A book review and part two of
this two-part epic…
The West Branch Mill of the Sierra Lumber Company Andy
Mark; The History Press; Charleston, SC; 2012
Tucked away in a corner of your
local independent bookseller, or, perhaps, sprinkled through their collection,
one will find gems not destined for the New York Times Best Seller List. Works by little-known local authors who
have a story to tell or a piece of history to regale, simply because that is
their passion.
Back in about 1969, my father and I took it upon ourselves
to find West Branch, the site of a small lumber mill that, by the time we’d
arrived, vanished. [See related Post: http://thechurchoftheopenroad.blogspot.com/2013/12/discovering-west-branch-mill.html] I'd been reminded of our adventure by an old Kodachrome slide of his I uncovered. Then, the other day, while shopping for books for others, I
stumbled across Andy Mark’s The West Branch Mill at a small bookseller
in Chico.
Mr. Mark apparently shares my love of history that oozes
from the canyons and foothills in and around Chico. But he did me one better: He researched and wrote about his
discoveries.
Within the cover of this little work one finds the thread
linking Chico’s earliest pioneers to an industrial past I still remember. Historic photos and their contemporary
counterparts illustrate the massive efforts in which men engaged in order to
tame this little corner of the west – and what remains of their work. I’d heard that flumes not only carried
logs from the mountains to town, but also, on rafts constructed solely for the
purpose, injured loggers. A photo
shows Dr. Newton Enloe (grandfather of a high school classmate) riding the
flume on one of these.
I thought I knew Chico Creek from headwaters to the
Sacramento. As a kid I swam and
canoed in the creek. I bicycled
and hiked in Upper Bidwell Park and was tapped, at 16, to help designate the
route for the Yahi Trail, which is maintained by the City of Chico to this
day. In 1986, my wife and I chose
to be married at the headwaters of the creek in Chico Meadows. Still, I had no idea that, four or five
miles east of the park, a huge, hand-built arching, wooden structure supported a flume from
the mill.
Original Source: Mr. John Nopel |
Well-researched (Recall church elder “John” from a previous
post? That’d be John Nopel, longtime
area historian who contributed the flume picture included herein) it contains
stories of humor, determination and grit.
This piece of local history makes me want to discover more bits of lore
in the field and more historic works in the bookstore.
One unfortunate footnote,
however: The text and the maps
included in Mark’s work confirm that all those years ago, Dad had not
parked the Land Cruiser anywhere near the old West Branch Mill. I think we may have found the hotel a
mile or so up the hill from the mill.
To me, this revelation appears to present a challenge, now doesn’t it?
© 2013
Church of the Open Road Press
Mom was born in Chico in '21, me here in '51. Would love to know aprox location of West Branch Mill & mill pond. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteWish I could tell you, but, apparently, Dad and I were never there. If you can find a copy of the book referenced in this post, it might help locate the actual spot.
ReplyDeleteRegards, Dave "Bumpa"