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Locality: Boulder Creek, California

Phone: +1 831-338-8382



Address: 12547 Highway 9 95006 Boulder Creek, CA, US

Website: www.slvmuseum.com

Likes: 1321

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San Lorenzo Valley Museum 27.01.2021

First Christmas Tree Farms by Lisa Robinson Over seventy years ago in 1949, it was proclaimed that "Santa Cruz County May Be[come a] Christmas Tree Center." In ...fact, it wasn't until 1943, that the first Christmas Tree farm was founded in the Santa Cruz Mountains. It was James P. Loghry's TipTop Ranch, located on Skyline Boulevard in the northern tip of Santa Cruz County. It was described as a reforestation demonstration and was carried out in cooperation with the county farm advisor. Formerly the 80-acre ranch grew 40 acres of fruit and vines and 15 acres of corn and vegetables. There was a vineyard growing Golden Chassela and Black Hamburg grapes and 750 prune trees. Now the ranch had 3200 Douglas firs, which were obtained from a burnt-over area on China Grade along with 800 coulter and ponderosa pines from Salem Oregon and 50 cork oaks. An additional 2500 Douglas firs, also from China Grade, and 3000 firs from Oregon were set in beds to be planted the following year. Six years later, farmers were "being urged to grow trees on 'worthless' land." The Crest Ranch on Ben Lomond Mountain was first planted in 1948 with 13,000 seedling Douglas firs. Pictured here are Howard and Beatrice Nielsen planting fir tree seedlings on the ranch in 1949. The Nielsens bought the 135-acre ranch in 1942; land that had formerly been used to grow primarily grapes. They gradually cleared the vineyards and planted Douglas and white fir. According to Howard Nielsen the climate "causes the Christmas trees to grow more slowly than in Oregon, and consequently the branches are closer together and the trees more bushy " Just down the road on Empire Grade, at Camp Ben Lomond, a California Youth Authority camp and state division of forestry, there was an experimental plot. Douglas fir, redwood, and Monterey pine had been planted in the camp's nursery. The farmers and ranchers of the county were encouraged to plant trees on "any waste land they may have." If they did not want to go into the Christmas tree business, they were encouraged to plant for lumber, windbreaks, erosion control, and water conservation. Some of the seedlings being grown at Camp Ben Lomond were to be used for the state's reforestation work including replanting following the huge 1948 fire in the Pine Mountain and surrounding area of the Santa Cruz Mountains; 30-40,000 seedlings had already been planted. And while the nursery was growing seedlings from seeds principally from Oregon, the boys at the camp were also busily collecting seeds from trees growing in the Santa Cruz Mountains. It was predicted that Christmas tree growing would become a major industry for Santa Cruz County.

San Lorenzo Valley Museum 28.12.2020

An Epizootic! "In 1872 the U.S. economy was growing as the young nation industrialized and expanded westward. Then in the autumn, a sudden shock paralyzed social and economic life. It was an energy crisis of sorts, but not a shortage of fossil fuels. Rather, the cause was a virus that spread among horses and mules from Canada to Central America."

San Lorenzo Valley Museum 13.11.2020

Missed "Yellow Ribbons" - then watch it here! #suffrage #SharingHistory #SantaCruz

San Lorenzo Valley Museum 24.10.2020

Stop by the Faye G. Belardi Gallery between 4 and 7 pm today to see the Smithsonian Museum on Main Street Water/Ways exhibition. #waterways #ThinkWater

San Lorenzo Valley Museum 21.10.2020

Today we transported the Smithsonian Museum on Main Street Water|Ways to the Belardi Gallery. Hope to open on Friday with limited capacity - only 8 people in gallery, masks on and distanced. #waterways #sharinghistory Thanks to Museum on Main Street in Pleasanton for helping us load up the 2 U-Haul's with the 20 crates! To our Museum volunteers for helping unload the crates and to the Rotary Club of San Lorenzo Valley for directing the traffic as we unloaded.

San Lorenzo Valley Museum 07.10.2020

So sorry to hear of Colleen’s passing.

San Lorenzo Valley Museum 02.10.2020

Stay tuned! #waterways

San Lorenzo Valley Museum 21.09.2020

Watch the trailer for the upcoming performance of Yellow Ribbons! https://www.facebook.com/events/2609028449361092/

San Lorenzo Valley Museum 19.09.2020

Enjoy these wonderful photographs: https://digitalcollections.library.ucsc.edu/coll/db78td465

San Lorenzo Valley Museum 12.09.2020

Portrait Of Persistence On Exhibition Now Outside the Grace Episcopal Gallery The story of women's suffrage is a story of voting rights, of inclusion in and exclusion from the franchise, and of our civic development as a nation. Votes for Women: A Portrait of Persistence, a poster exhibition from the Smithsonian, celebrates the 100th anniversary of the Nineteenth Amendment and explores the complexity of the women's suffrage movement and the relevance of this history to Americans' lives today. Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service #Votes100 #suffrage

San Lorenzo Valley Museum 09.09.2020

Tomorrow is Ask A Curator day - what will you ask? #askacurator

San Lorenzo Valley Museum 25.08.2020

Please Help! I found this picture outside of Costco. On the back it reads, Mom and Dad, 1955. I would love to return it to its owner. It looks like an old and precious photo. Maybe if we all share it, we can find the owner.