Placerville, California 1910
SHADES OF HANGTOWN
SHADES OF HANGTOWN
By Shannon Thomas Casebeer
March 17, 2015
DEDICATION
To my beloved ancestors, and the faith and fortitude that drove them to pursue their dreams, this innocuous little parable is affectionately dedicated.
To my beloved ancestors, and the faith and fortitude that drove them to pursue their dreams, this innocuous little parable is affectionately dedicated.
SOMETIMES IN THE EVENING
Sometimes in the evening
When the sun is sinking low,
And the pines are silhouetted
And I’ve nowhere else to go,
I remember good ol’ Placerville
In the distant days of yore,
And I’d very nearly sell my soul
To walk its streets once more.
When its avenues were dusty
And its storefronts weathered wood,
When the girls were thin and lusty
And the Ivy House still stood;
When Main Street ran a rutted course
And blooms were yet a bud,
The only ride to town, a horse,
And gold was in our blood;
When the Hangman’s Tree served nickel beer,
The Cary House was new;
Lamp-lit saloons exuded cheer
And frosty mugs of brew,
The three mile house was always full,
Lake Tahoe days away,
And folks who stopped at Hangtown
Almost always came to stay.
Father in Heaven, hear my prayer.
Dear God, please grant my plea.
If I could just awaken there.
If time could set me free.
If once more I could stroll its streets
And once more breathe it’s air,
I know there’s souls aplenty Lord
Who could benefit from prayer.
Old Dry Diggings aka Hangtown aka Placerville 1849
The sun was high, the humidity low, and the air hung heavy with
the scent of Manzanita, the drone of insects, and the obnoxious screech of
valley jays. We trudged on with determination all day long and right at dusk we
reached the crest of a pine-covered ridge. “Over the mountains of the moon,
down the valley of the shadow, ride, boldly ride, the shade replied, if you
seek for El Dorado.” So says ol’ Edgar Allan, and Lord knows Poe is well
acquainted with shadows. There below, basking in the last red rays of the
rapidly setting sun lay the storied metropolis of Hangtown. A small tormented
creek meandered through a series of deep, pine-lined ravines, and clinging
tenaciously to each bank, at close intervals and in no apparent order, squatted
several dozen shake roofed structures reminiscent of the clapboard shanties
that graced the Irish community back home. In addition to the rustic, wooden
framed structures were numerous log cabins, and on the periphery of the
settlement and lining Main Street on either side, an endless sea of tents
glowed hospitably from the lamplight within. The oak scented smoke of
countless campfires hung thick in the motionless evening air, and the entire
hollow twinkled in the light of countless lamps and flickering candles.
Laughter and jocularity rose spasmodically from a number of well lit gatherings
down below, and a melancholy rendition of “Little Annie Laurie”, scratched out
hesitantly on a pair of slightly flat fiddles, rose plaintively from a massive
canvas covered structure in the center of the scene. We eventually found access
to the main street and proceeded slowly and deliberately in the waning light
until we reached a large open area in front of the crowded tent. This was
evidently the heart of downtown. Main Street, lined on each side with false
storefronts, dropped in a gentle grade from the east; widening and splitting as
it approached a long row of canvas covered shops. At the east end of this
row of shops stood a bell tower as high as any building in town. Main
Street proceeded west, past a number of dimly lit but well patronized saloons,
and Center Street led quickly toward a row of barns and stables which faced the
rear of the shops to their south and hung precariously over the banks of scenic
Hangtown Creek to the north.
Placerville California 1890
Twilight arrived early that evening. The storm abated, and despite occasional flurries the moon shone down at intervals through a partly cloudy sky, lending an eerie translucence to the scene and casting curious shadows on the glimmering snow. The breathtaking beauty of the mountains once more overcame me. The magnificent ponderosa pines leaned and swayed precariously, each bow hanging heavy, laden with a mantel of white. The air was still and silent, with only the occasional pop of an overburdened limb disturbing the quiet as it echoed from the canyon beyond. Smoke boiled and billowed from a forest of stovepipes, and the sound of kindling being chopped rang at intervals from a series of locations and echoed from the ravine. I stood for a long time, shivering and staring awestruck across the snow-covered Sierras. I’ve never experienced air fresher, shadows deeper, or a scene so extraordinarily quiet and pristine. You’ll laugh and think I’m crazy, but it seemed as though I could almost hear the stars. On the afternoon of the fifth day, a bitter north wind whipped down from the high country. The storm returned with a vengeance and the temperature dropped to around thirty degrees. I pulled my chair closer to the potbellied stove and poured myself some coffee from the gray graniteware pot. As twilight approached I sat staring out the window and listening to the moan of the howling wind as it tore at the shingles and rattled the chimney cap. I could hear the hiss of sleet as it began filling the ruts and hoof prints in the muddy street, and icicles began to form and hung in profusion from the eaves. The sleet came down fitfully against the window and periodically a gust of wind would find its way down the stovepipe and the old cast iron heater would belch smoke from around its dampers and red hot lid. After a while the rough plank roof began dripping and leaking like a sieve, and one by one a strategically placed company of pots and kettles joined in a chorus of plinks, plops and piddles as they filled quickly with their captured leakage and began splashing rhythmically on the floor. Clearing a spot on the frosted windowpane, I squinted and peered outside. The snow was coming down in earnest now, and the street was entirely abandoned, with the exception of a few hardy souls on the boardwalk by the bell tower. I warmed a blanket for myself, kicked back in my chair and leaned against the wall. The stove dampers were wide open, and I remember watching the firelight dancing on the wall. Then the cobwebs came and darkness took me in.
The early
1850s found old Hangtown up one minute and down the next but always hanging
tough. The irrepressible ravine city was forever booming or
busting. In 1852 the little metropolis was thriving and rapidly gaining
renown as the bustling hub of activity in the heart of the Mother Lode. The
spring rains in Hangtown are long and leisurely, but once they quit they’re
done! By June of 1852 Hangtown was bone-dry and cactus thirsty. The higher elevations held a deep luxurious
snow pack and the creeks were running high, but below three thousand feet the
purple vetch was drying up, the roads were dusty, and the creeks were choked
with mud. Even the poppies were peaked. The mountains became open range. Pigs
rooted for acorns, chap-clad cowboys searched the ridges for strays, the lush
mountain meadows became home to dairies, and a melancholy chorus of cowbells
filled the air. The picturesque structures
along Main Street were in a constant state of metamorphosis. The tinder
dry buildings were forever burning down, abandoned, or completely renovated.
Main Street itself, for whatever reason, never seemed to change. The real
estate changed hands and the ramshackle, rough-sawn facades were gradually
replaced by brick and iron, but the dusty, rut-riddled boulevard held
tenaciously to its steady, time-honored course, past the courthouse, down the
grade, and widening for its familiar promenade at the belltower before
narrowing at the Round Tent and making a beeline passed the cozy inns and the
dimly lit saloons. The already infamous settlement gradually spread northward
into Bedford’s tent city and eastward up Hangtown Creek. Eventually referred to
as upper and lower town, the long narrow settlement was bisected by a crossing
near Blair’s Lumber Yard where upper town proceeded eastward along the creek
until gradually petering out just short of Smith Flat, home of Three Mile House
and the Blue Lead Mine.
SORROW SLIPS AWAY
Soft through the pines the summer breeze is blowing,
Sweet, solemn music to me.
Lightly through my mind old memories are flowing,
Tender thoughts of what life used to be.
Souls called away, golden days amid the tall grass;
Laughter lingers deep in my heart.
Pleasant moments shared, vibrant dreams of youth are ageless.
Hope unites though time may bid us part.
Shadows of time when the hours passed in moments,
Tender moments priceless to recall;
Futures to share, happy destinies awaiting,
Summer slipping gently into fall.
Seasons quickly pass. Our memories turn to treasure,
God’s gift to those who remain.
Sorrow slips away while our hearts preserve life’s pleasure.
Grief fades, but joy we retain.
HANGTOWN
TOUGH!
We
headed for Hangtown in ‘49,
But
never showed till ‘50.
Between
us we had nary a dime.
Suffice
it to say, we was thrifty!
The
Sierra Nevada’s are god-awful high!
And
the dang trail rugged at best.
Ma
took one look and groaned, “Oh my!
We
should have stayed home with the rest!”
The
creek ain’t iced up all the time.
August
heat is quick to thaw it.
It’s
just for wading. That's the crime.
If
there’s gold, I never saw it.
The
housing in Hangtown leaves much to desire.
That’s
the case ever’where we went.
But
Ma and me’s tough. There ain’t much we require,
And
we had a luxurious tent!
The
tent’s mighty cozy though lacking for room,
With
a dirt floor infested with mice;
Damp
as the dickens and cold as a tomb.
The
first year I froze to death twice!
The
wood stove was nice if ya sat on the lid.
A
bonfire would be better I’m thinkin’.
When
it dropped below thirty as often it did,
It
froze finials right off of the Franklin!
Flatlanders
are welcome despite what you hear.
You
won’t hang. I can’t even conceive it!
We’ve
oodles of room and we’re known for our beer.
Bring
plenty of cash and please leave it.
If
you’ve got a hankerin’ for livin’ on beans,
Out
west where it’s generally sunny,
Then
check out the gold camps and by all means,
Visit
Hangtown and bring lots of money!
SC
Mosquito Bridge, 1914
Mosquito Road winds along ridge top and ravine and eventually crosses a lava strewn flat. Here in the midst of pine needle covered hillsides of red clay and granite, some ancient, unrecorded volcanic action has created an unlikely landscape of unearthly geological formations and conglomerated lava. In the middle of this desolate and unlikely location, for some reason known only to them, a handful of Chinese immigrants have established a unique and isolated community. Here these peculiar, standoffish Argonauts prepare their ceremonial teas and enjoy the euphoric contents of their noxious clay pipes beyond the scrutiny of a disapproving society and with little fear of interruption. Finding the occupants entirely sociable, we struck up a conversation and visited for about an hour. And then, our lightly steeped libations consumed and the need for cordiality satisfied, we climbed back in the wagon and hames bells jingling continued on our way. Reaching the summit of a pine covered ridge, we rested the mules briefly and then began our cautious decent into the rugged canyon of the American River’s renowned south fork. The already treacherous thoroughfare soon lost all semblance of a road and gradually took on the unmistakable characteristics of a dry creek bed! Arriving eventually at the foot of a thickly wooded hill, we rode apprehensively to the edge of a deep precipice and stared in awe. At this point the prehistoric gorge was spanned defiantly by a picturesque but unnerving little suspension bridge. Constructed of gigantic, rough sawn timbers, and suspended by equally impressive cables, the primitive little conduit proceeded courageously out into thin air, and then extended precariously at a dizzying height, over a tumultuous rush of rampaging fury. The river was running high with the frigid runoff from the mountains generous and rapidly melting snow pack, and the reverberations of its unbridled onslaught resulted in a primal roar that literally shook the bridge. The midpoint of this remarkable swinging bridge afforded a spectacular vista of the riverbed some thirty feet below. Beneath us, the gut wrenching force of the rampaging river boiled and bounded through a series of violently rolling rapids and unique cylindrical formations which long eons of gradual erosion had carved into the solid granite base. The road swung immediately to the left at the opposite side of the gorge, supported by an outcropping of granite whose overhang provided home to a community of tiny bats. Below us the restless current intermittently exhibited a fleeting streak of silver as a rainbow trout would erupt from the surface in a frenzied attempt to surmount the foaming falls. Irrigated by the rising mists, lush growths of moss clung tenaciously to the rugged bluffs, and here and there a maidenhair fern found a hold and spread luxuriously in the canyons filtered light. Here in this unexpected haven we parked the rig and spread a quilt for lunch. Steller’s Jays piped from the canopy of Live oaks, and as the summer sun shone intermittently from behind a wispy sea of cumulus clouds, the mist that rose from the tumultuous rapids below periodically burst into a brilliant rainbow. The temperature warmed into the low eighties, and we sprawled on our blanket luxuriously full and absorbed the summer sun. Following a long, leisurely lunch, we proceeded across the swinging bridge and began our laborious ascent. The narrow trail ascended the cliff face in a series of narrow switchbacks, which zigzagged back and forth in a gradual climb and periodically afforded an unobstructed view, almost perpendicularly from the trails edge, one hundred feet to the boulder-buffeted torrent below. Negotiating the barely maneuverable switchbacks we eventually approached the top of a pine-covered ridge. The distant roar of the river dissipated and grew silent, replaced by the chattering of the gregarious nuthatches and chickadees which darted in and out of the cone clad bows that hung in profusion from the pine and Douglas fir. Gradually the incessant drone of insects and the familiar but indescribable sound of the breeze in the towering evergreens lulled us into a drowsiness which left us nodding and semiconscious in the gently rocking wagon. The mules set their own casual pace, occasionally addressing a persistent fly with a leisurely swish of their tails, and pausing briefly from time to time to brose on a tempting morsel along the way.
NEATH
CALIFORNIA SKIES
Asa
Camp was a pioneer,
And
a relative of mine.
My
great great grandpa headed west,
Back
in ’49.
The
trail west was rugged,
And
the wild Sierras high.
The
golden prey illusive,
But
Asa was determined he would try.
The
plains were fraught with peril,
And
the road west took a toll.
But
at last they reached the summit
Of
a steep and piney knoll.
Down
below was Hangtown,
The
end of a weary road;
The
mythical El Dorado,
Heart
of the Mother Lode.
There
Asa Camp would spend his youth.
There
he’d wed a wife.
There
he’d father children
Through
a long, industrious life.
But
first he made a second trip,
In
1854.
He
knew the long, rut riddled route.
He’d
made the trek before.
This
time he brought the Oldfield’s west,
In
this saga that I’m tellin’.
And
when their daughter came of age,
He
married Laura Ellen.
They
raised three daughters and a son,
In
Hangtown through the years.
They
buried Ella on the hill,
And
persevered through tears.
His
hands were hard and callused.
His
smile warm as toast.
He
didn’t treasure company,
But
he was a gracious host.
He
mined the rugged south fork,
And
lived on Reservoir Hill,
Panning
gold, hauling freight,
And
ruling home and hearth with an iron will.
There
his children married.
Each
lived their life with zest.
And
great great grandpa loved them all,
But
Asa loved the wild Sierras best.
He
cherished every blessing,
Neath
the California skies.
His
life was spent in gratitude,
And
he died with the wild Sierra’s in his eyes.
Laura Ellen Oldfield Camp, Baby Albert,
Asa Steven & Meda Eliza Camp
Reservoir Hill
1859 sounded a sweet note in old Hangtown’s colorful
history. As California’s neighbor to the east, Nevada had benefited as
easterners poured through the arid, inhospitable country in route to California
and its gold. Now the tables turned. Some 100 miles from the
Sacramento Valley the remote and previously benign outpost of Virginia City,
Nevada all at once exploded on the scene. With the discovery of silver,
Nevada’s Comstock Lode began drawing a new generation of Argonauts. They came
from far and wide enticed once again by fame, fortune, and unprecedented
wealth. Placerville would once again benefit by its fortuitous
location. As Hangtown prospered as people poured into El Dorado
County for its gold, they would now find themselves strategically located along
California’s route to Virginia City’s booming Comstock Lode. The
tenacious little city in the ravine would now find the traffic flow reversed,
but a rush is a rush. Hangtown’s boom was back. The lure of the Comstock
represented an irresistible draw to spectators, prospectors, and speculators of
every conceivable kind. Starry-eyed optimists were drawn out of southern
California in droves, and the route of choice was the Placerville stage
road. Old
Hangtown was fast becoming civilized. The city fathers were passing a new ordinance
every week. We knew we’d reached a new
level of sophistication when they posted an ordinance which prohibited a feller
from relieving hisself in the street.
The idea, though well received, soon proved impractical and was later
amended to apply to Main Street only.
That was a relief! Finally they
whittled her down just right by adding the clause, during business hours. By 1860
traffic through old Hangtown was thicker than flatlanders at a water rights
revolt. You literally risked your life to cross the street. From Hangtown
to Tahoe the stations and stage stops were open twenty-four/seven, but if you
dared pull off you lost your place in line, and it often took hours for another
chance to merge. During the summer the dust was so deep it was like
walking through sifted flour, and when it rained the mud holes could claim a
horse. It took a good forty-five minutes to drive the length of our
booming metropolis, and very few managed the dust-choked travail without
stopping in town for a frosty mug of beer. Many colorful saloons graced the now
booming metropolis, with each establishment much like the next. The floors were
strewn with numerous and sundry containers, strategically placed for the
purpose of capturing leakage, and a company of tarnished brass cuspidors stood
at the ready along the base of a well polished and ornate bar. Coal oil
lamps flickered determinedly from within their soot-choked chimneys, and the
atmosphere was permeated with a thick cloud of noxious smoke which belched from
the dampers of well-stoked wood heaters and countless cheap cigars. Against the
rear wall of the establishment a humidity-ravaged piano bravely plinked out a
barely recognizable medley of Irish tavern tunes, in competition with an
unsympathetic chorus of clanking utensils and beverage induced jocularity.
GROWING UP IN
GOOD, OL’ PLACERVILLE
Long
ago when I was young
I
lived on Reservoir Hill,
On
the family’s forty acres,
Outside
of Placerville;
I’ve
traveled far and traveled wide,
But
few things match the joy,
Of
memories of Placerville,
When
I was a little boy;
Recollections
of the neighborhood,
Of
cherished childhood friends,
Youthful
adventures long ago,
What
joy they bring revisited again.
Innocent
romance, holding hands,
Days
of carefree bliss,
Palms
caressing as we walked,
The
naïve delight of a chewing gum scented kiss;
Sweet eternal summers,
Crowding in a car,
For picnics on the riverbank,
Sprawled in the pleasant sands at
Chili Bar;
Splendid weekend outings,
What happy times we had,
Tenting, campfires, sleeping out,
Horseback rides and fishing trips with
Dad.
Weekend excursions to the lake,
Highway 50s passing cars,
Windshield wipers slapping time
To the radio in that ol’ Ford of ours;
Invigorating winters,
The old town all aglow,
The bell tower bedight in strings of
light,
And familiar storefronts glistening in
the snow.
I’ve traveled on the Yucatan,
Seen sunsets from Tulum,
Admired the beach at Xela,
And enjoyed a moonlit swim in the
lagoon.
I’ve strolled the streets of
Edinburgh,
Of Dublin and Quebec,
Climbed Dunn’s Falls in Jamaica,
And gotten mighty wet.
I’ve traveled Canada by rail,
Seen San Francisco’s sights,
Sipped tea at Ghirardelli Square,
And marveled at a sky alive with
kites.
Still, no other place enthralls,
No memory more excites,
Than memories of Placerville,
And Placerville’s delights.
I have no memory fonder,
And probably never will,
Than those cherished childhood
memories
Of growing up in good, ol’
Placerville.
Sis & me, mid '60s
Reservoir Hill
GLAD DAYS LONG AGO
I
remember sitting on Reservoir Hill,
While
watching storm clouds grow,
And
listening to the windswept pines
As
their branches filled with snow;
The
sense of silence building
Till
it muffled every sound,
But
the gentle rush of snowflakes
As
they blanketed the ground;
The
American River canyon
In
the fogbank down below,
And
off in the distance, Placerville
With
street lights all aglow.
Just
down the hill was granddad’s home
And
the warmth inherent in it.
If
only time were malleable
I’d
be there in a minute.
I
see my grandma at the stove,
With
all the family there,
My
granddad’s sweet mischievous grin,
His
white and wispy hair;
The
glimmer of the window panes,
And
the old dog at the gate,
Shaking
the snow from his wiry coat
And
wondering why I’m late.
Dear
God, preserve our memories
Of
glad days long ago,
Of
happy lamp lit gathering
And
Hangtown in the snow;
Of
all the precious loved ones
Who
lived and loved but brief.
May
blessings grace our days, dear Lord,
And
hope dispel old grief.
May
faith assure tomorrows joys
Despite
the winds that chill,
And
each night bring us dreams of youth,
Old
friends and Placerville.
SIERRA SPRING
Stark and leafless branches,
Festooned with buds of spring,
While robins dot the greening fields
And unseen crickets sing;
Evergreen branches dripping ice,
Bright droplets melting snow,
While rivers crest their muddy banks
And tributaries flow.
Up above the timberline,
Granite boulders shed fresh sand,
That's carried by the snow-melt
To create new spits of land.
Spring's elixir swells the branches
Of sapling sprigs and shrubs,
While Momma bear slips her winters den
To emerge with wrestling cubs.
Crocus struggling toward the light
Through dwindling drifts of snow,
While delighted children send up kites
As balmy breezes blow;
The sigh of old-growth evergreens
As evening breezes shift,
Trout feeding at the sparkling edge
Of an ice-flows lazy drift;
The roaring of a waterfall
As rainbow mists drift by,
The primordial cry of eagles
And their circles in the sky;
All God's creatures great and small
Shaking winter's chills,
While meadows lifeless days ago
Erupt in daffodils;
Each one emblematic
Of a fresh, inviting spring,
Alive with opportunities
And all the hope they bring;
And at last the call of northbound geese,
Impervious and free,
Arousing primal passions,
Stirring souls and calling me.
SIERRA SPRING
Stark and leafless branches,
Festooned with buds of spring,
While robins dot the greening fields
And unseen crickets sing;
Evergreen branches dripping ice,
Bright droplets melting snow,
While rivers crest their muddy banks
And tributaries flow.
Up above the timberline,
Granite boulders shed fresh sand,
That's carried by the snow-melt
To create new spits of land.
Spring's elixir swells the branches
Of sapling sprigs and shrubs,
While Momma bear slips her winters den
To emerge with wrestling cubs.
Crocus struggling toward the light
Through dwindling drifts of snow,
While delighted children send up kites
As balmy breezes blow;
The sigh of old-growth evergreens
As evening breezes shift,
Trout feeding at the sparkling edge
Of an ice-flows lazy drift;
The roaring of a waterfall
As rainbow mists drift by,
The primordial cry of eagles
And their circles in the sky;
All God's creatures great and small
Shaking winter's chills,
While meadows lifeless days ago
Erupt in daffodils;
Each one emblematic
Of a fresh, inviting spring,
Alive with opportunities
And all the hope they bring;
And at last the call of northbound geese,
Impervious and free,
Arousing primal passions,
Stirring souls and calling me.
GRANDDAD’S
TENT
We
did lots of camping when I was a kid.
We
camped in an old canvas tent.
I
remember the sound as it flapped in the wind.
I
remember its feel and its scent.
I
remember the sound of warm rain on its roof,
The
comfort it offered each night.
I
recall how I felt looking out at the stars
By
the campfires flickering light;
The
feel of my pillow at the end of the day,
When
my shoulders were pink from the sun,
My
grandmothers kiss as she tucked us in bed,
After
our prayers were done.
First
thing in the morning the fire was lit.
Great
Grandma brought granite-ware dishes.
Golden
brown hotcakes for breakfast of course,
And
for supper fried tatters and fishes.
Each
day we’d go swimming and play in the sand.
My
granddad would take us all hiking.
Sis
and I watched as he whittled a cane,
And
the stick horses more to our liking.
We’d
sit by the fire in the late afternoon.
I’d
sit in my grandmothers’ lap.
Dad
would go fishing, my momma would read,
And
Granddad enjoyed a good nap.
Later
on in the evening, when supper was done,
There
was coffee from a granite-ware pot,
Delicious
marshmallows we roasted on sticks,
And
dried figs that my great grandma brought.
I
remember the feel of hot sand on bare feet,
And
melon seeds stuck to my chin,
The
stories of camping trips long, long ago,
And
the way that my granddad would grin.
How
the decades fast have flown.
How
quickly reached, September.
How
bitter sweet the joys we’ve known.
How
precious to remember.
How
bright the wide and starry skies,
How
fleeting, lives long spent.
How
like the stars, my granddad’s eyes,
And
life ephemeral, much like Granddad's tent.
Great Grandma Daniels, Grandma and Granddad Daniels and Sis & me
GONE FISHIN’
I
enjoyed many fishing trips in bygone days with Dad.
And
I treasure every memory of the happy times we had.
We
fished the Crystal Basin, Ice House Dam and Union Valley,
We’d
fish till we were tuckered out, and then old Dad would rally!
We
fished all day at Girlie Creek, from Wentworth Springs to Loon,
Lost
track of time and stumbled back assisted by the moon,
High
in the Sierra’s where the peaks rise up forever,
As
though the fleecy clouds above, their summits would dissever.
We
only had one motor bike back when we was thrifty!
So
both of us rode double on my Dad’s old Honda 50.
We
fished above the timberline, amid grey granite boulders,
Way
Back before we had a bike, and I rode on Daddy’s shoulders,
We
spent cold nights at Wright’s Lake too, sheltered by the trees,
And
marveling at the antics of the Jeepers’ Jamboree’s,
Fly
fished in Desolation among its pristine lakes,
With
blistered toes and sunburned nose, smiling despite the aches.
We
outsmarted fish at upper Blue, with snowdrifts all around,
And
mosquitoes buzzing in our ears till they made a roaring sound,
Trudged
through Mountain Misery till our shoes were black as tar,
Trolled
all day with the Evinrude and smeared Zemacol by the jar!
We’ve
Luncheoned on the running board of Dad’s old Chevy truck,
Shared
cold coffee and stale crackers, and counted it as luck,
Returned
to camp with limits filled and feasted on the trout,
And
returned with creels empty and for supper went without.
I
cherish every memory, but when all is said and done,
It’s
not about the fishing, but my father and his son.
It’s
about an inconceivable bond, an indestructible tie.
That
will be my greatest joy in life, until the day I die.
Thank
you God for memories of the happy times we’ve known.
Thanks
for all my blessing and the kindness that you’ve shown.
Thanks
for the very best childhood that a fellow ever had.
But
thank you most of all dear Lord for my ol' dad.
HOPE FAITH & CHARITY
Faith alone won't keep us warm,
Or shelter us from rain.
Through faith we see beyond the storm.
We glimpse blue skies again.
Faith doesn't keep the storms away.
The clouds aren't really gone.
Through faith we smile anyway.
Through faith we carry on.
Faith doesn't promise fairness,
Or excuse how others live,
But faith can bolster empathy.
Through faith we can forgive.
Like love, faith hopes. Faith can preserve.
The Book says God is Love.
Through faith we're spared what we deserve.
Through faith we rise above.
Love, like God, is infinite,
Rejoicing in the truth,
Inherent in each one of us.
We know love from our youth.
Love dispels all questions.
Compassion trumps all doubt.
Love can't dismiss all sorrows,
But love helps ease them out.
Some question faith and deity,
Denying God above,
Disdaining forces they can't see,
But no one questions love.
Dad & me, early 1950s
HOPE FAITH & CHARITY
Faith alone won't keep us warm,
Or shelter us from rain.
Through faith we see beyond the storm.
We glimpse blue skies again.
Faith doesn't keep the storms away.
The clouds aren't really gone.
Through faith we smile anyway.
Through faith we carry on.
Faith doesn't promise fairness,
Or excuse how others live,
But faith can bolster empathy.
Through faith we can forgive.
Like love, faith hopes. Faith can preserve.
The Book says God is Love.
Through faith we're spared what we deserve.
Through faith we rise above.
Love, like God, is infinite,
Rejoicing in the truth,
Inherent in each one of us.
We know love from our youth.
Love dispels all questions.
Compassion trumps all doubt.
Love can't dismiss all sorrows,
But love helps ease them out.
Some question faith and deity,
Denying God above,
Disdaining forces they can't see,
But no one questions love.
Sometimes
when the moon is full
And
the campfire flickers low,
A
sudden spark lights up the dark
Rekindling
thoughts of long long ago.
And
my mind recalls a distant day
As
bright embers stir the fire,
Days
of youthful romance,
Wistful
dreams and old desire.
Days
when mountain meadows
Were
lush and green and fair,
When
cowboys combed the hills for strays
And
the sound of clanking cowbells filled the air;
When
men donned slickers and hit the trail,
Despite
inclement weather,
When
canvas tents were lamp lit,
And
smelled of kerosene and well oiled leather.
I
can almost see old Hangtown,
When
her streets were dust or mud,
When
her storefronts smelled of weathered wood
And
gold was in our blood.
In
my mind, I walk her boardwalks
Passed
the Hangman’s Tree saloon,
And
I cross the street at Cary House
And
dine there on the balcony by the moon.
From
my perch I see the Round Tent
As
it juts into the street,
With
horses nosing wooden troughs.
I
can almost smell molasses as they eat.
And
across from that, the Bell Tower,
With
It's well-known promenade,
And
Main Street’s old rut riddled course,
Past
the Court House, widening for the grade.
How
the old days call me back
Rekindling
old desires,
Revisiting
youthful romance
And
stirring coals of long spent fires.
Dear
God, preserve our memories
Of
dear folks on Reservoir Hill,
And
grant me many fireside dreams
Of
moonlit nights in good old Placerville.
Placerville California, 1900
CRIMSON SHADES
CRIMSON SHADES
Seasons are a
wondrous thing, but time is resolute, and with time, each season will pass.
Spring and summer are favorite seasons in Placerville. The foothills are alive
with budding orchards and absolutely inundated with blooms. Purple vetch climbs the fencerows, lush vines
of sweet peas transform the roadsides into luxurious displays of pastel pink,
opulent spires of china blue lupine and magnificent golden poppies carpet the
hillsides, and the lazy drone of honeybees fills the air. Oh to be barefoot,
youthful and free, and intoxicated with summer.
Dear God, thank you for life’s seasons. Through the seasons much of old
Hangtown has been lost to the passage of time, but thanks to the tireless
efforts of many dedicated people, shades of Hangtown survive today in
Placerville. In my mind’s eye she still
exudes the uncivil scent of sawdust floors and canvas. The rustic, rough-sawn facades
glow hospitably in crimson shades of long spent sunsets, and rows of tents glow
pleasantly, flickering with myriad lamps.
Camp/Daniels home, Reservoir Hill
I remember sitting by a crackling fire high in the Sierra Nevadas and listening to the ill-tempered Jerseys filing past with their cowbells clanking, their babies bawling, and the old bull curling his lip and looking for work. I remember standing on the rough plank sidewalk outside the Ivy House, inhaling the aroma of grilled ribs sizzling over Manzanita coals, and watching the massive freight wagons lumber by with harness squeaking, hames bells jingling, and the iron-clad rims of hickory-spoked wheels smashing the gravel to dust beneath their cumbersome tonnage of crocks of butter and barrels of fragrant cheese. I remember believing that my whole life would be a long and wondrous adventure. And it was.
UP ON THE HILL
Up on the hill where the pines grow dense;
Where the fields are green and the sky immense,
Scatter one day my last remains,
To be drawn in the earth by the gentle rains.
Gladly did I tread this place
With the gentle breeze upon my face,
A faithful dog for company,
And benevolent sun beaming down on me.
Thank the Lord for the time we had,
When rest was blessed and toil was glad,
When joyous hearts rejoiced in truth,
And we shared our hopes and dreams and youth.
Look to the heavens bright and blessed.
See me satisfied, caressed.
Know at last I’m free from care.
My dust is here, but my spirit there.
SMILE AND SING AND SOAR
High in the Sierras where the winds blow free,
When this flesh drops away that's where I'll be.
Keep your harp and keep your cloud.
Keep your glum, self-righteous crowd.
I'll have no use for either there,
When my spirit's free to take the air.
I say this not to cause you grief.
Don't worry yourself with my belief.
Don't shake your fist or wring your hands.
It's sufficient that God understands.
Don't stew and fret for the path I've trod.
What I believe is between me and God.
High above bright granite peaks,
That's the heaven my spirit seeks.
Lazy sweeps on the gentle breeze,
At one with stars and streams and trees,
At one with the Lord who created it all.
Keep your heaven it's way too small.
I'll have no use for flesh up there.
I'll have no grief, no pain, no care,
No robe of flesh to snag like before.
I'll only smile and sing and soar,
High in the Sierras where the winds blow free,
With only the Lord for company.
High Sierras, Lover's Leap
SMILE AND SING AND SOAR
High in the Sierras where the winds blow free,
When this flesh drops away that's where I'll be.
Keep your harp and keep your cloud.
Keep your glum, self-righteous crowd.
I'll have no use for either there,
When my spirit's free to take the air.
I say this not to cause you grief.
Don't worry yourself with my belief.
Don't shake your fist or wring your hands.
It's sufficient that God understands.
Don't stew and fret for the path I've trod.
What I believe is between me and God.
High above bright granite peaks,
That's the heaven my spirit seeks.
Lazy sweeps on the gentle breeze,
At one with stars and streams and trees,
At one with the Lord who created it all.
Keep your heaven it's way too small.
I'll have no use for flesh up there.
I'll have no grief, no pain, no care,
No robe of flesh to snag like before.
I'll only smile and sing and soar,
High in the Sierras where the winds blow free,
With only the Lord for company.
Autobiography
By
way of introduction, my name is Shannon Thomas Casebeer. I was born in the
Sierra Nevada Mountains of Northern California and raised on a little piece of
paradise called Reservoir Hill. Idyllic childhoods are mighty few and
mighty far between, and I didn’t deserve one, but some of us just get lucky.
Near the top of Reservoir Hill, on the banks of historic South Fork ditch and
overlooking the snow-capped Sierras to the north, the coastal range to the west,
the Sacramento valley to the south, and Miller’s pear orchard to the east, were
the homes of my mom’s parents and her dad’s mother, Meda Eliza Camp Daniels. Meda’s
Husband, my great grandpa, Asa Wilder Daniels, arrived in Placerville in 1888,
purchased 40 acres on Reservoir Hill, operated a freight service, and served for some time as Justice of
The Peace. Her father, Asa Steven Camp, arrived in Hangtown with his father,
Clark, in 1849. Together they filed several claims in order to try their hand at prospecting,
and then after accompanying his father safely home, Asa returned to Placerville in
1854.
Meda Eliza Camp Daniels & Asa Wilder Daniels,
Reservoir Hill
I have
many vivid memories of walking the tree lined lane from my home on Mosquito
Road, up the hill past my great grandma’s home and on to the home of my grandma
and granddad Daniels. Passing Great Grandma’s window I was occasionally waved
down and invited inside to warm myself by her wood range and snack on the
candied figs which she’d dried in the sun before steaming and coating with
sugar. My favorite room was the kitchen. Even now I can close my
eyes and picture it in every detail just as it looked those long years ago. I
can see the old wood range and hear the
clanking of its lids as great Grandma painstakingly brought the range to life.
I remember how the nickel handles and black cast iron stove-top shone in the
flickering light of the coal oil lamp as she polished them with a wax covered
bread wrapper. I smell the sulfur and see the flash and flutter of the wooden
match as she lit the crumpled newspaper. I hear the cast-iron clanking of the
dampers being open and the crackling of the fire as Grandma carefully fed
kindling to the growing flame. I remember peeking in through the open dampers
at the glowing embers on the grate, watching their light dancing on the wall,
and gazing up at the warming oven in expectation of the golden brown treasures
that would soon be steaming inside. On a few occasions I recall sitting in her
lap in the old rocking chair. The wood range would crackle and pop
pleasantly and great Grandma would carefully
unfold and read aloud from the same little muslin book that had mesmerized my
granddad as a child. Time with Granddad was always a special treat and rarely
did a summer pass without Granddad seeing to it that the entire family enjoyed
a series of camping trips high in the Sierras, where Granddad had camped with
his family all his life. All variety of kith and kin accompanied us on
these woodland adventures, including Granddad’s brother and sister and of
course his mom, who camped with us until age 93. As a little girl, Great
Grandma’s mom, Laura Ellen Oldfield Camp, had crossed the plains by covered
wagon, making the trek from Wisconsin to old Hangtown back in 1854 when the rut
riddled boulevard west was often impassable, and Native Americans still thrived
on vast herds of migrating buffalo. Camping was in our blood. We camped much as
the family had for generations. Granddad had built red wooden sideboards for
his 1941 Chevy, so the little pickup was well prepared to house all the
essentials of camping, and with the addition of a canvas cover provided snug sleeping
quarters at night. I remember well crawling from my own sleeping bag at
first light, in order to join my grandparents in the cozy bed of the old Chevy.
I remember Granddad’s beaming smile and mass of disheveled gray hair as he
peeked from under the covers. I recall how snug and warm it felt crawling under
that down comforter after kicking off my moccasins on the tailgate, the feel
and smell of the canvas cover rustling in the mountain air, and gazing at stars
through silhouetted pines. Once the fire was lit, Sis and I would dress quickly
and join the rest of the family, warming our backsides at a stone lined
campfire and anticipating the smell of coffee brewing in the graniteware coffee
pot, and the debilitating aroma of pancakes and bacon sizzling on Great
Grandma’s griddle. Stellar Blue Jays called from the canopy of old growth
pines. The welcome sun cascaded down through the lush boughs of evergreen. Off
in the distance rainbow trout snatched Mayflies from the cobalt blue surface of
pristine mountain lake. And my mind’s eye envisioned my granddad’s granddad
crossing the country by covered wagon long ago when Indians roamed these
hills. Such were the days of my childhood, when life seemed simple, summer
was perennial, and childlike faith assured tomorrows joys. Treasure your
memories, keep them fresh and never take them for granted. Even our
memories can fade with the harsh glare of time.
Great Grandma & Grandpa Daniels, little Asa, Myrle
Spuds the dog and my granddad, Jared Waldo Daniels
Reservoir Hill
Long ago when my heart was light,
Meda Eliza Camp Daniels
& Asa Wilder Daniels
Reservoir Hill
Spuds the dog and my granddad, Jared Waldo Daniels
Reservoir Hill
FLEETING
& FINITE
Long ago when my heart was light,
When
my hopes were high and my future bright,
The
summer sun cast a glorious light
And
the moonlight was kind and forgiving.
There
my life was a joy to me.
I
envisioned time as an endless sea,
Flowing
on to eternity
And
love came as easily as living.
Now
each hour is a precious prize,
Lost
to time as each minute flies,
Fleeting
away now before my eyes,
Like
the petals of last season’s flowers.
Gone
today is the joy sublime;
Gone
the sweet and melodious rhyme,
Fleeting
and finite the dregs of time,
And
the decades have dwindled to hours.
Meda Eliza Camp Daniels
& Asa Wilder Daniels
Reservoir Hill
REMINISCENCE
When our hopes and dreams grow faded,
And we miss the friends who cared,
And old times are consecrated
By the golden hours we’ve shared;
When the streets we tread so long ago
Come back to haunt our dreams,
And we treasure those we used to know
And conjure up old schemes;
When old associates fill our heart
And refresh our weary mind,
And we feel as one though miles apart
And old woes wax sublime,
When our flesh at best contains us
And we’re far from hearth and friend,
May fond memories then sustain us
Till we meet at last again.
‘NEATH SKIES OF CHINA BLUE
I
spent the best years of my life
Up
on Reservoir Hill,
On
Great Grandpas’ 40 acres,
Outside
of Placerville.
My
days were unfailingly happy,
My
disappointments few,
Amid
fields of golden poppies,
‘Neath
skies of china blue.
I’ve
hiked Manzanita covered hills
And
orchards lush with pears,
With
pear juice dripping from my chin,
Till
it washed away all cares.
Jackrabbits
hid in ambush
Along
each dusty trail,
The
only other sound, the call
Of
California quail.
Blackberries
were my quarry
Beneath
the summer skies,
Drenched
with homemade ice cream,
And
wrapped in the golden crust of Grandma’s pies.
Adventures
with the neighbor kids
Were
led by our pet raccoon,
With
summer nights spent beneath the stars,
Lit
by a flickering campfire and the moon.
Holidays
meant Granddad’s house,
With
kinfolk by the dozens,
And
Great Grandma sharing memories
To
entertain the cousins.
She’d
share her tales of days gone by,
With
eyes welled up with joy,
Recalling
memories from her youth,
Back
when even Grandpa was a boy.
And
I soaked up each and every word.
And
treasured every minute,
Memorizing
every face,
And
each expression in it.
Praying
that my loved ones lives
Would
stand the test of years,
And
facing disillusionment
As
reality tempered innocence with tears.
Now
I too am a granddad
With
memories of my own,
Sharing
tales from long ago
Of
precious souls I’ve known.
I’ve
cherished each and every day
Through
every joy and tear,
And
I wouldn’t change a single thing.
I
relish every year.
But
oh to be a child once more,
And
live on Reservoir Hill,
And
face each day with childlike faith,
And
walk once more the streets of Placerville.
LITTLE
FORDS AND WEATHERED WOOD
If I could turn the clock back,
And
live my life once more,
I
believe I’d take a slower pace,
Not
hurry like before.
I’d
spend my life in Placerville,
When
the Ivy House still stood,
When
the whole town smelled of doughnuts,
Little
Fords and weathered wood.
When
school was taught with chalk on slate,
Each
hour marked by a bell
Luncheon
served from paper bags,
And
a pint of milk was swell!
When
horse and buggy still raised dust,
And
little Fords were few,
When
little girls weren’t exempt from lust,
But
little boys had no clue.
When
belts were worn with shirts tucked in,
And
Pomade clogged our comb,
When
we took our best girl to the dance,
And palms caressed while walking sweethearts home.
I
know it’s just a silly dream.
I
know it can’t come true.
I
know it just sounds foolish now
To
share it here with you.
But
my wish for every one of us
Is
that we’ll live each minute,
Treasure
every hour of life,
And
every loved one in it.
Hold
tight to your memories
Of
those days when life was good,
When
Main Street smelled of doughnuts,
Little
Fords and weathered wood.
It
was many and many a year ago
Along
an old stagecoach road,
A
gold camp flourished in the snow,
In
the heart of the mother lode.
Soon
the whole place went to heck,
And
loath to call a truce,
They
stretched a couple careless necks
With
a crudely fashioned noose.
So
the gold camp grew in infamy.
Notoriety
done the trick!
And
soon the little ditch was known
As
historic Hangtown crick.
The
camp was christened Hangtown too,
In
memory of the dead,
And
far and wide her legend grew
As
the lawless place them fellas wound up dead.
Soon
folks rushed in from shore to shore
To
pan the muddy street,
With
Hangtown renowned for evermore
As
the place to come to see them swingin’ feet.
The
city fathers deemed it wise
To
spread the gold camp’s fame.
Soon
gold aplenty became the prize,
And
emptying tourists pockets became the game.
When
delicate womenfolk arrived,
The
name Hangtown give ‘em grief.
So
a brand new name was soon contrived,
In
the hope it might provide the men relief.
Ravine
City was considered
But
the womenfolk groaned still,
So
at last the city fathers
Changed
the name to Placerville.
The
little metropolis grew and grew
And
the townsfolk, being thrifty,
Began
providing gasoline
To
the motorists they could lure from highway 50.
Flatlanders
now are welcome
Despite
what you may hear.
And
we very rarely hang one.
With
ropes now coiled, we count each tourist dear.
So
if you’d like to live on beans
Out
west where skies are sunny,
Check
out Old Hangtown by all means,
And
just to play it safe, bring lots of money.
SC
Copyright
March, 2015
All rights reserved
CONTENTS
DEDICATION
SOMETIMES IN THE EVENING
The sun was high…
Twilight arrived early…
The early 1850s…
SORROW SLIPS AWAY
HANGTOWN TOUGH
Mosquito Road winds…
‘NEATH CALIFORNIA SKIES
1859 sounded a sweet note…
GROWING UP IN GOOD OL’
PLACERVILLE
GLAD DAYS LONG AGO
SIERRA SPRING
SIERRA SPRING
GRANDDAD’S TENT
GONE FISHIN’
LONG SPENT FIRES
FAITH, HOPE & CHARITY
FAITH, HOPE & CHARITY
Seasons
are a wondrous thing…
I remember sitting by a crackling fire…
UP ON THE HILL
SMILE AND SING AND SOAR
SMILE AND SING AND SOAR
Autobiography…
FLEETING & FINITE
FLEETING & FINITE
REMINISCENCE
LITTLE FORDS &
WEATHERED WOOD
‘NEATH SKIES OF CHINA BLUE
HISTORIC HANGTOWN CRICK
Copyright 2015 all rights reserved
Copyright 2015 all rights reserved