Posted on 04/25/2016 10:26:17 AM PDT by Rummyfan
I grew up listening to stories of turn-of-the-century rural Central California from my grandfather Rees Alonzo Davis (1890-1976). He was the third generation of the Davis family to have lived in my present housegreat nephew of Daniel Rhoades, who had walked into the High Sierra in early 1847 as part of a party sent to help save the Donner Party. Years later, after a small strike in the Mother Lode, Rhoades became a land baron near the shores of the now dry Tulare Lake, in modern-day Lemoore (where his strange mausoleum is currently a California historical site). He died, I think, when Rees was five or six, but his Rhoades portrait still hangs in my stairwell.
Much of my grandfathers lectures concerned the law and his appreciative sense of progress. Without law in the wild days of his preteen years, sometimes farmers, he lamented, shot it out to adjudicate competing claims over water rights from a common ditch. He referenced a land of early epidemics; his daughter, my aunt, caught a summer polio virus in 1921, and lived most of her life in the living room of my house (d.1980), courageously struggling against a disease that had left her scarcely able to move.
My grandfather was born about 10 years after the Mussel Slough Tragedy (the inspiration for Frank Norris' classic muckraking novel, The Octopus, which is about the tentacles of the Southern Pacific Railroad and its land grab from early settlers).
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We actually own all nine seasons. Barabara Hale played Miss Street. Ray Collins was sickly, and the series wasn’t the same without him. For some reason, he never seemed quite the loser that Hamilton Burger was. And for whatever personal problems he had, Raymond Burr WAS Perry Mason, and the platonic ideal of lawyers ever since.
“She refers to the illegals as the gun nuts so she doesnt run afoul of the PC police but it is clear who she means.”
Most of us here in our little valley refer to the illegals as UDAs when we are calling the the Pinal County Sheriff. But mostly we refer to them as Wetbacks.
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