Saturday, December 11, 2021

Soldiers Battled Pandemic in Waning Days of World War I

Soldiers from Camp Fremont celebrate the end of World War I on University Avenue in Palo Alto.
Note all of the soldiers are wearing masks due to the 1918 pandemic. Photo courtesy of "The Story of Camp Fremont" and the Menlo Park Historical Society.

I'm working on a new book, which will be a collection of my articles so I'm going back and making sure they still hold up. When I first wrote about Barbara Wilcox's book in 2018, "World War I Army Training by San Francisco Bay: The Story of Camp Fremont," my article was mostly a promotion for an upcoming talk the author was giving. I grew up right down the road from Stanford and I had never heard about this vanished military base. 

When I re-read the book in 2021, I found its section on the 1918 pandemic absolutely fascinating for obvious reasons. So I wrote a new column for the local paper. Click the link for my report. 


Tuesday, November 16, 2021

Alfred Hitchcock and his Northern California Connection

Director Alfred Hitchcock displays his famous profile at his estate above Saratoga. The outline was easily identified as it graced the opening of his popular television mystery program "Alfred Hitchcock Presents." Photo courtesy of UC Santa Cruz Special Collections & Archives and Tere Carrubba.

There is something absolutely fascinating about movie director Alfred Hitchcock, who was born in London in 1919 and died in California in 1980. His movies were unlike those of any other director. He became easily as famous as any of the stars he featured in his films. And he seemed to love the macabre. 

What most people in Northern California don't know is that he had a home in the mountains above the Santa Clara Valley that also looked down upon the California Coast and spent a lot of time there from 1940 through 1974 when Hitchcock grew frail and his wife Alma made arrangements to sell the home. 

Having a home in Northern California had a direct impact on "The Birds" one of his most famous films, due to an event on the California Coast Hitch learned about because he kept up on the local news. 


I've recently secured permission to use several interesting archival photos of him at the estate and though I have written about this before I felt the photos definitely added some fun to the tale. Click the link to read the column I filed about him in the Los Altos Town Crier for Halloween.



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Monday, August 9, 2021

The Peninsular Railway: Electric Tech Ahead of Its Time

This rail car, from the Peninsular Railroad is Number 102 and shows a sign in the window that it runs from Los Altos to San Jose. It also sports a sign that says "Flyer," which means it was likely used for direct commuting. Photo courtesy of the Palo Alto Historical Association Archives.
This lovely map cover for the Peninsular doesn't even show a train: It was likely used to advertise the line's Blossom Special to tourists in a valley which then had the largest number of commercial fruit orchards the world had ever seen. Image courtesy of History San Jose Archives.

During the years I have done research on the San Francisco Bay Area I have seen a number of images of what looked like a small rail system that ran around the Santa Clara Valley. I always thought the lines were some branch of the Southern Pacific Railroad, which was the only rail I remembered from my childhood. 

Early in August, I attended a lecture by Ray Cosyn at the Saratoga Historical Foundation for the reopening of their museum, and the whole thing began to come into focus. And this led to a story of course. Click to learn more from my regular column in the Los Altos Town Crier: 

THE ELECTRIC PENINSULAR RAILWAY

Thursday, January 21, 2021

A DC Reporter Looks Back After a Riot Shocked the World

     
Robin Chapman served as a reporter in Washington D.C. covering national and local news for WJLA-TV, the ABC affiliate. She later worked as national correspondent for Group W TV.  In photo right, Robin prepares to go live from the "swamp site" on Capitol Hill.

I still have a hard time processing what happened on Capitol Hill, January 6, 2020. I was lucky to spend some of my career there covering the news in what I have long considered a post-graduate course in how United States government works. I never live up to my own expectations and, looking back, often think how I should have and could have done so much during my years in the capital. 

After the riot that shocked the world there, I had to sit down and write about it--just to help myself process what happened. Here's what I wrote for hometown paper in Silicon Valley.