guest :: login
  • Home
  • Collections
    • Historical Articles
    • Photos
    • Publications
    • Yearbooks
    • Maps
    • Multimedia
  • Help
  • Heritage Council
  • Contact Us
Home > Search Results: recid:7065
Search:
 
Search Tips :: Advanced Search
Search collections:
Sort by: Display results: Output format:
Solano History 5 records found  Search took 0.02 seconds. 
1.
(100)
Visualize Vacaville Surrounded By Water? / Rico, John [879] [RICO-1981-879]
Beware, the flood is coming. At this point I am rather confused about our climatic transitions in the years ahead. One group of scientists and meteorologists tell us the North Pole ice masses are gradually creeping toward us and that in a million years, more or less, little Vacaville will be covered by glaciers measuring hundreds of feet deep.
Detailed record - Similar records
2.
(80)

0875 0875
1925

Ice on water tank at Locy ranch around 1925

Detailed record - Similar records
3.
(80)
Mystery surrounded the demise of jail / Bowen, Jerry [70] [WAYITWAS-2001-70]
The next time you're enjoying a day at Andrews Park, go ahead and wander over to the waterfall. It's a little hard to determine the exact position because the banks of Ulatis Creek have changed considerably since 1906, but you are in the area once occupied by Vacaville's original jail.
Detailed record - Similar records
4.
(78)
Fires and family life at the Water Works / Bowen, Jerry [567] [WAYITWAS-2005-567]
Some of the most interesting local history comes from the people who lived it. Last year, during the Solano County Historical Society's Pioneer Days Celebration, I was very fortunate to meet Betty Davis who lives in Fairfield. While we were talking, she asked me if I would be interested in a family history that was written by her mother, Edith Lucille Venning.
Detailed record - Similar records
5.
(77)
Patwin legend tells of smokehouse / Bowen, Jerry [179] [WAYITWAS-2003-179]
Little was known about the American Indians who inhabit- ed Solano County and the surrounding area until the late 1800s and early 1900s. By that time, for various reasons, there were virtually none left, disease being the biggest killer after the arrival of the Spanish.
Detailed record - Similar records

 
© 2014 Vacaville Heritage Council
Powered by CDS Invenio
spacer