Thursday, May 17, 2012

REGISTRATION TIMES

AT PORTALS
WEDNESDAY  9 TO 6:30
THURSDAY     7:30 TO 8:45
FRIDAY            7:30 TO 8:45 AND 5 T0 7:30
SATURDAY     7:30 TO 9:00

LAST MEETING BEFORE DIGGINS

Wednesday, May 30th-
5:00- School Tour leader meeting at the Diggins site( walk through your route and flow of the days program
5:45 to 6:15- Pizza party
6:15 to 7:15 - saftey, last minute annoucements and info on 1852 and venue interpretation
Happy to have you all here at the park in 14 days for Diggings Tent Town 1852 !! 
We are no longer taking registration- if you would still like to help, please call Amber at 209-536-2913 or email acantisano@parks.ca.gov.  We have almost 150 volunteers participating this year- if you are one of them and have some extra time to help us staff a venue etc please let me know.

As we are now critically low in staffing please make sure you are making an effort to contact me and I can pass info on to others in the park as we move in to the last few weeks before DIGGINGS.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Clothing in the Gold Rush

Borthwick remarked on the range of clothing styles he saw:


"Those who did not stick to their former style of dress, indulged in all the extravagant license of California Costume, which was of every variety that caprice could suggest. No man could make his appearance sufficiently bizarre to attract any attention. The prevailing fashion among the ragtag and bobtail was a red or blue flannel shirt, wide-awake hats of every conceivable shape and colour, and trousers stuffed into a big pair of boots."


Before the Gold Rush, clothing was generally made to order, whether by a wife, mother, seamstress, tailor or shirtmaker. California gold seekers brought few items of wearing apparel with them, or wore them out very quickly. The predominance of men, with few women to care for their needs, encouraged the development and expansion of the ready-made clothing industry. J.D. Borthwick noted: "The clothing trade was almost entirely in the hands of the Jews, who are very numerous in California, and devote their time and energies exclusively to supplying their Christian bretheren with the necessary articles of wearing apparel."


Jose Arnaz, of San Buenaventura provided this description of the clothing of Californio women: "The dress of the women. . . was very plain. Ordinary dresses were made of English or American calico, though rich women used the more expensive French goods and had also silk gowns for festive occasions. Stockings were of white cotton, and satin shoes were worn at the balls. Rebozos of cotton and silk were the customary cloaks, and they were so essential that many costing only fifteen or sixteen dollars in Mexico were sold for ten times that amount in California. Fancy tortoise-shell combs were popular, and some ladies had silk mantillas to wear to church. Women of wealth often owned gold or pearl necklaces, gold earrings, and finger rings set with diamonds, emeralds, and other precious stones." [note that this observation was made in a coastal area, prior to the Gold Rush]


--From The Old Town San Diego Retailer's Reference
THE NEXT DIGGINS MEETING WILL BE MOVED FROM MAY 12 TO MAY 5TH..
Where:  Eagle Cotage
When: May 5th from 10:00 to 11: 45 Diggins Meeting.
Discussing cenarios for town and last minute needs for staffing etc.
 For more information contact:  Amber Cantisano
               acantisano@parks.ca.gov
                or 209-536-2913. 


Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Costuming Information for Tent Town

Costuming information
Sent to us by Judith Peebles, via Louise Kirk (thanks!)

Lots of photos of extant garments.

http://www.cwrl.utexas.edu/~ulrich/19cdress/50s-60s.htm
Merchants provided not only provisions and necessities, but also news for miners. Many kept current by reading from their stock of newspapers, books and periodicals. Daily transactions familiarized them with neighborhood and domestic affairs, while travels or contacts with wholesalers made most proprietors aware of more distant events. California merchants were well informed and respected, although not always agreed with.

Going to the store to purchase groceries, supplies and other merchandise was not the quick procedure of today. It was commonly a social occasion. Individuals came to argue politics, exchange gossip, gamble and share each others company. Leisure hours were spent in stores as a form of recreation and most proprietors accommodated them although at times loafers could be a problem.

Some storekeepers served the community as postmasters or express agents. Alonzo Delano described the letter keepers importance to those individuals away from their families during the Gold Rush: "The trader is the general receptacle of news, either as an express agent, or from his position in seeing more of the wandering Esaus from the valley, and the miner sends through him to th epost office, his hopes, his fears, his love, the whole outpouring of his very soul, written in burning words, to those who are dearer to him than all the world, and for whose sake he exiles himself, or receives through the same channel, with a glistenting eye, the long, long, expected letter from HOME."

With American currency scarce in California, merchants had to be well informed on financial matters. They had to understand the exchange value of: gold, foreign coins, bank notes from other communities, and different commodities. This was especially true in the years before banks became well established.

Undoubtedly, a merchant's attire reflected his personal background and traditions, whether a Californio, from the Eastern Seaboard, France, Chile, or elsewhere. During the Gold Rush, Englishman J.D. Borthwick noted how different nationalities could be determined by their clothing: "The Mexicans were very numerous, and wore their national costume--the bright colored serape thrown gracefully over the left shoulder, with rows of silver buttons down the outside of their trousers, which were generally left open, so as to show the loose white drawers underneath, and the silver-handled bowie-knife in the stamped leather leggins. Englishmen seemed to adhere to the shooting-coat style of dress, and the down-east Yankees to their eternal black dress-coat, black pantaloons, and black satin waistcoat; while New Yorkers, Southerners, and Frenchmen, came out in the latest Paris fashions."

-- From The Old Town San Diego Retailer's reference and Historic Account Book or, Advice for Merchants Re-creating a c.1835-1872 Store








"The above illustration will be recognized as a correct Post-Office scene upon the arrival of mails from the Atlantic. An interval of two weeks elapsing from the arrival of one mail to another, creates an anxiety to hear from home that can scarcely be comprehended by other than residents of California. At an early hour of the morning on which it is announced the mails will be ready for delivery, anxious faces commence forming in the lines leading to the different deliveries, and by 8 o'clock the whole interior of the spacious building is completely jammed with persons, as well as the streets adjoining. The letters are generally delivered with all possible dispatch, yet evening will often find the different lines but little shortened; and the RUSH sometimes continues for three days.

Persons in the Atlantic States will readily understand the disappointment a friend here experiences at being told at the window, after undergoing for three or four hours the persecution of being jammed and jostled by an anxious crowd, exposed to a burning sun or the freezing and disagreeable winds which at seasons sweep round the corners of our streets carrying with them clouds of dust--yes, at being told by the clerk that there is nothing for him. The announcement falls harshly upon his ear, and with the speed of thought settles upon his countenance a shade of gloom and disappointment. On the other hand, should a letter be handed him, it is refreshing to note the gleam of joy that sparkles in his eyes, and the smile of thankfulness that beams upon his face, as he places the sacred epistle in his pocket, and walks hurredly away. Friends in the Atlantic States, could they but for a moment witness the scene so perfectly represented by the artist in the sketch above, and watch the anxiety depicted in the features of each figure slowly working his way to the delivery, we think they would be more punctual in their correspondence, for it would be no pleasing sight to notice the disappointment of a husband, a father, a brother or a friend, caused perhaps, by their negligence. "

Published by LELAND & McCOMBE. Post Office, Building, San Francisco Engraved expressly for the Publishers by Anthony & Baker. [1854]




From the Virtual Museum of the City of San Francisco http://www.sfmuseum.org/hist10/postoffice.html