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Shasta Memory Bank 5.8.2011

The Redding Steam Laundry Truck in the old days (c. 1915) picked up and delivered laundry at one’s door. The Redding Steam Laundry was located on the southwest corner of Placer Street and Railroad Avenue.

Photo courtesy of Shasta Historical Society. Click on the image to enlarge it.

The Shasta Historical Society library is open to the public and … Continue Reading

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Shasta Memory Bank 4.24.11

The Chamber of Commerce building stood on Yuba Street in Redding, next to the Carnegie Library. The Chamber was organized in 1910 with Dudley Saeltzer as its first president.

Photo courtesy of Shasta Historical Society

The Shasta Historical Society library is open to the public and volunteers are available to assist with research. Hours are 10 a.m. to … Continue Reading

Shasta Memory Bank 4.17.11

Gold miners, bespattered with tallow, from the Midas Mine at Harrison Gulch, around the turn of the century. Of special interest are the candles and holders carried by the miners, as well as their lunch buckets. Click on the image… Continue Reading

Shasta Memory Bank 4.3.11

Shasta transit buses parked in front of a train at the Redding Depot in the 1920s.

The Shasta Historical Society library is open to the public and volunteers are available to assist with research. Hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. For more information, call 530.243.3720 or click here to visit the Shasta Historical Society website … Continue Reading

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Renee McKean: The Alexander Mansion

In about 1884, an enterprising man named Samuel Thomas Alexander moved from Hawaii to Oakland, then traveled north seeking new investments for his own agricultural empire after having already established one in Hawaii with his partner Henry Perrine Baldwin. From… Continue Reading

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Redding’s Armory Hall Fell with its Own Fireworks

According to Ed Peterson’s book on Redding’s first hundred years, the San Francisco Call described this building in 1890 as “a $60,000 hall to be ready by July Fourth.” Its actual cost was only $6,500 to build and, by all… Continue Reading