For the purposes of the NORCAL and SOCAL mailing lists, the boundary between Northern California and Southern California is the line that runs east to west between Monterey and San Luis Obispo counties as it is the only one that runs all the way across California from the Pacific Ocean to Nevada. Anyone looking at a map of the state will find the line very easily. For a visual, visit: http://media.maps.com/magellan/Images/CALCOU-W1.gif -- Yvonne Bowers, Sonoma, CA. Listmom, WebMom NORCAL, SOCAL, CA-CORNISH NORCAL LIBRARY http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~yvonne/norcallib.html NORCAL Genealogy Index http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~yvonne/NORCAL%20index/
Forwarded: Calif. History Lecture Series (5 lectures, for a $5 fee for non-members). See <http://www.rancholoscerritos.org/calendar.html> for more info, and make your reservations early! Sounds neat. Carol Tucson >X-Sent-Via: DakotaCom.NET >Delivered-To: [email protected] >X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express Macintosh Edition - 4.5 (0410) >Approved-By: Thomas & Pamela Wellock <[email protected]> >Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2004 07:59:11 -0800 >Reply-To: H-NET List on California Studies <[email protected]> >Sender: H-NET List on California Studies <[email protected]> >From: Thomas & Pamela Wellock <[email protected]> >Subject: CA History Lecture Series in Long Beach, Jan-May >To: [email protected] >X-MIME-Autoconverted: from quoted-printable to 8bit by >breaker.dakotacom.net id i09FEZiS013111 >X-Spam-Status: No, hits=-0.3 required=5.0 > tests=APPROVED_BY,AWL > version=2.55 >X-Spam-Level: >X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 2.55 (1.174.2.19-2003-05-19-exp) > >From: [email protected] >Subject: CA History Lecture Series in Long Beach, Jan-May >Date: Thu, Jan 8, 2004, 9:44 AM > >Rancho Los Cerritos Historic Site in Long Beach, Ca, is offering a terrific >lecture series during the winter and spring. These lectures will take place >on five Saturday mornings, January through May. The first lecturer is Prof >Engstrand, of Univ San Diego, who will speak about Baja and Alta Ca in the >late C18. It's Saturday, January 24, at 10am. There is a modest fee, and >reservations are necessary. The full schedule is below, and it can be sent >by flyer is preferred. > >Best, >Meighan Maguire Ph.D. >Education Coordinator >Rancho Los Cerritos Historic Site >4600 Virginia Road >Long Beach, CA 90807 >562-570-1755 >www.rancholoscerritos.org <http://www.rancholoscerritos.org> > > >Rancho Los Cerritos Historic Site announces its > >2004 Lecture Series on Early California History > > > >January 24, 2004 at 10 a.m. >Baja California: Where California Really Began >Speaker: Dr. Iris H.W. Engstrand > > >Beginning with the plans of Hernan Cortes in the early 1530s, and continuing >through the final Jesuit Missions two centuries later, the history of the >Baja California peninsula set the stage for continued exploration and >settlement to the north. Dr. Engstrand explores cave paintings, missions, >ranching, mining, scientific research and more, all taking place in the >south before the Spanish settled San Diego and soldiers including Manuel >Nieto received vast land grants for ranching operations in Alta California. > > > >About the speaker: Iris H. W. Engstrand, professor of history at the >University of San Diego, received her PhD from the University of Southern >California, where she specialized in the history of California, Latin >American and the American West. She is the author of fifteen books, >including Rancho Los Cerritos: A Legacy Preserved. > > > >Cost: $3 for students and members, Friends of Rancho Los Cerritos; > >$5 general public > >For further information and reservations, please call: (562) 570-1755 > >Rancho Los Cerritos Historic Site >4600 Virginia Road, Long Beach, CA >www.rancholoscerritos.org > >Upcoming lectures include: > > > >February 21 Women's Roles and Rights in Early California >Ms. Donna C. Scheule > > >March 13 The Hide and Tallow Economy in Early California >Dr. William Barger > > >April 17 The History and Heritage of Mexican Los Angeles: Ranchos to >Barrios, 1781-Present >Dr. Antonio Rios-Bustamante > > >May 8 The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo and the Californio Ranchos >Dr. Ricardo Griswold del Castillo Carol De Priest <mailto:[email protected]> Honest Intellectual Inquiry <http://www.dakotacom.net/~depriest>
Hi all, Forwarded: Book review. Carol Tucson >X-Sent-Via: DakotaCom.NET >Delivered-To: [email protected] >X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express Macintosh Edition - 4.5 (0410) >Approved-By: Thomas & Pamela Wellock <[email protected]> >Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2004 08:09:06 -0800 >Reply-To: H-NET List on California Studies <[email protected]> >Sender: H-NET List on California Studies <[email protected]> >From: Thomas & Pamela Wellock <[email protected]> >Subject: California Water History: Boulder Dam and Pisani Review >To: [email protected] >X-Spam-Status: No, hits=-0.3 required=5.0 > tests=APPROVED_BY,AWL > version=2.55 >X-Spam-Level: >X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 2.55 (1.174.2.19-2003-05-19-exp) > >From: [email protected] >Subject: Re: California Water History: Boulder Dam and Pisani Review >Date: Thu, Jan 8, 2004, 10:31 AM > > Herein, A.E. Holland of New Mexico Univ., presents the second of two >reviews concerning these new volumes by Pisani, on Water development in the >West, under guidence of Federal authority and the Bureau of Reclamation, >thru its own history. Below are a couple of excerpted paragraphs, concerning >two key areas of this history, from the Holland review found on >H-California, in December of 2003: > >Donald J. Pisani. _Water and American Government: The Reclamation >Bureau,National Water Policy, and the West, 1902-1935_. Berkeley and >London: University of California Press, 2002. 415 pp. Preface, >acknowledgements, maps, notes, index. $49.95 (cloth) ISBN 0-520-23030-2. >Reviewed for H-California by Alfred E. Holland Jr. [email protected], History >Department, University of New Mexico > >"Success through Failure: Reclamation's Aims and Accomplishments In his >clearly titled _Water and American Government_ Donald J. Pisani continues >his planned multivolume analysis of water law, water policy, and American >governmental institutions.[1] This second volume offers a narrative history >of the Reclamation Service from its creation by theReclamation Act of 1902 >through its monumental, crowning achievement in the first third of the >twentieth century, Boulder Dam on the Colorado River. > >Pisani has written an institutional history of the Reclamation Service and >its successor the Bureau of Reclamation (1923) and the efforts by those >agencies to establish and implement a national water policy that would >attack social ills in the urban squalor of the East, construct the physical >apparatus to deliver water for irrigation, provide electricity for homes and >and industry, and extend flood protection. All the while Reclamation had to >survive and ultimately prevail in vigorous competition with the Department >of Agriculture's Office of Irrigation Investigations and the War >Department's Army Corps of Engineers for authority and funding. Pisani's is >a history wherein "agency" prevails as a noun meaning a formally >constituted government bureau rather than an awkward euphemism for >individual or collective "initiative," where "power" is measured in >standardized units including horsepower, kilowatts, votes, and dollars, >or is overtly wielded by government institutions and their constituencies >rather than secreted between the lines of text. _Water and American >Government_ narrates a nuanced history of the Bureau of Reclamation's early >life as it sought to formulate and to realize ideals relict from Thomas >Jefferson's yeoman farmer, Andrew Johnson's Homestead Act of 1862, and the >admiration of professional expertise characterizing the progressives at the >turn of the nineteenth to the twentieth century. Pisani's history is its >most interesting and his contribution greatest where he skillfully places >Reclamation, an agency in the executive branch, and the several men who led >it, in the political and ideological crossfire between the Congress and the >Cabinet, the East and the West, the South and the North, principles of >public and private ownership of infrastructure assets, urban and rural >sectors of society, agricultural and industrial visions of the American >future, and, scientific and sentimental ideologies. Pisani argues "it makes >more sense to see the Reclamation Act of 1902 and the events that followed >as evidence of the persistence of 'frontier America' and traditional >nineteenth-century values, rather than as the emergence of 'modern >America'" or "as a symbol of ... the expansion and centralization of >national power over natural resources" (p. xi). "Persistence" is Pisani's >key word in his thesis. The laissez-faire principles of small, individualist >land owners; private or at most localized power and irrigation distribution >enterprises; and decentralized administration display remarkable tenacity >through the thirty-three years. Pisani discusses--a tenacity all the more >remarkable for the increasingly centralized administrative ideologies >ascendant during the first third of the twentieth century. Pisani >demonstrates in his ten chapters how the constraints of the American federal >system of government and its institutionalized processes of compromise >preserved the ideals of the "agricultural model of 1800 or 1850" (p. xi). >It is a study of practical politics and policy wherein the political parties >are often only incidentally party to the politics..........." > >Completely absorbing, just reading Holland's review here, is this >presentation in descriptive power and phrasing. Pisani's work, taken as >most accurately described, has certainly covered the substances of this >subject, as this comment attests, from my own experience and research work >done at UCLA in the 60's, mentioned previously, concerning the volume I >review. > >Prof. Holland has gotten this without the need for my own kudos. Pisani's >work, described, would certainly be masterful. Am only hopeful, not having >read the volumes to date as these reviews are inspirations to do so, Pisani >explored in more detail and depth than review allows, the Jeffersonian >heritage and concept which served as model and value for Bureau of >Reclamation championing small family farm policy and practice. These are >ideas and ideals not as well observed in an age of modern, large corporate >farming; whose own cosequences, include more recent history. > >Indeed, reading this review alone is like shaking hands with a old friend, >who has not been seen for many long years , yet remains vital in all aspects >and dimensions. In so saying, there is another dimension not so completely >commented upon by the review. This concerns the closing chapter, with the >Bureau entering that modern age door: > >"Gateway to the Hydraulic Age: Water Politics, 1920-1935," Pisani's ninth >chapter, argues "modern water politics was born in the 1920s" (p. 235). The >intra-cabinet rivalries between the departments of Agriculture, Interior, >and War triggered several cabinet reorganization proposals in the wake of >American experience with centralized planning practiced by several of its >wartime allies. Nearly thirty federal agencies had something to do with >public works. Competition rather than cooperation prevented integrated >planning and administration............ > ..........Pisani argues that as the "utility companies replaced the >railroads as the 'mother of trusts,'" public opinion came to accept federal >power generation at Boulder Dam, six times larger than all the capacity in >all earlier federal reclamation projects, in addition to the flood >protection for the Imperial Valley and the power to lift the waters of the >Colorado River Aqueduct over the San Gabriel mountains and into the >burgeoning Los Angeles Basin.The sectional compromises negotiated to support >the Boulder Dam Project allowed subsequent large dam projects, again >offering multiple uses for multiple constituencies, at Grand Coulee on the >Columbia River in Washington and the Shasta Dam on the Sacramento River in >northern California..........." > > Here, is the centerpiece for any work concerned with the modern era. >Holland and Pisani correctly state this importance of the Colorado River >project and Boulder Dam, which did represent the break with that past >oriented towards 19th and 18th Centuries; thru emergence in modern 20th >Century power and water management. It is interesting to note, historically, >West Coast settlement and migration patterns that prompted this orientation >and focus, were considerably smaller than the Megolopolis, 21st Century >California and West Coast life has brought; in very large part, due to this >exceptionally visionary Boulder Dam with its twin emphasis on power and >water. These twins have shouldered much to those burdens required for >building the West and California. It is not too far to argue, this success >was cornerstone in eventual development of California's water resources; >again, as noted in commentary about Sacramento devevelopment. But it was >Boulder Dam, its achievement, that gave life to the modern West and >continues to do so even today. > >Boulder, following the pattern of human migration, reached the West Coast >initially; only recent history, has seen "backfill" for land areas >previously passed, by both people and water from Boulder. These now stand >astride the California-Nevada border areas as Las Vegas and the Mojave >Desert. Both, shorted in water distribution arising from Boulder, have only >recently begun to make their claims upon this system, now some 80 years into >development. Lands, previously thought not important to include in >the Boulder system, have now become so. > > >It is this final and as yet still unfolding focus, that comprises broader >dimensions to this volume's final chapter; perhaps, starting point for >another? That history would describe, just as completely, this modern era of >power and water history for California and the West, as well as the still >important Bureau of Reclamation and its contributions to the nations' values >and ways of life. > > Wyatt Reader > (UCLA-Whittier College) > Instructor-California Community Colleges/private Carol De Priest <mailto:[email protected]> Honest Intellectual Inquiry <http://www.dakotacom.net/~depriest>
For those who might be interested, please email <[email protected]> for further info. I don't know if or what costs might be involved. Carol >X-Sent-Via: DakotaCom.NET >Delivered-To: [email protected] >X-Sender: 127.0.0.1&lavender/postbox.csi.cuny.edu&[email protected] >X-Mailer: QUALCOMM Windows Eudora Version 6.0.0.22 >X-Note: This E-mail was scanned for spam. >Approved-By: Catherine Lavender <[email protected]> >Date: Wed, 7 Jan 2004 23:05:51 -0700 >Reply-To: H-Net Western History List <[email protected]> >Sender: H-Net Western History List <[email protected]> >From: Catherine Lavender <[email protected]> >Subject: CONF: Race & Religion in American West (Claremont, > CA; 27-28 Feb 2004) >To: [email protected] >X-Spam-Status: No, hits=0.0 required=5.0 > tests=APPROVED_BY,AWL,MAILTO_TO_SPAM_ADDR,SMTPD_IN_RCVD > version=2.55 >X-Spam-Level: >X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 2.55 (1.174.2.19-2003-05-19-exp) > > >Date: Mon, 5 Jan 2004 01:07:57 EST > >From: [email protected] > >The Claremont Graduate University's 2004 Thornton F. Bradshaw Seminar > >"The Most Segregated Hour: Race and Religion in the American West" > >February 27-28th, 2004 >Albrecht Auditorium >Claremont Graduate University, Claremont, California > >This conference seeks to explore ways in which religion, ethnicity, and >race have confronted and combined with each other in history. Because it >has been a region where these categories are particularly open to the >mixtures of peoples and cultures, we have chosen the American West as the >site for both the conference and its subject. The Bradshaw seminar seeks >to bring together participants from both the academic and religious >communities in order to discuss how regional, racial, ethnic, and religious >categories inform identity politics, cultural interactions, and theological >concerns. > >Invited speakers: > >Rudy Busto, University of California, Santa Barbara >Donald Dayton, Azusa Pacific University >William Deverell, California Institute of Technology >Doug Flamming, Georgia Institutue of Technology >Philip Goff, Indiana University, Purdue University >Jane Iwamura, University of Southern California >Laurie Maffly-Kipp, University of North Carolina >Armand Mauss, Emeritus, Washington State University >Randi Jones Walker, Pacific School of Religion >H. Mark Wild, California State University, Los Angeles > >Those interested in attending are asked to register by email at the >following address: [email protected] Carol De Priest <mailto:[email protected]> Honest Intellectual Inquiry <http://www.dakotacom.net/~depriest>
thanks so much for those replies to my question of "How to use the guest pass for Vitalsearch". Cy ________________________________________________________________ The best thing to hit the internet in years - Juno SpeedBand! Surf the web up to FIVE TIMES FASTER! Only $14.95/ month - visit www.juno.com to sign up today!
A man goes to a party and has too much to drink. His friends plead with him to let them take him home. He says no - he only lives a mile away. About five blocks from the party, the police pull him over for weaving and ask him to get out of the car and walk the line. Just as he starts, the police radio blares out a notice of a robbery taking place in a house just a block away. The police tell the party animal to stay put, they will be right back and they hop a fence and run down the street to the robbery. The guy waits and waits and finally decides to drive home. When he gets there, he tells his wife he is going to bed, and to tell anyone who might come looking for him that he has the flu and has been in bed all day. A few hours later the police knock on the door. They ask if Mr. X is there and his wife says yes. They ask to see him and she replies that he is in bed with the flu and has been so all day. The police have his driver's license, and they ask to see his car so she asks why. They insist on seeing his car, so she takes them to the garage and opens the door where they find the police car, lights still flashing. True story, told by the driver at his first AA meeting!)
Cy, If you are referring to VitalSearch.com...this is how I've finally managed to use the free areas of that website (especially if you have internet security engaged such as Norton as I do). Once you get to where you need to enter a search name...disable your Norton or whatever momentarily, (I keep mine on my taskbar so it's easy to do quickly), allow the page to load, and then immediately enable your security again (if you are as paranoid as I am about hackers) until you need to look at the next page...then disable and re-enable as needed. Whatever makes you comfortable, but you can't proceed to the next page again unless you disable again momentarily. Dis-enabling my Norton internet security as needed by page is the only way I've been able to view the free areas at the Vitalsearch website (with many previous trials and tribulations, while hearing others not having problems). I've experienced the same with some other websites as well. Hope this info helps you and others who "should" have free research access to certain areas as they advertise, without having to "risk" hackers accessing your hardrive. Just my opinion. I just noticed on the bottom of your e-mail that you may use Juno.com as your internet service. I don't know if they include security or if you are using a separate program for that. In any case, this is how I've managed to access the advertised free areas of VitalSearch and other websites. Luana [email protected] wrote: >I tried using a guest pass with password, but am having trouble getting through. > >I want to look up the marriage of Theodora Lucille Favers to a DUNN husband. I was attempting to look in the first marriage indiex, 1949 to 1959? > >Thanks >Cy > >________________________________________________________________ >The best thing to hit the internet in years - Juno SpeedBand! >Surf the web up to FIVE TIMES FASTER! >Only $14.95/ month - visit www.juno.com to sign up today! > > >==== SOCAL Mailing List ==== >Please use relevant subject lines. >
Karla, could you please look up these two names? Robert Cyril Gorham Helen Ross Thank you, Sammy I picked up a 1952 Bakersfield City Directory yesterday and will be happy to do look-ups.
I picked up a 1952 Bakersfield City Directory yesterday and will be happy to do look-ups. Karla in Bakersfield
Hello group. Does anyone know if city directories exist for the city of Los Angeles for the years 1869, 1870 and 1871? I haven't contacted the Los Angeles Main Branch Library yet - thought I'd start here. Thanks for any information. Gregory McReynolds Pasadena, California
I tried using a guest pass with password, but am having trouble getting through. I want to look up the marriage of Theodora Lucille Favers to a DUNN husband. I was attempting to look in the first marriage indiex, 1949 to 1959? Thanks Cy ________________________________________________________________ The best thing to hit the internet in years - Juno SpeedBand! Surf the web up to FIVE TIMES FASTER! Only $14.95/ month - visit www.juno.com to sign up today!
List members as of today: NORCAL - 474 SOCAL - 207 NORCALCHAT - 32 Happy New Year! ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~ Visit the NORCAL Volunteer Lookup Library at: http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~yvonne/norcallib.html and the NORCAL Genealogy Index at: http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~yvonne/NORCAL%20index/ -- Yvonne Bowers, Sonoma, CA. Listmom, WebMom NORCAL, SOCAL, CA-CORNISH NORCAL LIBRARY http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~yvonne/norcallib.html NORCAL Genealogy Index http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~yvonne/NORCAL%20index/
While I was going through some old family photos, ROMINE, KING, and HALSTEAD, I found a photo taken at a Mr. CONWAY's 100th birthday party in 1946. At the time, he was living at Sequoia Home near Visalia. No other information available. Please contact me off-line for a copy of the photo. George Halstead
Here is the obit you requested for the following person: KILLIAN JEANETTE born: 05/25/1918 F COLORADO died: KERN 10/25/1968 age: 50 yrs The Bakersfield Californian, October 28, 1968 Killian, Jeanette - Graveside services will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday in Union Cemetery for Jeanette Killian, 50, of 2800 Renegade Avenue who died Friday in a Bakersfield hospital. John Loustalot will officiate. A native of Denver, Colorado, Mrs. Killian had lived in Kern County most of her life. She was fond of the outdoors and was active in duck hunting, skeet shooting and related sports. She had been employed at Bakersfield Savings and Loan Association as a new accounts clerk for seven years. Survivors include the widower Harry R., and two daughters, Riki and Tomi. Payne and Sons Funeral Home Sharon Kern Co Volunteer
Here is the obit you requested for the following person: PARR LILLIAN born: 03/31/1881 F NEBRASKA mother: WALLENSTEIN father: SALHOLM died: KERN 10/18/1941 age: 60 yrs The Bakersfield Californian, Monday, October 20, 1941 Par, Lillian - Services were held yesterday at the Payne & Son Chapel for Mrs. Par, 60-year-old Kernville resident who died Saturday in a local hospital. Graveside services were scheduled for 1 p.m. today at Inglewood Cemetery. She was a member of the Seventh-Day Adventist church, had been a resident of Kern County for 14 years, and was born in Omaha, Nebraska. She had been a housekeeper for the Edison Company station in Kernville ever since she moved into the county. Her survivors include daughters, Mrs. Cecil Pascoe of Kernville, and Mrs. Raleigh James of Lodi; and sister, Mrs. J. T. Waters of Las Vegas, Nev.; a niece, Mrs. Harold Black of Glendale; and 4 grandchildren. Sharon Kern Co Volunteer
At 3:03 AM -0700 12/23/03, [email protected] wrote: >X-Message: #3 >Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2003 14:28:30 -0800 >From: Donna <[email protected]> >To: [email protected] >Message-Id: <[email protected]> >Subject: Quake list >Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed > >Didn't there at one time exist a list for California quakes on >Rootsweb? Does anyone have the address for it? I am sure it is >buzzing right now if it still exists. >Thanks >Donna Donna, you are correct - we used to have CA-EARTHQUAKE-L but Rootsweb eliminated it a couple of years ago because it wasn't very active and not genealogy-related. Of course, little activity was a GOOD thing since it meant there weren't any reportable quakes. Folks, you may use SOCAL & NORCAL for earthquake reporting. -- Yvonne Bowers, Sonoma, CA. Listmom, WebMom NORCAL, SOCAL, CA-CORNISH NORCAL LIBRARY http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~yvonne/norcallib.html NORCAL Genealogy Index http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~yvonne/NORCAL%20index/
In a message dated 12/22/03 1:30:46 PM, [email protected] writes: << Just checking to see if any one has any personal experiences to report, you can write me private l;-)Dan [email protected] >> Dan......no personal experiences.......but We felt it here all the way down in San Diego! Louise
I agree with Karla. At first, for a moment my wife thought something was wrong with the refrigerator doors as they were moving. Gail Darling Bakersfield ----- Original Message ----- From: "Karla Everett" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Monday, December 22, 2003 2:25 PM Subject: Re: RE:Quake > We felt it quite strongly in Bakersfield, too. We > knew it had to be pretty far away because it wasn't a > jolt, but waves that lasted 45 sec to a minute. > > > --- [email protected] wrote: > > > > In a message dated 12/22/03 1:30:46 PM, > > [email protected] writes: > > > > << Just checking to see if any one has any personal > > experiences to report, you > > > > can write me private l;-)Dan > > > > [email protected] >> > > > > Dan......no personal experiences.......but We felt > > it here all the way down > > in San Diego! > > Louise > > > > > > ==== SOCAL Mailing List ==== > > Do NOT post virus notices to the list. > > > > > __________________________________ > Do you Yahoo!? > New Yahoo! Photos - easier uploading and sharing. > http://photos.yahoo.com/ > > > ==== SOCAL Mailing List ==== > Do NOT post virus notices to the list. > >
Here are two websites and how to subscribe to two earthquake lists. I subscribe to both. The Northern California one has been going crazy since this morning and there have been several on the Southern California one also centered around the Gorman - Bakersfield area (San Andreas??) These send out a message for anything over 3.0. http://quake.wr.usgs.gov/recenteqs/latestfault.htm http://www.cisn.org/ Northern California To subscribe to the list, send a message to: <[email protected]> Southern California To subscribe to the list, send a message to: <[email protected]> Elaine
Thanks Mike. This is a great site too. Donna At 03:00 PM 12/22/03 -0800, Mike Huggins wrote: >The following website will get you to where you want to go, and you can pick >how much info you want to find out (this site is a technical site so it may >have more than you need, but there is lots of good information here). > >http://earthquake.usgs.gov/recenteqsUS/Quakes/nc40148755.htm > > > >-----Original Message----- >From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] >Sent: Monday, December 22, 2003 2:45 PM >To: [email protected] >Subject: Re: Quake list > >It was taken off the ROOTSWEB server...not genealogical. I don't know if >there is another. > >Perrin > > > Didn't there at one time exist a list for California quakes on > > Rootsweb? Does anyone have the address for it? I am sure it is buzzing > > right now if it still exists. > > Thanks > > Donna > > > > > > ==== SOCAL Mailing List ==== > > Do NOT post virus notices to the list. > > > > > > >==== SOCAL Mailing List ==== >Please use relevant subject lines. > > >==== SOCAL Mailing List ==== >Do NOT post virus notices to the list.