Enter a name, company, place or keywords to search across this item. Then click "Search" (or hit Enter).

Copy the Page Text to the Clipboard

Show the Page Image

Show the Image Page Text


More Information About this Image

Get a Citation for Page or Image - Copy to the Clipboard

Go to the Previous Page (or Left Arrow key)

Go to the Next Page (or Right Arrow key)
Page: of 8

MARRIAGE CONTRACT .
Although she .was_ tempermental and a bit unconventional, Sarah Althea Hill
was beautiful and intelligent and
she. managed to capture the
attentions of many a man.
In 1880 Senator William
Sharon met Sarah at the San
Francisco Stock Exchange and
fell under her spell. He first
offered his assistance, then
dinner, and finally a suite at the
Grand Hotel which was con-.
veniently joined to the Palace
Hotel where the senator lived.
. The couple was together almost
constantly for nearly a year
when the fickle senator suddenly
broke it off.
“Your services are no longer
desired, my dear,’”’ he coldly
told a crying and pleading
Sarah, and refused to see her or
to answer “her pathetic letters.
Sarah even tried gypsy love
potions and charms but Senator
Sharon responded by having her
trunks packed and moved out of
her suite at the Grand.
The scorned lover was not one
to let him forget her so easily.
When Sharon took up with
another young lady Sarah sued
him for adultery. To an
astonished world she explained
that he had signed a secret
} 7 :
rr ae) oO ian Ft
F
e
School of Nursing, inc
Morna Mary Prince, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph H.
Prince of Grass Valley.
During the next year, new
students will spend the major
portion of their time in the
classrooms of Merritt Hospital
and at the California State
University of Hayward for
NEVADA COUNTY NUGGET
~ 301 Broad Street
Nevada City,. Ca.
95959
Telephone 265-2559
PUBLISHED EVERY
WEDNESDAY BY
NEVADA COUNTY
PUBLISHING CO.
Second class postage
_ paid at Nevada City,
California. Adjudicated
a legal” newspaper of
general circulation by
the Nevada County
Superior Court, June 3,
1960.
Decree No. 12,406.
Subscription Rates:
One Year . . $3.00
Two Years .. $5.00
. Member of .
CALIFORNIA NEWSPAPERay
PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION,
See Wire he: & Oe Ge Sew Or OOe Rok Say Bel suk © we eee o Zee aoe
2 The Nevada County Nugget Wed., October 8, 1975
California Country}; Rough an
Kristi Steber
marriage contract with her. The
politician angrily denied it, but
he could do nothing to stop the
impending divorce trial or the
scandalous rumors being
printed in the newspapers.
The courtoom was filled with
spectators, newspapermen, and
gossip mongers the first day of
court, November. 1, 1883. The
opposing attorneys yelled insults at each other and Sharon
was removed from the courroom.
The trial dragged on for over a
‘year and on Christmas. Eve 1884,
the judge granted Sarah A.
Sharon a divorce decree and
awarded her $2,500 a month in
alimony.
Senator Sharon filed an appeal
un the grounds that the
marriage contract was a fake
and another round of courtroom
appearances was scheduled to
begin, much to the delight of a
titillated public and a thriving
newspaper business.
It was nearly another year
before the date of the federal
appeals court decision. The day
the decision was to be delivered,
November 15, 1885, Senator
Sharon died. When the court
finally convened three weeks
later it declared the marriage
contract a forgery.
F 2 e
fp]
LOMO
prehensive education in
stetrical nursing with clinica!
experiénce at Merritt Hospital
as well as other. hospitals, for
specialized study in pediatrics
and the care of psychiatric
patients.
Samuel Merritt Hospital’s
School of Nursing is presently
one of only two hospitals, for
specialized study in pediatrics
and the care of psychiatric
patients.
‘Tom Coleman
elected real
estate leader
Tom Coleman is the newly
elected president of the
Nevada County Board of
Realtors.
Thirza Scheimer will be the
new vice president; Ted Beck,
secretary-treasurer; and new
directors are Ward Shinn,
John Morgan and Russ
Garland.
A business meeting will .be
held Tuesday and new Union
Publisher Jack Moorhead will
be on hand to meet Realtors in
the area.
In other activities current
board president John Morgan
is attending the 71st. annual
convention of the California
Association of Realtors at
By , Fay Dunbar
There is no doubt about it this morning,
summer is gone! The pitter patter of raindrops
on the awning over my bedroom window served
as this morning’s alarm clock. Some more of
that beautiful Indian Summer a little later
would be nice, Maybe we could all get our fall
chores done. I like winter weather but the farmand-I are never quite ready for it. I have two
groups of company scheduled for October but it
won’t take much of this wet cloudiness to scare
them away.
R&R
The big news in Rough and Ready this week
is the Grange Bazaar. The Grange Ladies have
worked months preparing for this event.
Romaine McCrum is this year’s chairperson.
The Bazaar is scheduled for next Saturday,
October 11, from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Snacks
will be available so you can come early and
stay as long as you like. Do your Christmas
shopping early and in comfort!
There will be a Country Kitchen section
with plenty of fresh baked goodies, jams and
jellies, and other types‘of home cooked foods. If
the rain doesn’t ruin it there may even be some
fresh garden produce.
The handwork group specialized in
household linens of all kinds for this year. Their
other contribution is stuffed toys and dolls for
the children. As usual there will be lots of interesting items in the Green Thumb corner.
Best of all the winners of the handmade
quilt and two afghans will be drawn.
R&R
Another exciting event this week is Maciel
rwers
¢
awmills for the county was ver)
incomplete. There were 42 sawmills in the
county in 1858. 26 of them were run by steam
and 16 by water. Rough and Ready had 6 of
these. The Holt sawmill went into operation in
1849. It was the first. After its destruction by
Indians another was built nearby by a man
named Ellsworth. It began cutting in 1851.
Their list for Rough and Ready should have
been 7. This place was originally part of the
Portuguese Mining Company property.
Eventually Doris’ grandfather John Frank
acquired all of the mining company property.
There is a knoll down beyond our barn.
There were still parts of an old building there
when we first came here 20 years ago. There
were signs of a small cellar and of the foundation for a building over it. Manuel mefely
told us that it had been a bootleggers’ hangout
during prohibition. Doris says its history goes
way back.
When her grandfather built the home for
his new bride he hauled the logs, with a team of
oxen, and built and used a mill there to mill
them into the structural boards and the foot
wide boards and battens for the home. The mill
was also used to build the long sluice lines that
provided water for placer mining before and
again after the Sawyer act in 1884.
I expect that the amazing old boards that
we found when we remodeled this house came
from that mill. They were not made of second
growth timber. They were almost 13 inches
wide and a good inch and a quarter thick. They
were as good as new and as hard as cement.
This house will never fall down. The flood water
the Road Dept. turns down my roadway may
wash it away some day but I venture to say it
will go in one piece.
R&R
Hjalmer Berg depends upon Ani.
LiSt OL
. Morrison and Retha Downey for help with the
d Ready News
Bicentennial Commission work. They are both
in the hospital which doesn’t simplify things a
bit for Hjalmer.
Anita was hurt in an auto accident here in
Grass Valley and you probably read about it.
She hopes and expects to be, home by the time
you read this so you can send your good wishes
there. Sa
Retha was hurt in Sacramento. She is at the
American River Hospital, 4747 Engle RoadCarmichael, CA-95621. She has a broken hip ahd
may possibly be there for some time. I have not
spoken to Retha but reports are that she is
doing fine.
The Bicentennial Commission includes
Rough and Ready so Anita is helping us too. In
my mind I always claim Retha for Rough and
Ready. Her grandmother-or was it great
grandmother—was so influential in the life of
early days in Rough and Ready. The old
Downey House made the San Francisco papers,
several times, as early as 1853.
R&R
Hjalmer cleared up a point for me that you
may be interested in, also. The other day I was
approached, to sign a petition, by a group
calling itself the Bicentennial Liberty Committee. I could not sign the petition in good
faith. The idea is excellent, but it’s not what’s in
the fine print, it’s what is left out of it that I
objected to. My real annoyance however was
with their tise of the name. It seemed ‘sneaky’
Hjalmer says it’s being done a lot Sut the
only proper use Bicenténnial .for a project
in &
Their approach was clever. They used a big
U.S. which seemed to stand for patriotism and
all that important stuff, out when you read the
fine print you found it indicated Understand or
United Stand. I just automaticaily resent
anything that tries to fool me.
R&R
Next Sunday, October 12, is Columbus Day.
No, I see by my calendar, it is October 13 this
year. Be that as it may, and hopefully it isn’t
going to continue to ‘be,’ Columbus is still
credited with discovering us on October 12,
1492. The old childhood rhyme that helped me
remember the date is still with me. It said in
part ‘‘..in 1492 Columbus sailed the ocean
blue..”
The credit belongs to Columbus, tho’ he is
thought actually to have landed on Watling
Island in the Bahamas. Leif Ericksson is
probably the first to have touched the continental Americas in 1003. He called the land
Vinlind. I found that Bjarni Heriulfsson
probably followed. our coastline for several
hundred miles in 986 but he did not make a
landing. Thorvald Ericksson, Leif’s son, landed
in 1005. Other Norsemen made landings also
before the idea of colonization was given up.
By the time Columbus came he deserved
the credit. On his third voyage he did reach the
continental Americas, Aug. 1, 1498. He landed
at a.point probably on the northern coast of
South America. By this time, in the summer of
1497, John Cabot had reached the Gulf of St.
Lawrence. In 1498 Cabot sailed ‘‘perhaps as far
south as South Carolina.”
R&R
October 12 is also important in Rough and
Ready for another reason. It’s Jack Bixler’s
birthday. Many happy returns Jack.
——_—__ R&R :
ot ' Pn a ae ee a
tt