Graeagle
Story
by Shirley West
Edited by Michael Clawson
Page 2
Davies needed housing
at his new location, so he commissioned the Boca-Loyalton Railroad
to transport the company houses from Sardine Valley to Graeagle.
The Boca-Loyalton Railroad took them to Beckwourth where they were
transferred to the NCC0 Railroad and brought into Graeagle via Clio.
This was not as simple as it sounds, as each house had to be sawed
in half in order to fit on the railroad cars. These lines are still
visible on the red houses on Main Street today.
In the early 1920's, Davies sold his holdings to the California
Fruit Exchange, headquartered in Sacramento. Howard Mortenson was
the first manager. In the latter part of 1920, Herb Rowe was named
general manager. He remained in Graeagle until the mill was sold
and dismantled in 1956. In fact, the mill burned two days after
his death. Mr. Rowe brought many skilled workers to Graeagle from
Hobart Mills, near Truckee.
The Fruit Exchange
built a lumber mill near the mill pond, also a box factory, molding
mill, planing mill, dry kilns, and huge boiler rooms to generate
steam. Everything in town was steam heated. There was a steam line
that ran across the highway to service the large red houses on
the hill. The steam radiators had two temperatures; too hot or
too cold.
Graeagle was
completely self-sufficient. They ran both beef herds and a large
dairy herd in the surrounding meadows. They had the slaughter house
built behind the meadow and off the present Navajo trail. Everyone
is familiar with the "dairy", the small stone building
located near the old bridge on the Feather River. This was complete
with hot and cold running water . . . even a shower for the milkmen.
I was fortunate enough to have been given several milk bottles
with the cardboard caps still intact and reading
"Graeagle Lumber Company Raw Market Milk".
Directly across
from the dairy was a tall, spare white house that had been both
a stagecoach stop and hostel over one hundred years ago.
The old school
house, known as the "Mann School", located at the corner
of Highway 89 and county road A14, directly across the highway
from the present "frosty" and golf driving range, was
of course, the spanking new school house over seventy years ago.
They had trouble keeping "school marms", and hardly any
stayed long enough to establish tenure. Over half of Graeagle's
population was single and courted each and every new school marm
unceasingly. |