Seeking Hidden California

I came across these photos today.  Both images are undated and neither are attributed to a photographer, but they were filed under 1900. They look like they might be autochrome images.

Both pictures feature poppy fields in Waterford, California, which is about 15 miles east of Modesto.

Poppies, Waterford, California
Middlebury College

 

Holsteins and poppies
Middlebury College

I’m always searching for this hidden part of California culture. I know it when I see it or hear it, but it’s difficult to describe. It was much more prevalent in the early twentieth century but I occasionally find traces of it still exist.

These pictures are a good example of this mystery genre and there’s some music too. The best example I could find is from the documentary The Second Gun. I believe the composer was Travis E. Pike. I’ve asked musician friends what this genre is called but I haven’t found anyone who knows. For the time being, we’ve named it NorCal Vineyard Folk music.

If you’re curious, here’s a 30-second snippet the documentary featuring this mystery music. (Because it’s a clip instead of a full video, I can’t embed it in this post.)

https://youtube.com/clip/Ugkx8MI7UKdDedfHh3dBtddBm0IkKSFbtcsX?si=svs1NlTd6A7ZJJPL

I hope you have a happy weekend–perhaps a delightful surprise or a grand adventure awaits you!

President Theodore Roosevelt driving through the Wawona Tunnel Tree, in Yosemite Nat’l Park. May 15, 1903. Underwood & Underwood

16 thoughts on “Seeking Hidden California

  1. I love the poppies, too! They’re a gold color where my oldest daughter lives. Unfortunately, people stop, get out of their cars, trample the poppies and clog up the freeway traffic.

    The redwood tree reminds me of our walking through the tunnel because our car was too wide!

    I really like that music, too. It reminds me of something I’ve heard before, but can’t remember where.

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  2. I have a cognitive bias. When I see a “red poppy” I think of Flanders Field and the Buddy Poppy distributed by the Veterans of Foreign Wars, a.k.a. “VFW.” Buddy Poppy has been part of American culture since 1918. Today, unfortunately, the solicitation of donations by and for the VFW in return for a Buddy Poppy has faded from America’s landscape.

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  3. Pingback: 6 Photographs Bring Turn of the Century Napa to Life in Vibrant Color | old spirituals

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