Showing posts with label Alternative. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alternative. Show all posts

Saturday, September 19, 2015

Crystal Pier and Eddie Vedder

Pacific Beach at the intersection of Garnet and Cass is where we left off on our last post from the remains of Highway 101 in San Diego. From here the old highway continues North on Cass. Before we continue our drive North lets takes in some Southern California tourism and local beach culture with a trip to stroll on the beach.



A few blocks further west of the intersection brings us to the water and the foot of the Crystal Pier.  From there to the right a boardwalk skirts the edge of Pacific Beach, Left, to the South of the pier the boardwalk runs along the edge of the sand and Mission Beach. If front of us Crystal Pier juts out into the rolling surf of the Pacific Ocean.  The pier itself is pretty noteworthy,

Crystal Pier
(Wikipedia)


In 1885 a railroad link was established between San Diego and the East Coast. Almost immediately, large numbers took the train West to start a new life in  Southern California. Early settlers at Pacific Beach found the beach side climate was perfect for growing lemons.It seemed that part of San Diego would be an agricultural center.

In  1889 a rail line was opened that extended from downtown San Diego to La Jolla with a station at Pacific Beach. Some farm acreage were carved into lots that became a neighborhood. The loss of farmland also meant a loss for a source of income for the community. Being San Diego, tourism was looked to as replacement revenue source,

Crystal Pier Hotel Enrtry Arch
Crystal Pier Hotel Entry Arch
(Flickr user Chris Lee/CC)
By the 1920's the are was developing enough to have its own school and over 500 residents. Earl Taylor, a local businessman, worked to develop the street grid that had been laid out and named in 1900. Alphabet streets ran North to South were named after early San Diego officials.streets. The East/West streets were named after precious minerals (hence Garnet, which we traveled down in our last post).

Earl Taylor  wanted the area to draw visitors and was interested in building some sort of amusement pier. Piers had been successfully operating in Los Angeles for years and Taylor thought it would be a good draw for  tourists to the area,

Meanwhile, up the coast at Santa Monica, near Los Angeles A successful pier called the Pickering's Pleasure Pier had burned down in 1924 leaving it's builder/operator Ernest Pickering facing rebuilding. Taylor reached out to Pickering for a partnership. In 1925 the San Diego Union ran an ad announcing the development of a pier in Pacific Beach.

Crystal Pier Entry Arch from Pier Side
On The Pier Looking At The Shore
(Flickr user Theron Trowbridge/CC)


By 1926 the pier was opened, It was a fabulous looking structure with a dance hall that sat above the water. The pavilion had a vaguely Aztec art deco theme.  Right away there were troubles.

The crowded dance pavilion was full of partiers celebrated the opening of the pier. Some of the guests noted that the building was swaying in the surf. It was assumed the structure was settling. The sawaying fixtures were wired in place to avoid seasickness in the pavilions customers.

The pier was NOT just settling. A contractor who was involved in supplying the pylons for the bridge was contracted to coat the supports with creosote.This would prevent damage to supports that could be caused by by a small sea creature called a marine borer. Marine borers love to eat wood and have traditionally been the scourge of wooden ships by literally eating away their hulls.

Is This A Pier Or A Hotel Parking Lot?
(Flickr user Herb Neufeld/CC)


The contractor reportedly used a less expensive alternative called creosol to coat the wooden pilings. It was a bad decision. Creosol does not have the same repellent effects to marine borers. The pier was being eaten by the sea. Within a year the first Crystal Pier collapsed.

The idea of a pier was proven though. By 1936 the pier had been rebuild. Instead of dance pavilion at its tip, it instead featured cottages that you could drive right up to!. The cottages were little houses with kitchens and patios. As the cottages reached their edge over the rolling surf a fishing pier extended further out over the ocean.

Today the cottages are still their and are a hard room to get and a popular tourist destination. The pier itself is open to the public and gets thousands of visitors daily to enjoy the view, take a stroll, or go fishing.

Fishing on Crystal Pier
(Flickr user Bill Morrow/CC)

Playlist Additions

The 1990's were an important time in the San Diego alternative music scene. After grunge exploded on the music world from Seattle, many other cities that had also been cultivating local alternative rock scenes in the 1980's began to get noticed. Alternative bands from those other scenes began to chart as well, with both radio and MTV success.

San Diego had a small alternative music scene centered that around a rock club called the Casbah. Within a few years bands such as Blink-182, Stone Temple Pilots, Slightly Stoopid, Rocket from the Crypt, and Drive Like Jehu all emerged from the San Diego area and began achieving some success.

What many people don't know was that one of the most famous stars in the Seattle scene had a lot to do with the development of the scene in San Diego.

Eddie Vedder was born in the suburbs of Chicago in 1965. The product of a broken home, his parents divorced in infancy. His mother quickly remarried and Eddie lived in Chicago until he was 12 years old.

In the mid-70's the family moved from Chicago to the San Diego, where Vedder was given a guitar to help occupy him in a new environment where he did not have any friends yet. The move to San Diego began what must have been a traumatic period in young Vedder's life.

Late in his high school career his parents divorced. His mother moved back to Chicago, while Vedder decided to stay in San Diego with his father to complete high school. It wasn't long after his mother left that Vedder found out the truth that he was not the biological son of the man he knew as his father.

His real father he never got to meet, having died of multiple sclerosis before Eddie knew he existed. Eddie Vedder moved into his own apartment and supported himself working the night shift at an Encinitas drug store. It was too much and he dropped out of high school and moved to Chicago to rejoin his mother.

While in Chicago, he got his GED and attended some community college. In 1984 he and moved with his girlfriend back to San Diego. He worked at several odd jobs, including hotel security guard, to suuport himself while he began working towards a career as a musician. During this time Vedder played in casually several San Diego bands including Surf and Destroy and The Butts.

One of these bands he played with was a group called Indian Style. That band also featured drummer Brad Wilk who would go on to great success with the bands Rage Against The Machine and Audioslave.

Modest success came in 1988 when he joined the San Diego progressive funk band Bad Radio, a band who styled themselves along the lines of the Red Hot Chili Peppers. The band gained a record contract, and was drawing attention.



Bad Radio achieved some success but it was a short stint for Vedder. He left he band working in the late 1980's as an attendant at a gas station. Still hanging around the local music scene, Eddie Vedder was friends and played basketball with Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer Jack Irons.

Jack Irons told Vedder about a band in Seattle band that was looking for a singer. The story was that the locally successful Seattle band Mother Love Bone, had recently lost their singer, Andrew Wood,  to overdose. Guitarist Stone Gossard and bassist Jeff Ament were in need a replacement singer.



Irons gave Vedder a demo tape to see if he was interested in contacting them. Eddie Vedder listened to the tape before a day of surfing. (Could it have been in Pacific Beach? Possibly, accounts are unclear.)

Eddie Vedder tackled the surf as inspiration struck and he conceived of the lyrics to a three song suite he called Mamma-Son. The songs tell a story with many parallels to Vedder's own. In it, a young man finds out the truth about his paternity after his birth father is dead. From there he becomes a serial killer before being caught sentenced and executed. Vedder recorded his verses onto the instrumental demo and sent them tape North to Seattle.

Impressed with Vedders unique vocals they responded by asking him to come up to Seattle for an audition. At the time a new project was being conceived by Soundgarden  singer and  rhythm Guitarist Chris Cornell. Eddie Vedder was asked to join.

The band was a Seattle supergroup composed of  Soundgarden's Chris Cornell, and drummer Matt Cameron,  and Stone Goddard and Jeff Ament from  Mother Love Bone. The would be joined by newcomers Mike McCready on guitar and vocalist Eddie Vedder from San Diego. The band was named Temple of the Dog and was intended to be a tribute to deceased mother Love Bone singer, Andrew Wood. It was also a bit of a benefit for Goddard and Ament who were suddenly without work.


The self titled album broke just before the the Seattle music scene was to explode across America. Though it was well received, Soundgarden's obligations meant it could not be more than a side project for Goddard and Cameron.

It did achieve one of Cornell's original goals for the group. That would be keeping Goddart and Ament playing music in the Seattle scene. With revived inspiration, Goddart and Ament along with recruited drummer Dave Krusen formed the band Pearl Jam. The rest is history.

Released in 1991 just before  Nirvana's explosive breakthrough Nevermind, Pearl Jams debut Ten took off slowly but by late 1992 the album had peaked on the Billboard hot 200 at number 2. The sales of the album were driven by the success of three singes, Alive, Evenflow and Jeremy, all of which had successful videos on MTV.
  • Alive   Ten  Pearl Jam 5:41
  • Evenflow  Ten  Pearl Jam 4:53
  • Jeremy  Ten  Pearl Jam 5:19


Ten's tracks Alive, Once, as well as the rarity b-side to the Jeremy single, Footstep, were the same songs Eddie Vedder wrote surfing that day in San Diego. It is where the biggest San Diego connections to Eddie Vedder end. His story would be Seattle's after this, including long time rock star fame and legendary legal  battles with Ticketmaster. But that is a story for another day
  • Once  Ten  Pearl Jam 3:51
  • Alive  Ten  Pearl Jam 5:41



Mileage Stats

Route 66: 1/4 Mile/1 State/1097 Tracks/394 Videos/43 Posts
Highway 101: 25 Miles/2 Countries/1 State/702 Tracks/418 Videos/33 Posts
Interstate 95: 200 Miles/1 State/121 Tracks/183 Videos/18 Posts

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Saturday, March 21, 2015

Sea World San Diego

Sea World VW Beatle
ShamuMobile (Flickr user Mike Liu/CC)
Northbound Highway 101 left Old Town San Diego, jogged a bit to the west then moved north along the shores of Mission Bay. At the South end of Mission Bay we come upon one of San Diego's most famous attractions, Sea World.



Sea World opened in 1964. Highway 101 was shortened in 1966 to an official starting point in Los Angeles. Interstate 5 was opening in 1965 as the Main North/South highway in San Diego and Orange Counties running over largely the same route. At the same time the Interstate was being built, several large scale housing development were in the works for Northern San Diego. Tourism had been drawing huge crowds (and revenue) into Orange County to the North because of Disneyland in Anaheim and San Diego city leaders wanted in on the action.

A plan was drawn up by the city allow development of an aquatic theme park on the edge of the already resort lined Mission Bay. The marine theme fit in nicely with the cities beachfront location as well as it success with its world famous zoo in Balboa Park. Two proposals for a marine park were considered. One backed by the San Diego Union, was a park designed by a group of local businessmen. This was the odds on favorite,

The SeaLand concept park introduced the idea of having an orca performing in shows. The plan would have had the orcas swimming in mock battles with sharks. Never mind the fact that no one had successful kept an orca in captivity. And having two predators performing together and doing stunts, what could possibly go wrong? The proposal also had shows with dolphins, penguins, penguins riding on dolphins and other sorts of unlikely marine entertainment.

The underdog proposal was submitted by 4 recent UCLA graduates, George Millay, Milt Shedd, Ken Norris and David DeMott. They were living in Los Angeles. Also in Los Angeles, an existing operation called Marineland  had been running since 1949 on the relatively remote Palos Verdes Peninsula, Marineland had been started as an aquarium and educational facility in marine biology. Within a few years to keep up income from visitors the park added shows featuring a trained pilot whale, as well as dolphin shows such as several other aquarium facilities around the country featured.

Sea World trainer rides dolphins
Dolphin Shows Are Still Part Of The Marine Park Experience 
(Flickr user Alexis Fam/CC)
The Los Angeles' groups plans did not include an orca. Their more modest, but more realistic plan was to build an underwater restaurant underneath a large aquarium. They won the bid and were allowed to begin development. Soon it was found that some practical issues proved their original plan unfeasible. Instead a 22 acres park was built and filled with dolphin and seal shows, 6 rides  and a sort of a "Disneyland meets Marineland on Mission Bay" atmosphere.

The park was more "fun" than the more scholarly Marineland in Los Angeles. It had  easier access too due to the new highway for visitors driving down from Los Angeles or Orange Counties. With a large local base also curious about the big new park, its first year was huge success with over 400,000 visitors.

For over 50 years Sea World has continued to entertain visitors with exhibitions of trained sea animals, most famously their orca shows. Here is a series of home videos of families visiting Sea World since it's opening.



Sea World had great first year. It's fame would continue to grow when their first orca named Shamu broke the life longevity record for an orca. Before Shamu the longest lived orca in captivity was 13 months. Shamu lived and entertained Sea World guest from shortly after the the parks opening in 1965 until she finally passed away in 1971. Shamu's long captive life gave Sea World credibility at the time as a humane operation.
Sea World orcas
Orcas Put Sea World On The Map 
(Flickr user Andy Morales/CC)
As years passedpublic opinion has changed on the humaneness of Sea World. The movie Free Willie had a significant effect on public opinion. Schoolchildren raised funds that led to the real life purchase and limited re-release in the wild of an orca named Keiko from a marine park in Mexico. Marine parks in general have gained a lot of scorn, and since Sea World the most famous Marine Theme park it has gotten particular attention from animal rights activists. in the last few years Sea World has seen a steady drop in attendance and frequent criticism for its operation and its very concept.

Sea World trainer rides orcas
Sea World Has Been Criticized For Not Respecting The Dignity Of Their Animals
(Flickr user Channone Arif/CC)






As part of our look at Sea World I now offer you a virtual day at the park with video playlists of all of the currently operating attractions and shows being performed. If you like the idea of Sea World here is a free sampler. If you hate the idea of Sea World, you can see the animals and build up a righteous rage.

Sea World Cirque De la Mer show aerialist
Cirque de la Mer Is A Non Animal Show
(Flickr user Mike Liu/CC)


The animal shows that made Sea World famous, and they are what is causing a public relations disaster for the part in recent years. The shows currently running are:
  • One Ocean
The orca show.
  • The Shamu Story
Another orca show
  • Blue Horizons
A dolphin show
  • Sea Lions LIVE
Yes, you guessed right, a sea lion show. Coupled with theme park caliber comedy.
  • Pets Rule
Do I need to say it? A pet show.
  • Madagascar Live! Operation: Vacation
A song and dance numbers featuring costumed character from the animated film, Madagascar.
  • Cirque de la Mer
Cirque de Soleil style show on the edge of Mission Bay with acrobats, jet skis, French clowns-you get the picture.




Sea World Journey To Atlantis
Journey To Atlantis
(Wikimedia Commons)

Regardless of your opinion of the trained animal shows, Sea World does have more to recommend it.Ten rides and attractions offer something for the more thrill oriented guests. Although sea life is never far away in the theming,
  • Bayside Skyride
A classic gondola skyride that goes over the bay with stunning views.
  • Journey to Atlantis
A unique attraction that combines a water flume ride and a tracked coaster ride connected by a bit of dark ride.
  • Dolphin Point
A supervised "interact with dolphins" program.
  • Sea World Sky Tower
On of the original attraction a sky needle that his a revolving deck that rises up along its length like an elevator. Excellent views of Mission Bay and San Diego reward the passengers.
  • Sesame Street's Bay of Play
A playground/character area featuring theming and characters from Sesame Street. Toddler central.
  • Shipwreck Rapids
A typical white water rafting ride with some elaborate shipwreck/storm theming.
  • Turtle Reef
An underwater viewing are for a large sea turtle aquarium.
  • Wild Arctic
A simulated helicopter ride take you to an arctic research station where you can see a beluga whale, look at scientists quarters, see walls of ice and polar bears before exiting through the obligatory gift shop.
  • Riptide Rescue
A spinning ride with inflatable rescue boats as the theming.
  • Manta
The other big coaster for Sea World beside Journey to Atlantis.




Playlist Additions

A musical Sea World adventure of sorts. This weeks playlist is a fairly eclectic mix with everything from new wave to funk to french cafe jazz. The list has indie country-rock, 50's muzak, and marching bands. There is also has a modern interpretation of 1930's jazz soundtrack music, it has 60's psychedelic country rock, and 1980's English anarchist folk music. Then we move on to some harmonica blues, indie pop, sea chanty folk music and a beach fire folk singing. I hope you like it.
  • Vacation Return To The Valley Of The Go-Go's The Go-Go's 2:59
  • Love Rollercoaster Funk Classics: The 70's, Vol. 2 Ohio Players 4:50
  • Secrets Of The Sea Mermaid Avenue, Vol. 2 Billy Bragg & Wilco 2:42
  • Aquarium Motifs Paris Combo 4:32
  • The Calming Seas Beachwood Sparks Beachwood Sparks 3:20
  • Music For Vacation Fun Sound 8 2:15 LINK
  • Ocean Tide March American Brass Band Journal: A Collection of New and Beautiful Marches, Quick-Steps,and Polkas Arranged in an Easy Manner for Brass Bands of 12 Instruments Empire Brass 1:23
  • On To The Show The Beau Hunks Play The Original Little Rascals Music The Beau Hunks 0:50
  • Dolphin's Smile The Notorious Byrd Brothers The Byrds 2:00
  • Dolphins Don't Try This At Home Billy Bragg 4:20
  • Walking Thru The Park SuperHarps II Carey Bell 4:30
  • Vacation Connie Francis 2:20
  • Rollercoaster Post-War M. Ward 2:49
  • The Whale Weighting Anchor Shanghaied On The Willamette 6:38
  • Only The Ocean To The Sea Jack Johnson 3:39




Signing Off And Coming Attractions

Today's visit to Sea World is not about taking a stance pro or con on the ethics of an operation like this, I have my opinions, but would like to keep this blog as non partisan as possible, The fact is, this is a notable stop on our journey that could not be bypassed for reasons of avoiding controversy. Have you pleasant experiences about Sea World? I'd love to hear about them in the comments.
  • Three Weeks: We move North out of San Diego through the first geographical challenge of many we will encounter as we continue North on the old Highway 101 in California.

Mileage Stats

Route 66: 0 Miles/1 State/1055 Tracks/268 Videos/41 Posts
Highway 101: 26 Miles/2 Countries/1 State/641 Tracks/407 Videos/31 Posts\
Interstate 95: 143 Miles/1 State/89 Tracks/144 Videos/15 Posts


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 With your help, I can keep the show on the road for you.


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Saturday, January 10, 2015

Old Town Civic Life/Old Town San Diego Pt.5

In our earlier posts in this series we have taken a look at some of the historic homes in Old Town San Diego, California. It is the businesses and civic institutions that make a community into a town or a city., There are several museums around Old Town dedicated to civic life and business. Let's explore.


The San Diego Union Building

Next door to the Casa de Pedrorena is the home of San Diego's first newspaper, The San Diego Union. It was built in 1851 and made out of pre-assembled pieces that were shipped into San Diego from the East Coast. It is now a museum dedicated to the early days of the press in San Diego. Typesetting and printing equipment show how much work it took to put out the news in the early city.

The San Diego Union Printing Office
The San Diego Union Printing Office
(Flickr User J. Stephen Conn/CC)
The San Diego Union Printing Office Interior
Freedom of the Press
(Flickr User Adam Jones/CC)
Mason Street School
Most towns of any size have a schoolhouse. Old Town San Diego was no exception. The Mason Street School was a small one room schoolhouse built in 1865 that served as the towns schoolhouse until 1872
.
This building has been around a bit though. When the school moved to a bigger 4 room building the schoolhouse was moved about a half a mile away and used as a private home until somewhere around 1918.

The little schoolhouse then was converted to a restaurant called the Old Town Tamale Factory which served up presumably tasty meals until the late 1940's.

After the restaurant shut down, the building sat idle until being acquired by the State of California, who Moved it again, this time into the developing Old Town area where it was opened as a museum on July 1, 1955.

San Diego's Oldest Schoolhouse
(FlickrUser Jim MooreCC)
Come Inside, Class Is About To Start
(Flickr User Ming-yen Hsu/CC)
Children be Seated!
(Flickr User Bonnie Dean/CC)
Seeley Stables and The Black Hawk Livery

Before cars and highways and Old Highway Notes, and before the railroads were built into San Diego in the 1890's, travel would be challenging. To go to Washington D.C. you could sail South all the way around the tip of South America then head North up the Atlantic Coast. Or you could go half way, to Panama cross the isthmus to the Atlantic Ocean and the continue North on different ship. Or you could go overland.

Overland travel in mid 19th century San Diego often meant travel by stagecoach. Albert L. Seeley was a man who helped address that need in Southern California. It 1868, he was granted a charter for a weekly mail route between San Diego and Los Angeles. Within a year Seeley and partened with another San Diego merchant, Charles Wright. The Seeley and Wright Stage Line had increased the run to at three days a week. It was a two day trip with an overnight stay in San Juan Capistrano. Their service meant you cold leave San Diego at 5am in the morning and arrive in Los Angeles at 4pm the next afternoon.

The Seeley Stables were constructed in 1869 to house his horses and equipment. his business was successful for 8 years, until the Southern Pacific began service from Los Angeles to Anaheim in 1876. He was not the only stagecoach operator in San Diego and the competition combined with railroads impact squeezed him out of business in 1877. By 1920 the stables were demolished. But in 1977 the State of California realized the importance of depicting early transportation in the area and rebuilt the stable to serve a s museum of ,id 19th century overland travel. Today the Museum housed inside features stage coaches, horse tack, farm wagons and other displays.

Behind the stables is the Black Hawk Livery, a reproduction of the Blacksmith Shop that would have naturally worked with such a horse based operation as a stagecoach line. The reproduced livery offer live demonstrations of the type of smithing that would have been performed here when the stable were active.

Seeley Stables
Seeley Stables
(Flickr User eefeewahfah/CC)
Concord Stagecoach
A Concord Stagecoach featured in the Museum
(Flickr User Jasperdo/CC)
Historic Wagon
A Private Wagon of The Era 
(Flickr User Jasperdo/CC)
Freight Wagon
The Big Rigs of the 1800's 
(Flickr User Jasperdo/CC)
Black Hawk Livery
Black Hawk Livery 
(Flickr User Gary J. Wood/CC)
Blacksmith
The Blacksmith Worked Hard For His Pay 
(Flickr User Dmytro Kochetov/CC)
The Colorado House and Wells Fargo San Diego History Museum

The Colorado House was built as hotel in 1850 by Cave Johnson Coots. Coots was Tennessee native and west Point graduate who came West to serve in the frontier. During the Mexican American War he was in California stationed at  Los Angeles, San Luis Rey, and San Diego from 1848 to 1851 

While stationed in San Diego, Coot began building his hotel. a two story building it had a first floor veranda and a typical Western false box front. Coots became involved in civic affairs serving on the first Grand Jury in 1850. he would later serve as county judge in 1854.

During the Colorado House's construction Coots must have fallen in love. In 1951 he was married to Ysidora Bandini, daughter of his friend Juan Bandini, One of the generous wedding gifts the couple received was land. A tract of 2219 acres was deeded to the newlyweds. The couple would move to their new rancho in 1853. 

Throwing himself into his work developing the Rancho, Coots' interest in the Colorado house waned,  From 1854 to 1866 he leased out the subdivided building to provide office space for the San Diego Herald, a surgeon, jeweler, hairdresser and other businesses. 
Colorado House
The Wells Fargo San Diego History Museum is in the Colorado House
(Flickr User Prayitno / Thank you for (4 millions +) views/CC)
In 1866, Coots faced legal troubles and was charged with but ultimately found not guilty of the murder of an Indian worker on his Rancho. He would go on to gain land from three other ranchos, becoming on of the richest men in early Southern California.

That same year he sold the Colorado House to Joseph Mannasse and Marcus Schiller. In 1872 it was destroyed by fire. Adding to Old Town San Diego, the building was reconstructed in 1992 where it now houses the Wells Fargo San Diego History Museum

Wells Fargo Wagon
TheWells Fargo Wagon Connected The West 
(Flickr User Prayitno / Thank you for (4 millions +) views/CC)
Wells Fargo played a crucial role in early California being a leader in banking, shipping, and travel. There famous stagecoaches crisscrossed the young state of California. Its banks provided assaying services to miners in the gold fields. Secure transport of money and passendgers connected the far flung state to the Eastern United States and it commerce.

The museum touches on those early days with t he recreation of an early bank and assay office, with displays of gold rush era mining and banking equipment as well as a large gold nugget n display and one of its iconic stagecoaches.
              



The San Diego County Sheriffs Museum

San Diego County Sheriffs Patch
(Wikipedia)

Any city draws crime. It is the job of law enforcement to protect the peace. For over 150 years the San Diego Sheriffs Department has served that function. In celebration of that history, they too have a historical museum in Old Town San Diego.

From their website:
The Sheriff's Museum consists of 6800 square feet of exhibit space, covering the entire history of the San Diego County Sheriff's Department from its inception in 1850 through today.

The Museum contains cars, motorcycles, real life jail cells from various eras, and replica Sheriff's offices from the 1850's, 1940's and present.

Children will love the Museum - they can sit on a real life motorcycle and use the siren, pick up a bullet proof vest, play with handcuffs, and sit in a real Sheriff's Car!

Adults will appreciate the rich history of the department reflected throughout the Museum.  Ask the docent to take a picture of your entire family - locked in a jail cell!


1966 Dodge Polera Squad Car
1966 Dodge Polera Squad Car
(Wikipedia)



Playlist Additions

This week we have two songs from each of the following themes:
  • Newspaper
  • School
  • Stables
  • Horse
  • Wagons
  • Blacksmith
  • Bank
  • Bank Robbers  
  • Law Enforcement
  • Jail
Newspaper starts us off with The News from jam band supergroup called Comotion. The group contains members from String Cheese Incident, Leftover Salmon, David Grisman Quartet, Aquarium, Rescue Unit, and the Anger-Marshall Band. Sadly, I could not find it available for download.  The CD is available in my Amazon store. All the fancy finger picking in The News leads to a old time country hit from Arthus Smith playing Jimmy Brown, The Newsboy.
  • The News Head West Comotion 4:27
  • Jimmy Brown, The Newsboy 200 Years Of American Heritage In Song Arthur Smith 1:41

School follows as we mix in some pub rock with Rockpile and Teacher, Teacher. Cat Stevens mellows us out a bit with his nostalgic Old Schoolyard.
  • Teacher Teacher Seconds Of Pleasure Rockpile 2:35
  • Old Schoolyard On The Road To Find Out Cat Stevens 2:44

Stables are the next theme in the civic life of Old Town San Diego. I was a little surprised to find a few stable songs in my collection.Livery Stable Blues perfectly fits the Seeley Stables. I have several versions of this dixieland classic, I went with a version from the house band in Disneyland's New Orleans Square, the Side Street Strutters. If you want a copy for yourself, you have to go to Disneyland, sorry. Keeping in the jazz vein, we follow with Stablemates by Stan Getz and Kenny Barron. Unfortunately, I could not find videos for either song to share.
  • Livery Stable Blues You Ask For It     The Side Street Strutters Jazz Band 3:46
  • Stablemates People Time Stan Getz & Kenny Barron 8:49
Horses are what a stable exists for. So we have a couple of horse songs. Flatt & Scruggs break it down bluegrass style with Six White Horses. Then we have Oregon's own Misty River with a story of little girl longing in Black Pony.
  • Six White Horses Flatt & Scruggs 1948-59 Flatt & Scruggs 2:44
  • Black Pony Misty River - Live At The Backgate Stage Misty River 3:37



Wagons and Stagecoaches are why Seeley needed horses and a stable, Our first wagon song is Brett Ratliff's cover of a Grandpa Jones novelty song called Wish I'd Stayed In the Wagonyard about a farmer who comes into town, leaves his wagon at the wagonyard and proceeds to get drunk and in trouble, Another classic wagon song also is a tribute to Wells Fargo, so it just had to make the list.Wells Fargo Wagon from Merediths Wilson's The Music Man is our next addition. My version is from the Original Broadway Cast.
  • Wish I'd Stayed In The Wagonyard Cold Icy Mountain  Brett Ratliff 2:38
  • Wells Fargo Wagon The Music Man Original Broadway Soundtrack Eddie Hodges with Cast Of 'The Music Man' 2:13

Blacksmith songs were in short supply, so I went with his tools to represent the blacksmith shop. Anvil Chorus by Glen Miller and his Orchestra really bangs it out, while a Nine Pound Hammer Is Too Heavy for the Monroe Brothers.

  • Anvil Chorus The Best of the Lost Recordings & the Secret Broadcasts Glenn Miller 4:05
  • Nine Pound Hammer Is Too Heavy Harry Smith's Anthology Of American Folk Music, Vol. 4 The Monroe Brothers 2:14

Bank songs are more common than blacksmith songs, and frequently they are not pro bank, as you might imagine. Our first song was featured in the Route 66 playlist on this blog. It is by Early Chicago bluesman Big Bill Broonzy and it's the Bankers Blues. A more modern spin on the same idea comes to us from Beck with Canceled Check.


  • Banker's Blues Bill Broonzy-01-75 Big Bill Broonzy 2:32 Download Here
  • Canceled Check Mutations Beck 3:14

Bank Robbers show up when there is a bank. Our playlist gets an unlikely cover  by Hot Tuna as they play the Clash's Bank Robber. Bringing it back to my hometown, Portland's Freak Mountain Ramblers bring their country fried hippy rock sound to a fairly faithful cover of a Jeffery Fredericks and The Clamtones song from 1970's hippy Portland, Robbin' Banks.
  • Bank Robber Live At Sweetwater Hot Tuna 4:30
  • Robbin Banks III Freak Mountain Ramblers 4:17


Law Enforcement becomes a requirement when you have a crime. Our first law enforcement song is an old time country song from Big Dave McLean, Police and High Sheriff. Cops from the well played The Beau Hunks Play The Original Little Rascals Music pairs nicely as an old time jazz number.
  • Police And High Sheriff 35 Years Of Stony Plain Big Dave McLean 1:13
  • Cops The Beau Hunks Play The Original Little Rascals Music The Beau Hunks 0:37




Jail. They have one at the Sheriff Museum and you can take pictures there. Nice place to visit, but you would not want to stay there. To close out this weeks playlist additions, we have a bluegrass jailhouse lament, Jailer Jailer, by Peter Rowan. You might remember Peter Rowan as one of the legendary hippy bluegrass band Old And In The Way or as one of Bill Monroe's Bluegrass Boys. Our last song this week is by a fictitious group, the Soggy Bottom Boys. From the film O Brother Where Art Thou comes the  Soggy Bottom Boys big hit, an old country classic, Man Of Constant Sorrow.
  • Jailer Jailer Legacy Peter Rowan Bluegrass Band 3:38
  • In The Jailhouse Now O Brother, Where Art Thou? The Soggy Bottom Boys  3:35

Signing Off and Coming Attractions

I hope you have been enjoying our tour of Old Town. We have just one more thing to see then we will hit the road again. I'd like to hear your opinions about the playlist. Do you prefer individual videos or video playlists? Let me know in the comments please,

Next Week: Our drive North on Interstate 95 in Florida continues. There are more Spring Training baseball fields to see along this stretch of the highway. We will hit one, and see what else Port St Lucie has to offer.
Two Weeks: The story of the Blues Brothers continues to dominate our look at the city of Chicago, Illinois at the start of Route 66.
Three Weeks: Before we continue North on Highway 101 through San Diego, California we will conclude our visit to Old Town. Their is one more house to see and it has quite a story tied to it. 


Mileage Stats

Route 66: 0 Miles/1 State/1001 Tracks/270 Videos/40 Posts
Highway 101: 22 Miles/2 Countries/1 State/614 Tracks/319 Videos/29 Posts
Interstate 95: 123 Miles/1 State/87 Tracks/139 Videos/14 Posts


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