18 • JUNE 2015 THE PETALUMA POST Skip Sommer has restored historic properties in Sonoma and Marin Counties, including The Great Petaluma Mill, The River House and Larkspurs famed Lark Creek Inn. He has been credited with initiating restoration of Petaluma's historic downtown. Skip is an honorary life member of Heritage Homes of Petaluma, a life member of The Petaluma Museum and recipient of Petaluma’s Good Egg of the Year award. He contributed to the book: "Celebrating Petaluma".Email: [email protected]. L ast April, it was announced that S M A RT, w h i c h will run our soonto-be-commuter trains, wanted to give away the 1904 railroad swing-bridge over the Petaluma River and replace it next September, with a new $16 million dollar model. Our present one, they reflected, was a “good old bridge”. In 1904, the Petaluma Argus headlined that the “good old bridge” was a “wonderful engineering feat” which had, (then), replaced the old 152-foot wooden bridge with a forged steel 300,000 pound 182-foot swing-bridge. The final day of installation drew a large crowd of onlookers. While, …. in other ’04 RR news, a Petaluma freight train had tumbled off the tracks into our Creek, causing….. “consternation”. Petaluma was still a small town in 1904, as the Argus announced in April, that “Citizens appeared before the City Board with strong protests against the hog pens on Western and Baker Sts.” (The pig stys were removed just 12 days later, as we were becoming soooo sophisticated). …One local ad suggested that, if you had a toothache, or a sick cat, you could go to “Dr. Ralph Mazza, Veterinary Surgeon and Dentist”, to get both fixed. ….(I Wonder if he sterilized his instruments?) That month, it was also advertised that “Norris & Rowes Big New Shows with 2-RINGS-2 ” would be playing the baseball grounds here and featuring,….. (Are you ready for this?): “Elephants, camels, lions, tigers, hyenas, tapirs, llamas, buffalo, kangaroos, elk, deer, ponies, goats, ostriches, monkeys and educated seals” ! (Hopefully, not all in the same ring, at the same time). (Anyhow, what would P.E.T.A. say?) In 1904, you could get 1 to 4 Color offset Printing I Digital Color Printing I HigH sPeeD Digital CoPying •BusinessCards •Mailers •Letterhead •Flyers •Envelopes •Labels •Brochures •Stamps •Newsletters •PromoItems •Booklets •GraphicServices Phone (707) 763-4188 • Fax (707) 763-9541 139 Lakeville Street Petaluma, CA 94952 [email protected] • www.minutemanpetaluma.com PETALUMAPOST.COM Stories from the Past The Bridge at Haystack Landing by History Editor Skip Sommer a roast beef sandwich in Petaluma for 5 cents. And, if such dining-out had become a ‘chubby’ problem for you, you could purchase a “Nemo Self-Reducing Corset, just $3.00 at Phillips and Tough, under the clock tower“… to encase your problem with rubber. And, if you were interested in real estate, this ad from Conley & Lamb would get attention: “3 acres in City. Good house. Cow. 650 hens. 14 chicken houses. 2 incubators. $2,900.”(That was IN Petaluma !) You could ride over to s e e t h a t p ro p e r t y i n a horseless carriage, if you were one of the very few, fortunate enough to own one at that time. And, on May 24th 1904, it was announced: “A. B. Hill to wed Miss Fairbanks”. Thus, merging two of Petaluma’s founding families. Their fathers, Hiram Fairbanks and William Hill, had both struck it rich in 1849 and brought their gold to the Petaluma Valley, to found competing banks and feed mills. (The Fairbanks mansion, still one of the largest homes in Petaluma, has three stories and seven bedrooms on the corner of 8th and ‘D’ Sts.) Speaking of ‘founding fathers’: On May 24th 1904, our paper said: “The McNear Company to construct a two story brick building on Kentucky Street for mercantile purposes”. It was to sport a “Massive iron front, the first in the city, on the Main Street side“…. It’s now McNear’s Bar and Grill…. (Petaluma was just getting public sewers in 1904, but you can bet that Mr. John McNear, Esq. had hooked-up early-on). Nationally, it was a heck of a year. Albert Einstein had just published his Theory of Relativity, The Dow Jones Industrial Average had just broken 100 ! (now 1,8000+), the first motion picture had been released, Wilbur Wright had just flown the first aircraft, the United States, under Teddy Roosevelt, had taken over the construction of the Panama Canal and, on February 5th, the U.S. had ended its occupation of Cuba. In San Francisco, in 1904, The Bank of Italy h a d b e e n f o u n d e d . ( It would eventually become t h e Ba n k o f A m e ri c a ). Also, in “The City”, China Town was finally recovering from a disastrous four-year stretch of the Bubonic Plague, which had take 113 lives there. No one knew then, that an incredible earthquake was just 16 months away…. It would change everything, but… the “good old bridge” would be unaffected and live-on for another 111+ years. Scan to visit The Petaluma Post online
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