Photo taken May 17, 2008 at about 3500 feet near Peterson Road, Pine Ridge, Fresno County
Sunday, May 25, 2008
Shield Fern, Dryopteris marginalis
Rosy Fairy Lanterns, Calochortus amoenus
Sunday, May 11, 2008
Old Sunday, wife and child
The Benson Family circa 1928
Thursday, May 8, 2008
Lee Marvin Rice
This photo of Lee Marvin Rice (1892-1984), son of John Wesley Rice and Rebecca Jane (Hole) Rice, was published January 5, 1987 in the Fresno Bee, along with a story on Rice by writer Gene Rose (link). Rice was born in Watts Valley. Marvin Rice, also called Lee Rice and L. M. Rice, was an artist and writer of some note. His best known book, They Saddled the West (1974), is a detailed history of the saddle-makers of the western United States and the development of the modern western saddle. A noted saddle-maker for the Visalia Saddle Company, Rice also published, with Bruce Grant, How to Make Cowboy Horse Gear, and many articles in Western Horseman Magazine, Pacific Sportsman, Fur-Fish-Game, and Western Out-of-Doors among others. As a commercial artist, he created illustrations for Levi-Strauss ads and several covers for Sunset. He also was a fine artist of some talent and produced many fine sketches, chalks, and oils. He was a friend and student of western artist Maynard Dixon.
Although he had become a successful commerical artist by the 1920's, Rice continued to do the work he loved as a cowboy working for several large ranches in the San Joaquin Valley and Central Sierra Nevada, among them Bob and Ed Simpson, who headquartered near Academy, Fresno County.
Although he had become a successful commerical artist by the 1920's, Rice continued to do the work he loved as a cowboy working for several large ranches in the San Joaquin Valley and Central Sierra Nevada, among them Bob and Ed Simpson, who headquartered near Academy, Fresno County.
Rice House
The Rice house in the extreme eastern end of Watts Valley was built by John Wesley Rice about 1881. Charles Leroy Rice (1878-1973), second child of John and Rebecca Jane Rice, lovingly describes how the home came to be built: "Our first home was a log cabin. My oldest sister, Florence [b. 1876], myself, and sister Alice [b. 1880] was born in it. Then we built a new home out of lumber. My other darling sisters and brothers were born in it. They were Sadie [b. 1882], Wesley, Jessie and Marvin."
Rice Barn
This barn, built by John Wesley Rice, has stood on this place at the extreme eastern end of Watts Valley since before 1900. A photo of the Rice Place published in the Fresno Bee April 25, 1920 (published also in Brenda Preston's book on the Firebaughs) shows this barn with the Rice house in the background and two other ranch buildings nearby which no longer exist. John Wesley Rice bought the Firebaugh homestead in 1875. According to family records, the Rices lived in a log cabin for a few years before John built the house that still stands on the property. The Rices sold out in 1917 to the Martins, who in turn sold out to Joe Lassotovich about 1930. Descendants of the Lassotovich family still own the property. Lee Marvin Rice (1892-1984), son of John and Rebecca Jane Rice, became an artist and writer of some note.
Tuesday, May 6, 2008
From the old days
I found this firebox door from a woodstove in the creek near the location of Wiley Burrough's house as shown on the 1891 Fresno County Parcel Map. Burrough, born in 1811 according to his grave marker in Watts Valley Cemetery, was living in Watts Valley when Andrew Firebaugh moved here in the early 1860's to homestead near the confluence of Watts Creek and Sycamore Creek at the eastern end of the series of tiny valleys that make up Watts Valley.
Bransford Mountain and Jack Harken Point
Monday, May 5, 2008
Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest
I found this photo of General Forrest in the Gilmer family album along with photos of a number of my great-great grandfather Robert Gilmer's comrades at arms from the 4th Iowa Cavalry. Forrest's name is written faintly in pencil under the frame. The photo's presence in the album gives confirmation to the story that Lt. Gilmer's company chased Forrest out of Memphis on that foggy August morning in 1864. Robert Gilmer seems to have been proud of that exploit. One pictures him sitting on his porch in Burrough Valley with the album in hand telling friends and family the story of that fateful morning.
Robert Paxton Gilmer, circa 1865
My great-great grandfather Robert Paxton Gilmer moved with his wife, Mary Anne, and seven daughters to Burrough Valley in 1882. They built a house near Little Dry Creek at the very east part of Burrough Valley, just where the creek begins to flow down the canyon to Watts Valley. The foundation of the house can still be seen from the road. Robert was a 2nd lieutenant in Company G of the 4th Iowa Cavalry and fought at Vickburg under Sherman. In 1864, when the 4th was garrisoned at Memphis, Nathan Bedford Forrest raided the city on a foggy morning and took some Union prisoners. Company G got credit for chasing Forrest's troops out of town.
Adriance Mower at Soaproot Flat
This old mower lay half-buried at Soaproot Flat until it was removed to the Eastern Fresno County Historical Society Museum a few years ago. My great grandfather used it to harvest hay at Soaproot Flat early last century. I found an entry in the Burrough Store ledger books for a hay sale at Soaproot to the then very young U.S. Forest Service. Similar mowers were used in Burrough Valley and Watts Valley in the old days. This model dates from the 1870's.
Gearbox of Adriance Mower
Sunday, May 4, 2008
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