The City of Atascadero Joins the Community In Celebrating Colony Days!
Happy Colony Days!
Complimentary Historic City Hall Tours October 6th, 11-2 pm
2 • Atascadero Colony Days • October 2018
TABLE OF CONTENTS
President’s Message..........................................4 Schedule............................................................6 Colony Days Parade..........................................9 Activities.........................................................10 Grand Marshal................................................12 Colony Days King and Queen........................14 Tent City After Dark.......................................16
The Printery....................................................20 Tent City Exhibits...........................................23 Tent City Schedule of Events..........................24 Founding of Atascadero..................................26 2017 Parade Highlights...................................28 Sunday Recipe................................................32 2017 Colony Days Tea....................................34
Cover: Atascadero News October 7, 1916
We’re Celebrating
COLONY DAYS and our
37th ANNIVERSARY!
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A Publication of the Atascadero News • 3
Welcome
Colony Days President’s Message
T
he 45th Annual Colony Days celebration is going to be one you will not want to miss! This year for the first time it will be a multiple day event – starting Friday, Oct. 5 with a great concert in a setting of warmly lit tents as they were in 1916. A full day of free fun follows on Saturday as we fill El Camino Real with lots of laughs at the Mudhole Follies Parade. Just after, the Sunken Gardens will be the site of the Tent City Reenactment of 1916, small dog races, vendors, food, rides and more good music on the Tent City stage. Colony Days is all about community. Our goal as a Committee is to provide a time for everyone to sit back and appreciate our heritage, our City as it once was. It is also a time to visit with friends and neighbors and meet new people, celebrating who we are now. We encourage everyone to come out, have a fun-filled, relaxing day and appreciate the place we are so fortunate to live in and the people who make it so special. As Atascadero grows, let’s continue to use Colony Days as a time to grow together! Congratulations to our Grand Marshall, Bob Brown and our King and Queen, Lamon and Jeanne Colvin. They are incredible, longtime residents of Atascadero that have experienced much in
their decades here. They surely have added considerably to the community and have many stories of great times and great people. We thank them for brightening our celebration and look forward to sharing with them at the festivities. It is amazing what can be done by a small group of dedicated people. I wish there was room to thank each one on the Committee, all the volunteers, sponsors, vendors and community organizations individually. Colony Days truly shows what can happen when a community works together. 45 years of the celebration is a rich heritage of itself – and we are so blessed to have Maggie Vandergon, a Founder of the event, active on our committee and still steering us in the right direction. Don’t forget the parade route is very similar to Cruise Night – all the way south to the 7400 block of El Camino Real to give great access to come to watch. We hope it is filled with a crowd all the way. We have added announcer stands the entire route. Dust off your dancing shoes for Friday night, don your handlebar mustache for Saturday and join us for a great celebration!
-Karen McNamara
Published by
Atascadero News 4 • Atascadero Colony Days • October 2018
HAPPY COLONY DAYS! ro e d
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Bottom Left to Right: Lori Hendrix, Kristy McMillin, Dennis Lemons, Jon Piwowarski, Jeff Fletcher, Patrick Moore, Tim Butcher, Fernando Crespo Top Row Left to Right: Teresa Crespo, Dalton Lemons, Abraham Ochoa, Braulio Marin, Miguel Campoverde, Al Kupstas, Darryl Schoening, Brad Davis Not Pictured: Fabian Orozco, Nico Cuarao, Madison McCullough
For over 55 years Davis Body Shop has and continues to satisfy its many customers. Started in the early Sixties by Dave Davis, Davis Body Shop has been able to maintain its reputation of quality service and customer satisfaction.
By supporting Little League, Atascadero Youth Athletics and many community events throughout the years, Davis Body Shop has backed the residents of Atascadero. We feel blessed to live and work in a community that is as wonderful as ours.
Paso Robles Front Row Left to Right: Samuel Sanchez, Neto Campos, Edgar Garcia, Javier Calderon Back Row Left to Right: Julio Crespo, Robert VanLoon, Jose Castaneda, Bernie Nolan, Greg Kehoe, Jason Moore Not Pictured: Erik Salmon, Humberto Aguilar, Ivan Vasquez
Atascadero
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A Publication of the Atascadero News • 5
45th Annual Atascadero Colony Days Schedule
Colony Days Tent City After Dark Friday, Oct. 5, 2018 Tent City After Dark Concert takes place at Sunken Gardens 4:30 p.m.
“Slacker” Whiskerino contest registration
4:30 p.m.
Food and beverage sales (ends at 10 p.m.)
4:30 p.m.
Toro Creek Ramblers
5 p.m.
Five-pound burger eating contest sponsored by Sylvester’s Burgers
5:15 p.m.
Whiskerino contest prejudging
5:45 p.m.
Whiskerino contest
6 p.m. Wood 7:15 p.m.
Hilary & Kate
8:30 p.m.
Carolina Story
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6 • Atascadero Colony Days • October 2018
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45th Annual Atascadero Colony Days Schedule
Colony Days Parade & Festival Saturday, Oct. 6, 2018 7 a.m.
Lions Club Pancake Breakfast in Sunken Gardens (ends at 9 a.m.)
10 a.m.
45th Annual Colony Days Parade
10 a.m.
Vendor Fair at Sunken Gardens (ends at 4 p.m.)
10:30 a.m.
Tent City 1916 Re-enactment at Sunken Gardens (ends at 4 p.m.) Detailed Tent City schedule on page 24
10:30 a.m.
Dogtoberfest Race Registration (ends at 12:30 p.m.)
11 a.m.
Tours of historic City Hall (ends at 2 p.m.)
12:30 p.m.
Parade Awards announced on Tent City Stage
1 p.m.
Dogtober Wiener Dog and Small Dog Races at Sunken Gardens (ends at 2:30 p.m.)
1 p.m.
Atascadero Historical Society museum open to the public (ends at 4 p.m.)
2:30 p.m.
Dogtober Pet Costume Contest
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2018 Colony Days Parade Map Colony Days Parade
2018 Parade Route
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Start Golden China
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Davis Auto Body
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P Since 1974, the Colony Days Parade has closed El Camino Real for a celebration of the founding of Atascadero, E.G. Lewis’ utopian dream, and the history of the city. For 2018, we have revised the parade route and it now starts at 7385 El Camino Real and will run through El Camino Real and turn down West Mall along Sunken Gardens this year. The parade begins at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. X 6 right at the start by Davis Auto Body.
H enjoy this year’s parade! This year’s theme is Mudhole Follies. We P hope you X
NOTES AND MAP LEGEND X
DETOUR ROUTE Follies! X Happy Mudhole PARADE ROUTE C.Sue Hubbard
X
X
Insurance and Financial Services Agent
PARENT DROP OFF C Sue Hubbard Agency Se Habla Español 7730 Morro Rd #206, Atascadero Tel 805.466.7333 Cell 805.674.4844 0D91634 chubbard@farmersagent.com
FLOAT DROP OFF STAGING AREA
X
ROAD CLOSED STAGE 2 CLOSURE - Start of Parade
Family Owned & R REGISTR Operated!- Coast H
H HORSE T
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A Publication of the Atascadero News • 9
Activities
45th Annual Atascadero Colony Days
Tent City After Dark Concert
Colony Days Parade
Colony Days Festival
The annual fundraiser for Colony Days will be held on Friday, Oct. 5 with doors opening at 4:30 p.m. There will be food vendors, beer, wine and a five-pound burger eating contest, a Whiskerino Contest in addition to live music. Tickets are $35 in advance or $40 at the event and include a drink (wine, beer or non-alcoholic).
The Atascadero Colony Days Parade is a crowd favorite. This year marks the 45th Annual Atascadero Colony Days Parade.
The Colony Days vendors will have a variety of booths to explore. There will be food, amusements, shopping and more!
The parade kicks off the day’s festivities and begins this year at 7385 El Camino and goes all the way to West Mall and Lewis Avenue.
Stop by to see the great small businesses in our community that are giving back by supporting Colony Days. Thanks to the vendors, we are able to continue a portion of this tradition.
Parade begins at 10 a.m. and features floats, marching bands, equestrian groups and antique vehicles.
Stroll leisurely through Sunken Gardens while listening to the sounds of our local musicians. Vendors will be set up for shopping with the amusements close by so the family can spread out but still be within eyesight. Kids can ride the train and peruse the booths while you enjoy a great local beer.
Featured artists are Carolina Story, Hilary & Kate and Wood. Toro Creek Ramblers will open the event at 4:30 p.m. Grape Encounters host David Wilson will be pouring wine from Cordant | Nelle, Ruby Cellars, Pianetta Winery, and others during the event. Tent City After Dark will feature beer from Firestone Walker Brewing Co. and Dead Oak Brewing.
Bring your favorite lawn chair, hats and sunscreen for the parade. Be sure to enjoy the rest of the Colony Day festivities.
10 • Atascadero Colony Days • October 2018
Make Colony Days one of your family traditions.
Activities
45th Annual Atascadero Colony Days
Tent City 1916 Recreated
11th Annual Dogtoberfest
Historic City HallTours
Come see Atascadero as it was in 1916.
We are excited to have the Heilmann Dog Park join Colony Days for the second year in a row, bringing the Dogtoberfest Wiener and Small Dog (under 25 pounds) races and a pet costume contest. This is guaranteed to be a great time for kids and adults.
Historic City Hall will be open from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 6 for Colony Days.
Atascadero Colony Days’ Tent City arose from an idea to bring Atascadero’s 1914-1916 Tent City period to life. The historic Tent City reenactment is peopled with exhibitors from the community, each sharing part of the early Atascadero story. The 2018 event will take place on Saturday, Oct. 6. The Tent City re-enactment will be held in the Sunken Gardens for the second year. Be sure to thank your newsie for selling you this copy of the Colony Days Special Edition.
Registration begins at 10:30 a.m. Races begin at 1 p.m. The event proceeds will benefit the nonprofit organization Heilmann Dog Park, and we thank you for your support. All dogs, large and small, on leash are welcome at this event.
Enjoy a free tour of City Hall from a docent from the Atascadero Historical Society. The docent will take you back through the history from the original construction of the building and its restoration. There are fun points of interest throughout the tour and it is a great way to learn the history of Atascadero. Please allow 45 minutes for a tour. Tours will be conducted every 30 minutes starting at 11 a.m. The Atascadero Historical Society will also be open from 1 to 4 p.m.
A Publication of the Atascadero News • 11
2018 Colony Days Grand Marshal
Bob Brown By Camas Frank News
of the Atascadero
T
he Colony Days Royalty Committee announced retired broadcaster and long-time Colony Days Parade judge Bob Brown as their 2018 Grand Marshal. Brown said he was surprised and honored by the invitation and, even though “never in his wildest dreams” would he have expected it, he knows a lot about the festivities having served on the Colony Days Committee and been a parade judge through the 1970s and as the “Voice of the MidState Fair” in Paso Robles before computerized announcements. His renewed participation in Colony Days this year comes as an early 92nd birthday present. Born Oct. 13, 1926, in Stuart, Neb., his middle name is Fallo after his father’s best friend, who folks in the village of Cody referred to as “Fud.” Brown has a great deal of information on his early childhood and and the 1930s into the early 1940s in part because he’s been asked to write it all down before. After handing an interviewer a six page typed document drafted in 2011, he notes that it was something the family’s 15 grandchildren and nine greatgrandchildren might want to have around. Interesting nuggets include the reflections that although his friends had house parties in Los Angeles while he was in high school, he doesn’t actually remember there being smoking or alcohol involved. The family moved to California in September 1941 and he was attending Washington High when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7. “As we became seniors we looked forward to going into the armed services during WWII,” he wrote frankly. Sitting down with longtime friends Lamon and Jeanne Colvin, this year’s Colony Days King and Queen, he reminisced with them that he and his late wife Sue, must have, “driven to every state but Alaska and of course Hawaii,” in their later travels.
12 • Atascadero Colony Days • October 2018
He added that he’d been to Hawaii quite a few times before however, serving on the USS Oneida in the final days of the war, he helped transport thousands of troops between Hawaii and the mainland and around various notable Pacific ports before preparing to invade Japan itself. In the Navy, he said, he gained three inches and 25 pounds, and self confidence. Going to school at Los Angeles City College on the GI Bill he majored in Radio Broadcasting with a minor in Speech, and met his first wife Charlotte. Although they moved away from California, he wrote that six months away and the cold winter at his first job after college as an announcer and engineer in Montana did not agree with him. Through the 1950s he worked up through the industry in Ventura and Oxnard before, “the opportunity to become a general manager of a radio station presented itself, as my former mentor Karl Rembe put me in touch with John Cohan who owned KVEC radio in San Luis Obispo, along with KSBY TV, plus KSBW radio and TV in Salinas.” Starting July 1, 1958, he ran KVEC as general manager for 18 years, becoming part owner in 1966 and Vice President of West Coast Broadcasters. While building up a portfolio of stations and proud of making KVEC, “the most successful radio station in San Luis Obispo, doing more business than the other two AM stations combined,” he also relished the opportunity to broadcast local high school and Cal Poly baseball and football games. Brown also started lecturing part-time at Cal Poly teaching radio technique to students in the journalism department and filling in for staff shortages through the years. Having separated from Charlotte in 1972, he made more big changes in 1976, marrying Sue and leaving KVEC. He started his own firm, Bob Brown Consultant, working on public relations, advertising, political
campaigns and fundraising as well as broadcasting. One of those projects included managing KPRL in Paso Robles for a year before going on to start an ad agency with Dan Clarkson, which they ran until he retired in 1993. Retirement did not seem to sit well though, as between traveling the country, often with other couples from Atascadero on trips, and renting out their on home for extended absences, he returned to work part-time selling ads with the Atascadero News for more than four years, and doing books with his wife’s accountancy firm. In that time, he also became active with the Elks Lodge, where one of the many tiles he accrued was President of the Past Exalted Rulers, as well as service on their various committees and editorship of their newsletter, the Velvet Antler. “Community service has been one of my objectives over the years,” he wrote, noting the list of titles he’s held with various local Chambers of Commerce and booster clubs, but of Atascadero itself and the friends he’s known he adds, “we’ve done a lot of fun things here. We’re there for each other, too.”
Photos by Camas Frank of the Atascadero News
Bob Brown is the 2018 Grand Marshal.
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2018 Colony Days King and Queen
Lamon and Jeanne Colvin By Camas Frank News
of the Atascadero
L
ocal retirees Lamon Colvin and Jeanne Colvin will serve as the 2018 Colony Days King and Queen, respectively.
L
Lamon Colvin amon Colvin was born in Phoenix, Ariz. on June 8, 1933 and the family moved to Watsonville when he was
a child. A member of the Atascadero Community since 1958, he credits the US Army for stationing him at Camp Roberts and giving him an introduction to the area. Before his time in the Army from 1956-1958, he went to school at the San Francisco College of Mortuary Science, which gave him the skills to manage the local Chapel of Roses Mortuary and ambulance service in 1958. He recalls that an emergency ride in a 1947 Cadillac ambulance cost $15, $10 on appointment, and was still considered a difficult to collect sum for the time. Depending on inflation index that $15 pencils out as roughly $130 today. Another bit of math he had at the ready when speaking with the Atascadero News, as of Oct. 6 he’ll have officially moved to town 60 years and 10 days ago, having seen the community grow approximately six times over the size it was then. All the new people make some of the conveniences of the 1950’s a bit impractical now, for instance there were only two telephone numbers. The exchanges had operators acting as an informal answering service, tracking down missed connections and as an emergency dispatch.
Photo by Camas Frank of the Atascadero News
Lamon and Jeanne Colvin are this year’s Colony Days King and Queen. “At that time El Camino had a sign that said, ‘Atascadero, 5,000 people and 50,000 chickens,’” he said, noting that local businesses would call the operator to inform them of important changes or folks would leave a message with them before going out for the evening.
14 • Atascadero Colony Days • October 2018
He became a partner in the mortuary in 1961 and a new facility was built in 1976. In between, he remembers instances where the family dog would retrieve golf balls from the No. 2 tee box at the golf course which was near the house and the mortuary, which
messed up a few games but also led to new acquaintances. Particular changes of note through the years, “Chuck Paddock was just starting his zoo. They’ve built it up to what it is today from a pen with just four geese in it,” he said adding that the E. G. Lewis estate was still intact at the time and that motor boats and water skiing were still allowed on Atascadero Lake. The Highway Patrol also had a particular game of ‘Cat and Mouse,’ parking behind the bushes at the mortuary so as to, “keep an eye on speeders as they left the drive in.” Regarding his long career in town, 38 years on the job, retiring in 1996, followed by traveling and a lot of service club activity — past president of the Atascadero Lions and a lifetime member, charter member of the Atascadero Methodist Church and a co-founder of the Flying Condors Club and Wagon Master of Elks Camping Club — Colvin said that people don’t pick his brain too much. “Occasionally people will ask how long I’ve been here and I tell them that the little yellow house next to the Sunken Gardens was my first home in town,” he added Colvin shares some memories in town with last year’s King, Ed Chidlaw, both were members of the “Club 50” swing dance club held in the impressive upstairs ballroom at City Hall and Colvin regularly was a guest at Chidlaw’s home on Santa Lucia Road for events in the informal “Chidlaw Stadium” during home Greyhounds football games.
Jeanne Colvin
T
he Colony Days Committee doesn’t always get to pick a married couple as King and Queen for the event but they found one with an interesting story this year. Born in Watsonville in 1937, Jeanne Colvin has known Lamon since she was a baby, but they went on to have very separate lives and families until circumstance intervened, and he convinced her to join him in Atascadero in 1983. They moved into their current home on Atascadero Avenue a few years later. More than the changes the town has gone through in the last 35 years, she reflects on the time traveling with the friends they’ve known from town, especially in the Elks Club, although those were more weekend excursions than the Coast to Coast trips she also remembers fondly.
Photo by Camas Frank of the Atascadero News
For example, the Colvins have been friends with this year’s Grand Grand Marshall, Bob Brown, for at least 40 years, with memories of nursing the Brown’s struck with flu in their RV on a visit for two weeks. And, whereas Lamon prefers to bullet-point facts of interest, Jeanne breezes through 30 years of history in a paragraph but pays attention to relationships. “In 1942, my family moved to the Central Valley and I attended schools in Modesto,” she said, noting her first marriage in 1955, gave her four children before she went to work in 1966 as a nursing assistant for eight years. “I then worked as secretary to the youth minister where we attended church for four years,” she added. “After divorcing, I went back to work at the hospital in the hospice/social services department until marrying Lamon in 1983.” She describes the life they made here as, “a blended family with six children, 13 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren.” While Lamon’s children from his first marriage grew up in Atascadero, only one of Jeanne’s children followed her permanently after the 1980s. Unfortunately, Ed Marco Jr., who was well known in town from his job at Jespersen’s Tire Service, passed away in 2007. It was a loss the likes of which Lamon had seen many in his professional life, and experienced himself with the death of a spouse. Brown added that the Colvins had seen him through similar tragedy. While she hasn’t taken and active part in Colony Days festivities recently, staying engaged with the life of the Atascadero community has remained important. “I have volunteered as a counter at our church [the United Methodist Church] for many years now and currently am the financial secretary and head counter,” she added. The couple added that they were, “surprised and honored,” to have been selected by the committee to be the King and Queen, but were “going with the flow,” as they weren’t sure what to expect on the day.
A Publication of the Atascadero News • 15
Tent City After Dark
Contributed photos
T
he fundraiser for Colony Days will be bigger and better than ever with more bands, food trucks, local wine and beer and a five-pound burger eating contest sponsored by Sylvester’s Burgers. Register for the Whiskerino Contest at 4:15 p.m. The entire event will happen inside historic Tent City, which will be set up in Sunken Gardens along El Camino Real. “Tent City After Dark is an amazing combination of good music and an incredible setting,” Colony Days President Karen McNamara said. “Once the sun sets, the tents and hanging lanterns glow as they did in the original Tent City.” The event was historically held the Saturday evening of the Colony Days celebration for event goers to experience historic Tent City once the sun went down. The event will begin at 4:30 16 • Atascadero Colony Days • October 2018
p.m. with food trucks and beer and wine and continue well into the night. The main music event will begin at 6 p.m., although there will be a amateur musicians and other events happening beforehand. “It is truly something that can only be experienced at our event,” McNamara said. “There will be lots of food and drink vendors, plenty of room to dance to a high quality concert and a moderate late summer evening. We believe the move to Friday night will bring a stellar kick off of the celebration of our community.” This year, Tent City After Dark will kickoff the Colony Days weekend giving a preview of the tents along with live folk and country music with the backdrop of the illuminated historic city
hall. Advance tickets are $35 each and include one beverage. Tickets purchased at the event are $40 each. VIP sponsorship tables of eight are $500 and include one drink per person, a platter of tacos for the table and personal table service for the entire evening. Tickets go on sale Saturday, Sept. 1 at 9 a.m. at ColonyDays.org. “I can’t wait to see this event grow into one of our community’s premiere evenings of entertainment,” Tent City After Dark committee member Candice Hubbard said. “Tent City After Dark will bring our community together to celebrate the history of Atascadero in a relaxed and fun atmosphere.” For those attending the home football game that night, admission after 8 p.m. will be $10 per person with a hand stamp from the football game.
at the time with Emily focusing on her budding career as a solo singer/songwriter and Ben being in another band. It was on that trip camping along the Davidson and French Broad rivers that the light bulb went off. They decided to ditch their current endeavors upon returning to Memphis and focus on writing and performing together. Carolina Story was born beside the afterglow of a campfire along the banks of those rivers with the name embodying the inception of their journey together. They were married in June 2009 and embarked on their first tour right after their honeymoon with Ben finishing his last semester of school online from the road.
Hilary & Kate Carolina Story Carolina Story, made up of Ben and Emily Roberts, writes and performs songs, knowing that there are enough love songs on earth. They evoke the blue collar man and woman, because that’s exactly who they are. It was music that drew them together at Visible Music College, a progressive arts college, on a fateful, summer day in late-August 2007, they met outside the dorms under the hot Memphis sun as Ben helped Emily move a couch into her room. While drawn to each other’s talent, they came to realize the overlapping nature of their hearts. It was in Western North Carolina, on a week-long fall camping trip, where the band’s story really begins. They were both preoccupied by separate projects
Hilary & Kate is a duo made up of Hilary Watson and Kate Feldtkeller. As their two voices, guitar, and violin intertwine, they conjure up echoes of time-honored musical traditions rooted in folk, bluegrass, and gospel while putting a fresh spin on these sounds as only young artists can. In early 2012, Hilary and Kate began playing and recording together; Hilary was already seasoned from years of traveling and performing both solo acoustic and with her full band, but Kate brought something new and unique with her voice and violin that instantly clicked. The year ended up being one of rich blessing for Hilary and Kate, with extensive tours around the United States and Europe. See TENT CITY AFTER DARK Page 19
A Publication of the Atascadero News • 17
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TENT CITY AFTER DARK Continued from Page 17
Wood Wood is made up of five members: Steve Kindel, Paul Steven Silva, Dahlan Richenberg, Rob Strom and Barry Johnson from San Luis Obispo. Wood plays acoustic music, best described as folk pop. Catchy, thoughtful original tunes that reflect the natural beauty and diversity of the Central Coast. The group is rooted in music that came out of the Laurel Canyon scene in the early 1970s.
Toro Creek Ramblers The Toro Creek Ramblers is an informal group of (mostly) amateur musicians who meet at the Last Stage West’s bluegrass jam session and buffet on the second and fourth Wednesday of every month. The band is anchored by “Executive Director” Bern Singsen on guitar, and “Musical Director” Dan Mazer (BanjerDan) on the banjo. The personnel varies from show to show, but the sound is always rooted in the style of the first-generation artists who made bluegrass music what it is today.
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The Printery
The Printery - Set to Repeat History
An image of the Printery as it stood in the 1900’s. The printery printed the Atascadero News and the Illustrated Review.
Contributed by Karen McNamara
O
f the civic center buildings in the early Colony, the Printery was the very first to be completed. E G Lewis knew a national promotional campaign was critical to the success of the Colony. He published and printed the Atascadero News and the Illustrated Review, a picture-filled news magazine, which grew to a nationwide circulation of more than 600,000 copies a month.
The staff worked in shifts nearly round the clock, but took time out for this notable event: Outstanding among the big parties of 1919 was the Printery banquet, when 70 employees of the big plant enjoyed a fine supper and social evening. It was held in the great room of the circulation department on the second floor, which had been cleared for the occasion. In the confusion of washing and wiping dishes and restoring the room, it was voted that Atascadero needed a community dining room and kitchen. Despite the success of the Printing plant
20 • Atascadero Colony Days • October 2018
Photo contributed
and lot sales, late in 1924 Lewis came under attack by some investors and was forced to sell the Colony holdings. The Administration building and the Printery were sold and converted to classrooms and dorms of a Junior College. In further years, the Printery changed owners and tenants many times, abandoned in 2004 and up for tax sale in 2017. A strong group of local citizens formed the Atascadero Printery Foundation and purchased the property to rehabilitate it for community use. It will once again house a working Printery section, a community Performing Arts Center and many
Photos contributed
Above: The Printery as it stands in 2018, cleaned and ready to be restored. Below: The same room in its heyday. Staff busy working away on an issue.
multipurpose rooms. That 1919 desire for community dance/dinner space will be fulfilled in the Printery itself. Throughout the facility, the rich history of the building and the community will be on display. Bringing the Printery full circle as a vital part of the community is a large task which the Printery Foundation is working at diligently. Along with community
volunteers, countless hours have been put in to make significant progress on cleaning and securing the building. Help is needed in the form of donations and volunteers for workdays, events and grant applications. It is truly a work for the community, by the community. For more information, www.AtascaderoPrintery.org or call 805466-1961.
A Publication of the Atascadero News • 21
Celebrating 101 years in Business in Atascadero
Wishing You All A Happy Colony Days 4401 Suite G, El Camino Real, Atascadero 805-466-2585 www.AtascaderoNews.com
22 • Atascadero Colony Days • October 2018
Te n t C i t y E x h i b i t s
Ice Cream Parlor – Whether you’ve just stood near the hot furnace at the smithy and need to cool off, or you are just walking by... you’ll want to treat both your taste-buds and your tummy to some delicious, smooth, and luscious ice cream. Step into this colorful, and wondrous establishment and sit a spell. It’s hard to believe that it’s been only a dozen years since the first ice cream cone was introduced at the St. Louis World’s Fair. Blacksmith – Some of our visitors may be unfamiliar with the work done by a blacksmith: working the bellows... hammering away on his anvil, etc. Although industrialization is replacing many of the blacksmith’s skills, automobiles are so new most residents still ride horses, as well as use buggies and delivery carts. The services of a blacksmith are vital. Due to the huge success of the Colony, the smithy has been enlarged to include two forges — and Matt Zippi’s son will join him in the family business. Printery – Children will be able to print their own design on paper. While the adults hear about the Printery Building. It is the oldest building. Atascadero Mutual Water Company – Before residents were permitted here, the Colony needed to build an infrastructure... especially to secure our water supply. In the AMWC tent you can see amazing photographs of our development over the years. Our Colony is not just a center for the arts, but will also be an agricultural center requiring irrigation. Three years ago AMWC installed water mains for future residences, and orchards. This was very time-consuming, and expensive, but was necessary to reassure potential residents of Mr. Lewis’s commitment to success. Bank – The “Colony Holding Company” is where all of the assets in the Colony are exchanged, including money, real estate and commercial goods. Our bank is
where you can exchange paper dollars for wooden nickels. (The exchange rate is pretty accurate; the purchasing value of the dollar has been devalued by 95 percent since 1913 when the Federal Reserve Bank was established.) Caladero Emporium – Atascadero has been an agricultural success for years, providing dehydrated foodstuff for the U.S. Army during recent conflicts. Orchards have been planted throughout the Colony, and the dehydration plant continues to this day. During the fall, apples are processed into homemade apple cider, dehydrated apples, apple butter and various apple cobblers and pies. Visitors are encouraged to join in the work, and enjoy the fresh, cold, sweet cider. Barber Shop and Community Lounge – Don’t wait ‘til you need a trim, or a shave to stop in... relax in our new lounge where not only can you wait your turn for the barber...you can discuss the world’s problems, if not solve them! Read the newspaper, play a game of checkers or chess, or just come by to “chew the fat” with your neighbors. This is also where you will find our only telephone in Tent City — another new-fangled marvel of this era. Colony Diner – There are two dining halls in Tent City, but the Colony Diner is open all day for those who prefer not to wait for meal call. They also have a bit of community entertainment in the diner as well, so whether you are hungry for a roastbeef sandwich, roasted corn-on-the-cob, or just some fun company, come on in. Community Laundry – There’s no better way to keep informed about the goings-on in the Colony than by gathering together and getting your hands wet, with your neighbors. Roll up your sleeves and experience a real washboard and laundry tub. We are all excited about the new-fangled electric washing machines, but until we get them installed in our new homes, we still rely on this tried-and-true method. A clothesline and clothespins for drying are provided! See TENT CITY Page 24
A Publication of the Atascadero News • 23
TENT CITY Continued from Page 24
Colony Mercantile – Among a plethora of dry goods, this is where folks revive themselves with a sparkling sarsaparilla or Coca Cola, as well as Crackerjack, licorice, etc. Gentlemen, don’t just reach into our pickle barrel for a dill, but also check out our gardening tools. Children, come buy marbles or jacks; you have a wide assortment of marvelous toys from which to choose. Atascadero News – This is the Colony’s first year with a newspaper. Whether you stop by the office, or buy one from a ‘newsie’, learn the latest regarding Europe’s Great War, the contentious election season in Washington, or just down the street at Headquarters House. Printed right here in the Colony Printery, a foundational business reflecting Mr. Lewis’ zeal for publishing. Federated Community Church – There’s nothing in the world like our church. Regardless what your denomination is, you’re welcome to worship with us. We celebrate what we share in common, and avoid specifics that would otherwise divide us. Dr. Edward A. Berry leads worship under the large oak tree a quarter-mile northeast of Tent City. The acoustics in the natural amphitheatre are superb, requiring no amplification. Come join us, and stay for a potluck afterwards. American Red Cross – This is the best place to show our compassion for our cousins in Europe as they endure the utter devastation of warfare. Stop in to rip old sheets into bandages... give blood... donate clothing, or even write an encouraging letter. You can also learn first-aid from our helpful, and friendly nurse, who has many of the latest medical tools available in her tent.
Residential Tents – All of our guests stay in tents which come furnished with electric lighting. Many have set up housekeeping and are preparing for their moves into new homes, surrounding themselves with old favorite items and reminders of the past.
TENT CITY SCHEDULE OF EVENTS 10 a.m. — Exhibits Open Noon — Pie Eating Contest (and at various other times, too) 11:30 a.m. - 2:45 p.m.: Sack Races Egg Toss Watermelon Seed Spitting Popular music of the Era Tug of War Bucket Brigade
1 p.m. — Old-Fashioned Spelling Bee (stage) 2 p.m. — Sing Along at the Tent City Stage 2:45 p.m. — Tent City Bucket Brigade (Near the Laundry)
Happy Colony Days
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24 • Atascadero Colony Days • October 2018
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Celebrating Colony Days Over 496 Years of Combined Service To Our Community
105
Years of Service
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Years of Service
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Years of Service
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Years of Service
Years of Service
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Years of Service
EL CAMINO BUILDING SUPPLY, INC. “You can build on our experience”
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Years of Service
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Years of Service
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Years of Service
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We Thank These Businesses and Organizations A Publication of the Atascadero News • 25
A Look Back at the Founding
Inside the Dining Hall in Tent City
Building roads in Atascadero
The hospital at the Atascadero Colony
Map of the lots sold and available
Kenneth’s Heating and Air
Proudly serving all of the San Luis Obispo County
to purchase
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Happy Colony Days! 26 • Atascadero Colony Days • October 2018
(805) 466-3133 • Fax (805) 466-5546 • www.ecbs.com 8800 SANTA ROSA ROAD • PO BOX 756 ATASCADERO, CALIFORNIA 93423
of A t a s c a d e r o
Photos courtesy of Kent Kenney
Photos contributed by Kent Kenney
Residents of Tent City Inside Lewis Headquarter House
Girls posing in front of the fountains at the Administration Building
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2050 Spring St., Paso Robles • 238-0141 A Publication of the Atascadero News • 27
Highlights:
Happy Colony Days! Daniel Phillips LUTCF 8800 El Camino Real, Atascadero 805-461-1664 28 • Atascadero Colony Days • October 2018
Photos of 2017
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Colony Days Parade
Atascadero News file photos
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A Publication of the Atascadero News • 29
COLONY DAYS PARADE Continued from Page 29
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Happy Colony Days 18 0 2
ndy Ci
dy
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and David Kenne
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A Publication of the Atascadero News • 31
Atascadero Colony, October, 1916
By Barbie Butz For the Atascadero News Viola May Miller Atascadero Colony Atascadero, California Oct. 6, 1916 Greetings to you, my dearest friends in Universal City. I do hope that all of you are well and enjoying the coming season. As I told you last year, we are settled in our beautiful new Colony home here in Atascadero and continue to be very happy to have made the move to California three years ago. As is typical here in Atascadero our summer was very warm, but we made several trips over the road that Mr. Lewis put through to the coast. We were cooled by the waters of the beautiful Pacific Ocean at Atascadero Beach. The weather is beginning to change and I know that autumn will soon arrive. I see little signs everywhere such as the little green acorns on the abundant Oak trees that cover our golden hills. The leaves of the many deciduous trees are turning from green to yellow, red, orange and amber — all the glorious colors of autumn! The changing of the leaves help to remind me of our days in Missouri and of our longtime friends who shared many autumns with us. We enjoyed our time living in Tent City, making new friends and learning everything we could about this part of the state, which I told you is located between San Francisco and Los Angeles. We still plan to visit those exciting cities one of these days. For now, we are happy to be here in Atascadero. You may remember how much I loved to entertain. I am happy to say I have been able to successfully do so again this past year since we moved into our new home. It was difficult to do much more than serve tea while living in a tent! Speaking of our new home, I have a lovely, wellorganized, very modern kitchen. I even have one of the newly invented DOMELRE units. (The name is a contraction of DOMestic-Electric-Refrigerator). It is a
factory manufactured refrigeration unit mounted on top of an Ice Box. As you may know, it was invented by Mr. Fred W. Wolf Jr. in 1913, the very year of the founding of Atascadero by Mr. E.G. Lewis. I feel quite blessed to have one of those refrigerators in my kitchen, to help keep our food fresh. Last year I sent you some of my favorite recipes for a Sunday meal. They came from a special little cookbook in my collection that came with me when we moved from Missouri. The title is “Fifty-two-Sunday Dinners” and was written and compiled by Mrs. Elizabeth O. Hiller in 1913. Since the eternal question we women must face each day is “What shall we have for dinner today?” I am including some new recipes with the hope that they will help answer that question for you — at least for one Sunday. We all know how important Sunday dinners are for families to gather and share time before the busy week ahead.
Menu
Vegetable Soup Fried Chicken with Béchamel Sauce Browned Sweet Potatoes Stuffed Tomatoes Kole Slaw Baked Apples Stuffed with Figs
Vegetable Soup Ingredients: ½ cup carrot ½ cup turnip ½ cup celery 2 cups potato 1/3 cup onion 1 ½ quarts beef broth 1/3 cup butte 1/2 tablespoon finely chopped parsley 1 ½ teaspoons salt 1/8 teaspoon pepper Process: Wash and scrape carrot, cut in tiny cubes; wash and pare turnip, cut same as carrot; wash, scrape and cut celery in thin slices; wash, pare and cut potatoes in one-fourth inch cubes; peel and cut onion in thin slices, mix vegetables, except potatoes, and cook ten minutes in butter, stirring constantly. Add potatoes, cover and cook three or four minutes, add beef broth which was previously strained and all fat removed. Cover and simmer one hour. Put parsley, salt and pepper in bottom of soup tureen and turn in hot soup.
Fried Chicken with Béchamel Sauce Process: Separate two young chickens in pieces for serving; dip in milk, sprinkle with salt, pepper and dredge with flour, or dip in crumbs, egg and crumbs and
32 • Atascadero Colony Days • October 2018
Contrbuted Photo
Barbie Butz’s grandmother, Viola May Miller O’Haver with Barbie’s mother, Loretta taken in 1917.
fry in deep hot Cottolene. Cottolene should not be too hot the latter half of cooking chicken. Drain on brown paper; serve on hot buttered toast with Béchamel Sauce.
Béchamel Sauce Ingredients: 4 tablespoons butter 4 tablespoons flour 1 ½ cups highly seasoned chicken stock ½ cup hot thin cream 2 egg yolks Salt, pepper, few grains nutmeg Process: Boil sweet potatoes, remove skins and cut lengthwise in one-half inch slices. Cool. Dip each slice in melted butter, sprinkle with salt, pepper and thickly with brown sugar. Lay in a well-greased dripping pan and brown in a hot oven. Dispose around rim of platter containing Fried Chicken.
A Sunday Dinner Menu Browned Sweet Potatoes Season one quart of canned tomatoes with one and a fourth teaspoons salt, one-eighth teaspoon pepper, two tablespoons sugar, one-half tablespoon grated onion and a few grains cayenne. Moisten one and one-half cups of soft bread crumbs with one-half cup melted butter. Butter a deep baking dish, sprinkle with a thick layer of crumbs. Pour in tomato mixture and cover with remaining crumbs. Bake in the oven until cooked throughout and crumbs are browned.
Stuffed Tomatoes Process: Select six firm, smooth tomatoes. Cut a thin slice from the blossom end. Carefully scoop out the pulp and mix it with and equal quantity of cooked corn, rice or bread crumbs. Season with salt, pepper, and few grains cayenne, three tablespoons melted butter and a few drops of onion juice. Refill tomato cups, replace the tops, place them in a buttered baking dish and bake thirty minutes.
Kole Slaw with Cream Dressing Process: Shred half a head of cabbage very fine. Soak in cold, acidulated water to cover (add one tablespoon
vinegar to one quart water). Drain and mix thoroughly with Cream Dressing. Chill and serve in lemon cups arranged in nests of cress or parsley. Cream Dressing Ingredients: 3 hard cooked egg yolks 1 teaspoon salt Few grains cayenne or paprika 1 teaspoon mustard 2 tablespoons vinegar Few drops onion juice or 1 teaspoon finely chopped chives 1 ½ cups thick cream
Sugar Syrup
Process: Cook one cup sugar and one and one-half cups water ten minutes, while stirring to dissolve sugar. Add two thin shavings of orange rind to syrup while cooking. I hope you will enjoy the recipes in this menu for a Sunday meal. I look forward to hearing from you and learning the news of your families there in Universal City. I remain your loyal friend,
Viola May Miller
Process: Mash and rub the egg yolks through a sieve, add seasonings (except cayenne), then vinegar, onion juice or chives. Whip cream until stiff, and add a little at a time to the first mixture, beating constantly. When all is used, sprinkle in a few grains cayenne or paprika.
Baked Apples Stuffed With Figs Process: Select fine-flavored, tart apples, wipe, core and pare. Fill cavities with washed figs cut in pieces. Bake until tender in a hot oven, basting with hot sugar syrup. Serve cold with thick cream sweetened, and flavored with nutmeg.
About the receipe This letter and recipe was compiled and written by a very own, Barbie Butz. Butz is a long time community supporter, fellow Colony Days Board Member and Atascadero News columist. She was also the Grand Marshall of the Parade in 2015. Butz’s inspiration in the letter was writing as her grandmother, Viola May Miller. Butz, “thought it would be fun to use someone from 1913 era. My mother was born in 1916 so my Grandma would have been keeping-house in 1913!” We definately agree that this a fun throwback at what folks in the Colony would have served for Sunday Dinner in 1913. If you see Barbie Butz at Colony Days be sure to say hello to her!
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A Publication of the Atascadero News • 33
Highlights: 2017 Colony Days Tea Atascadero News file photos
2017 Colony Days Royalty crowned at the Colony Founders Tea by 2016 Royalty. 2017 Colony Days Grand Marshal Jerry Tanimoto King Ed Chidlaw and Queen Doris Reynolds
34 • Atascadero Colony Days • October 2018
100 Years: Thank The Administration Building You Original construction of the Historic Atascadero City Hall began in 1914 and was completed in 1918. In 2003, the building sustained significant damage in the San Simeon Earthquake. After being closed for 10 years, and undergoing extensive renovations and retrofitting, the building re-opened in August 2013. 2018 marks the 100 years of its completion.
Photos contributed by Kent Kenney
Atascadero/Morro Bay Insurance Agency Jason Cybulski
7070 Morro Road, Suite A Atascadero, CA 93422
phone: 805-466-1062 fax: 805-466-2494 www.atascaderoins.com
Thank you for supporting the 2018 Colony Day Official Program A Publication of the Atascadero News • 35