Got Milpitas in your Attic?

As we announced at our last meeting, the Historical Society has been given the opportunity to display Milpitas history items in the glass cases in the lobby of our City Hall. We are hoping to find bits of Milpitas history that you can loan us (or donate if you prefer) that we can display there along with other historical items that the society already owns. We have loan or donation forms that you can fill out to make sure your items are returned to you or you get a tax credit for them.

Call Harriett McGuire for more information at 262- 7979.

Information from the May Meeting

In case you missed our May meeting about the Santa Clara County Historical and Genealogical Society (SCCHGS), and how to find the information you need to document your family tree, you can find a wide variety of family records at the at the SCCHGS website.

You can find lots of help at the Santa Clara City Library, 2635 Homestead Road in Santa Clara, where representatives of the SCCHGS can help you. You can call the library at (408) 615-2900 or go the Santa Clara City Library website.

Genealogy Topic of May 11th Meeting

The next meeting of the Milpitas Historical Society, will be a presentation on researching genealogy, given by Trina Gentry. Ms Gentry serves as Second Vice President and Editor of Connections, a publication of Santa Clara County history and genealogies for the Santa Clara County Historical and Genealogical Society.

Her presentation will cover how to work on your family tree and what the society offers for help to family historians and researchers through the vast local and international collection housed in the Santa Clara Central Library on Homestead Road.

The library and the society have combined collections including not only Santa Clara County and California records, but also genealogical information from a variety of other places in the United States, including New England and the southern states as well as family information about ethnic groups such as Italian, Jewish, Native American, Canadian, and many others.

The Milpitas Historical Society meeting will be held Wednesday, May 11 at 7 pm in the Community Room of the Milpitas Public Library, 160 N. Main Street. The public is invited to attend free of charge and meet Ms. Gentry. For further information on the Historical Society, phone (408) 320-9587.

Light refreshments will follow the meeting.

Laguna School in Main Street Park

By Steve Munzel, President

Milpitas is poised at a very important point in our history. For the first time, our city purchased land for use as a park. What will be done with that new parkland on Main Street is now being decided.

Generally, our neighborhood parks are all cut from the same mold: there are tot lot play areas, barbecue pits, picnic tables, and areas for ball sports. These features attract and serve a particular demographic segment of our community that is mostly young and physically active.

This new Main St. Park is 1.6 acres located next to a senior housing facility, a medical clinic, railroad tracks, and our wonderful public library. The housing development that is located behind high walls just west of the new parkland already has play equipment and picnic areas in a well-maintained park.

The Parks, Recreation, and Cultural Resources Commission (PRCRC), after many months of study, is considering recommending to the city council that Main St. Park be a different kind of park, a so-called passive park, featuring pathways, benches under shade trees, grassy areas, a flower garden maintained by volunteers, and a small museum. These are all features that seem to blend well with the quieter activities offered by the buildings anchoring this end of Main Street.

In particular, a small museum is appropriate for the park, not only as a central repository for artifacts from our vanished agricultural past, but as a place where our citizens and visitors can discover how different cultures came to Milpitas and contributed to making our city. Fortunately, support for a community museum is growing.

The Milpitas Historical Society has joined with the PRCRC in favor of locating a community museum in the new park. The Historical Society has even offered, at no cost to the city, to furnish and staff the museum.

The last one-room, wooden school house in the county, Laguna School, has generously been offered free to the city by its owner, Bill Hare (who recently won two Grammy Awards) for use as a community museum. Laguna School was built in 1865. Its first students used the chalkboard still hanging on its walls when Lincoln was president and the Civil War was raging. It would become the oldest museum structure in the South Bay if our city council agrees to accept Mr. Hare’s philanthropic gift and to invest in moving it to the Main St. Park.

Since the previous use of the parkland was as a commercial business, the sewer and water infrastructure is already in place for a museum. The building itself is free, a local group has offered to maintain it for free, there is already a parking garage just a few feet away, and there seems to be growing, broad support for a museum from so many community members, — so when will there be a better time to act?

Right now we see the best and cheapest opportunity for Milpitas – the only city town in Santa Clara County without a museum – to have one of the most historic structures in the county and the state as our own community museum and to put it right next door to the finest library around.

To be sure, it will not be without cost, but considering that the price of a single tot lot playground can run $3 million, by not building one of those in Main St. Park, the City should be able to save enough money to provide ample funds for a small, one-room museum
Please join with the rest of our community to encourage our friends and neighbors on the city council to let us all have a museum of our own.

Milpitas Street Name Stories: Evans Road

Evans Road, which marks the eastern boundary of residential Milpitas in many places, is named for Josiah Evans, one of our early settlers, who owned a ranch that bordered the road.

Evans came to Milpitas in 1853 from Ohio after a few years in the California gold fields, during which time he founded the Butte County city of Evansville. He bought 800 acres of Rancho Tularcitos land in 1853. His ranch was described in 1874 by a reporter for the San Jose Mercury as having fine orchards of fruit and nut trees. The present day road follows the same route as the historic road that served the ranches of the 1860s.

In 1862, his daughter, America Evans, married Samuel Ayer, another Milpitas pioneer rancher, who became a respected long-time county supervisor, for whom the first high school in Milpitas was named. That school (1959- 1980) was located at 1395 E. Calaveras Blvd, the current location of the Milpitas Sports Center.

Milpitas Street Name Stories-Dixon Landing

Dixon Landing Road, and Dixon Road, its continuation east of Highway 880, were named for Matthew Dixon, who came west for the gold rush, and in 1861 bought 600 acres of land, on both sides of the Santa Clara/Alameda county line, for his farm. The area was then known as Harrisburg. He built his house on the eastern side of the then-Mission Highway, and made a road down to the waterfront, where he and his neighbor, Captain Valpey, built rough docks for flat-bottomed, two-masted scow schooners to load hay, and grain from the Milpitas and surrounding areas. The landing was next to the former Fremont Airport.

The last existing scow schooner, the Alma, is on display at the Maritime Museum in San Francisco. Built in 1891, the Alma was found rotting on the Alviso mud flats and rescued in 1959 and was restored in by the state park service.

Santa Clara County Archives

At our last meeting, on Wednesday, March 9, Trista Raezer, Archivist for the Santa Clara County Archives, showed us the rich resources housed at the new county archives, including such things as cattle brand registration and voting ballots of the past, as well as marriage, birth, death,, property, political, and other records.

As part of the presentation, she showed us a photograph of this grand old Hall of Records building in San Jose, built in 1893 on the corner of First and St. James Streets, It also housed the offices of the county clerk, treasurer, auditor, surveyor, recorder and superintendent of schools until it was taken down in 1966 because it was not earthquake safe.

You can find more information about the Archives and its collections at http://archives.sccgov.org.
The current Santa Clara County Archives are now at 1875 Senter Road in San Jose (near Kelly Park).

Shapell Trust Fund Settled

By Steve Munzel, Historical Society President

In 1990, Shapell Industries granted The Milpitas Historical Society $100,000 to be used to restore the Alviso Adobe. In 1992, the Society used some of the money to buy a tarp to put over the leaky roof of the adobe. In 2008, the Society used more of the money to put in a special drainage system that diverts rainwater away from the adobe.

In 2005, the president of the Society signed an agreement with the city to turn over all of the Shapell Trust fund to the city when the city presented invoices for any work on the Alviso Adobe to the Society – even if restoration was unfinished. Previous presidents had refused to sign the same agreement when it was offered to them. Although no vote was taken directing him to sign the agreement and no vote to ratify it was made afterward, the Society’s 2011 board of directors determined that we nevertheless should honor this commitment.

At the March 9, 2011 regular meeting, the membership voted unanimously to disburse to the city the rest of the Shapell Trust fund. The payment of $83,392.79 will be made in November when the CD that the funds are in matures.

Preserve Your Precious Family Heritage

The April 13, 2011, meeting of the Milpitas Historical Society will feature Kathleen Orlenko, a professional conservator, who will demonstrate how to protect and preserve your family documents and photographs as well as different ways to store your family treasures. The meeting will be held at 7 pm in the Community Room of the Milpitas Library, 160 N. Main Street.

Ms Orlenko will also discuss preservation supply vendors and conservation treatment options. She began her long career as a conservator in the Conservation Office of the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C and now has a private business in conservation of art on paper and of rare books and documents, and acts as consultant on preservation issues to various institutions and private collectors.

For further information on Kathleen Orlenko, and on her career and work in this field go to her web site.

Light refreshments will follow the meeting.

Gilroy Hot Springs

The Gilroy Hot Springs presentation is scheduled for the Historical Society’s next  meeting on Wed. Sept. 8, 2010 at 7 pm in the Milpitas Library Community Room, N. Main Street.

In a corner of Santa Clara Valley there exists an exceptional historical site that very few know anything about and one that far fewer have ever visited.

Located in the eastern foothills at about 2000 ft. elevation above Gilroy at the far end of a canyon sits the 150 year old resort of Gilroy Hot Springs.

The resort first began in approximately 1860 receiving visitors including California’s elite.

The resort was widely known for it’s recreation and curative powers.

Early advertising cite the ability to leave S.F. by train in the morning and having taken a special livery from the Gilroy train station arrive on site by afternoon.

In it’s heyday the resort is known to have entertained 500+ guests as well as the staff and their families who lived on-site.

Although the hotel and sleeping annex burned down in the late 1900′s their still exists a small town of cabins, barn, and resort facilities.

In the latter years of the sites operations in the late 1900′s the site was home to app. 60 post-internment camp Japanese-American families.

Currently, due to the extremely fragile state of the site access to this historical monument is limited to guided tours offered by the Friends of Gilroy Hot Springs.

Two members of the Friends of Gilroy Hot Springs will be presenting a narrated slide show as well as a display of artifacts to members of the Milpitas Historical Society as well as  members of the general public.