Showing posts with label Dave Stone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dave Stone. Show all posts

Sunday, February 23, 2025

Violet Alpha Sillers Rodgers, 130th Birthday

My maternal grandmother, Violet Alpha Sillers (I called her Nana) was born 130 years ago today, February 23, 1895, in River John, Nova Scotia, Canada.  She passed away on January 8, 1987, in Alhambra, CA.  She was a very pleasant, loving, and wonderful grandmother, you couldn't ask for a better one.  Her brother, Ernest Sillers (Uncle Ern to me), was also born in River John.  

She married Hiram Stephan Rogers (born April 11, 1887), who was also from River John.  I called him Papa.  I don't know how, when, or why they ended up in Pasadena.  They lived at 1254 N. Hill Ave.  Before my mother was born and raised in the home, they had a baby son.  It either died at childbirth or shortly thereafter.  The family never discussed the son further.  I don't know if or where the infant is buried, or it's name.  I don't recall anyone directly ever telling me this, but something tells me it was named Stephan (like my grandfather's middle name), but it may have just been known as "Infant Rogers."  

My grandfather owned a grocery store in the Nelson Building at southwest corner of Washington and Hill, Pasadena.  I think he may have retired about the time I started realizing the world existed as a tiny child in the late 1950s.  I vaguely remember going into the store once or twice.  I don't think my grandmother liked the new owners.  

I have fond memories of the house.  I remember a basement that I was only occasionally allowed to enter.  It was like a magical cave to me.  In the rear enclosed side porch, there was a wringer washer that was always fun to watch my grandmother use.  I remember a stool in the kitchen where I could sit and watch my grandmother cook and sometimes "help."  I remember the front living room, where my grandfather would play with me, and the dining room table where I seem to eaten a lot of peeled, chunked, and boiled potatoes with a bit of butter and salt on them, and pot roast.  Naps were in my mother's childhood bedroom.  Her furniture set was saved in the family until just a couple years ago, when my granddaughter Cassy needed part of it.  Sadly, we broke up the set, gave her what she wanted, and donated the rest to charity.  

The backyard had an incinerator that they rarely used.  I remember what seemed to me as a large tree in the back yard that I played with toy cars and trucks making roads in, around, and under the tree roots.  The backyard had lots and lots of flowers.  On one occasion, I snuck into the detached garage and found a pair of roller skates from my mother's childhood.  I strapped them on thinking it would be easy to skate down the driveway.  I made it a very short distance before one of the leather straps snapped, and I went down hard.  Life lesson.    

When I needed to be distracted, Papa would take me for a walk.  The same route each time.  We'd leave the house, walk up the street to Washington, and turn right.  We'd continue along Washington to the first street, Wesley, and turn right again.  We'd walk downhill to Asbury, and turn right to Hill then back home.  

About ten years ago, I was in Southern California for work, and on a whim, I pulled off the freeway to the house.  I found myself parking along the curb in front of the house, and decided to take a walk.  I followed the same route around the block.  It was eerie how much of the surroundings came back to me.  As I walked, I remember a gas station at Washington/Hill.  It's not the same, but it's a gas station still, just different.  I remember the same type of fencing in front of a couple of homes on Wesley especially a specific chain link fence, and the smell of germaniums at one particular home.  It was a strange and wonderful experience.  

We lived at our home in Anaheim during this time.  Occasionally when Nana would babysit me, she would take me to nearby Washington Park to play and run around.  If I was good, which of course I always was, while playing at the park she would give me my favorite sandwich, white bread with the crusts cut off, with a large amount of soft butter and brown sugar for the inside.  Nothing healthier, no?

We later moved to Tucson, and eventually moved to nearby La Canada.  It was during this time that my Papa died, May 3, 1962.  I don't remember much about it, but I knew I was being kept away from the adults dealing with it.  My mother got the call about him while we were at home.  She immediately grabbed me and drove to their home.  She was distraught as she drove, and went through some Stop signs and red lights.  I'd never seen my mother cry before.  I still hold an impression of that drive in my mind.  


These are scans of Polaroid photos from her 80th birthday celebration (1975), at her rest home at 1428 S Marengo Ave, Alhambra, CA 91803.  The business has changed names since then.  I think it was an Episcopal home then, and looking at Google Maps, appears to have been extensively remodeled.    





Standing at the table, my mother, Dorothy Stone (left) and my Aunt Aldine.

Seated, to the left, an unknown woman.  To the right, my Uncle Ern, Violet's brother.

At the table, my mother, Dorothy Stone. Standing, an unknown woman and to the right with her back towards the camera, my grandmother, Violet.

From the right, my mother, standing.  Seated is Violet, then Ernest.  The others are unknown to me, and were possibly other residents of the facility.  







These next photos are from a time that "Nana" visited us at our new home at 1237 Laurel Lane, Lafayette, California.  I don't know the date, but it was likely 1966-1968.  The first two are inside our kitchen, and the last one is in the front yard in front of the steps my dad built (I helped) that led from our front yard up the hill to the top of the driveway.  










This one was taken at the same time as when "Nana" was opening her gift. My mom has a gift too, so I don't know it was Christmas or something else.  It seems odd that it would be Christmas, but opening our gifts like this because it wasn't our style.  












Thursday, January 16, 2025

Eaton Fire, Altadena, California

I don’t really have any known links to people impacted directly as victims of the Palisades Fire or the Eaton Fire in Altadena, except for this string of connection.  In Octavia Butler’s 1993 book “Parable of the Sower,” the story includes how Los Angeles was ravaged by fire in 2025.   Butler, who died in 2006 at 58, is marked by a footstone etched with a quote from “Parable of the Sower,” among her most famous novels: “All that you touch, you change. All that you change, changes you.”  She is buried in the Mountain View Cemetery in Altadena—the same cemetery as my maternal grandparents, Violet and Hiram Rogers. 


https://apnews.com/article/octavia-butler-los-angeles-wildfires-cemetery-eaf2ee7921561355d632d0e381099ed6



 

Thursday, January 9, 2025

1959, My First Camping Trip, Big Pine, California

This is the closest I ever made it to climbing Mt. Whitney.  It would be interesting if the "east side" experts here recognize any of the views or locations.  

This was my first camping trip with my parents and I remember my parents saying we were camping at Glacier Lodge.  I believe this site is the Big Pine Creek Campground adjacent to Glacier Lodge, just outside Big Pine, California.  I don't know what the ownership or relationship of the campground to the lodge was in 1959.  I researched it some, and it was interesting to learn the glamorous history of Glacier Lodge, and fate of the lodge and its replacement.     

All-in-all, it was a great trip with some hiccups.  

It rained during this trip, and my WW II Army veteran dad was using a dark green Army surplus canvas tent.  When it started raining hard in the middle of the night, he made me get out and help dig a drainage trench around the tent.  Inside the tent, he told me not to touch the roof of the tent, and then I did, causing a leak inside.   Hence, I learned why not to touch it.  My father was not pleased.  

I don't think this was my mother's style of camping.  She doesn't have her normal happy smile on.  As a family, I don't think we ever tent camped like this again.  We only tent cabins and RVs after this trip.      

I was four years old at the time, and the VW in the photo was our new (white) 1959 Bug.  I remember the car well.  Not long afterward, we moved to Tucson, Arizona.  My parents would drive across the desert at night to visit family in So. Cal. in it while I curled up in the cubby behind the back seat to sleep.  The bright red Coca Cola metal ice chest stayed in family use until the late 1970s.  It was a workhorse of a cooler.        

Some history of Glacier Lodge: 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacier_Lodge 

David and Dorothy Stone

Our neighbor's campsite.





1959 Volkswagen Bug (white)







Wednesday, January 8, 2025

1972 Buena High School, Ventura, Calif. Senior Photo


 

I graduated from high school in June 1972, so I presume this photo was taken in the fall of 1971.  

Jeff Holland Photography on East Main Street in Ventura was the place to get the the photos taken.  I went with my mother for the sitting, and later to review the proofs.  As with any set of proofs, some you like and some deserve going into "round file" forever.

This photo was not picked to be my senior photo.  It was supposed to be trashed.  My mother thought it was fine, but I didn't like the way my bottom lip was pushed out as compared to all the other photos.  Yet, this was the final product and the the one that ended up in the yearbook too.  

Fifty plus years later, does it still bother me?  Not as much as before.  But I still remember being very disappointed about it at the time.  


Tuesday, March 19, 2024

Late 1950s photos of me

I just started scanning a bunch of family photos.  I'll post them here.  


This is the first three.  I'm guessing late 1950s when we were living at 1219 Kenwood Place in Anaheim, California.






Wednesday, February 28, 2024

A New Substation


I had the pleasure of being invited to attend this afternoon’s open house for the new Fresno S.O. Area 2 Substation at Armstrong/Turner.  It’s a wonderful new building that should serve them well for many years.  It replaces a rental building on Shields Ave. that was used since the 1980s.  When we first started using the Shields building, we thought it was pretty fancy.  Well, except for the constantly leaking roof.  This one blows it away.  They have awesome three dimensional badges on the side of building.  




Just the right amount of dignitary speeches and a tour of the facility.  It was good seeing some familiar faces and getting caught up.   And of course, some of the new black and white patrol cars.  







This is 1954 map of Fresno metro and eastern Fresno County that was gifted to me back in the 1970-1980s.  I had it framed later, and it’s hung in my offices at TCI, AT&T, and then in my Yosemite home.  I dropped it off a month or so ago for the substation to use.  They have agreed within the substation not to hang anything on the walls for a while, so for the time being it sits over a memorial case to some of the fallen deputies.


https://maps.app.goo.gl/6NpduZSUKhyr9EUh6?g_st=ic 

Wednesday, January 24, 2024

Back In Black!



Black and whites.  


Finally!  


Last night I was excited to see this post on the Fresno Sheriff’s Office Facebook page.  


     


Sheriff John Zanoni is excited to announce the Fresno County Sheriff's Office has rolled out a new design to its patrol car fleet.  The thought behind the change is that our current green and white design goes back to the 1990s and it was time to update our look.


Future orders of Chevy Tahoes, Ford Explorers and Ford F-150 pickup trucks will feature a black and white color scheme.  It was important to keep the FSO tradition of green and gold in the design, so we have incorporated it into the lettering on the sides and rear of the vehicles.


The two pictured vehicles are being deployed into the field this week.  Over the next few years, we will be taking delivery of more of these vehicles.  The goal is to eventually phase out the patrol vehicles in the current fleet and replace them with black and white vehicles as they become available and replacement of aging equipment becomes necessary.


     #


I was on the original vehicle committee in the early 1990s when Fresno SO adopted the ubiquitous existing white car with a green stripe that was being pushed hard by the California Sheriffs Assn. (we couldn’t understand why they wanted all California S.O. cars to resemble the National Park Service).  Nonetheless, Sheriff Magarian bought into it 100%.  A couple of us still pushed for black and white in various renditions, even some very similar to this new one.   


The committee worked hard to come up with proposed graphic schemes, and even all Deputies were allowed to vote on the three finalists—with understanding that Sheriff’s management could override the vote.  Of course, we were directed not to submit any black and white schemes, or brown and white schemes for Deputies to vote on.  We never knew the final numbers, only the final decision by the Sheriff.  


As I mentioned, the committee worked diligently.  I did a lot of the research.  I found photos of prior graphics used in the department including a snazzy looking black and white from the 1950s.   I researched and compiled information from all the other 57 Sheriff’s Offices to see what they were using for graphics.  For the ones I didn’t know—the vast majority of them—pre-internet I telephoned them all.  It was time consuming.  


On one fun day, committee member Sgt. Rick Cobbs grabbed me after day shift briefing, and he drove us up the San Joaquin Valley all the way to West Sacramento.  We stopped at every Police Department and Sheriff’s Office and took pictures of the different patrol cars.  Of course, the department didn’t pay for photo processing, so I paid for it.  I still have those photos in storage, and will try and post those in the future.  


And since I was the only one with a computer (and it was at home) I wrote all the drafts for the committee to review and then the final proposal.   (I did the same previously when on the Uniform Committee.)  


I’ve included a photo of the brown and white cars that the department had when I was hired in 1976, although there were a handful of all white ones floating around too.  Coincidentally, it’s a photo of Sgt. Rick Cobbs when he was a Deputy in the K9 Unit.  I love black and whites, yet I really liked these brown and whites too.  I was happy to drive one. 

 


Unfortunately, the county next bought brown and white Ford LTD IIs for the replacements.  The brown paint in those faded to a pukish green color.  The decision was made to change.  


Next, we went to the white cars with the brown stripes down the side.  The California Code of Regulations forbid a patrol car with a “painted stripe” wider than six inches.  Our stripe was something like eight or ten inches wide.  When discussing this with CHP Sacramento, they kept referring to the code.  After reading between the lines of what he was saying, I realized to be in violation, he was emphasizing the “painted” portion of the code.  Ours was a decal, not paint.  Technically, not a violation. 

 







The Sheriff’s executive team said they liked what they saw on the Broward County (Florida) units that they had seen on the television show COPS.  


I reached out to BSO fleet and they graciously sent me one of their graphics packages and our County Shop installed it on one of our new cars.  We swapped the BSO Star with ones the County Shop still had from the old brown and white FSO units that were still used for other purposes.   


Before a Sheriff’s management meeting, Sgt. Rick Cobbs and I parked it somewhat hidden in the department basement.  We were anxious to have the executive staff check it out.  We waited for them in the Briefing Room.  


They didn’t bother to come down  to see it.  Instead, they asked for Polaroid photos to be sent in quickly. I grabbed my personal Polaroid and took some photos in the dark basement.  If you don’t know, Polaroids used a disposable flashbulb that went into a removable flash unit.  To prevent injury from an exploding defective bulb, the unit had a flip open safety lens.  That lens was tinted blue tinted to help prevent flash glare.  As a result, the photo of the green reflective Broward’s County stripe had a slight bluish tint.  The Polaroid photos were sent into the meeting.  We weren’t allowed in to explain or be a part of the discussion.  The answer came back.  They didn’t like it.  So much effort to get the decals and have them installed—just to have them removed because a management team wouldn’t leave a meeting.  Especially after hearing that’s what they liked.  Sgt. Cobbs and I were very frustrated with the process and joked that maybe we’ll just send the whole car to the Broward County Sheriff.  


We ended up with what we got.  On the earlier Uniform Committee, I agreed with almost everything that was eventually approved.  On the Vehicle Committee, I agreed with almost nothing of the final accepted product.  What I disliked the most was the font used for the lettering on the front fenders.  It was supposed to mimic a 1890s style old western font. I thought it turned out poorly, missing the mark in daylight while being very fuzzy at night.  Other agencies used a block font that was much more readable at day and night.  Hopefully the new designs have been viewed at night.   But…I liked our final result much better than Broward County’s units. 

 


I think I saw one of the new FSO black and whites recently before the announcement.  I just didn't know what it was yet.  I was sitting at a traffic light on a multiple lane road, and one pulled up a couple lanes over in traffic.  I could kinda see the design as it moved through the traffic, and thought it looked really nice.  Patrol cars from near and far aren't unusual to see around the metro area of Fresno and Clovis due to various trainings and meetings.  


    











Photo credits to the original photographers.   


Fresno Sheriff

Cop Cars

Police Cars

Law Enforcement Vehicles



Friday, July 15, 2022

Time passes

For the better part of 45-50 years, I’ve always had a watch, a clock in the home, or later, my mobile devices set to 24-hour “military time” format.  This will be an adjustment.   


2008 Toyota FJ Cruiser for sale

For Sale 2008 Toyota FJ Cruiser, Sun Fusion, Automatic Transmission, Four Wheel Drive One owner, purchased new on Dec 6, 2008 with 28 miles ...