top of page
All Posts


Foxes for Neighbors
Up until around 1948 we had no neighbors in sight of our home in Auburn. Then Ken and Georgia Fox bought the three lots just around the bend in the street to the west of us. Dr. Kenneth Fox was a young dentist who had grown up locally, the son of a music teacher, as I recall. Ken was a man to be taken seriously when he applied himself to a task. He showed up with a war surplus jeep, and proceeded to literally beat down the trees and brush on the property with that jeep. Wh
James Evans
Angelo and the Fruit Shed
There weren’t many jobs available to young people in Auburn. Some kids found work in gas stations and grocery stores. Some worked on their family cattle and fruit ranches. The largest employer of summer help was the Mendelson-Zeller Company that operated a fruit packing shed on Nevada Street on the west side of town adjoining the north bound railroad line. There was another fruit shed further up the road, but it didn’t do as much business, and there were other sheds locate
James Evans


The Gold Shows
The Gold Shows that I remember occurred in the summers of 1948, 1949, and 1950. These years straddled the centennial of the Gold Rush. There was at least one more Gold Show, earlier, in 1935, and perhaps more. (See picture, below.) My memory is hazy, but I think the celebrations lasted about a week. There was a carnival which set up shop in what was a vacant lot next door to the Catholic Church, and across the street from the old Lincoln Way School (now, Auburn’s city hall
James Evans


Blair
I have already made several references Blair Birdsall Dobbas Cranston, but there is more to say about her. Every community has one or more leading families, and the Birdsall family would most likely fit into that category. (See References for added information.) There were three Birdsall children: Blair, Thersa, and Mary. I don’t know their relative ages, but, naturally, they were all members of the San Souce Club. Thersa married Fred Haswell, who I remember little about.
James Evans
Sheriff Jim Kenison
I don’t know the exact dates of Sheriff Jim Kenison’s term of office, but I do know that he was sheriff for a long time in the 1940’s and 50’s. As with all law enforcement politicians, Sheriff Jim cast a wide net gathering his supporters. I don’t have any idea whether or not he was a good sheriff, but I do know that he enjoyed his drinks, and didn’t like to drink alone. When I was in elementary school, my father carried a Deputy Sheriff card in his wallet. He enjoyed showi
James Evans
Andy Dorer
Andy and Loretta Dorer were also part of my parent’s circle of friends. Loretta worked with my father at the PG&E. I think she was fond of him for his kindness and virtues, as were several other ladies with whom I came in contact at the office. I always considered Loretta as my father’s “office wife.” She was the woman who looked out for my father and his best interests while at work. I don’t exactly remember, but I think she also was a San Souci member. Who wasn’t? And
James Evans
The Holt Billiard Parlor & Recreation Center
Every town has what I would call a center of gravity, a hub or a place that serves as a fulcrum to balance all of the other places of commerce and local interest around it. From that point of view, my candidate for Auburn’s social hub was the local poolroom located downtown on Lincoln Way. This is not to say that the local pool hall was that common a gathering place. On the contrary, the clientele was generally limited to three groups of “customers:” the local louts, laya
James Evans


Life on the “Cee-Bar-Cee”
No other place in my childhood had a greater impact on my formation than the Cranston’s ranch. Graham Cranston was born and raised in Santa Barbara. He came from a prosperous family, and went an elite boarding school in the East for his high school education. He subsequently went to Harvard where he majored in English and journalism. According to my mother, he came back to California after graduation, and worked as a journalist for a while in San Francisco. I don’t know why
James Evans
“Aunt” Vera
My godfather was Sam Babcock, Vera’s husband. My godmother was Phyllis Reed. Nevertheless, Vera was always known to me as “Aunt” Vera., and an informal godmother. We used to go over to the Babcock’s for dinner occasionally when I was young. They had a small two bedroom house across the street from Placer College (now Sierra College in Rockland, this campus is now part of Placer High School) as mentioned earlier concerning Pearl Harbor. What I remember most about their home
James Evans


Thelma
One of my mother’s best and earliest friends in Auburn was Thelma Cooper Hughes Goodman. Thelma’s father had been a district manager with PG&E, and she could probably be classified as one of the community’s elite young ladies. By the time I came along, she was married to Bill Hughes. I was too young to know much about Bill. I do know that he was drafted during WWII, and that this left Thelma to her own devices and desires. Thelma, of course, was a member of San Souci and
James Evans
bottom of page