In 1908, Sacramento becomes the first public library in the state to offer free access to all county residents. This is the beginning of California’s…
Comments closedMonth: August 2020
Pío de Jesus Pico influences California history for most of the 19th Century. Born in 1801, he is 31 years old when appointed governor —…
Comments closedAs the last fluent speaker of Wukchumni, one of many dialects of the Yokuts tribal group of the San Joaquin Valley, Marie Wilcox decides to…
Comments closedOn December 18, 1879, One-Eyed Charley, one of the legendary stagecoach drivers of early California, dies of tongue cancer. As locals prepare the body for…
Comments closedOn December 6, 1887, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office issues a patent for Dam and Reservoir Construction to Harriet Russell Strong, Whittier walnut farmer…
Comments closedIt is late summer 1839, and John Sutter makes his first journey up the Sacramento River to establish a fortified colony that will be the…
Comments closedEmily Pitts Stevens occupies a hallowed position in the pantheon of early suffrage advocates in California. As a 25-year-old teacher of night classes for working women…
Comments closed“For the first time in the history of this nation a political party has chosen a Negro woman for the second highest office in the…
Comments closedOn October 24, 1884, Marietta Stow declares her candidacy for vice president of the United States on the Equal Rights Party ticket, during a speech…
Comments closedIn 1961, José Sarria runs for a seat on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors and becomes the first openly gay candidate to run for…
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