Isaac N. Roop, Esquire

North Roop Street, Susanville, 1931. Courtesy of B.R. Zimmerman Collection
North Roop Street, Susanville, 1931. Courtesy of B.R. Zimmerman Collection

Susanville’s founder wore many hats, one being an attorney at law. There is the interesting tale when Roop was to take the bar examination for the Nevada Territory. At that hearing, a lawyer from Carson City attempted to provide Roop with some assistance. The bar examination was fairly simple and one of the more difficult questions was the definition of a corporation. The Carson attorney informed Roop that “A corporation is a creature of the law, having certain powers and duties of a natural person.” When Judge Gordon Mott, who presided over the examination asked Roop to define a corporation Roop replied, “A corporation is a band of fellows without any soul of whom the law is a creature, who have some powers and take a great deal many more, and entirely ignore the statutory duties imposed on them.” Thus, with that remark Roop was admitted to bar.

In 1865 Roop was elected Lassen County District Attorney and was re-elected to a second term in 1868. He never served the second term, as he did not post the required bond.

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Penmanship

Shinn Brothers bill for printing services to Lassen County
Shinn Brothers1880  bill for printing services to Lassen County. James Oliver Shinn excelled in spencerian script, no doubt influenced his mother, Louisa, being a school teacher. His two brothers, Al and Robert, who became attorneys had sloppy handwriting.

In education circles there has been a debate brewing over whether cursive handwriting should be taught.

By 1850, Spencerian Script had been widely adopted in schools as well as in the business community. With the advent of typewriters it began to fade away in the early 1900s. By the 1920s, schools began adopting the Palmer Method. It was considered more streamlined, less laborious and faster technique.

Of note, the Spencerian had some quirky traits, which one sees a lot in early documents of Lassen County. A double “s” such as Lassen, looks like a “p.”  This was evident in the short-lived Lassen Post Office in the Willow Creek Valley that only operated from June 19, 1874, to July 14, 1875.  Some records cite it as “Lapen,” due to the penmanship of Edward Bonyman, its first and only postmaster.

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Standish – Wrede Hotel

Wrede Hotel. Courtesy of Dorothy Story
Wrede Hotel. Courtesy of Dorothy Story

In the summer of 1937, V.R. McClure announced his intentions to tear down the Wrede Hotel and replace it with a restaurant and bar.  For whatever reason, he procrastinated and did not do the demolition until the fall of 1942.

The structure was originally known as Pringle Hall. When it was built in 1898, it was the most substantial structure in the new town of Standish. The downstairs housed Mike Phillips general mercantile store, while the upstairs was a hall, used for a multiple purposes. This is where the initial church services were held until a church could be built. It was also used for dances and various lodges held meetings.

As Standish grew more facilities became available. Frank Wrede purchased the building from James Pringle and expanded it. The upstairs was converted into hotel rooms. The downstairs had a store, restaurant and a branch office of the Bank of Lassen County.

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Susanville Roundhouse

The Southern Pacific Roundhouse, Susanville, 1947. G. Dunscomb Collection
The Southern Pacific Roundhouse, Susanville, 1947. G. Dunscomb Collection

Yes, I must confess my ignorance on this topic. This railroad’s roundhouse is unique in the sense it was isolated.  It was not something a person would drive by, and it went relatively unnoticed unless you worked for the railroad or was involved with the nearby lumber mills.

Equally, puzzling is the rarity of photographs of trains along the Fernley & Lassen line. What makes that peculiar when one takes into consideration the large amount of tonnage shipped. During its existence, I would safely estimate some three billion board feet of manufactured lumber was shipped across these rails, that with the exception of the rails left at the Susanville Depot are all gone.

If anyone has information that they would like to share about the roundhouse, it would be greatly appeciated.

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Swamp Angel

Murphy Field, November 19, 2015
Murphy Field, November 19, 2015

No this has nothing to done with some foul, slimy creature crawling out of a lagoon. There are a lot of  localized place names that over the years have been forgotten and abandoned. One example is Murphy field, where Bob Murphy and Finn Barry after graduating from college tried their hand at farming in 1916.  It did not take long for Finn to give up the farm and went on to become an attorney. Continue reading Swamp Angel

Susanville’s Thompson’s Photography Studio

Courtesy of Frances Wier
Thompson Studio, 1921. Courtesy of Frances Wier

It has been awhile since I wrote about the professional photographers of the area who left a valuable historical record behind.

In September 1912, Peter Julian “Jack” Thompson announced he was going to relocate his photography studio from Loyalton, which had been in operation there for ten years, to Susanville. However, due to some delays he did not open for business here until February 1913. Continue reading Susanville’s Thompson’s Photography Studio

Paradise City – Lassen County

Hayden Hill, 1909. Courtesy of Dallas & Joyce Snider
Hayden Hill, 1909. Courtesy of Dallas & Joyce Snider

Paradise City was one of the earliest mining camps adjacent to Hayden Hill. In 1872-73, according to the Lassen County Assessment Rolls, Joseph Miles owned a house and lot in Paradise City—though no records of any subdivision is known for that place or for Hayden Hill. Paradise City was also the location of the Providence Mining Company’s quartz mill. It was the first quartz mill constructed at Hayden Hill. This mill would crush the rock so that the gold could be extracted. Incidentally, that mill was hauled to the Hill from its original location at Hardin City in the Black Rock Desert.

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Don’t forget these books!

Books
A screen shot of some of the titles available.

Besides gift subscriptions, do not overlook a wide variety of local history books, too. There is something for everyone, since so many wide-ranging topics are covered. Many, but not all titles are available locally either at Margie’s Book Nook or Doyle’s Gift Shop. Not local, or want the ease of online ordering you can do that, too. Its all a click away here. 

P.S. Don’t forget the 2016 Lassen High Alumni Calendar!

Save Our Center

soc campaing
It was headline news everywhere.

Less than 10 years after it opened, it was disclosed that the State of California had plans to shut down the California Conservation Center at Susanville. Of course, the community fought to keep it and on December 13, 1972 the Save Our Center campaign was launched.  State Director of Corrections Ray Procunier stated that the California Conservation Center near Susanville was to be closed effective April 1, 1973. Procunier cited a decline of the inmate population by 4,000. In doing so it would eliminate 270 jobs. Procunier stated, “The cutting off of that payroll is to have an impact of the economy of that community, but Susanville is not the best location in the world for a correctional institution because of its remoteness.”

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The Gift of Lassen History

Main Street, Susanville, 1894. Courtesy of Ivor Lanigar.
Main Street, Susanville, 1894. Courtesy of Ivor Lanigar.

Not sure what to give that special someone, but want to keep the budget balanced too? Why not a gift subscription to tipurdy.org. At five dollars a month it is a bargain. You can decided whether for a month, quarter or even splurge for a year.

The recipient not only receives a daily email notification of the latest topic, but is entitled to hard to find papers on the Eagle Lake Ice Caves, too. On top of that they can partake in members only tours such as a summer solstice observance at an ancient solar observatory. Those that can’t attend tours, or live too far away, as there are supporters not just across the United States, but Canada, England and New Zealand, receive material concerning the field trips.

A view from the ancient solar observatory, June 2015.
A view from the ancient solar observatory, June 2015.

Information on subscriptions is found right here.  Have a question drop me a line at tim@tipurdy.org.

Exploring Lassen County's Past