Here are my photos from the reunion at Carolyn and Dick’s place in Scotts Valley about 10 years ago. All of my pictures are screen shots from video, so I need more pictures from you folks who were also there.
I was taking this picture so I’m missing, so were some others. -Ron.
Who enters here must wipe their feet Or They’ll go down in deep defeat. Wipe them clean and do not stir Be you mother, child or Sir. When they are clean as driven snow, Open the door and in you go.
“We have lived at many different addresses but the only one I can readily recall is 2038 34th Avenue, Oakland. All six of us children were born in that house.” – Cecil Rhodes. Vonnie and Earl and Mildred and Cecil and Ralph and Les were born here, starting in 1904, and the house is still standing. It was on Bray avenue in Fruitvale, which is now 34th avenue in Oakland. I found a hand drawn map that pinpoints the location, and I’ve matched it up to a present day Google map.
This is what is used to look like in 1904:
And in 1918:
It says 1918
This hand drawn map is interesting to check out. Who drew it? Was in Harry Rhodes? Some of the street names have changed. You can see where the creeks ran. The Rhodes’ house is the little tiny box, right in the middle.
And how it lines up with the google map.
And here’s a close up satellite picture.
Here is a Google map of the area, and if you have it, a Google Earth map.
The Pluto Platter was renamed the Frisbee in 1958, but it took longer than that for the new moniker to be adopted in Aptos, especially at the Ralph Rhodes Ranch golf course. Wine was the preferred drink during a round (likewise during the annual Easter egg hunt), and extra commendations were handed out for not spilling during a fairway drive. It was advantageous for the younger players to have a large party, for the local club pros would generally accept a handicap of playing with a hand-me-down sub-par platter. Craig and Glenn were the distance champs, and Ralph was the master of the one-footed trick shot.
Although the actual holes did change over the years, and special course rules were added to accommodate the presence of frisbee loving dogs, here is the course layout as I remember it.
From the patio to the bush at the end of the lawn
Starting on the road, between two trees and back over to the propane tank.
Through the hoop and into the pig scalding tub.
All the way to the barn.
Around the barn to a tree.
Back up and through the tire.
From the barn to the tree in the turn-around.
Over the house and into the bush.
Up the hill and hit the cork tree.
I’m sure I missed some details and some special holes, so please send me corrections and additions.
The first page of this memo was typed up elsewhere. But I found the whole original document. Here is Bertha May (Gillespie) Rhodes’ remembrances of her family stories. Read all 3 pages.
Sometime before the revolutionary war, there were three brothers, by the name of Gillespie came to the U.S. from Scotland and settled in Virginia, the date of their landing does not seem to be known, but all people of the name of Gillespie, whom I have met, tell the same story of the three brothers so I presume it is true. My father William Moore Gillespie was born in Wheeling, West Virginia Sept. 16, 1826. His folks moved to Pennsylvania then on to Ohio. There are no family records of his family and I am only writing this as I remember him telling it to me when I was a child. His parents Hue (possible Hugh) Gillespie and Martha Kimberly had seven children. William M. and Elizabeth twins, Margaret, John, James, Mary and Needham. His father died when quite a young man, probably in his early 40’s, and Elizabeth did when quite young. Father said he and she ran and climbed on sacks of grain to look out of a window to watch the first train that ran from Columbus to Cincinnati and she fell and broke her neck. After the death of his father, his two brothers, John and James were Bound Boys. He stayed with his mother being the eldest and helped her run a mill of some kind. I do not know what was made but he always said his mother ran it in the day time and he run it at night. Consequently, he always like to be up and doing at night. He had a fairly good education for that day and age, he always led the singing school, was a general leader in all the young people’s activities. When gold was discovered in Cal in 1849 he joined one of the first from Ohio and came to Cal. There were 100 men in their company, no women or children. They had mule teams and saddle horses. They left Ohio, March 4, 1849 and crossed the Calif line July 4, which was considered a very quick trip for those days. Contrary to other records which may be found, he always told me, there was not a [casualty] in their company. As I said before, he had always been use to night work and he hated to cook, so when they were making up their camp routine of work, he traded with other men who did not want to do guard duty and preferred to cook. So father stood guard every night and it was also his duty to find the river crossings and guide the train across all rivers. He had a very fine saddle horse which would swim any river, but in crossing the Platt River he had difficulty in finding a landing place on the far side of the river and the current was so strong it took he and horse down the stream and they were both nearly drowned. But they got out and found a suitable place to get the wagons up the bank then he had to swim back and lead the train across. He said they had no trouble with Indians and only once were they threatened with. He said is was a clear night the moon was just coming up when he saw something dodge up and down and presently he would see another object and that kept up for quite a while but the Indians, which it proved to be did not attack them. Said that was the nearest he ever came to an Indian fight. Then he slept during the day. So said he didn’t get to see as much of the country as he night otherwise. He said once they met a tribe of Indians and they had a white girl with them. She wanted the captain to take her on with them, but he said no, he didn’t dare to do it because he knew if he did there would be trouble with the Indians. Said the girl had a fine pony and she could sure ride it. Said for several days she would ride to the train and follow a while then ride back to the Indians. When they got to Nevada, they went by they way of the Carson sink and into Cal. He was at San Andreas and Mariposa and all that country, Sacramento and finally to Petaluma, which at that time was the Metropolis of the state. There he met my mother Caroline Malisse [ not Miranda?] Leffingwell, more of that later.