View in Browser Our Journalism Needs Your Support Please Donate Today
California Local Logo
Graphic which spells out The Newsletter.


By Sharan Street
Published Jul 10, 2023

On downtown San Jose’s Milligan Lot sits a home from the Civil War era that could be bulldozed to make way for a parking lot. Preservationists believe there are more creative options for this pretty creekside site. On downtown San Jose’s Milligan Lot sits a home from the Civil War era that could be bulldozed to make way for a parking lot. Preservationists believe there are more creative options for this pretty creekside site. Image credit: Preservation Action Council of San Jose

The History of Us

On the topic of Earth’s history, blogger/author Tim Urban offered a unique take to Derek Thompson, host of the Plain English podcast. Urban describes what the past quarter-millennium would look like condensed into a 1,000-page book, in which each page covers 250 years.

Written history doesn’t even start until page 975. Christianity starts at page 993. But on the 1,000th page—covering the early 1770s to today—Urban says, “suddenly it looks nothing like the other pages.”

Urban elaborates on the dizzying social, political and technological revolutions that have steamrolled over civilization the last 250 years. It’s a rate of change that far outstrips anything our ancestors faced, so it’s no wonder we struggle to preserve what we can of the past.

Thanks to the internet—which itself was born in 1969, 1983 or 1990, depending on what one defines it to be—historical facts and even digital artifacts can be found online. But there’s nothing like experiencing historical objects and places in the real world.


Pinning Down the Past

All around the state, there are citizen groups serving as guardians of sites that evoke our ancestors’ sensory experiences. Preserving history is always challenging, given that economic progress is fueled by new construction, but it’s easier in an area where tourists flock to enjoy historic districts. That’s not the case in Silicon Valley, which makes the work of the Preservation Action Council of San Jose that much more difficult. But PAC*SJ has come up with some clever ways to spread the word on threatened local landmarks.


Still Standing ... for Now

The Burbank Theater, built in 1949, is for sale again after restoration plans stalled. A neighborhood coalition is seeking city landmark status to prevent its demolition.
Each year, the Preservation Action Council of San Jose sends out a warning to architectural history buffs, identifying the Endangered 8—those structures most likely to be lost to rot and redevelopment.


California Local logo

El Dorado County's Homepage

Direct your browser to https://eldorado.californialocal.com/ to catch up on the latest news in California and El Dorado County. Bookmark the link and visit often, there's a lot happening in your community!


History Lessons

When properly cared for, historical landmarks and museums safeguard our collective memories. As reporter Pam Marino writes in a recent cover story for Monterey County Weekly, local governments have an important role to play. She quotes Bob Evans, chair of Monterey’s Museums and Cultural Arts Commission, who says, “This is the most historic city in California, and maybe the West Coast.” And Marino asks what the city can do to make that history more accessible to the public.

Whether under the care of local governments or volunteer curators, museums and historic sites help a community understand its past. In each county where California Local is active, we list community groups involved in preservation and also offer articles like the one below, which catalogs the best repositories of history in Sacramento, which has been the state capital since 1854.


Hidden History in the Birthplace of California

The California Constitution was written, in English and Spanish, at Colton Hall, at the time the largest municipal building west of the Rockies.
Pam Marino of Monterey County Weekly reports that the city government there is grappling with a unique problem: How to provide access to the places that make Monterey “the most historic city in California.”

Capital Collections

Old Sacramento Historic District Sacramento is an open-air museum of historic buildings.
Sacramento’s rich past can be explored by visiting its many and varied historical museums.

Marking Time

In addition to saving relics of the past, it’s also important to save the stories. That’s where E Clampus Vitus comes in. This secretive fraternal organization has mounted more than 1,400 historical markers across the state. Writes California Local’s Richard von Busack, “Clamper plaques can be found across the state, commemorating yesterday’s famous bordellos, demised breweries, “hurdy houses” (taxi dance bars), frontier hellholes, and obscure battle sites.” Some commemorate people and places that are part fable, part fact, such as the story of Joaquin Murrieta. (Much more can be learned about The Life and Times of Joaquín Murieta—the first novel published in California—in a scholarly Paris Review article.) But as reporter Maxwell Scott (Carleton Young) said at the end of The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, “This is the West, sir. When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.”


Atlas Absurdum

Among the events commemorated by E Clampus Vitus is the founding of the group’s first California chapter.
Dedicated to commemorating parts of history that sometimes offend the local chamber of commerce, E Clampus Vitus has studded California with plaques.


Impact Report Image for decorative use


Get to Know a Group

Golden Empire Council logo Golden Empire Council

The Golden Empire Council of the Boy Scouts of America pursues the mission of this national organization to “instill values in young people and prepare them to make ethical choices during their lifetimes, to take leadership roles as adults, and to reach their full potential.”

→ Learn more

California Media Alliance logo

From Our Media Allies

→ View All
 logo Summer Lake Adventures That Aren’t Lake Tahoe, Part I

Finding quiet in a busy tourist town can be a challenge but there are hundreds of lakes within a short distance. The longer the hike, the quieter it’ll be.

 logo Author Jill Shalvis Pulls on the Heartstrings

Jill Shalvis has published more than 100 books. Her latest, “The Sweetheart List,” is set in Tahoe.

 logo Did El Dorado’s Gilmore Brothers Beat the Wright Brothers to the Skies?

Grass Valley resident Lyman W. Gilmore may have dissed gravity when he took flight in a homemade airplane on May 15, 1902. A coal-fueled, steam-powered engine provided energy for lift.

  California Local Pin Marker  

Recent Local News

→ View All

Millions in Transformative Housing Grants Awarded to Tahoe Region

Affordable housing in the Lake Tahoe area is getting a boost due to a $2.4 million grant from the California Department of Housing and Community Development awarded to the bi-state Tahoe Regional Planning Agency.

(07/10/2023) → Tahoe Daily Tribune

American Century Championship Contract in Tahoe Extended Through 2029

NBC Sports and American Century Investments jointly announced today a multi-year extension of one of the most prolific partnerships in professional sports – the American Century Championship – to run through 2029, the tournament’s 40th anniversary.

(07/10/2023) → Tahoe Daily Tribune

WWE Comes to Tahoe Blue Event Center

For the first time, WWE will be coming to Lake Tahoe to the Tahoe Blue Event Center on October 1. 

(07/10/2023) → Tahoe Daily Tribune

Tahoe Blue Event Center to Partner With Football Legend Tim Tebow on Professional Hockey Team

Lake Tahoe will have a professional hockey team thanks to former NFL quarterback and Heisman Trophy winner Tim Tebow in partnership with David Hodges, CEO of Hodges Management Group LLC and management/operations team of Zawyer Sports & Entertainment.

(07/10/2023) → Tahoe Daily Tribune

Construction of New Tunnel Creek Singletrack Trail Begins

Construction of the new 2.3-mile Tunnel Creek Singletrack Trail is now underway, which has been possible from the fundraising efforts of the Tahoe Fund, a Recreation Trails grant from Nevada State Parks and trail-building efforts by Great Basin Institute and the Tahoe Area Mountain Biking Association.

(07/08/2023) → Tahoe Daily Tribune

Wheels Turn on Making Trip to Green Permanent

A June 27 decision by the Placerville City Council will begin the process of formalizing the Trip to Green project, an effort to mitigate congestion caused by Highway 50 stop lights.

(07/07/2023) → Mountain Democrat

Tamarack Lawsuit Moves Forward

A lawsuit against the U.S. Forest Service over damage caused by the Tamarack Fire has been filed in the Eastern District of U.S. District Court of California.

(07/06/2023) → Tahoe Daily Tribune

Capital to Tahoe Celebrates Grand Opening at Spooner Lake

The event is the culmination of years of planning and work to build an approximately 17-mile trail from Nevada’s capital city to the Tahoe Rim Trail, which connects to the Pacific Crest Trail.

(07/06/2023) → Tahoe Daily Tribune

Transplanted Market Settles Into New Location

After a series of three City Council meetings that ultimately resulted in the relocation of the Wednesday night farmers market on Main Street in Placerville, the market is up and running in its new location and working to set down roots.

(07/05/2023) → Mountain Democrat

Sheriff Receives Cut of Prop. 64 Marijuana Tax

The El Dorado County Sheriff’s Office received a portion of a $19 million grant from the California Highway Patrol to combat impaired driving.

(07/05/2023) → Mountain Democrat
  California Local Pin Marker  

Recent Statewide News

→ View All

• CDFW Confirms Detection of Snake Fungal Disease

Research by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife’s snake fungal disease project indicates that the pathogen is occurring in more locations and impacting more snakes in California than previously known.

(07/06/2023) → Benito Link

• California Steps Up Efforts to Stem Violence Against Native Americans With Feather Alert System

Today tribal leaders, local law enforcement and lawmakers gathered to learn how the a new tool—the Feather Alert—will work to help law enforcement quickly notify the public about missing Native Americans and enlist their aid.

(07/06/2023) → YubaNet

• State, Truck-Makers Strike Deal Over Zero-Emission Vehicles

Truck manufacturers won’t file legal challenges over California's controversial mandate, and in return, the state air board will relax some smog-fighting requirements.

(07/06/2023) → CalMatters