les built a large camp at <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Stone Cellar with several large buildings which cater to private <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> groups as a summer retreat throughout the season every year.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><font color="#000080">Tells <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek/Peak</font> Gudde indicates it was named for a early Swiss <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "homesteader" named Tell. His cabin is shown on the early maps to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the West of Tell's Peak on Tells Creek around 1875. However other <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> sources in Gudde's research suggest it was named for "Ciperano <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Pedrini", commonly known as "Bill Tell," who was a merchant in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Garden Valley (Gudde) James, 1915, pg 160 wrote "Tell was an old <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Switzer who used to keep a dairy ranch on the slopes of the mountain <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> bearing his name." In fact it was named for Ciperano Pedrini or <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> William Pedrini as he was called after arrival in America of Garden <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Valley who owned a store there called Tell's Store and Tell's Ranch <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> below Tell's Peak. Later in 1875, his store and ranch holdings were <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> taken over by his nephew, Renaldo Filippini along with his partners, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Massino and Clemente Pedrini, thereafter known as Rinaldo Filippini <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and Company. Filippini arrived in 1859 and worked for his uncle in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the store at Green Valley(Gernes,1982)</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style4"><a href="historypages/swiftranch.htm">Swift Ranch, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Union Valley, California</a> <span class="auto-style1">See <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> also Lower and Upper Bassi Ranches.</span></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i><b><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="georgetowndividemap1915.jpg"><span class="style4">Uncle Tom's Cabin</span></a> 1864-<a href="laketahoemap1915.jpg">Georgetown-Wentworth <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Springs Road,</a> Eldorado National Forest, El Dorado County, Ca</font></b></i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="uncletomscabin1.jpg">Uncle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Toms1,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="uncletomscabin2.jpg">Uncle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Toms2, </a> <a href="uncletomscabin3.jpg">Uncle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Toms3,</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Originally built by Tom Markham <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in 1864(Presba, 1992). Archie and Irma Lawyer, married in 1912, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> owned Uncle Tom's from about1921, living there every Spring till the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> first snow of the Fall till the mid 1970s.According to Irma Lawyer, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> it was named after a black man who lived there, mining and trapping <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in the early mining days. No one ever knew his real name, although <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> he was referred to as Tom. However, other sources indicate that Tom <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Markham was in fact a Caucasian from Missouri. He later left the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> county in the late '70s for Tulare County (Gardner, 1993). <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> White fur trappers who moved into the area would seek help from Tom <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> with trapping and actually getting their hides out. After many <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> years, the name "Uncle Toms Cabin stuck and continues to this day (Yohaler, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1977). <a href="RayandIrmaLawyerUncleTomsCabin.jpg">Here is an <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> undated picture of Ray and Irma Lawyer standing in front of Uncle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Tom's Cabin shared on Facebook by Bill Purier. Ray would be Archie <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and Irma Lawyer's son.</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>After Tom Markham left for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Tulare County, John Brock and John Saucerman, hunters and trappers, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> made it their headquarters before it was passed along to William <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Vaughn and B.W. "Dick" Hartless turned it into a store and beer bar <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> (Gardner,1993) According to Gardner, Dick Hartless actually <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> inherited the name "Uncle Tom" among his friends, which followed him <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to the end of his life.. By the late 1880s, the the property was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> acquired by the Swiss Timber and Land Company who built a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> substantial building there. Uncle Toms was then operated by B. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Scholari and then Charles Schultz of Coloma. After the Swiss <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Timber Company sold the property, Uncle Toms burned down, but the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> new timber company owner rebuilt it immediately (Gardner, 1993). <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> The Lawyers once they took it over from this timber company, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> operated it as a roadhouse which catered to the Spring and Fall <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> cattle drives of the valley ranchers moving their cattle into the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> many sierra meadows which were homesteaded by early California <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> pioneers</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <b><i><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="style4">Union Valley</span>-Named <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> in Spring of 1851 by a party of men, including James W. Summerfield, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> formed to find Lake Tahoe. Summerfield was a late arrival to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> goldfields in the Summer of 1849, arriving from Union, Virginia <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> (now West Virginia) where he was born. He spent the remainder of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1849 and 1850 mining in Kelsey before returning to Hangtown in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1851. He and several other miners heard the story of a "certain <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> mountain lake" which had a stream flowing into it, where one could <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> see "innumerable pieces of gold, some of which were fully as large <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> as a small-sized walnut." (Upton, 1906)The story went on to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> describe the lake which the stream flowed into, as so clear that <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> pieces of gold could be seen in it as well. James Summerfield was <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> one of several men who formed several companies referred by Upton as <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Gold Lake Party who left Hangtown to find Lake Tahoe, using the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> directions written down by the three men who gave them the story of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> gold. The party, which included Summerfield, made their way up into <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> what is now called Union Valley, searching for this clear lake and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> stream of gold. Union Valley received it's name from this party of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> men as "they communed and held services---when they became puzzled <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and were unable to follow the line of procedure as described in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> paper of directions." For this reason, hereafter, it was named Union <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Valley. (Upton 1906)</font></i></b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><font color="#000080"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="style4">Union <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Valley Dam</span></font> Here are several in construction pictures of the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> dam taken by my father with myself standing on the dam during <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> construction <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="unionvalleydam1.jpg">Pictures 1. </a>and<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="unionvalleydam2.jpg">2.<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><a href="Map.pdf"><span class="style5">Upper Bassi <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ranch</span></font><i><b><font face="Californian FB"> </font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a><font face="Californian FB">and ranch <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> buildings, 1860s. Located Northeast of Union Valley on Bassi <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Creek, between Fillipinni/Forni/Van Vleck Ranch and Tells Peak. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Both pictures were taken in the early 1960's by John Holmes, Lot 33 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Gerle Creek Summer Home Tract......<a href="upperbassi1.jpg">Pictures <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1. </a>and<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="upperbassi2.jpg">2. </a> The following information <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> comes from G Bassi's own comments to P.Sioli during the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> preparations and writing of the "The History of El Dorado County, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California, 1882-83.</font></b></i></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>G. Bassi was born in Valle, Switzerland May 18, 1840, the son of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Antonio and Osula Bassi. He spent his early years herding cattle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> but by age 18 was ready to seek his fortune in America, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> setting out for California and the opportunities there.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>G. Bassi arrived 10 years into the Rush to California in January <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of 1859 spending his early years in El Dorado County working on dairy <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ranches and as a miner saving his money. In 1864 ,he went to Nevada <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> looking for opportunity but returned in the Fall of 1864 and bought <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> an interest in a dairy ranch at Rock Bridge.(Sioli, 1883). Later by 1870 , <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> G. Bassi was able to buy the dairy ranch in full which was situated <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> on the banks of the South Fork of the American River and included <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> summer ranches and ranges on the banks of Silver Creek (Later <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> years, called Big Silver Creek) in Union Valley and a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> second ranch on a fork to Big Silver Creek, later called Bassi Creek. (Sioli, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1883) In <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the early years the lower ranch on Big Silver Creek was referred to and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> marked on maps as "Bassi," while the ranch on Bassi Creek which is a fork of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Big Silver Creek, was referred to as Upper Bassi and so marked on early maps. With the construction of Union Valley <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dam in the early 1960s, Bassi Ranch on Big Silver Creek was removed <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> from within the area of the new lake.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>G Bassi later married Virginia Forni, daughter of Sam Forni of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown January 6, 1878. Their children included Daniel M Bassi <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> born January 20 1879; Josphine V. Bassi born August 19, 1880 and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Kitty Angelina Bassi born March 9, 1882.(Sioli, 1883)</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>"Among the stockmen who passed through our town the past two <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> weeks for their alpine ranges were: Murphy Bros of Weaver Creek, for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> their range at McKinney's ; G. Bassi for Silver Creek; Sam and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Amelio Forni, for Forni's; Wm. Bacchi and Son from Garden Valley; <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> McCollough from near Folsom, for South Fork; Rodoni Bros; Butler <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> from near Folsom, with sheep; Jake Drairer from Cool." <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown Gazette June 10, 1898</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>See also Lower Bassi and Swift Ranches</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p class="style4">B-17C Crash Site Tell's Peak Upper Bassi Ranch</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><a href="B17crashoct311941.pdf">B-17C Crash October 31, 1941</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="bee-clip.jpg">B17C Pilot Located</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="B-17%20Hike%20Halsey%20and%20Dan%207-16-06.jpg">B17C Crash <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Site Map</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.co.el-dorado.ca.us/stories/B17Crash.html">B17C <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Crash Site Link</a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <img alt="" height="263" src="GerleCreekOct2008%20049.jpg" width="350" /> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> L-R John Watt, Pete Cowper and Bill Dillon during our hike to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> site October 2008 Photo</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="eldoradonfmap1916.jpg" name="V"><span class="style4">Van <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Vleck Ranch )</span> </a>1870s One of the original ranches built for summer <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> range East of Robbs Valley for grazing cattle...identified as<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/documents/georgetowndividemaps.htm"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "Tell's Ranch"</a> on Amos Bowman's 1874 Map of the Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Divide for the California Water Company of San Francisco, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California...Originally belonged to the<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.gerlecreek.com/images/fillpinis1895.jpg">Ce</a>perano <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Pedrini or William Pedrini....(William Pedrini was commonly called <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ."William Tell", with his store in Garden Valley called Tell's Store <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and his ranch on the slopes of Tell's Peak, Tell's Ranch ) till 1875 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> when the ranch and store was passed to his nephew, Rinado Filippini <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of Rinaldo Filippini and Company. Renaldo arrived in 1859 to work <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> for his uncle Ceperano Pedrini in the store and on the ranch. (Gernes, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1982) Fillippini owed the ranch till the late 1890s before being <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> passed to the Forni Family (The 1895 USGeo and 1916 US Forest <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Service Map shows Forni's name on the ranch) an then to the Van <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Vlecks...four pictures of the Brattland family visiting this <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> historic ranch in July 1991...the next year the ranch burned down <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> from a chimney fire. Pictures show the original ranch building along <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> with the beautiful near natural meadow which made this such a <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> perfect place for a summer ranch when first located by early <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> settlers. Some of the timbers of this original mid 19th Century <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> ranch house most probably came from the Southfork Mill at Hanna's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Camp when it was originally built during the Summer of 1885. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="vanvleck91a.jpg">Pic#1</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="vanvleck91b.jpg"> Pic#2,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="vanvleck91c.jpg">Pic#3,</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="vanvleck91d.jpg">Pic#4 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a></b></i></font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>A report from the October 28, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1881 edition of the Georgetown Gazette on the Filippini <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> "Dairy"........"A profitable Dairy - Filippini and Company of Garden <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Valley, have a dairy of about 200 cows which they keep during the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> summer months in the higher altitude above Georgetown. They <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> brought their stock down last week and reported the following as the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> result of the seasons operation. they made something over four tons <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of cheese, at which business, being native sons of Switzerland and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> trained to it from childhood, they are adept, and for their cheese <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> they have an active demand. They are shipping this cheese to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Eureka, Nevada, and other points. They also put up something <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> over three tons of butter of remarkable fine quality , equal to the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> best we have ever tasted."(Gernes; Deibert, 1999)</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>A report from the June 23, 1882 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> edition of the Georgetown Gazette on the movement of livestock <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> through Georgetown to the ranches in the Sierras.........."A great <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> many droves of stock and dairy cattle, sheep and goats, have passed <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> through Georgetown during the present month for their ranges above, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and many more are yet to pass before the month ends. Among <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> those who have already passed up with dairy stock are: Forni of Gold <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Hill, Sam Forni of this place(Georgetown), Filippini & Co., Bacchi <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of Garden Valley, Schelari and Gerley(mispelled) of Uniontown, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Deller and Son near this place (Georgetown) and others whose names <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> we have not in mind. Besides this, no less than a dozen large <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> bands of sheep and goats have passed through town. Much stock <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> is also passing up by routes south of this place." (Gernes; Deibert, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1999)</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">A report from the October 23, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1885 edition of the Georgetown Gazette on the Filippini Mountain <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ranch building......."Fred Smeder has just returned from R. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Filippini and Co,'s Mountain ranch, some 40 miles east of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown, where he has been engaged for the last eight weeks in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> building a fine large dwelling house for that enterprising Company. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> this and John Flora's new swelling, going up near Volcanoville, are <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the finest buildings on the upper divide>" </font></i></b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font face="Californian FB"><b><i>(Gernes; Deibert, 1999)</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><i><b><font color="#000080" face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="historypages/wentworthsprings.htm" name="W"><span class="style4">Wentworth Springs</span>-</a>1880,Eldorado National Forest, El Dorado <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> County, Ca</font></b></i></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Quick Index <a href="#A">A</a> <a href="#B">B <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> <a href="#C">C </a> <a href="#D">D </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="#E">E </a> <a href="#F">F </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="#G">G </a> <a href="#H">H </a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="#I">I </a> <a href="#J">J</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> K <a href="#L">L </a> <a href="#M">M</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> N <a href="#O">O</a> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="#P">P</a> Q <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="#R">R </a> <a href="#S">S </a> T <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> U <a href="#V">V </a> <a href="#W">W<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a> X Y Z <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="#Bibliography">Bibliography</a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i><b><font face="Californian FB" size="5"><a name="Bibliography">Bibliography</a></font></b></i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Anderson M.D., Winslow,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#000000">"Mineral Springs and Health Resorts of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California," </font>The Bancroft Company, San Francisco, Ca, 1890.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Baldwin, Anna Luneman, "Joys <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and Tears of Yesteryears", Anna Luneman Baldwin, 1975...source <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> material for the Orelli, Jacobsen and Leonardi Families</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.stumpranchonline.com/skagitjournal/WestCounty/Anac-Fid/Anac/Pioneer/Bowman02-BeforeandAfter.html">Bowman, Amos,</a><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#66ffff">"</font><font color="#000000">Report on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Properties and Domain of the California Water Company, situated on <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown Divide: Resources of the Country, Between the South and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Middle forks of the American River, In El Dorado County, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California," </font>A. L. Bancroft and company, San Francisco, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ca,1874. See the link to learn more about Amos Bowman</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.stumpranchonline.com/skagitjournal/WestCounty/Anac-Fid/Anac/Pioneer/Bowman02-BeforeandAfter.html">Bowman, Amos,</a><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#000000">"Map of Georgetown Divide, El Dorado County, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Showing also Portions of Placerville and Forest Hill Divide, with <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ditches, Mines and other Properties of the California Water <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Company," </font>Amos Bowman, San Francisco, Ca, 1873 See <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the link to learn more about Amos Bowman</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Brown, Linton A., Long time <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> South Fork Mill, Old Ditch Camp, Georgetown Divide recreational <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> user, growing up and spending considerable time during his youth <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> living, hiking, fishing and working in these areas, with his late <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> father Linton Brown Sr...huge collection of historic photos covering <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> all areas of the Georgetown divide, including the old ditch Camp, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Loon Lake, Rubicon Springs, Wentworth Springs, and the California <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Water Company holdings...most taken by his father Lint Brown Sr.. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lint is working on written history of this area, which will include <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> many of the historical photos which he has loaned to me to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> include in the Gerle Creek history. Lint is a retired Engineer for <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California Department of Water Resources and lives in Redding, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California. </b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><b><i>Brown, Linton A.,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#000000">"SIXTEEN SUMMERS ON THE DITCH, Memories of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> South Fork and Gerle Creek Ditches and Old Loon Lake Dam, El Dorado <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> County, California," </font>Linton A. Brown, Red Bluff, Ca, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> February, 2003 [This new book is a wonderfully written book on the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ditch Camp, California Water Company, Georgetown Divide Water <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Company, Gerle Creek and Loon Lake Dam. It is absolutely full of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> wonderful pictures of these areas, not seen before from the author's <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> family collection, as well as much detail on the Ditch Camp, Loon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lake Dam, and its early construction, Uncle Tom's Cabin and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Wentworth Bros of Georgetown's mineral springs by the same <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> name....Wentworth Springs. The maps and charts are very good. This <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> book should be part of any ones library who has an interest in the <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown Divide, Eldorado National Forest and El Dorado County <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> history....This is self published. The author,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="mailto:lariatlane@hotmail.com">Linton A. Brown, </a>22360 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Lariat Lane, Red Bluff, Ca 96080 can be contacted by mail . I <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> am very pleased to have one of the 35 original copies]</i></b></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Clemenstsen, Les, life <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> long El Dorado County resident, former Army Air Corps Pilot in WWII <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and life long cattle rancher on the Eldorado National Forest, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> original owner and builder of Robb's Resort as well as the builder <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and owner of the summer camp at Stone Cellar. Personal interview and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> historical discussion, Gerle Creek Lot 43 Dinner, October 12, 2004</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Cross, Ralph Herbert, "THE EARLY INNS OF CALIFORNIA 1844-1869," <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ralph Herbert Cross, Cross & Brandt, San Francisco, 1954</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">Crowder, James L., "OSAGE <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> GENERAL: MAOR GENERAL CLARENCE L. TINKER," Office of Hisotry, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Oklahoma City Air Logistics Center, Tinker Air Force Base, Oklahoma, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1987</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Errington, Don; Deal, Krista,<font color="#00ffff"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </font><font color="#000000">"Airport Forest Health Project, Draft <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Environmental Impact Statement," </font>USDA, US Forest Service, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Pacific Southwest Region, Eldorado National Forest, Pacific Ranger <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> District, Pollack Pines, Ca., July 2000</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Gardner, Georgia; Edited by <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Leonard M. Davis, <font color="#000000">"Along the Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Divide, A collection of Stories and Reminiscences About the Famed <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown Divide," </font>1993, Roseville Historical Society, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Roseville, Ca 2002</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Gernes, Phyllis, Editor,<font color="#00ffff"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </font><font color="#000000">"Daily Journal 1852-1860 of Stephen <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Wing," </font>Physllis Gernes, Garden Valley, Ca 1982</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Gernes, Phyllis L.,<font color="#00ffff"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </font><font color="#000000">"Hidden in the Chaparral," </font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Phyllis L. Gernes, Garden Valley, Ca, 1979</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Gernes, Phyllis & Deibert, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Kenneth, <font color="#00ffff">"</font><font color="#000000">On & <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Beyond The Georgetown Divide," </font>Phyllis Gernes and Kenneth <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Deibert (530) 622-7590 (530) 333-4402, 1999 ( web <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> master's note....just an excellent book....The authors have taken <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the time to read all of the Georgetown Gazette newspapers between <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1880 and 1900, plus several other smaller relevant papers, pulling <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> out significant quoted parts which cover significant events, people, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> businesses etc. covered by the Georgetown Gazette..... a great help <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to anyone without access to the Georgetown papers which are only <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> available in the El Dorado County library or the State <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Library.....if one has any kind of interest in the Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Divide, it's people, events, places of interest, etc., , one needs <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> to own their own copy of this book, as do I..........mgb)</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Gudde, Erwin G.<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#000000">"California Place Names, The Origin and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Etymology of Current Geographical Names," </font>University of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California Press, Berkeley, Ca, 1949,1960,1969.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Gildersleeve, David H.,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#000000">"California Water and Mining Company Report to <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> the Stockholders," </font>New York, 1880.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.highcountrysketches.com/aj.asp">Hill, Jonni </a><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Artist, Early Eldorado National Forest and County historic ranches <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and pioneers, Several of her photographs used with her permission<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.highcountrysketches.com">High Country Sketches</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Hill, Lilla, "Our Traveling Correspondent" Newspaper Column, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Mountain Democrat Newspaper, Summer of 1929. Articles reprinted in <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> September to November period of 1977 in the Mountain Democrat <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Newspaper.</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>James, George Wharton,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#000000">"The Lake of the Sky-Lake Tahoe," </font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> George Wharton James, Pasadena, Ca 1915.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Jerrett, Herman Daniel,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#000000">"California's El Dorado---Yesterday and <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Today," </font>Press of Jo Anderson, Sacramento, Ca, 1915.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Jerrett, Herman Daniel,<font color="#00ffff"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </font><font color="#000000">"Hills of Gold," </font>Cal-Central <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Press, Sacramento, Ca, 1963</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Johnson, Wilbur S., Superior <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Court Judge Retired, Redwood City, Ca.... Unpublished early <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> historical information, e-mail, including early photographs, maps, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> etc., on Wentworth Springs and its surroundings, Robert S. Jerrett <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and family for Georgetown and Wentworth Springs, Ca, the Wikanders <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of Buck Island Lake from 1932, May/June 2003</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">Mason, J. D. "History of Amador <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> County California" Thompson & West, Oakland, California, 1881</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Mathis, George; Moser, Halmar <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Forrest,<font color="#00ffff"> </font><font color="#000000">"El <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dorado Sketches," </font>Friday House, Columa, Ca, 1973</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Morgan, Jacqueline; Rambeau, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Sheryl; Wurm, Bonnie, <font color="#000000">"Georgetown <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Historical Walking Tour" Brochure, </font>Georgetown, Ca, Minuteman <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Press/USDA/Forest Service, 2003</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><a href="mailto:history@rubiconspringshistory.org">Morris, Rick,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>"Rubicon Springs and The Rubicon Trail: a history,"<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.rubiconhg.com">Rubicon Historical Group, Rubicon <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Soda Springs, Ca, 2011</a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Nicosia, Francesco M.,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#000000">"Italian Pioneers Of California," </font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Italian-American Chamber of Commerce of the Pacific Coast, San <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Francisco, Ca, 1960.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Niles, Bob,<font color="#00ffff"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </font><font color="#000000">"The Little South Fork Ditch and The <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> History of the Water Companies on the Georgetown Divide",</font> US <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Forest Service Report, El Dorado National Forest, Placerville, Ca, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> May, 1979</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Parker, Marilyn,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#000000">"The Pollock Pines Epic," </font>Placerville <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> press, Placerville, Ca, 1988</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Polkinghorn, R.S.,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#00ffff">"</font><font color="#000000">Pino Grande, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Logging Railroads of the Michigan-California Lumber Company," </font>Howell-North <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Books, Berkeley, Ca, 1966</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Polkinghorn, R.S.,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#00ffff">"</font><font color="#000000">Pino Grander, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Logging Railroads of the Michigan-California Lumber Company," </font><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Howell-North Books, Berkeley, Ca,1984 (Revised&Enlarged Edition)</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Presba, Peg,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#000000">"Jeepers Jamboree, Book II, The First 40 <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Years," </font> Jeepers Jamboree and Jeep Jamboree, Inc., <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Georgetown, Ca, 1992</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Rambeau, Sheryl; Moser-Flynn, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Halmar, <font color="#000000">"Georgetown and The Divide, Volume II <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of El Dorado County Historic Places of Interest Myths & Legends," <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </font>The Heritage Association of El Dorado County, Georgetown, Ca, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1998</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Rambeau, Sheryl, "Georgetown" Arcadia Publishing, San Francisco, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> CA, 2010</p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB">Roth, Major General Marshall <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> S., "Letter from Maj Gen Roth to Dr. James L. Crowder on Camp Gerle <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> and why Major Tinker established the encampment," August 28, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 198527</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="1927%20Amador%20Co%20%20History%20by%20Amador%20Women's%20Clubs.pdf"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Sarget, Mrs J.L.,Editor "Amador County History,"Amador County <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Federation of Women's Clubs, Plymouth, Ca 1927</a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Scott, Edward B.,<font color="#00ffff"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </font><font color="#000000">"The Saga of Lake Tahoe, Volumes I&II,"<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </font>Sierra-Tahoe Publishing Company, Lake Tahoe, Ca 1955/1973.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="mailto:sevignya@cvc.net">Sevigny, Arthur, Historian</a>,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.20fwa.org/history.htm">20th fighter Wing <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Association</a> source for background on Camp Gerle, Eldorado <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> National Forest, 1932, Major Tinker US Army and 20th Pursuit Group.</font></i></b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Sioli, Paolo,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#66ffff">"</font><font color="#000000">History of El <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Dorado County, California," </font>Oakland, California, 1883.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Starns, Jean E.,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#000000">'Wealth From Gold Rush Waters," </font>Jean E. <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Starns, Publisher, in association with Word Dancer Press, Sanger, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Ca, 2004</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Supernowicz, Dana Edward,<font color="#66ffff"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </font><font color="#000000">"Historical Overview of the Eldorado <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> National Forest," </font>Masters Thesis, Sacramento State <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> University, Sacramento, California, Spring 1983.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Upton, Charles Elmer,<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <font color="#000000">"Pioneers Of El Dorado," </font>Charles <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Elmer Upton Publisher, Placerville, Ca, 1906.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Upton, Will O.,<font color="#00ffff"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </font><font color="#000000">"Churchery 9, 2001s of El Dorado County <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California, Their History Covering a Period of Ninety Years From <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> 1850 to 1940," </font>Old Hangtown Press, Placerville, Ca, 1940</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><a href="flynn_joe.pdf">Whited, Nordstrom, Interviewer, "Joe <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Flynn USFS Retires Reunion Living History Project, UCB Library, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> February 9, 2001, Revised/Corrected January-February 2004 by Joe <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Flynn</a></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Wilson, Norman L., Dyson, Jack <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> R., <font color="#000000">"Archeological Survey in Gerle Creek <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Diversion Dam Area, El Dorado County, California," </font>State of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> California, The Resources Agency, Dept of Parks and Recreation, <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> division of Beaches and Parks, Sacramento, Ca, 1962.</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Wrights Lake Summer Home <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Association, <font color="#000000">"The Wrights Lake Story,"</font> <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> Cal Central Press, Sacramento, Ca, 1962/1994(Revised Edition)</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b>Yohalem, Betty,<font color="#00ffff"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </font><font color="#000000">"I Remember"....Stories and Pictures of <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> El Dorado County Pioneer Families," </font>El Dorado County Chamber <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> of Commerce, Placerville, Ca 1977</b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <i><b><font face="Californian FB" size="5">HISTORICAL LINKS FOR <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> GERLE CREEK</font></b></i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.visit-eldorado.com/stories.html"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> www.visit-eldorado.com/stories.html</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.enfia.info/">www.enfia.info/</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.lookouts.us/Sorted_By/California.htm"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> http://www.lookouts.us/Sorted_By/California.htm</a> </font></i></b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.co.el-dorado.ca.us/museum/other_museums.html"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> www.co.el-dorado.ca.us/museum/other_museums.html</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><font face="Californian FB"><i><b><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.visit-eldorado.com/historical.asp"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> http://www.visit-eldorado.com/historical.asp</a></b></i></font></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><b><i><font face="Californian FB"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="http://www.jeepersjamboree.com/jamboree_history.html"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> http://www.jeepersjamboree.com/jamboree_history.html </a></font></i><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </b></p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p> </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <!-- #EndEditable --></div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <!-- End Left Column --><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <!-- Begin Right Column --><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <div id="column_r"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <!-- #BeginEditable "sidebar" --><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="MsoNormal"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <embed align="absMiddle" height="230" src="gerlecreek.wmv" type="video/x-ms-wmv" width="244" /></span><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p>Gerle's Ranch </p><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <!-- #EndEditable --></div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <!-- End Right Column --></div><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <!-- End Page Content --><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <!-- Begin Footer --><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <div id="footer"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <p><a href="../index.html"><span class="style2">Gerle Creek</span></a> | <!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="gerlecreekhistory.htm"><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <span class="style2">Gerle Creek History</span></a> |<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="../hotrods/hotrods.htm"><span class="style2">Brattland Family</span></a> |<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a href="../coolplaces/coolplaces.htm"><span class="style2">Cool Places</span><!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> </a>|<!-- [et_pb_line_break_holder] --> <a 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