Entering Elvis’ Building-
Recalling 3 Visits to Graceland 4 Decades Ago
When my book Rocket Reporter was released earlier this year, I promised an Elvis Presley story for “later this summer”.
Well, as we wind down the year, here’s that summer story. What can I say? It’s been a busy year.
There is a timely “hook” to this story. December 3 marks the 55th anniversary of the Elvis Comeback Special.
That 1968 television show on NBC was the first small-screen appearance of Presley in seven years. It transformed Elvis from a poor-quality movie-making machine to a dynamic stage performer. Sadly, that transformation lasted only a few years before prescription drugs and a less-than-healthy lifestyle would take his life in 1977.
That program made an impact on a young grade school boy who watched with his parents on that cold December evening.
I became an Elvis fan that night. Little did I know I would connect to his legacy in my adult life on three occasions.
I visited Graceland three times during the two years I worked in Huntsville, Alabama (1980-1982). Memphis was about four hours away from Huntsville. Elvis had passed just a few years prior to this time. As a fan, I knew how important the singer was to the South.
I could not squander the opportunity.
In the years leading up to the spring of 1981, fans were allowed to walk onto the grounds of the mansion.
We could see the gravesites of Elvis and some family members. We did not know it then, but paid tours inside the house were just a year away.
That first visit was personal, but as a local television news reporter, I saw an opportunity to return to Memphis and do some stories for the sweeps period when stations were rated on how many viewers tuned in.
I proposed a three-part series on Elvis for the November ratings period.
My photographer and I would shoot and report the story during the August commemoration of Presley’s death.
We pick up the next part of the story with this excerpt from Rocket Reporter:
Fans were lined along the extended driveway from Elvis Presley Boulevard on up to the front of the mansion. People were everywhere. Across the street was a strip mall retail center with every store selling souvenirs of Memphis, Elvis, and Graceland.
One of the advantages of being a television reporting team was the privilege to head to the front of the line. With camera and microphone in tow, my photographer Bill and I made our way to the guard gate shack. From there, we were escorted through a line of more visitors to the right side of the mansion.
Back in 1981, the interior of the mansion was not open to the public. Visitors were directed along the right side of the property to where Elvis’ grave marker, along with the markers for his mother, father, twin brother (who died at birth), and grandmother were located.
We had plenty of things to shoot on the grounds.
We interviewed some of the visitors waiting their turn to enter the area where the grave markers were. I did a couple of stand-ups where the reporter talked on camera from the scene of a story.
One of the stand-ups was for the fourth-anniversary story. Another stand-up would be used in the three-part series to air later in the fall. We then went back out onto Elvis Presley Boulevard where I did another stand-up.
There’s plenty more to share about the time we shot the Elvis story in Memphis. Included in the extensive chapter about Elvis in Rocket Reporter, is the story behind my chance encounter with Sam Phillips, the man who first recorded Elvis in the Sun Records studio in the mid-fifties.
I interviewed Phillips and asked him about that often quoted comment he made back in the fifties about finding a white artist who sounded like a black rhythm-and-blues singer.
He confirmed his comments and elaborated on exactly what he meant.
Our television story on the fourth anniversary of Elvis’ death aired the next night on the six o’clock news. The three-part special report called, The Elvis Influence aired over three nights in November.
I would visit Graceland one more time just one year later in the weeks before leaving the station. That story is in the book as well.
Telling a small part of the story of Elvis Presley remains one of my personal career highlights from over forty years ago. It was topped, or maybe tied with the other big story I was privileged to report back then: the first three launches of the space shuttle program.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
Rocket Reporter is available online at lulu.com
Steve is indebted to the late Twila Stout, a local woman whom he met on a couple of occasions while speaking about his books before local civic groups. Twila was a fan of his books and a true community steward.
Lights, Camera, Castle
1957 Natalie Wood Movie Filmed at the Air Base
Hollywood came to Merced County in early 1957. It arrived in the form of movie star Natalie Wood and a film about military air power.
Over the recent Veterans Day holiday, a Hollywood movie starring Natalie Wood was played on the big screen at the Merced Theatre. The film, while not a blockbuster or even a critic’s choice, has a distinction we can hold close for generations.
Parts of the movie, titled Bombers B-52, were filmed at the Base in early 1957. Most of the scenes depict the large landing strip that is still in use by private and public sector customers who use the former base in a reimagined role as an industrial business park.
The storied history behind the fences of the former Castle Air Force Base in Atwater continues to be gathered and documented for future generations.
The Base closed as part of a Clinton-era realignment effort in the 1990s, but the Castle Air Museum holds many of the documents and items that fill the background about World War II and Cold War-era military air power.
The Castle Air Museum has an exhibit on the filming of Bombers B-52 in its indoor exhibit building. Visitors can see photographs the Air Force took while the crew and stars were in sight.
Visitors can even see two military uniforms and a red dress worn by the actors in a display case.
The movie was directed by Gordon Douglas whose credits include movies with the likes of Elvis Presley, Jerry Lewis, and even Laurel and Hardy.
The screenwriter was Irving Wallace who would go on to write several novels and the non-fiction The People’s Almanac.
Natalie Wood, fresh off her role with the late James Dean in Rebel Without a Cause, was the star of the picture. Her father was played by Karl Malden who we best remember from the television series The Streets of San Francisco.
Natalie’s character has a love interest played by then forty-year-old Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. who would later star in the television series 77 Sunset Strip and eventually on The FBI (the version that aired in the 1960s and 70s, not to be confused with the franchise currently on CBS).
But it’s not these stars who local audiences filed into the Merced Theatre to see on Veterans Day.
As far as Merced audiences were concerned, the star of this movie was Castle Air Force Base.
While the love story between Wood and Zimbalist was intended to keep moviegoers entertained, the military side of the story involved the B-52 Stratofortress. This was a new bomber the Strategic Air Command wanted to introduce to America and the rest of the Cold War world.
There are plenty of references to how this bomber is the biggest, most powerful conventional weapon in the world.
“The film tells that story real well,” says Castle Air Museum Executive Director Joe Pruzzo.
There’s no doubt some local folks still remember the film from when it was first released or some who were connected to the rollout of the Stratofortress.
On the Internet Movie Data Base website (IMDB.com) there is a comment posted from someone who was stationed at Castle in the late fifties. This person (no name was included in the post) stated he has photographs of Natalie Wood posing with some of his squadron mates.
Quoting from that post, “The high point was the low altitude flyover of a flight of B-52s. The segment where the landing gear is jammed was done in our maintenance hanger with the bomber on jacks with wheel well doors open.”
Some of the narrative in the Castle Air Museum exhibit tells of how Natalie attended a March of Dimes fundraiser dance with over two hundred people from the Teen Agers Against Polio organization. The narrative says the actress stayed at the Hotel Tioga. More than one hundred movie production workers were assigned to the movie.
She was photographed dancing with Buddy Obenoskey, a Merced High School teen in 1957. By all accounts, she enjoyed the dance and was gracious to servicemen at Castle.
It’s interesting to note the film came out in 1957, the same year Castle Air Force Base made the cover of Life magazine. In January, three aircraft left Castle for a first-of-its-kind around-the-world flight with no landings for refueling.
Operation Power Flite (the Air Force used this spelling for naming the mission) tested the US's ability to refuel military aircraft from the air. That type of refueling was not done back in the fifties; Operation Power Flite proved it could be done.
1957 was a big year for Castle Air Force Base. The year began with an accomplishment that made the cover of Life magazine. It ended with the release of the movie Bombers B-52 which showcased Castle on the cinema screen.
The airmen of Castle were right in the middle of it all.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced
You can read the column he wrote about Operation Power Flite by clicking on this link. The Week Merced County Made the Cover of Life Magazine — Merced County Events
His latest book is Beaten Paths and Back Roads, and is available at BEATEN PATHS AND BACK ROADS (lulu.com)or at the Merced County Courthouse Museum Gift Shop.
Castle Air Museum: https://www.castleairmuseum.org/
’48 Modesto Crusade Still Reaping Benefits-
75th Anniversary of Billy Graham's Visit to the Central Valley
October 24, 1948, was a Sunday. A large canvas tent set up in a rural Modesto field was about to be filled with over two thousand people.
For the next two weeks, that tent would fill up every night with more people coming out to hear a special young man speak.
They were there to see a Southern Baptist minister who would preach the Bible by night, and work with his close associates by day to write the rules for a newly formed evangelical organization.
The evangelist was Billy Graham and he was on the precipice of becoming a world-known religious leader. Eleven US presidents would call upon him for spiritual comfort. More than a billion people would hear him preach.
The seventy-fifth anniversary of what became known as the Modesto Crusade was recently noted with little to no fanfare anywhere.
But what took place there three-quarters of a century ago was truly remarkable.
The Crusade ran for two weeks with an estimated twenty-eight thousand people taking part. It was important to the Graham ministry on three fronts: national prominence, the Modesto Manifesto, and the Modesto Gospel Mission.
National prominence
The event was an important step that would propel the organization into the national scene. The two-week Modesto Crusade was among the last Graham would lead before heading to Los Angeles.
The Los Angeles Crusade in 1949 would run for eight weeks and bring his preaching to over three hundred thousand people. After the success of the Southern California crusade, the stage was set for a worldwide public ministry.
Modesto Manifesto
A key accomplishment from the Modesto Crusade is what Graham and three of his associates worked on during the day throughout the duration of the event.
Working from the former Rock Motel on the old Highway 99 in Modesto, the team wrote a set of four principles they would call the Modesto Manifesto.
The principles spelled out in the Modesto Manifesto are:
Accountability-transparency in reporting finances and Crusade attendance
Purity-specifically addressing sexual immorality. This led to a directive that no one working for the Graham organization be allowed to have a closed-door meeting with someone from the opposite sex.
Integrity-no criticism of local churches or local pastors
Humility-no seeking out “exaggerated publicity” for the crusade events
A key player in writing the Modesto Manifesto was Billy Graham’s close friend Cliff Barrows.
Barrows grew up in nearby Ceres, Stanislaus County. He went to work with Graham when the preacher hired him to fill a music minister post prior to a revival meeting in North Carolina.
Barrows suggested the Modesto stop hoping that his connections with local churches would make a Central Valley crusade successful. As part of Graham's inner circle, he took part in those daily sessions where the core principles were discussed.
Barrows coined the term Modesto Manifesto.
Modesto Gospel Mission
A continuing example of what made the 1948 Modesto Crusade a success is what was done with excess funds raised from the nightly offerings attendees gave.
With an estimated five thousand dollars from excess offerings from the Crusades, local pastors started the Modesto Gospel Mission.
“There was homelessness in 1948 just like we have now seventy-five years later,” said Modesto Gospel Mission Chief Executive Officer Jason Conway. “Back then, it was more transitory with men coming into Modesto riding in on a boxcar of a train.”
Jason said in the early years, the Mission’s primary work was that of a soup kitchen. “Most of the visitors would get a meal and then move on. Some might stay a day or two, and then they would be on their way.”
That 1948 model has changed a lot. Today, the Mission annually serves nearly a quarter-million meals, shelters about eighteen hundred men, and does the same for over two hundred women and children.
“Today, residency is the focus on most of Modesto’s homeless,” Jason said. “Our clients come here with the intention of staying in the area. That wasn’t the case in 1948.”
This effort was made possible because a group of Central Valley pastors invited Billy Graham to bring his revival meetings to Modesto some seventy-five years ago.
There’s no memorial to the Central Valley’s role in the development of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Organization.
While one can find a bronze rendering of the American Graffiti era honoring native son George Lucas, no such memorial exists for that extraordinary two weeks back in October and early November in 1948 when the Modesto Crusade captured the attention of thousands.
But there is what can be considered a memorial to the Billy Graham visit in the work of the Modesto Gospel Mission.
Founded right after the Graham visit, the organization marks a seventieth-fifth year of service along with the Modesto Crusade.
The Mission feeds the hungry, houses the homeless, and helps families throughout the city.
From that five-thousand-dollar investment in human service made possible by the 1948 Modesto Crusade, a living tribute to the work of Billy Graham continues to reap dividends to countless numbers of people who over the years have needed a handout and possibly a hand up in turning their lives around.
It is the living testament to the Manifesto tenet dealing with working with local churches.
It is the true memorial to a historic event in the Central Valley.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
He is available for public speaking events at service clubs and other organizations to discuss his new book Beaten Paths and Back Roads.
The book is available for purchase at the Merced County Courthouse Museum gift shop or online at BEATEN PATHS AND BACK ROADS (lulu.com)
For more information on the Modesto Gospel Mission, go to MyMission.org
How they Put Out the Fire 150 Years Ago
Courthouse Museum Helps Merced Fire Department Celebrate Anniversary
Imagine it is 1874 and a downtown Merced building is on fire.
Someone runs to the nearby Merced Fire House. An alarm is sounded. Volunteer firemen rush to get the gear they need. The station’s pumper, Old Betsy is hauled to the scene of the blaze.
That pumper had been in service in Stockton for more than a decade before being sold to the Merced Fire Department in 1874. The fire department was established one year earlier in 1873.
The organization is celebrating a One hundred fiftieth anniversary this year.
Old Betsy is still here, though long retired.
For a few decades, Old Betsy was one of the focal points at the Merced County Courthouse Museum.
On loan from the Fire Department, the vintage pumper gave Museum visitors something to admire about the past, something to compare with today’s modern firefighting equipment, and something to look at with a sense of pride.
At a ceremony on October 12 in front of the old Courthouse, the Museum launched the exhibit titled: 150 Years Later: Old Betsy’s Legacy Continued.
Three rooms in the upper level of the Museum have been dedicated to showcasing the development of the city fire department.
Old photographs have been reproduced showing Old Betsy and other pieces of the firefighting arsenal in action.
Memorable fire events such as the destruction of a lumberyard in 1951 are captured in the displays.
That particular blaze could be seen as far south as Fresno and as far north as Modesto according to accounts in the exhibit.
Old Betsy was already in use by the Stockton department when Merced acquired it one year after forming the fire department.
"It was the first fire engine of the Merced City Fire Department,” Museum Director Sarah Lim said as she wrote about how the engine was built in Rhode Island. “It was shipped around Cape Horn and purchased by Merced from Stockton Eureka Engine Company No. 2 in 1874.”
On the City of Merced website’s fire department history section, the narrative states the name Old Betsy was given by the publisher of the Merced Express local newspaper.
The fire engine was used for over three decades.
While Old Betsy was removed from firefighting service as more efficient equipment came online, it was used in fire department competitions and public events.
A crack in the wood frame of the pumper forced a retirement from these activities.
“It is a fantastic representation of the Merced Fire Department,” Fire Chief Derek Parker said. “Old Betsy will return to the firehouse for continued maintenance.”
Chief Parker says the department is in the planning stages of preparing a secured display for Old Betsy.
Eventually, it will be on display at Merced City Hall.
If that continued maintenance is finished in 2024, it may be ready for another welcoming party exactly one-hundred-fifty years after first being brought to the City to help protect the property and people of Merced.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His new book Beaten Paths & Back Roads is available at Lulu.com or at the Merced County Courthouse Museum Gift Shop.
Steve thanks the Atwater Rotary Club and the Merced Women’s Club for hosting him for talks about his new book.
The exhibit 150 Years Later: Old Betsy’s Legacy Continued will be featured at the Courthouse Museum throughout the fall.
Preview of Beaten Paths & Back Roads
New book explores “the other California”
My new book is called Beaten Paths & Back Roads.
It contains more than forty stories about places and people all over California with a focus on locations off the so-called beaten path.
In many ways, this is a sequel to the 2017 book California Back Roads. There are just too many stories to write about in just one book.
Here’s a preview
The California Gold Rush was sparked by the discovery of nuggets in the Sacramento Valley. It put California on the radar of the nation.
When gold was discovered at John Sutter’s mill near Coloma in El Dorado County, California in 1848 (the actual year, not 1849 as legend states) the gold rush was on. Soon, the region would fill with prospectors, wannabee gold seekers, and a myriad of service providers.
As news spread of the discovery, thousands of prospective gold miners traveled by sea or over land to San Francisco and the surrounding area. The non-native population of the region exploded from fewer than one-thousand in 1847 to well over one-hundred thousand by 1850.
While the rush peaked in 1852, some people who look at the era estimate that over two-billion dollars of gold was found during that short period of time.
The rush was effectively over within a few years, but left behind is a beautiful part of the California landscape that visitors now enjoy.
The scenery is spectacular, to coin a word often used by the late California Gold television show host Huell Howser. The region lies north of Yosemite National Park in the Sierra Mountains.
Calaveras Big Tree State Park is a free venue that offers small and medium scale hiking paths among the Sequoia trees.
The trees are the stars of the show. Looking up in some spaces, it is hard to see the tops of the majestic towers of nature.
There are a couple of fallen trees that have been left for visitors to view up close. You get a real idea as to how big these big trees are.
My wife and I posed for a photo in front of the Empire State Tree. As we are transplants from upstate New York, the symbolism of standing next to a tree named for our native state really hit home.
The park had a gift shop that had just the right number of taxidermy wild animals to impress the visitor.
My suggestion is to save the gift shop visit until the very end.
Otherwise, you might be on the lookout for an angry wildcat or wolf just like the ones preserved for posterity in the gift shop.
There’s too much to document in these pages, but permit me to share three venues that have provided natural beauty, with a link to the state’s motion picture history, with a little Broadway thrown in.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
Beaten Paths and Back Roads is available now on Lulu.com.
After October 5, copies will be available for sale at the Merced County Courthouse Museum gift shop.
Steve is launching the new book at a meeting of the Merced Women’s Club on October 3.
A Secret Mission and a Monument to Bravery-
Finding a Memorial to an Army World War II Battalion
Over the past ten years, I have been on a mission to learn as much as I can about my great uncle Army Corporal Chester T. Dean.
Chet was killed in a training accident in Wales on June 8, 1944, just two days after D-Day.
In this space, I have shared new-found pictures, newspaper clippings, and the text of an Army Adjunct General’s letter written to the widow in response to her inquiry asking for more information on how Chet died.
The letter confirmed the worse, but went on to praise Chet as a soldier, leader, and friend to his platoon partners. This past summer, a new search started.
Taking the exact wording from what was inscribed on his headstone a new journey for more information started. What has been found is information that Chet and his battalion worked on a secret Army mission.
There’s even a memorial to that company on the grounds of a former training camp in Arizona.
Chet served with the 748th Tank Battalion, Medium. They were also known at the time as the Rhinos. On August 20, 1942, they were activated from Camp Rucker in Alabama.
Eight months later on April 15, 1943, they were sent to Fort Knox, Kentucky for training.
Five days later on April 20, they were reorganized as a special battalion ready for a top secret Army mission. The secret mission was all about a powerful lighting device that would be attached to tanks.
The group was trained on and equipped with special CDL spotlights. CDL stands for Canal Defense Light. CDL was a powerful searchlight mounted on a tank that was intended to be used during night-time attacks to disorientate enemy troops.
The Rhinos would be sent to Camp Bouse, Arizona where they would be attached to the 9th Armored Tank Group. Rhinos landed at Glasgow, Scotland on in early April of 1944, and then proceeded to South Wales.
The Rhinos landed in Normandy on Utah Beach on June 6th, 1944, D-Day.
Corporal Dean trained with the soldiers and remained in Wales, presumably to train with more troops that would be deployed sometime after D-Day.
Two days after D-Day, Corporal Dean was killed in a training accident in Wales.
All three locations where Chet trained: Camp Rucker, Fort Knox, and Camp Bouse are confirmed in a newspaper clipping found several years ago when I started looking for more information about my great uncle’s service.
American military history has been compiled on-line in a number of websites and databases.
I learned most of this new information for a Google search that took me to the Historical Marker Database (https://www.hmdb.org).
According to the website Veterans.ND.org, over nine-thousand troops spent time at Camp Bouse.
All were sworn to secrecy about the projects. Solders could not transfer out of the camp and their movements were restricted.
The internet search took me to a stone marker and bronze plaque honoring the 748th Tank Battalion.
The monument is on the site of Camp Bouse Desert Training Center in south western Arizona.
According to the website DesertTrainingCenter.com, Camp Bouse was established in 1943 expressly for the secret CDL training. It closed when the soldiers left for Europe in the spring of 1944.
The inscription on the monument can be found at https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=92814
The man in the photo is Henry “Hank” Leintz who served in the 748th.
Hank’s son Jon was instrumental in getting the monument placed through the group E. Clampus Vitus. Hank passed in 2017.
Like many of our brave men and women who died while wearing the uniform of our armed forces, Chet Dean’s story has not been completely told.
Little by little, new information is being uncovered. We know now that the secret mission, the Canal Defense Light was found not to be as effective as the Army hoped.
That did not stop the 748th from completing the mission to win the war in Europe.
The soldiers of the 748th Tank Battalion made it to Omaha Beach, and would remain in France through the end of the war. The memorial at the site of the former Camp Bouse stands, along with several other monuments as a tribute to all the soldiers who passed through that aptly titled Desert Training Camp for that short time during the critical days of the war.
Chet Dean was there too. He paid the ultimate price.
-Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
He is indebted to four groups:
Citizens of Bouse, Lost Dutchman Chapter 5917, Billy Holcomb chapter 1069, John P. Squibob Chapter 1853, and E. Clampus Vitus for making this and other monuments at Camp Bouse possible.
Steve will launch his newest book Beaten Paths and Back Roads at the October 3 meeting of the Merced Women’s Club.
His California books are available at the Merced County Courthouse Museum or online at Lulu.com
The Virtue of Work-
Labor Day Holiday a Reminder of the Value of Doing Well at Work
I'll never forget a Friday before Labor Day when I got a call from one of the program managers at Merced County WorkNet.
He was asking if I could attend a completion ceremony that afternoon.
The event was set up to award certificates of completion for a skills training program I played a small role in putting together.
WorkNet is the agency that helps employees upgrade their skills while helping employers by providing better trained workers.
It is the public facing arm of the Workforce Investment Board. These boards direct the expenditure of state and federal tax dollars earmarked for job training.
The Friday before Labor Day was one of the quietest work days of the year for me. Most of the company leadership was already starting their three-day weekend.
But I was in the office, and told WorkNet program manager I would be there for the ceremony.
Earlier in that summer, we were able to secure skill training resources from my company with resources that WorkNet received from the Obama-era American Resource Recovery Act (ARRA).
By leveraging these resources, training was provided that targeted older youth (defined as ages 16-22). WorkNet had the infrastructure to provide program. My company had the specialized job training skills ready to teach.
As a result of this collaboration, about thirty older youth got specialized training in energy efficiency alongside job readiness training in soft skills.
Completion of the program helped these young people prepare for careers in such fields as heating and air conditioning service repair.
Through an on-the-job training incentive, some of the class members got jobs in the field upon completion of the program.
Several months later, the program was nominated for a community service award sponsored by the company.
In the late spring of 2016, I received word that the program would be recognized at a ceremony to be held in San Francisco.
My wife accompanied me to the ceremony. Our daughter who lived in San Francisco was also able to attend the event.
Awards were presented in such categories as safety and diversity. In the community service category, the program that helped Merced County workers improve their job readiness skills was recognized.
Most of my colleagues were based in San Francisco so they assembled in the company auditorium along with other work teams and families. I could hear our team cheering when I was called up to accept the recognition.
It was a special day, but not as special as that particular Friday before Labor Day a decade ago when I was asked to come by the local WorkNet office for the completion ceremony of the job training program.
Attending that ceremony helped me see the real value of these programs.
I saw satisfying looks on the faces of the participants, proud smiles from family and friends, and a sense of purpose from the WorkNet staff.
It made we feel good knowing that my company played a role in making it possible.
From about that time going forward, I stopped looking at Labor Day as just a signal that summer was over
The holiday now became associated with the virtue of honorable work. It is a time to be grateful for the job and to work diligently to improve skills that add value to the workplace.
A few years later at a conference of Workforce Investment Boards, I met an artist who was asking attendees to allow him to paint our forearms with a few words about how we feel about the virtue of work.
He took my picture and included it in his project called “Dear World”.
My key words were: A job is a blessing.
Now three years into retirement, I feel the same way about the virtue of work now as I did back when that photograph was taken.
The virtue of work coming into clearer focus on this Labor Day.
-Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His new book is titled Beaten Paths & Back Roads.
It will be formally released on October 3 at the fall meeting of the Merced Women’s Club. He will talk to the group about the project, and the book will be available for sale at that time.
Two of his books: California Back Roads and Can Do Californians, are available at the Merced County Courthouse Museum gift shop or online at Lulu.com
Columbia Takes You Back-
Historic State Park Lives On as a Gold Rush Community
Let the next five minutes take you back to 1849. Gold has been discovered at Sutter’s Mill in the Sierra Mountains.
Tens of thousands of wannabe millionaires storm the region. Gold rush towns such as Hornitos in Merced County pop up. In Columbia in Tuolumne County California the rush came.
But long after the prospectors left, this little town was not forgotten. A trip to Columbia can take you back to the Gold Rush days because the town never let go of its history. According to a historical plaque placed by the State Park Commission, Columbia never became a ghost town.
More than five-thousand people lived there in the Gold Rush era. Today, the population stands at just over two-thousand.
Many of the buildings that made up what is now known as Columbia Historic State Park are still standing and still in use. Gold is no longer the big business.
Tourism is the draw now with an estimated impact of nearly a quarter billion dollars of annual spending from travelers according to the Visit Tuolumne County 2021 Annual Report (visittuolumne.com).
On a warm sunny day in August, my wife and I took in the village as part of a one-day getaway.
Upon parking the car, we were in the historic confines in a matter of minutes.
We watched a pair of blacksmiths pound out customized horseshoes for paying customers. We picked up some chocolate treats from the candy shop. We saw how traditional candles are made at a shop that sells nothing but candles.
We bought lunch at a sit-down saloon with sarsaparilla available upon request.
Sarsaparilla was a favored non-alcoholic drink from the Gold Rush era. Fortunately for me on that sunny weekday in that authentic western saloon, other beverages were served as well.
Our day was topped off with the Sierra Repertory Theatre’s presentation of Jersey Boys, the one-time Broadway musical staged during the summer season with professional actors and professional stage personnel.
While the show was great, experiencing it inside the historic Fallon House was a capper to a refreshing day of old and new.
The Columbia Historic State Park was created in 1945. It was established by the state to preserve the historic buildings.
Some eight decades later, it remains very much like it was back in the Gold Rush era.
The region around Columbia was known as the southern mines as it lies well south of Sutter’s Mill where the first discovery of gold took place. For people living in the Merced and Atwater side of the County, you can get there within an hour and a half.
My wife and I have used Columbia as a convenient one-day event destination for out-of-town visitors.
It is another side to California that sometimes gets lost in the common misconceptions of the state being only about San Francisco or Los Angeles.
There’s a lot of history up there, and thankfully a lot of it has stayed in place ready to be rediscovered.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced
Two of his books: California Back Roads and Can Do Californians, are available at the Merced County Courthouse Museum gift shop or online at Lulu.com
Memorial to a Leader-
UC Merced’s First Chancellor Served Seven Years
Once the summer break comes to an end, a flood of college students will return to the two campuses in Merced.
There’s a new main entrance at Merced College; the result of a construction project that finished just days before the May commencement.
At the University of California at Merced, there’s nothing new for returning students to see upon their return.
But many will pass by a four-by-four-foot rock at the north side of the campus quad.
The plaque embedded in that rock is not new, but the person whose name is printed on the bronze is worth remembering once again.
The plaque honors Carol Tomlinson-Keasey, the first Chancellor of the institution.
She was named to the post in 1999, years before construction began and six years before students started their first classes.
My connection to Chancellor Tomlinson-Keasey began at a reception in Fresno, where I lived back in 2004.
She attended a reception for business leaders that UC Merced held at a community room in Grizzlies Stadium.
The purpose of the reception was to introduce the reality of a new institution of higher learning to the Fresno business community.
I found her to be gracious, beaming with pride, and intent on telling the story of the effort to start UC Merced.
It was only after I moved to Merced two years after that first meeting with her that I began to appreciate that effort to locate the university to our community.
In 2006, I made it my first priority to schedule a meeting with Dr. Tomlinson-Keasey once I settled in as CEO of the Greater Merced Chamber of Commerce.
We had a productive visit. I shared my thoughts about the future of our community. She shared her deep appreciation for what the community did to get the campus built.
Thanks to an exhibit at the Merced County Courthouse Museum celebrating the tenth year of the campus in the early twenty-teens, details of that effort to create UC Merced came into focus for me.
The exhibit shared icons from the groundbreaking, campus artifacts, and lots of pictures showing community members rallying for support to have the school built here.
We still have a number of individuals in the community right now who were either part of that initiative, or who remember just how far-reaching it was at the time.
In 2022, committee member Roger Wood shared his reflections of that time during an interview on the weekly public affairs radio program Community Conversations.
“There was a real sense of coming together for a common purpose,” I recall Roger telling me on that program. "I was proud to be part of it.”
The Merced Community, especially those who were part of the committee that helped get the Board of Regents to approve locating the campus here, remembers the work of the founding Chancellor.
But others, who knew her from her days teaching psychology at UC Davis also held her in high regard.
In the tribute section of her obituary, Tomlinson-Keasey was recalled as a teacher many would want to emulate.
One student expressed respect for her teaching style and was grateful for being one of her students.
Carol Tomlinson Keasey saw the effort to start UC Merced right through the first year of classes.
Those later years were tough as she battled cancer. She would soon announce her retirement and fought her disease for another three years. She died from complications related to cancer in 2009.
I recall the first commencement at UC Merced in 2006. While the campus had only been open one year, a handful of students who completed their coursework would be receiving diplomas that day.
I attended because I was invited and because I knew that many years from that day I could tell my grandchildren that I was there for the very first commencement at the campus.
The ceremony was held in a small auditorium on campus, but the sense of pride could have filled the entire Central Valley.
The students were smiling in their caps and gowns. The faculty, administration, and other staff were gleaming with satisfaction.
Dr. Tomlinson-Keasey had the biggest smile, the most touching speech, and a sense of grace. Her work was done.
So now, with a group of returning students as well as incoming freshmen and transfers, another year of hope and promise awaits at UC Merced and other colleges and universities.
Hopefully, some of those students will take some time on one of those busy class days to read the words on that plaque on the north side of the quad named after the founding Chancellor.
“Visionary leadership and tireless determination “ are some of the words appearing in the tarnishing bronze.
Those are two phrases help define success in life.
Both phrases defined Carol Tomlinson-Keasey Both phrases are words to live by.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His California books are available at the Merced County Courthouse Museum Courthouse or online at Lulu.com
Cooling Off on the Coast-
Within a few hours, you can be at the ocean
It’s been a selling point for the Central Valley for years: live here and you’re only a couple of hours from the ocean.
There’s more than eight-hundred miles of Pacific Ocean coastline in California. I’m been fortunate to have spent time at five locations along this span.
My first view of the Pacific was from a car crossing the Golden Gate Bridge into San Francisco. I had only been in the state a few weeks when a friend decided to take me on a poor man’s tour of the state.
That day included lunch at a Sausalito restaurant, a drive to a residential neighborhood where we thought exteriors from the Robin Williams movie Mrs. Doubtfire were filmed, and a drive-by past the Transamerica building.
All of it was exciting, although too brief to appreciate the beauty of the ocean and the thrilling prospects of the city by the Bay. In subsequent visits for work and pleasure, I had the opportunity to visit Alcatraz, see Major League Baseball games for both the Giants and the A’s, go on a scavenger hunt at the Oakland Zoo, and stay at the Fairmount Hotel where Tony Bennett first sang his signature song I Left My Heart in San Francisco.
The Bay Area of California opened up so many opportunities for me in the thirteen years I worked for a company whose home base was in San Francisco. For most of that period of time, work required me to travel there at least once a month.
A daughter lived in the Bay Area throughout those years, and she still does.
What I enjoyed most about those trips to San Francisco were the occasional lunches she and I would have in a little pocket park just off Market Street. Both of us were on tight schedules, so the time was precious and we made the most of it.
About an hour south of San Francisco, the Monterey area brings back a lot of fond memories on a number of levels.
The public beaches speak for themselves with the din of ocean waves washing up on shore.
There is something ephemeral about the nightly sunsets as I take in the limited time I have before the sun disappears from view.
Nearby in the pier region of Monterey, Cannery Row captures some of the imagery from John Steinbeck’s novels. I lost myself for what must have been the better part of an afternoon browsing in an antique store in Cannery Row. Surely other visitors to this or other stores in that neighborhood have done the same.
The Monterey Peninsula may be best-known for the Seventeen Mile Drive, the roadway that circles this patch of California.
Pebble Beach tops the list of world-renown courses on the Peninsula. While I have been on the grounds of Pebble Beach, I haven’t had the pleasure of playing a round on this iconic course. However, I have played the one course many of the locals play.
Pacific Grove Municipal Golf Links is unique for a number of reasons. The front nine holes are in a residential section of the City of Pacific Grove.
The back nine holes are along the coastline of the ocean. The front nine plays very much like a public course with the added benefit of deer near many of the greens.
You’ll see deer on the back nine as well, but the ocean view is the attraction here.
Throughout the back nine, here are areas of plant life that are marked with signs asking that golfers not tread into the vegetation due to the protective status.
A lost golf ball in these areas remains lost. The price is also a distinction. Green fees at Pebble Beach top over six-hundred dollars before cart and caddie fees. Green fees at Pacific Grove run in the fifty-dollar range with some breaks for twilight and junior players.
Pacific Grove is the poor man’s Pebble Beach. While not speaking for all golfers, my view of golf courses centers on how I feel about being on the landscape.
The views are important, but the people I meet, their stories from their experiences, the unique weather features such as ocean breezes or even an unexpected rain shower, are among the characteristics of a California coast golf outing.
About an hour north of Los Angeles, Pismo Beach is churning out California Dreamin’ memories.
The beach town holds a distinction of being the second venue where I experienced the Pacific Ocean. My wife and I were in the area returning from a trip to Solvang in the Santa Ynez Valley.
We got off the highway 101 freeway and made our way to highway 1, better known as the Pacific Coast Highway.
As you probably know, the Pacific Coast Highway runs north and south along most of the California coastline. It shares the name with portions of other highways and is known as State Route One.
We were not sure where the beach entrance was, but we saw a cluster of cars at a public park.
We decided to park there, ask around, and see what would happen. We found ourselves in The Pismo Beach Monarch Butterfly Grove. Thousands of Monarch Butterflies flock to Pismo State Beach as it is considered a place that’s essential to successful migration.
From late October to February, the butterflies cluster to the Eucalyptus trees throughout the Grove.
We were overwhelmed by the hundreds upon hundreds of Monarchs that seemed to cover every inch of the Eucalyptus trees.
According to the ExperiencePismoBeach.com website, there were an estimated twenty-two thousand Monarchs in the Grove during the Spring 2022 count.
Yes, they actually do something that looks like a count of the number of butterflies.
Tracking the numbers can provide information on how the species is doing from year to year. Grade school students from several districts made their way to the Grove to take in this true marvel of nature. We just happened to stumble onto it.
Thank goodness for serendipity.
We eventually found the beach and enjoyed a great day in the southern California sun. I have been fortunate to have returned to Pismo Beach several times in the nearly two decades I have lived in California.
As breathtaking as the beach view of the ocean can be, the experience of watching hundreds of butterflies flutter among the trees in the Pismo Beach Monarch Butterfly Grove is something that I will never forget.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
He thanks the members of the Merced Senior Club for supporting him as he competed in the Outrun the Sun 5 K to raise money for Planada flood relief.
Participants were told that over eight-thousand dollars was raised as a result of that event.
He’s working on a new book that will be a sequel to California Back Roads. His California books are available at the Merced Courthouse Museum gift shop and at Lulu.com
You Can Find it at Parker’s-
Hardware store closing after six decades in downtown Merced
The announcement was plain and simple.
A recent social media post read that after sixty-three years, Parker’s Hardware on 18th Street in Merced was closing. Sixty-three years is a great run for any business.
For a small hardware store in this age of big box home improvement centers, six decades is nothing less than phenomenal.
One customer wrote on Facebook, “I remember going there as a little girl with my dad. He always said if you can't find it anywhere else you can find it at Parkers.”
Another person, not on social media, lamented, “You go to those big stores and you’ll spend way too much time finding what you’re looking for. It can be very frustrating.”
The small hardware store has been part of Americana for over two centuries. Back in the 1990s, the television comedy Home Improvement added a hardware store to the mix of humorous locations where the characters of Tim and Al could be funny.
While the show played it for laughs, Harry’s was a place where folks could gather, buy all kinds of home supplies, and get some “how-to” advice.
Growing up in upstate New York, I always felt the local hardware store seemed to have it all.
The Western Auto in my hometown had bolts, nails, tools and everything in between. I got my first fishing pole, model car kits, and even home versions of TV game shows from that store.
It was the same place my dad would buy paint and window caulking for the house, or where my mom would get light bulbs and floor wax.
All of it came from the locally owned hardware store in my hometown. As a young father, I took my daughters to a locally owned hardware store. I was interested in the tools. My girls were interested in the penny gumball machine near the front of the store.
Merced Mayor Matt Serratto sees a local retailer with such longevity as Parker’s as a treasure for downtown. “Locally owned businesses are the backbone of a community,” he said.
Two years ago, the Mayor, County Supervisor, and State Assemblyman, drew attention to family-owned retailers by staging a raffle and hot dog roast at the store. The event was also put on to welcome back to Merced Derek Parker, whose family used to own the business.
At the time, Derek moved back to Merced from Sacramento to accept the post as the City’s Fire Chief.
At that time, the Mayor said of Parker’s, “Few things in this world are cooler than an old-fashioned hometown hardware store.”
After the store closes at the end of June, the focus will be on finding a new retailer to take over the space.
That will be a challenge as more retailers locate away from the downtown core.
But regardless of what becomes of soon-to-be former Parker’s Hardware, local customers can take some satisfaction in being part of the incredible six-decade run of this family owned business.
Local retailing has seen a lot of change in sixty-three years. To stay in that game for all those years speaks to the successful mix of giving customers what they need and keeping them coming back time after time.
To paraphrase the woman who remembers accompanying her dad to the store as a little girl, “you could find it at Parker’s.”
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His books Can Do Californians and California Back Roads are available for purchase at the Merced County Courthouse Museum gift shop. His new book, Rocket Reporter, is available at Lulu.com
Preview of Rocket Reporter-
New Book Recalls Time Covering Space Shuttle
My new book is called Rocket Reporter- Elvis, Huntsville, and the Space Shuttle Remembered. It is about the two years I worked as a local television news reporter in Huntsville, Alabama.
The reporting assignment included the first three launches of the Space Shuttle Columbia. Huntsville was the home of NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center. The northern Alabama city was a company town that centered on the space program.
The book is also about the three visits made to Graceland Mansion in Memphis, Tennessee.
I’ll share more about that part of the book later this summer. But for now, the focus is on a twenty-four year old newly married man who has taken his wife on a new journey to a seemingly foreign place.
The move from upstate New York to the heart of Dixie might be seen as an extreme culture shock. But for my wife and me, it was a new adventure. Here’s a preview:
April 1981
As the managers for the Shuttle Columbia got ready for lift off from the Kennedy Space Center, our television news department in Huntsville, Alabama was getting ready to cover the historic moment as a local news story.
Our local news department philosophy was that the network (in our case ABC News) was handling all the specifics about the lift off and mission.
As a local network affiliate, we saw our role as explaining to our viewers what contributions were being made by local employees at the Marshall Space Flight Center and any space-related subcontractors.
My job as the space beat reporter was to cover those local aspects of the bigger story. Every night leading up to the launch, I would report on some facet of the local impact of the shuttle on northern Alabama.
I would attend satellite news conferences first with the crew, and as the launch got closer, with the launch director and key members of his team. Satellite news conferences were a relatively new technology back in 1981, but that did not matter to any of us. The manager of the news conference would start the briefing.
After the launch director and members of his team spoke, the conference manager would have an engineer switch the audio to each of the NASA centers including the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Edwards Air Force Base in California, White Sands in New Mexico, and eventually to Huntsville.
We would ask our questions of the launch director or whoever was on the dais, and try to connect the answer to the local impact the space shuttle would have on viewers in our audience.
The weekend prior to the launch, I co-anchored the six PM newscast from the Marshall Space Flight Center.
But we had serious transmission problems getting the signal from Marshall to our receiver on Monte Sano Boulevard.
Most of that live reporting was lost due to those problems, but it turned out to be a good thing for the station.
After the weekend snafu, the station’s engineering department scouted out new locations on the Marshall property and performed signal tests.
They found a better location to originate our live reports for the upcoming launch. Had we not attempted the weekend live report, we might have lost an opportunity to do live reporting on the day of Columbia’s liftoff.
Much like NASA doing a shake-down test of systems prior to a launch, our station did a pre-launch shake-down of our Live Eye capability on the weekend newscast prior to the start of the mission.
The day of the launch (April 12, 1981) achieved exactly what we had hoped it would accomplish. NASA had a successful liftoff, the station delivered stories on the local efforts that helped make the mission a success, and our live signal from the Marshall Space Flight Center was clear.
Everything, to use NASA nomenclature, was nominal.
If there was such a thing as a club for journalists covering the space program, I guess I was now a member.
From Rocket Reporter- Elvis, Huntsville, and the Space Shuttle Remembered, by Steve Newvine. Available now at Lulu.com ROCKET REPORTER (lulu.com) Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
He thanks the members of the Merced Senior Club for inviting him to talk about his books and his twice monthly Our Community Story column at one of the group’s meetings recently.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
He thanks the members of the Merced Senior Club for inviting him to talk about his books and his twice-monthly Our Community Story column at one of the group’s meetings recently.
Say Cheese in Hilmar-
Company’s Visitor Center Satisfies Area Children
Growing up in dairy country in upstate New York, a grade school class trip to a milk processing plant was always a possibility for me. Some things never change.
Whether it’s 1968 when I was in grade school, or fifty-five years later in Hilmar. On any given school day, it is not uncommon to find a busload of school children taking the tour of Hilmar Cheese in northern Merced County.
The company’s visitor center is a hit for school groups who want something close to the home, full of interesting things to see, and that ends with ice cream.
On a breezy morning in early May, grade schoolers from Ceres Unified School District, their teachers, and several parent chaperones took the free tour in Hilmar.
The easiest way to get there is to head west for five miles at the Lander Road exit from highway 99.
“They love it here,” one of the Hilmar Cheese gift shop employees said as a customer acknowledged the large crowd of youngsters.
Hilmar Cheese has been part of the northern Merced community since 1984 when eleven dairy farms banded together with an idea scribbled on a napkin at a coffee shop.
The Visitor Center honors that humble beginning with displays showing how the company has grown over the past four decades. The Center welcomes children and others just about any day of the year with the exception of the major holidays.
The tour is free, and ends at the gift shop and café. There’s also an outdoor waterfall with a walking path to give visitors a chance to walk off any extra calories from lunch at the café.
The company says twenty-percent of all the cheese sold in the US comes from Hilmar Cheese.
In many cases, the cheese is sold under a different brand name. Cheese from Hilmar Cheese is sold in over fifty countries.
In most of the tours given by the team at Hilmar Cheese, visitors learn how cheese is made with hands-on exhibits about cows. They can see workers packaging large crates of cheese.
On this particular morning in May, the children were involved in a game that simulated the ice cream making process. The youngsters were wide-eyed and anxious about the game.
That might have been the result of a subtle promise by the group leader of real ice cream for everyone at the end of the tour.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His books California Back Roads and Can-Do Californians are available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and at Lulu.com.
Both are also on sale right now at the Merced Courthouse Museum gift shop.
Steve will be the guest speaker at the Merced Senior Center morning meeting on May 12.
For more information, call the Center at (209) 385-8803 or email at tommysoto31@gmail.com
At that event, Steve will have his new book Rocket Reporter available.
The book is the true story of his two years in Huntsville, Alabama where he covered the first three launches of the Space Shuttle Columbia.
Cars, Coffee, and Memories-
Monthly Car Show is a Win for Everyone
Tom Bustos remembers the day a car show provided a once-in-lifetime experience for a local woman. Back in 2022, a family cleaned up an old Dodge Dart that was exactly like the one their mom had back in her youth.
The family surprised the mom by taking her to the Cars and Conversation Merced show.
“They made sure the car was there before she arrived, Tom recalls. “She had no idea that this car was going to be part of their family that day. It was a joy to watch that reveal unfold.”
Personal stories like these keep Tom and his wife Emily putting on the monthly car show in the north parking lot at Merced Mall.
Cars and Coffee Merced started when Emily and Tom thought the time was right for a car show that was free, family friendly, and not too narrow in focus.
“There were a lot of shows, but they were very specific about car types or time periods,” Emily said. “We wanted a venue that was open to everyone, and any kind of car.”
From that basic concept emerged Cars and Coffee Merced. The property manager at Merced Mall offered the north parking area for displays, Merced Car Wash emerged as a partner to hold the events, and Jantz Bakery offered to provide morning coffee.
The couple use social media to let people know about upcoming car shows. Word-of-mouth has also helped spread the word.
On the first Saturday of every month beginning in March, Cars and Coffee Merced welcomes the cars, their owners, and the public for a few hours of nostalgia, reconnection, and car talk.
“We’ve been hosting Cars and Coffee in Merced since 2016,” said Tom Bustos. “We feel really blessed.”
The monthly activity provides all of the good things a car show can create and it helps community organizations along the way. The July event raises money for the Carlos Viera Foundation Race for Autism with a raffle for fireworks.
Other groups that benefit from the showcase of vintage cars include Cub Scout Pack 96 when the annual Pinewood Derby is staged on site alongside the automobile displays.
“That event includes a scavenger hunt where participants find cars with particular histories,” Tom said.
There are a lot of classic car enthusiasts in the Central Valley of California.
This monthly event provides the family friendly venue where everyone is welcome and any car can be displayed.
The Bustos get into the act with their two cars. One drives a Maserati and the other drives a Porsche. The other added bonus of Cars and Coffee Merced is the creation of new memories connecting people to a special set of wheels in their lives.
One car enthusiast shared a story about selling a classic car at a reduced price to a terminally ill friend so that the friend could enjoy it in what would be his final days.
Others can recall a specific type of car that was exactly like the car a close relative had back decades ago.
Still others just get a kick out of seeing all the cars.
Cars and Coffee Merced is held every first Saturday morning from March through October in the north parking area at Merced Mall.
There is no entry fee for cars and no admission charge to the public. A raffle helps generate enough money to provide some light snacks, pay for the event insurance, and purchase additional prizes.
The purpose is quite simple according to Tom: “The goal is just to bring motor enthusiasts of all kinds together.”
That goal is reached every month during car show season. Memories continue to be made month after month, wheel after wheel.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His books California Back Roads and Can-Do Californians are available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and at Lulu.com. Both are also on sale right now at the Merced Courthouse Museum gift shop.
Steve will be the guest speaker at the Merced Senior Center morning meeting on May 12.
For more information, call the Center at (209) 385-8803 or email at [tommysoto31@gmail.com][0]
[0]: mailto:tommysoto31@gmail.com
Back in the Buckaroo Saddle Again-
Classic Country Group Reunites After COVID-forced Break
Over fifty years ago, Fresno musician Jim Shaw wanted to record his country band Nashville West in a new studio owned by the legendary Buck Owens in Bakersfield.
Little did he know he would meet Buck and be asked to record with him that very day. “Buck was recording and needed a piano player".
He was told there was a piano player in the building: "me.” While Owens did not know Jim, he came out of the studio to meet him and asked whether Jim could play in the session.
That session worked out, and would soon be followed by a few more before Buck asked Jim if he’d like to join the group. “By June of 1970, I was hired as a member of the Buckaroos.”
Jim has been part of the Buckaroos ever since. He played in the band during the Hee Haw TV show that Buck co-hosted with Roy Clark.
Jim was there for the road appearances, network variety shows, and in the recording studio.
He never left the group. Band members moved on over the years and were replaced by other musicians.
Jim along with Doyle Curtsinger, who joined shortly before Jim, have both remained with the band for over fifty years.
The Central Valley’s country music heritage was on full display on the stage of the Buck Owens Crystal Palace in Bakersfield in late March.
The Buckaroos performed for the first time since COVID restrictions closed the place back in 2020.
While the Palace would reopen once restrictions were lifted, the band went into a sort of holding pattern.
Buck Owens died in 2005, but the band continued performing at the Crystal Palace.
Jim has played with the Buckaroos along with serving as the managing director for the Buck Owens Private Foundation.
The Foundation runs the entertainment, publishing, and recording arms of the singer’s estate. When he signed on, he joined legendary guitarist Don Rich and bass player Doyle Holly who were stalwarts of the band. Holly left a year later to forge a solo career.
Rich died in a motorcycle accident in 1974.
Others became Buckaroos over the past five decades. So the reunion shows took on a special significance.
Also on stage for the reunion was lead singer Buckaroo Kim McAbee.
On her Facebook page, she said of the reunion, “So much fun with the Buckaroos together again after three years.” Jim Shaw echoed the sentiments of Kim and others by saying the two shows at the Crystal Palace went very well. “Friday night was totally sold out and we had an enthusiastic crowd and a train-wreck-free performance.”
When he met Buck more than five decades ago Jim had no idea how his life would change.
“I moved into running Buck’s recording studio and took on other duties over the years. I’ve been a managing director of the Buck Owens Private Foundation for the past seventeen years.”
Jim describes recording for Buck as an experience that was at times challenging but also inspiring. “It was interesting,” he says of those years. “Buck was hard driving, a perfectionist. On the other hand, he brought out the best of us.”
The Buckaroos band was considered one of the best instrumental groups in country music. That’s due in part to that hard-driving leadership from Buck Owens and in part to the musical magic that can happen many times within a small band. Each member brings in something unique, and when the conditions are right, the results are almost magical.
The Buckaroos were co-founders of the so-called Bakersfield Sound, a distinctive style of country music that focused on a smaller number of musicians and the liberal use of electric guitars.
Buck Owens and Merle Haggard were the best-known country artists who delivered the Bakersfield Sound.
Behind those two country icons were the backup bands. Haggard had the Strangers. Owens had the Buckaroos.
“Back in our heyday, every major country artist had their own band,” Jim said. “Loretta Lynn had the Coal Miners, and Johnny Cash originally had the Tennessee Two. Now, an artist may have a band, but often the faces change, and rarely are they even named.”
It is different for the Buckaroos. They keep the flame burning. Thanks to reunion shows like the two performed in late March in Bakersfield, the Buckaroos continue to keep the Bakersfield Sound alive.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
He has written several Our Community Story columns on the Bakersfield Sound and has featured Bakersfield in two of his books: Can Do Californians and California Back Roads.
Both books are available on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and Lulu.com as well as at the Merced County Courthouse Museum Gift Shop.
Where Were You in 1973?-
Courthouse Museum asks the question and stimulates memories from 50 years ago
If you’re over fifty, reminisce along with me for this column.
If you’re under fifty, read this anyway because your day is coming.
The Merced Courthouse Museum’s latest exhibit focuses on the year 1973.
Using photographs acquired from the Merced Sun Star and other sources, the rooms of the Museum come alive with memories from that particular time fifty years ago.
The photos include the successful completion of the Bear Creek Bridge at M Street, protests over a plan to build the County office building in front of the Courthouse, and other projects from that year. Even how the community dealt with the Arab Oil Embargo gets a photographic representation in the exhibit.
As the year began, gas was thirty-nine cents a gallon. By October, the price would go up and rationing would start thanks to the Embargo.
The exhibit includes icons from 1973 within the display cases. There are vinyl record albums, a fondue set, and a sample of the fashions worn by the hip wannabees of the era.
Plaid pants for the guys and a polka-dot skirt for the ladies.
Among the photos is a series of three shots of the dissembling of the Westgate Plaza sign from downtown Merced.
The Sun Star photos are in glorious black and white.
But for many of us, especially those who did not live in Merced County in 1973, the exhibit affords an opportunity to look back on our lives fifty years ago.
I was a sixteen year old who just got a driver permit. Walking out of the Department of Motor Vehicles Department, then housed inside the Lewis County (New York) Courthouse building, my dad said to me, “Now you’ll have to learn how to drive.”
I ran my first red light within minutes as I was leaving the village of Lowville. That was not a great start. But somehow, I got better at obeying the rules of the road.
On weekday mornings in my hometown back in 1973, the sounds of two announcers at radio station WBRV would help me get moving for the day.
George and Ed hosted a popular morning show with segments that served as signals for me to get myself in gear to make it to the school bus stop near my house.
Here was the routine: breakfast by the 7:00 AM news, brush teeth by the 7:20 Swap Shop program, homework papers and school books ready to go by the 7:30 weather report, and out the door to the bus stop by the 7:40 sports program.
The bus arrived shortly before 8:00 and I was on my way to high school.
In 1973, my family was among the fortunate to have cable TV. Gone were the days of using an antenna to capture two or three stations within range of the stations’ transmitting towers.
In 1973 with cable TV, we now had an amazing ten channels from which to choose.
One of those stations was WPIX in New York City where my brother could watch practically every Yankee game, and where my dad and I could watch reruns of The Honeymooners.
I can proudly say that I knew the dialogue of each episode of the original thirty-nine episodes before I entered college. Ralph and Ed from the Honeymooners were almost as common as the daily drop-in visits from my Grandma and Grandpa Newvine, my great aunt Myrtle, our neighbor Fred, and others who always found the Newvine home warm and welcoming.
Instant coffee with some kind of baked good was always served to our nightly visitors. If there was time, a game of cards would keep us entertained.
While the focus on this exhibit is 1973, it is worth noting that the Merced County Courthouse Museum marks a fortieth anniversary this year. The Museum, established in part thanks to the efforts of the Merced Lawyer’s Wives group, opened in 1983.
1973 was a special year for the community of Merced. It was a time that made an impression on all of us, even if you did not live here then.
It was a pivotal time in our lives.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His California books are available for sale at the Merced Courthouse Museum Gift Shop. His childhood memoir A Bundle of Memories is available at Lulu.com
Merced Knights of Columbus at 100-
Service Club Marks Centennial with Celebration
Put yourself into the year 1922 for a few moments and think about the men pictured in the black and white photograph above.
They were the founding members of what was first called the Merced Council of the Knights of Columbus, a service club of Catholic men.
The Knights were started in 1882 by a Connecticut priest as a means for Catholic men to work together so as to help others and display patriotism.
From that humble start some one-hundred forty years ago, chapters of the Knights formed all over the country.
In 1922, the Merced Council was chartered.
The Knights founding principles are charity, unity, fraternity, and patriotism. There are nearly two-million Knights throughout the world.
The Merced group hosted receptions following church services on June 11 and 12 at St. Patrick’s Parish Hall. Displays of some council projects and group history were set up for parishioners to see.
Longtime member Randy Starkweather says the local organization changed its name from the Merced Council to the St. Teresa of Calcutta Council around the time Mother Teresa was canonized as a saint in September of 2016. The world-famous missionary died in 1997 and the canonization process began right away.
Locally, the Council provides support to the Alpha Crisis Center in Merced as well as a faith-based nonprofit organization known as Possibility Productions. Local Knights also help seminarians as they study for pastoral roles in the church. They provide service for a number of initiatives and organizations within the St. Patrick’s community.
In the years leading up to the Merced group’s founding, the Knights worldwide raised money and provided so-called “K of C” huts throughout Europe during World War I.
The huts were rest and recreational facilities that offered social services to Allied servicemen of all faiths.
The huts sprung up throughout the United States and Europe providing religious services, supplies, and recreation under the motto, “Everybody Welcome, Everything Free.”
This effort led to the eventual development in World War II of the non-profit group known as the USO (United Service Organization).
In the years following World War II, Knights all over America lobbied for public adoption of the words “under God” in the Pledge of Allegiance.
Those words were officially added to the Pledge following the signing of a bill into law by President Eisenhower in 1953.
“We have the Knights to thank for those two words,” said Randy Starkweather in remarks he made to those attending one of the receptions.
While the international organization marks its 140th anniversary, the local fraternal group celebrates a century of service.
Looking back, some of the senior members and club historians still recall the time in 1974 when the Merced County Administration Building was dedicated.
The Knights marched in one direction toward the building, while the local Mason’s group marched in another direction toward the same spot.
“They met in the middle, by design, right in front of the new County Administration Building,” Starkweather said. “And together they helped dedicate the new building.”
As the St. Teresa of Calcutta Council of the Knights of Columbus begins a new century of service, they can look back on some impressive achievements over the last one hundred years.
Who would have thought among the men in that 1922 vintage photograph that this organization would continue serving the community well into the next century?
It took hard work, strong friendships, and a little faith to make it all happen.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
He is currently working on a new book to be released later this year.
Ten of his books are available at Lulu.com, Barnes & Noble.com, and Amazon.com.
This summer, he joins several presenters at the Principles-Based Lifestyle Training summer youth program being held at UC Merced.
That’s Where Starbucks Was –
As coffee chain builds new stores, the old locations are repurposed
A new Starbucks opened in Merced in May. This one is the first beverage retailer in the new commercial development at the corner of G Street and Yosemite Avenue.
With the opening of the new location, the company closed the familiar shop just down the road at Yosemite and Paulson.
This is not the first time the coffee chain has moved to a bigger, and some might add a better, location.
The store on Olive Avenue closed a few years ago and emerged in a bigger spot in the CVS commercial zone a block west of the former location on Olive Avenue.
In both cases, the public area inside the new stores exceeds the available space in the previous location. Customers have more room for conversation, smartphone checking, and beverage drinking common in any coffee shop.
Both newer locations have drive-through service. It’s common to see a line of vehicles idling away their nearly six-dollar gallons of gas as they order and wait on their five-dollar-plus cups of specialty coffee.
Merced’s Main Street welcomed the Seattle-based coffee retailer nearly two decades ago in what many considered a prime location: next door to the movie multiplex.
That spot served downtown coffee drinkers for about fifteen years until a newer shop opened on 16th Street closer to the highway 99 exit. This location also has a drive-through window that the Main Street spot did not have.
A couple of years ago, a Starbucks opened on West Main Street. That one also has a drive-through.
So it’s clear that the big game-changer for the company is moving to locations where a drive-through can be built.
But the spaces vacated by the coffee giant generally don’t stay empty for too long. Pizza Hut moved across the street on Olive Avenue to take over the former coffee shop spot. Ironically, the former Pizza Hut location was raised and it is now home to Dutch Brothers Coffee.
The former Main Street Starbucks location next door to the movie theater is now occupied by a locally owned coffee brewer.
There’s no word yet on who will occupy the former coffee shop at the corner of Paulson and Yosemite Avenues.
That spot has a special place in my heart. I spent an hour there every week for about ten years having coffee with a good friend. That friend passed away earlier this year, so maybe it was a good thing that a once-loved coffee shop should close and move to a new location a couple of blocks away.
Fresh starts are good for all of us.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His new book A Bundle of Memories is available at Lulu.com.
Student Innovation Flowing Forward-
Water reuse among many ideas at UC Merced engineering event
During their four years as students at UC Merced, Rosa Ruiz and Robylene Seapno, had a strong enthusiasm for environmental sustainability.
As the newest campus in the state system, UC Merced was built to the highest sustainability standards in place back in the early 2000s.
For Rosa, part of the attraction to this new facility was the focus on making the best use of natural resources.
“I had a real interest in this,” Rosa said.
So it did not surprise these two when they paired up with two other students with similar views on conservation to work on an engineering solution that could help the entire campus community.
The four comprised a team within the School of Engineering who, along with other student teams, developed engineering solutions to problems facing manufacturers, ag producers, and non-profit organizations.
The workgroup was among sixty-six student teams that showcased their findings to teachers, clients, and business community representatives at the annual Innovate to Grow final presentations held on May 13.
The projects ranged from aggregating data from cropland microcomputers to improvements in early childhood learning tools. More than two hundred students worked on these projects throughout the semester. They met with real clients, traveled on-site when necessary, and worked on their problems collaboratively under the supervision of their professors.
“The students delivered great projects,” said UC Merced, Director of Innovation Stefano Foresti.
The problem facing this particular student team was rainwater, and how to engineer a way to capture what little rain falls on the campus, and use that water for landscaping and other needs.
Campus leaders are considering installing a rainwater harvesting system.
Right now, the only source of water for the campus comes from the City of Merced. The City’s water system does not utilize non-potable water.
The engineering team was given the task to address the goal of UC Merced’s leadership to design a system that will capture and use non-potable water to irrigate green areas on campus.
The proposed design location for the system is the Academic Office Annex building. The team calculated that an annual rainwater collection of 54,000 gallons could happen with the right solution.
To demonstrate the solution, a proof of concept a prototype was designed and installed at the UC Merced Community Garden. That prototype is expected to collect about 400 gallons of rainwater annually.
The students created a rainwater capture and storage concept using a small storage shed already on the campus as their prototype location.
Their analytics showed that saving the water and storing it can be done. Recommendations for more water-resistant plants and shrubbery were also entered into the calculations.
The University and the School of Engineering are satisfied with the team that took on the challenge. It’s hoped that their work can be passed on to another student team in the fall semester to take the research up to another level.
According to Rosa, “We are not giving up.”
The student team proved that a water capture and storage project can be done, but at this time the solution may not be cost-effective. Right now, it is less expensive to buy the water the campus might need for this effort from the City of Merced than it would be to build and maintain a system for the project.
This project will likely be turned over to a future Innovate to Grow team in hopes that an even better solution can be found.
That’s what innovators do. They keep trying.
For Rosa, Robylene, and the rest of their team, there was a great deal of satisfaction in knowing they were part of a much bigger challenge to make the best use of the Valley’s water supply.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His current book A Bundle of Memories is available at Lulu.com.
Four of his books are now available via author search on bookshop.org where each purchase helps independent book store owners.
Sequoia Legacy Tree Stands Proudly in Visalia-
Challenges in providing proper care
In a sense, this is a story about two guys who shared an office and an idea.
Let’s go back to another time. It’s wintertime in 1936 in the quaint small city of Visalia, California in Tulare County about ninety miles south of Merced.
Nathan was the Postmaster in a newly opened Visalia Post Office. Guy was the Superintendent of General Grant National Park in the Sierra Mountains. During the winter, the Superintendent shared workspace in the post office alongside Nathan.
Guy brought two small Sequoia trees to the office one day during that winter season of 1936. The pair thought re-planting the three-year-old trees on opposing sides of the new post office building might give the downtown area a little natural beauty.
They also hoped maybe the trees might encourage others to head up into the mountains to see more of the stately trees in the National Park.
The trees grew and grew.
By 1940, General Grant National Park was folded into what we now know as Kings Canyon National Park. The area where visitors can find the General Grant tree is now known as the General Grant Grove.
Nathan and Guy went about their work. Both kept an eye on the post office trees throughout their careers and beyond.
One challenge lingered during the first fifty years the two sequoias adored the sides of the Visalia Post Office. One of the trees became diseased and had to be cut down in the mid-1980s.
But the other one continued to grow. Outliving both Nathan and Guy, that tree is now a very special part of the community.
With a history going back to the 1930s, the downtown Visalia Sequoia, better known as the Sequoia Legacy Tree, is a unique part of this city.
Four years ago, the City formally dedicated the Sequoia Legacy Tree.
The Tree is the focal point of a pocket park at the corner of Acequia Avenue and Locust Street in downtown Visalia. Interpretive signs explain the story and get into some of the challenges in the care and feeding of a majestic tree that are normally found in the Sierra Nevada.
The granite pathway the circles the tree is the approximate diameter of the General Sherman Tree in Sequoia National Park. Sequoia National Park is adjacent to Kings Canyon National Park.
This tree has a lot more growing to do.
Keeping the Sequoia Legacy Tree healthy and growing is a complication as it grows on the floor of the San Joaquin Valley far away from the majestic Sierra mountain range.
In the mountains, the sequoias take in water that flows from the snowpack in higher elevations. On the valley floor, the Sequoia Legacy Tree depends on water from the City of Visalia water department.
It also depends on the time and attention paid to it from both the public works department and volunteers who keep watchful eyes on any signs of danger that might pose a threat.
There is a sign near the tree reminding visitors that it is really up to each of us to use our water wisely to protect and conserve.
That may have been what both Guy and Nathan were thinking back in the mid-1930s when they made it possible for a sequoia to have a regular presence in one of our valley cities.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced and travels throughout the San Joaquin Valley to find stories of interest to readers.
He’s published several books including California Back Roads where he examines more than three-dozen special places throughout Central California. The book is available at Lulu.com
To explore Steve Newvine's complete collection of books, simply click on the link below.
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Steve is also open to delivering speeches for service club programs and other public speaking engagements.
Contact him at: SteveNewvine@sbcglobal.net