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- Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
The collection will become known as the California Historical Society, or CHS, Collection at Stanford and will continue to be accessible to the public and academics.
Stanford University Libraries, or SUL, said it is committed to carrying on the California Historical Society’s core mission of preserving and sharing the history of California and the West.
“In partnership with the Bill Lane Center for the American West at Stanford, Stanford University Libraries are honored to curate and expand the CHS Collection,” said Michael A. Keller, the Ida
M. Green University Librarian at SUL. “From its origins, the California Historical Society has focused on collecting and preserving the history of the West and has amassed a remarkably rich and diverse archive over the years. Its collections of books, journals, letters and postcards, maps, photographs, newspapers, and more form an enormous, relatively untapped resource for historical research, for teaching, and for understanding the history of California and the western region.”
“The transfer of the CHS Collection to Stanford University Libraries is a watershed moment for the California Historical Society, as it marks a path forward to continue engaging both the public and scholars in discovering our history. The California Historical Society was established in 1871 for this very purpose — preserving, studying, and making accessible the history of California — at a time when the study of history was not yet recognized as a profession or academic discipline. At the time, the organization’s main focus was on research, writing, and publishing, with the ultimate goal of making California history accessible to the general public. Today, CHS’s mission will continue through the efforts of Stanford University Libraries and the Lane Center which will provide students and scholars with access to this extraordinary collection for their research projects, support researchers in their study of California history, and over educational programs for the public to better understand and appreciate our past,” said Tony Gonzalez, chair of the Board of Trustees for CHS.
David M. Kennedy, the Donald J. McLachlan Professor of History, Emeritus at Stanford and founding Faculty Director of the Lane Center, said that the acquisition of this collection “will make Stanford the premier place for historical research about California and the broader North American West. It will also confirm the Lane Center’s reputation as the most vibrant and important facility for teaching and research about the region.”
“It is not just the past, but the new past we are creating,” said Bruce E. Cain, current director of the Lane Center.
Cain believes that greater accessibility and visibility of the CHS Collection will help to uncover and elevate the voices and experiences of groups that have been historically marginalized.
Referencing the Lane Center’s different areas of research — from arts and culture to environment and energy — Cain looks forward to the diversity of perspectives that the CHS Collection will bring to studies in the humanities and social sciences.
Added Richard Saller, Stanford’s twelfth President and the Kleinheinz Family Professor of European Studies, “At a time when historical perspective is so critical, the California Historical Society Collection will provide a treasure trove of information about long-term trajectories over the past two centuries. The addition of this collection will serve Stanford’s core mission of research and education.”
Items from the CHS Collection date back to the early eighteenth century and span approximately 16,000 linear feet. It is estimated to contain more than 600,000 items and is renowned for its rare and diverse range of materials, making it one of the most significant collections of California state and local history.
The CHS Collection is held in high regard alongside those of other esteemed institutions such as the Bancroft Library, the California State Library, and the Huntington Library.
The CHS Collection includes original material from significant events such as the Gold Rush, statehood, and the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and Fire. It also features unique collections, such as the Peoples Temple Collection, which houses organizational records, government documents, social and personal correspondence, newspapers, publications, photographs, film and video tapes, audio recordings, and three-dimensional artifacts.
The collection has grown considerably since its establishment in 1983, thanks to the generous donations from former Peoples Temple members, family, and friends, as well as journalists
and scholars. It now stands as the most comprehensive archival record of the organization, spanning from Peoples Temple’s beginnings in Indiana in 1955 to the aftermath of the tragedy in Jonestown on November 18, 1978.
Other noteworthy collections include the records of the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California, which date back to the early 1900s. These documents provide a comprehensive look at the establishment and activities of the Northern California branch, including the full run of its newsletters, from 1936 to the present.
The Kemble Collections on Western Printing & Publishing are among the largest and most comprehensive collections on printing and publishing in the western United States. This collection spans nearly 200 years, from 1802 though 2001, and includes books, manuscript collections, trade catalogs, and type specimens, as well as ephemera related to printing practices, culture, and history in the Western Hemisphere.
The most recent sizable addition to the CHS Collection was donated by the California Flower Market, Inc., which consists of materials that document the history of the flower market
and industry in California from 1890 through 2014.
Throughout its 150-plus year history, CHS has consistently faced financial challenges. In its earlier years, operating deficits were often resolved through generous year-end contributions from its members and donors. In 1979, legislation was signed by Governor Edmund G. Brown, Jr., designating CHS as the state historical society.
However, despite this status and ongoing efforts to lobby the California Legislature for financial support, CHS is one of only a few state historical societies that does not, and has never, received general operating funds from its state government.
Additionally, unlike other large, well-established collecting institutions, CHS’s early benefactors did not leave sufficiently large endowments to help provide in perpetuity for all the ongoing operational costs of maintaining its sizable collection.
By early 2020, CHS was already in a vulnerable financial position due to nearly a decade of annual budget deficits. As a result, the Board and incoming Executive Director Alicia Goehring decided to sell CHS’s building at 678 Mission Street in San Francisco in order to fund a new vision and attain financial sustainability.
However, the COVID-19 pandemic, subsequent collapse of the city’s commercial real estate market and the unexpected passing of Ms. Goehring in 2022 thwarted these plans, ultimately leaving the organization in a financially dire and unsustainable position.
With no other viable path forward, the board of trustees elected to explore potential collaborations and even mergers to safeguard the CHS Collection and mission.
“It was never an option to deaccession and sell any part of the collection in order to stay afloat. The board was fully committed to its sacred duty of preserving the integrity of the collection,” Gonzalez explained.
The board considered several leading research and public institutions in California and ultimately decided that SUL was the best choice to manage and grow the CHS Collection.
“SUL brings a strong infrastructure that spans a network of twenty libraries across Stanford’s campus and an expansive team with knowledge and expertise in collections development, digitization and preservation, and technologies development,” said CHS Interim CEO Jen Whitley.
“Through SUL's partnership with the Bill Lane Center for the American West, the CHS Collection will continue to increase our understanding of California and the Western region,” said Whitley. “The center conducts research, teaches, and reports on a wide range of contemporary issues, including projects that explore visual arts, traditional customs, historical events, and diverse communities in California and the West. Its mission is to broaden both public and academic understanding of the region, bringing awareness to its rich history and current social issues. This aligns with the mission and past programs of CHS, which has long been dedicated to preserving and sharing the stories of California and the West.”
The agreement between CHS and SUL, which was unanimously supported by the CHS Board of Trustees and reviewed by the California Attorney General’s Office as part of the California nonprofit dissolution process, provides that the collection will remain intact under the expert care of SUL’s extensive preservation and archives staff. This ensures that the CHS Collection will continue to be publicly accessible for future generations to appreciate.
Noted Keller, “The California Historical Society’s collection, which is complemented by Stanford’s own extensive collections on California and the American West, will be preserved and made available for scholars, students, and citizens once its many constituent parts are ingested into the Stanford collections, this probably requires some years.”
Gordon H. Chang, professor of History and the Olive H. Palmer professor in Humanities, knows well the importance of having access to California’s rich history. “The Chinese Railroad Workers in North America Project at Stanford devoted considerable attention to mining the CHS archive and found material never used by previous railroad scholars,” said Chang.
His research shows the depth of the CHS Collection and its synergy to SUL’s own holdings on the history of Asian Americans, African Americans and Mexican Americans with the Chinese American Citizens Alliance Papers, the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund records, and the Huey P. Newton/Black Panther Party Papers.
“For me the CHS Collection is one of the most valuable, and underutilized collections in California,” said Richard White, the Margaret Byrne professor of American History, emeritus at Stanford and author of Railroaded and California Exposures. “It will augment SUL’s holdings in the American West, helping to fill in gaps from the nineteenth and early twentieth-century California. This is an incredibly rare opportunity to bring an archive of this significance to Stanford.”
“We firmly believe that Stanford University Libraries is the most suitable institution to steward the CHS Collection. Its state-of-the-art library will provide the highest level of preservation and protection for the collection in its entirety, and its capacity for digitization via in-house services and its ability to host researchers at its many facilities far exceeds what we have been able to do at CHS,” stated CHS Interim CEO Jen Whitley. “Furthermore, SUL will be able to proactively expand the collection, which CHS has only rarely had the resources to do throughout its history,” added Whitley.
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- Written by: PRESTON DYCHES
What’s Up for February? The Moon's many engagements, what's the right term for a planetary rendezvous, and the goddess of love draws near.
Starting with the Moon's journey across the sky this month, you'll find the slim crescent of Earth's natural satellite cozied up to the planet Venus on the 1st. It then visits the
Pleiades on the 5th, and hops over Jupiter on the 6th, looking increasingly fuller, before arriving right next to Mars on February 9th.
Jupiter and Mars rule the sky on February nights. You'll find them high overhead in the evening, together with the winter constellations of Orion, Taurus, and Gemini.
Astronomers sometimes get picky about their terminology. For instance, the apparent close approaches of objects on the sky, like two planets, or the Moon and a planet, are commonly called "conjunctions," and we often use that term in this video series.
However, most of the time, the technically correct term is an "appulse." Conjunctions technically occur when two objects have the same right ascension, and they don't have to appear close together in the sky. (Right ascension is a way of indicating where an object is along the sky from east to west, similar to how we measure longitude on Earth's surface.)
Appulses are simply the times when two objects appear at their closest in the sky, regardless of whether they have to have the same "space coordinates." The term comes from a Latin word meaning "brought near" or "driven toward."
And now that you know the distinction, you can choose to keep it casual or impress others with some next-level astronomy knowledge. Either way, it’s all about enjoying the view.
February is a month for love, so what better time to spotlight Venus, which is associated with the Roman goddess of love? This month, Venus shines at its brightest for the year. It'll remain dazzling through the start of March as it slowly descends from its late-January high point in the sky. By mid-March, it will disappear into the glare of sunset, only to reappear as a morning object in April.
Now, you may have heard that Venus goes through phases, just like the Moon. You can see these phases with a modest telescope. But there’s a surprising twist: unlike the Moon, Venus isn’t at its brightest when it’s "full." Instead, it shines most brilliantly in our skies when it’s a thinner crescent! It all comes down to distance. See, Venus only appears fuller when it’s on the far side of the Sun, and much farther from Earth. As it comes closer to us, its phase becomes a crescent, but the planet also looks much larger in the sky. Even as a crescent, the light from its closer position more than makes up for the smaller phase.
So, remember this Valentine's proverb: "The goddess of love is at her most radiant when nearby!"
Stay up to date on all of NASA's missions exploring the solar system and beyond at science.nasa.gov.
Preston Dyches works for NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
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- Written by: Elizabeth Larson
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Lakeport Police Department is continuing its investigation into a Friday night shooting at Library Park that claimed the life of a Lakeport resident, with the police chief reporting that the suspect directly responsible for the shooting was not yet in custody as of Saturday afternoon.
The fatal shooting occurred at Library Park shortly before 9:20 p.m. Friday, as Lake County News has reported.
Lakeport Police and firefighters arrived minutes after being dispatched to the scene to find the victim, a 32-year-old Lakeport man, lying unconscious next to the seawall near the gazebo.
The shooting victim was declared dead a short time later, according to reports from the scene.
In an update released shortly after 2 p.m. Saturday, the Lakeport Police Department said it is continuing its investigation with the assistance of the Lake County Sheriff’s Office and Clearlake Police Department.
Lakeport Police Chief Dale Stoebe on Saturday told Lake County News that the suspect who had committed the shooting had not been arrested, despite there being one subject in custody at the Lake County Jail, Parker John Coggins, with a murder charge on his booking sheet.
Lake County News has not been able to get further information on Coggins’ involvement in the case from the Lakeport Police Department.
The name of the victim is not yet being released pending the notification of his family.
The police department said Saturday afternoon that, “Initial information at the scene indicated that this was not an act of random violence. Rather the deceased was the specific focus of the
violence that took his life.”
Police also reported that none of the additional information they have developed during the ongoing investigation has suggested that the public at large “is in danger of similar acts by the suspect or suspects in this matter.”
The police department said it will offer additional updates when new information can be released in the case.
Anyone with information regarding this incident is asked to contact Det. Juan Altamirano at 707-263-5491, Extension 102, e-mail
Email Elizabeth Larson at
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- Written by: Elizabeth Larson
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Authorities are investigating an apparent homicide that took place in downtown Lakeport late Friday night.
The incident was first reported as an assault victim with a gunshot wound at 9:18 p.m., the Lakeport Police Department said in a statement released shortly after 3 a.m. Saturday.
Lakeport Police officers were dispatched to Library Park, where they arrived at 9:20 p.m., according to the report.
Upon their arrival at the scene, officers located an unconscious adult male victim that had been struck by gunfire.
The shooting victim was found near the seawall closest to the park’s gazebo, based on radio reports.
A request was made over the air for an air ambulance but it was reported that REACH was grounded due to weather.
Lakeport Police officers and firefighters with the Lakeport Fire Protection District performed life saving measures on the victim, however, the victim was pronounced deceased at the scene just after 9:30 p.m.
Officers blocked off an area around Library Park that included the intersection of First and Park streets shortly after the victim died, radio reports indicated.
Meantime, the suspect was reported to have fled north toward Xabatin Park.
Additional Lakeport Police officers, Lake County Sheriff’s deputies and California Highway Patrol officers were summoned to the scene to assist with the investigation and search for the suspect responsible for the shooting, the Lakeport Police Department said.
Officers went to Xabatin Park as well as a nearby bar where a fight had been reported shortly before the shooting, according to radio reports.
The Lakeport Police statement on the incident said information from witnesses indicated this was not a random act and that the victim and suspects were previously known by each other.
The investigation is still ongoing, police said.
Police said the name of the victim is not being released pending notification to next of kin.
If you have any information regarding this incident, please contact Det. Juan Altamirano at 707-263-5491 EXT 102 or e-mail at
Email Elizabeth Larson at
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