3 minute read
Aptos History Book
by Weeklys
| APTOS LIFE DECEMBER 2021 10
: Courtesy of UCSC Legacy Digital Collections
Advertisement
COMING ’ROUND THE MOUNTAIN The Betsy Jane hauls a train of logs down to Frederick A. Hihn’s mill on Valencia Creek, circa 1890.
Training Days
By JOHANNA MILLER
It was a moment of sheer luck that historian and author Derek R. Whaley, while researching for his own book, discovered the work of the late Ronald G. Powell.
Whaley owns local publishing company Zayante Publishing and is the author of the Santa Cruz Trains series, which documents the rise and fall of the railroading industry in Santa Cruz County. He’d been having difficulty finding the history of the Loma Prieta Branch that ran from Aptos through the Forest of Nisene Marks. So, he reached out to UC Santa Cruz Librarian Emeritus Stanley D. Stevens, who sent over a large PDF containing one of Powell’s manuscripts.
Courtesy of the Pajaro Valley Historical Association
STACK FIGURES The Loma Prieta Lumber Company’s lumberyard at the corner of West Beach and Pine streets in Watsonville, late 1890s.
“I was like, ‘What is this thing?’” Whaley says. “Powell was so incredibly thorough, so detailed. I was like, ‘This is crazy!’ And I immediately asked Stanley for more.”
The Reign of the Lumber Barons chronicles the golden age of the lumber industry in the hills above Aptos and Corralitos at the end of the 19th century. Through first-hand accounts, newspaper clippings, and more, the text examines how tens of thousands of old-growth trees were systematically harvested to use in the development of the Bay Area, starting in the 1860s.
Powell, a historian and author himself, was often found in the UCSC library in the 1980s and ’90s, poring over maps and texts, compiling histories as he went. The manuscript was intended to be part of Powell’s history series about Martina Castro’s Rancho Soquel Augmentation, a Mexican land grant given in 1833 covering present-day Santa Cruz County.
Whaley, who in 2014 had just moved to New Zealand to work on his Ph.D. in Late Medieval French Chronicles, saw an opportunity to preserve Powell’s work and do research for his book.
“What Powell wrote was a chronicle, which is what I’d been working on for the past four years for my thesis,” Whaley explained. “And here’s a guy who did it 30 years ago, about Santa Cruz history.”
Whaley published the first of Powell’s manuscripts as The Tragedy of Martina Castro last year, focused primarily on mid-county history. The Reign of the Lumber Barons uncovers stories of people living in the logging towns in places such as Loma Prieta and Valencia, pulling in history from Aptos, Corralitos and parts of Watsonville.
A new book in ‘Santa Cruz Trains’ series chronicles local lumber history
For more information about ‘The Reign of the Lumber Barons: Part Two of The History of Rancho Soquel Augmentation,’ go to zayantepublishing.com.
Non Profit
Join These Businesses in Supporting Non Profit Organizations
If you would like to feature your non profit in this directory, call 831.458-1100
Tools to Make Parenting Easier
First 5 Santa Cruz County triplep.first5scc.org 831.465.2217
FOR RESIDENTS OF MONTEREY, SANTA CRUZ AND SAN BENITO COUNTIES* WOOD STOVE CHANGE OUT PROGRAM
OFFERING REBATE INCENTIVES TO CONVERT QUALIFIED WOOD BURNING DEVICES TO CLEANER HEATING DEVICES
CONVERT TO RECEIVE UP TO
Natural Gas Propane Electric Ductless Mini-Split Heat Pump *Pellet Stove/Insert *Qualified Wood Burning Stove or Fireplace Insert Additional Incentive for Low Income
$1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,000 $1,000 $2,000
*Any replacement Wood Burning Device MUST be new, cleaner, and 2020 EPA Compliant
831.647.9411 WWW. MBARD.ORG/WOOD-STOVE-CHANGE-OUT-PROGRAM
JOIN SANTA CRUZ COUNTY’S HOLIDAY GIVING CAMPAIGN
80 LOCAL NONPROFITS CONTRIBUTE WITH CONFIDENCE IT’S EASY TO DONATE ONLINE
(OR BY MAIL OR CASH DELIVERY) SANTACRUZGIVES.ORG NOVEMBER 17 TO DECEMBER 31
NEW THIS YEAR!
ALL DONORS CAN CONTRIBUTE TO MATCHING FUNDS SHARED BY ALL ORGANIZATIONS. SIMPLY GO TO THE SHOPPING CART AND ENTER ANY AMOUNT IN THE FIELD TITLED: