Captain Thomas Jefferson Jackson See, “the Sage of Mare Island,” was born on this date in 1866. Captain See was an internationally known astronomer, mathematician, author, philosopher, and lecturer, who spent much of his career in charge of the chronometer and time station at Mare Island’s naval observatory. See attained a degree from the University of Missouri and later received a doctorate in astronomy at the University of Berlin in Germany. Returning to the United States, See worked closely with renowned astronomers George Ellery Hale and Percival Lowell, among others. He later worked at the U.S. Naval Observatory in Washington, D.C. and taught mathematics at the Naval Academy in Annapolis. See’s inability to work within the strict confines of military discipline ultimately led to his transfer to the then-remote Mare Island Navy Yard in 1902, where he served for nearly thirty more years.
Although Captain See was acknowledged as one of the most prominent and accomplished astronomers of his time, many of his theories ran counter to the theories popular among his contemporaries. Most notably, Captain See had a long-standing and bitter feud with Albert Einstein. Over time, however, Einstein’s theories gained wider acceptance while See’s theories were dismissed among main-stream astronomers. A contributing factor to these intellectual battles was See’s own personality. He stood well over six feet tall, with an intense disposition and an outspoken disdain for those not up to his intellectual standards. Captain See not only outlived his own theories, but also outlived most of his contemporaries, dying at age 96 in 1962.
For many years Mare Island’s time station signaled the exact instant of noon each day by dropping a time ball from a tower on the observatory hill. Navigators in the channel used this signal to check the accuracy of their chronometers. Later, this synchronization was set by radio signal from Washington, D.C. rendering Mare Island’s time station obsolete. The observatory was torn down in the 1930s.
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Saturday, January 25, 2014
Chief Engineer Daniel Scully

“In a short
time it was reported that the fire was in the Bernard block on Sacramento Street,
and a rush was made in that direction. It proved to be in the furnishing goods
store of S. Strause in the Sacramento Street side of the building. Those first
on the scene of the fire reported that no blaze was to be seen, but that a
dirty smelling and heavy black smoke was issuing through the front doors and
windows of the building. The people stood in crowds watching the progress of
the devouring element and in a short time the flames broke out and lit up the
whole neighborhood.”
“Chief Engineer Daniel Scully of the fire department was indefatigable in his efforts to suppress the flames and visited the different parts of the building to see where the best and most effective work could be done. He had been in the second story of the building where the smoke was intense and suffocating, and returned to the street, when in answer to a question he replied that he felt dizzy. He placed his hands on the shoulders of Thomas Gorham and Philip Steffan and sank down. They carried him to the sidewalk and afterwards to the Naval Drug Store where restoratives were applied, but all to no purpose as he died in three minutes after being brought in.”
“Chief Engineer Daniel Scully of the fire department was indefatigable in his efforts to suppress the flames and visited the different parts of the building to see where the best and most effective work could be done. He had been in the second story of the building where the smoke was intense and suffocating, and returned to the street, when in answer to a question he replied that he felt dizzy. He placed his hands on the shoulders of Thomas Gorham and Philip Steffan and sank down. They carried him to the sidewalk and afterwards to the Naval Drug Store where restoratives were applied, but all to no purpose as he died in three minutes after being brought in.”
Six years
after his death, the Evening Chronicle noted
that Scully’s sacrifice was still remembered by his fellow firefighters: “One
mournful emblem hangs upon [the firehouse] walls, a reminder of duty well
performed and paid with death and whose daring must prove an inspiration to
every fireman here. We allude to the heavy leather regulation hat which hangs
here and worn by Daniel Scully, the then foreman of the company and who met his
death fearlessly while fighting the flames in the Bernard building six years
ago. The fire department has its local hero and martyr in the person of Scully
and the memory of his unselfish sacrifice must always dignify and exalt its
work.”
Chief
Engineer Daniel Scully was buried in the Carquinez Cemetery on Benicia Road.
Today, his grave marker is broken and what remains of the inscription is badly
worn. Daniel Scully’s sacrifice has been forgotten.
In his book The Old Curiosity Shop Charles Dickens
wrote: “The memory of those who lie below passes away so soon. At first they
tend them, morning, noon, and night; they soon begin to come less frequently;
from once a day to once a week; from once a week to once a month; then at long
and uncertain intervals; then, not at all.”
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Thanksgiving in Vallejo During WWII
In November 1942 Vallejoans celebrated their first Thanksgiving since the start of World War Two. Thousands of defense workers labored round-the-clock at Mare Island Naval Shipyard to support the war effort. The Vallejo Times-Herald of November 26, 1942 described the holiday:
Vallejo, U.S. Observe
War Thanksgiving
“Today Vallejo joins with Americans around the world in
celebrating their first wartime Thanksgiving in a quarter century, starting the
day with prayer service, and climaxing it with the traditional turkey dinner.
In many homes, soldiers and sailors have been invited around the family board
as guests.
“While services are held by the Ministerial Union and by
other churches, thousands of Mare Island workmen in machine and ordnance shops
will be ‘passing the ammunition’ literally, with work as usual. But somewhere
during their day, civilians and service men will stop for their roast turkey,
and to reflect a moment on the fact that now, both at home and in war news
abroad, America really has something to be thankful for.
“American forces on the far flung battle lines may have to
take their holiday dinner in emergency rations, but those in the Vallejo and
Solano County area will “shoot the works.” Here is an exact U.S. Army menu
released yesterday:
“Fruit salad, stuffed celery, sweet mixed pickles, olives,
roast turkey, sage dressing, mashed potatoes, giblet gravy, cranberry sauce,
buttered corn, creamed peas, creamed carrots, hot rolls, assorted bread,
apples, oranges, bananas, grapes, assorted candies, coffee, milk, hot
chocolate, cigars, cigarettes.
“Aboard ships, as far as could be learned, there will also
be turkey and trimmings, in a menu much like the Army’s.
“However, in the [Mare Island] Navy Yard’s three large and
two small cafeterias, there will be no turkey.
“It would take too long to serve,” was the reason given by
F.L. Bonn, general manager of the cafeterias. “We feed more than 23,000
persons, and we could never accommodate this number by our closing hour of 5:15
if we had turkey. However, we’re having the same substantial servings of roast
beef, pork and cutlets as they get every day.”
“Ninety inmates of the Solano County hospital at Fairfield
will also sit down to a Thanksgiving dinner of turkey, cranberries, mince and
pumpkin pie, celery, cauliflower, and other trimmings.
“The “super” dinner and that period of time devoted to
church services will be the only evidence of a break in schedule for either the
soldiers, sailors or the workers on the American production front.
“Secretaries of the War and Navy Departments have ordered
personnel of their departments to observe the day by working as usual. War
Production Chief Donald M. nelson called upon those engaged in tasks vital to
the victory effort to remain at their jobs.
Serving Thanksgiving dinner at Mare Island during WWII |
“The American housewife, who for the first time in three
years could invite relatives from a neighboring state without wondering whether or not they had already celebrated the holiday, found that her 1942 dinner was
costing her more than at any time since 1919.
“The Office of Price Administration said the average cost
was offset by the higher average family earnings.”
Saturday, September 21, 2013
Brick and Terra Cotta Manufacturing in Vallejo
This Vallejo-made brick features a distinctive "V" imprint. |
"The term terra-cotta, if used generically, would, if its
etymology were strictly adhered to, include every kind of brick and porcelain,
since in Italian it means “baked earth.” It is, however, limited to mean a
species of kuolin or clay, usually of a dark cherry red color though comprising
also every variety of a buff shade and utilized in all sorts of ornamental work
for the exterior and interior of buildings, for stationary, tiles, brick, etc.
In fact, it would be difficult in the erection of a building to point out where
its use for architectural or constructive purposes could not be brought into
requisition. While its advantages have been recognized during a long lapse of
time, still it is becoming so popular and so highly appreciated everywhere that
the present may justly be termed its period of renaissance. The
application of terra-cotta to the simplest subject of domestic utility as well
as to the higher orders of architectural expression, demonstrates besides the
almost illimitable opportunities of this humble, cheap and universal clay as a
promoter of art. There is no other material that can compare with it in
mobility, ease of production or wideness of application. With proper handling,
relative to harmony in a while building, there is scarcely a situation in
cannot be made to adorn, and with a more general use of it, its cost is
comparatively so light as to be within the reach of the most modest house
building.
People
follow settled habits altogether when they begin building. They do not look
around them to discover it there be any material that could produce better
effects, and one may add that furnishers of such material do not advertise
their products widely enough, and people go on in using wood in fancy shapes
that cost more to whittle out than a good, fire-proof terra-cotta coating
would, and then invite an annual outlay for paint and repairs that in five
years would pay for the clay product. Besides its qualities of durability and
economy, we cannot resist the utterance of the belief that terra-cotta is yet
to prove an irresistible educator in art.
This
Company is composed of San Francisco
gentlemen, with the following officers: President, John H. Wise; Vice
President, H.T. Scott; Sec., W.H. Magee, and Superintendent of Works, Alphonse
Le Jeune. Thirty-five acres of land adjoining the works were purchased by the
company and contains a practically inexhaustible supply of the terra-cotta
clay. This is a shale clay, rich in iron and is the product of the
disintegration or weathering of silicious rocks. It contains in round numbers
60 parts of silica, 30 of alumina and the remainder are oxides of iron,
magnesia, water, impurities, etc. Mr. Le Jeune, the gentlemanly and accomplished Superintendent of Works, who
has operated in terra cotta in Belgium, France and Germany, and who for
eighteen years had charge of the great Northeastern Terra Cotta Works at
Chicago, pronounces it the best clay for the purpose he ever met with. This
being the case and with this establishment crowded with orders it is easy for
the people for Vallejo
to predict that in a short time its capacity must necessarily be increased.
Five large
three story buildings each 135x50 form the main body of the works. Besides
these there is a shed at the south end of the same dimensions containing brick
in stock, and running and the right angles with these and alongside the water’s
edge is a mammoth double shipping shed over 500 feet in length with tracks and
turntables between. Here is sorted for shipment the varied products of these
works, which when suitably crated are run on tram cars out on the company’s
wharf which projects 1800 feet from the land. The convenience for shipping
stock and receiving coal could not be improved on.
Perhaps of
the many features in this establishment which prove so interesting and
instructive to the visitor, the office of Mr. Le Jeune is the most replete with
attractions. It is hardly exact to term it as office, since it has more of the
air and methods of a sculptor’s atelier than anything we can compare it
to. It is here that his artistic inspiration gives forth its impressions in the
shape of designs and models for all the ornamental work. Here he drafts plans
and sketches with an ease of manner and prolificacy of artistic expression,
seemingly unconscious on his part. Here he designs brackets, cornices, sills,
window jams, arches, columns, mantles and all kinds of ornamental work where
felicity of skill and harmony of detail are required. In one corner of the room
was a terra cotta altar, just receiving its elaborate finishing touches and
intended for St. John’s
Episcopal Church of San Francisco. Over in the corner was a medallion of the
“divine Sara” Bernhardt, while scattered in ornamental profusion were plastic
objects in clay to which his creative hand was extending their first endowment
of beauty.
It was an
artist’s studio more than a workshop or an office. In making an article the
clay is modeled by hand into proper shapes, from this a plaster of Paris mould
is made, then the prepared terra cotta clay is pressed thereon, when it is then
“fired” in muddled kilns. There are three of the kilns, costing $7,000 each,
and the company is now building a muffle kiln that will double their capacity
for firing terra cotta.
What
puzzles the ordinary layman is how to get a given shade or color, so as to make
any number or articles in the same kiln of a uniform color. This is easily
explained it is the work of the Superintendent and he thoroughly understands
his business. It is often the case in mining clay that one stratum is mined and
used, then a stratum next below is used, the strata, however, differing widely
in their composition. One stratum may be burned in much less time than another
and the color of the articles produced may differ materially. To prevent any
disharmony in the color or shade required Mr. Le Jeune experiments with the
clays in a small kiln designed for this purpose. Besides he superintends the
selection or mixing of clays for every article manufactured. it requires close
scrutiny and a thorough knowledge of the soils, but the results are infallible.
To give this ware a red color there must be a certain amount of oxidized iron,
when heated to a certain degree, and care must be taken that the heat is not
sufficient to fuse the alkaline salts in the clay as this would give the
article a dark and metallic color or the luster of gray vitrifaction. A dainty
task this, to select one’s clay appropriately and heat the kiln to the proper
temperature.
In the
brick department only first-class face or stock brick are manufactured. Eight
brick machines, the patent of the company, are in constant operation. The
article turned out is perfect. It has a glossy surface, is of any buff, cream
or red shades desired, and has a metallic ring about it that shows its
durability. Nothing manufactured in terra cotta will oxidize. Acids will leave
no impression on it, which can not be said of bronze, brass or iron which
oxidize in a short time after coming in contact with the atmosphere.
Five brick
kilns, likewise patented by the company with a capacity of 50,000 each are in
use. These can be fired from above or below as best suits the condition of the
brick in process of hardening. Connected with the works is a large machine
shop, containing lathes, planers and boring machines where the company makes
its own dies, tools, etc. There is no occasion to go out for a single repair or
to procure a single tool.
These works
are complete in every particular. Though they are yet in their infancy they
have already acquired a most enviable reputation on this coast for the
perfection of their work. They have recently filled contracts for such splendid
edifices as the Crocker, Mills, and Fair building in San
Francisco, and the School
of Fine Arts in San Diego. Over one hundred men are employed,
and a the present rate of incoming orders it is only a question of time when
twice that number will be employed and the product of these works be sought for
from all parts of the state.
It is out
pleasure to close this article with the statement that the company is now
figuring to put up a plant to make clay fire proofing, which means employment
for more of our people.
_________________
When man
has passed from the condition of a nomadic herdsman and abandoned his tent to
make a permanent home it was but natural that the choice of building materials
should be a prime object in his changed conditions of life. On the plains where
he pastured his flocks stone could not always be readily obtained, and on
observing that clay on drying became hard and durable, the suggestion came
naturally to him that if he put this clay in proper shape while soft and
suffered the sun to bake it, he had a building material that required no tools
to prepare it. Hence we find that the adobe, the first and oldest form of brick,
was connected with the early stages of every nation that has made any
considerable advance toward civilization. The transition was easy from the
adobe to the burnt brick and was in itself an indication of permanency of
habitation and domestic progress. It is not pertinent here to trace the
wonderful improvements and modifications in the manufacture of brick from the
time when the clay was tempered by treading with horses or oxen, when brick
yards enjoyed a pre-eminence in their line if they burned 20,000 brick in a
season up to the present day when a machine automatically filled from a pug
mill can turn out its 50,000 per diem. It is sufficient for out present purpose
to know that Vallejo
in the brick making industry occupies a most enviable place and has at her
disposal the most practical and complete machines which human ingenuity has so
far devised.

To obtain
an intelligent idea of these works and the process of manufacturing brick, it
is quite necessary to make a rapid survey of the entire establishment.
Adjoining the storage room, to the east, is where the first work has been done
in the clay pit. The soil for three feet down from the surface is a dark
colored loam, from the surface is a dark colored loam, reposing on a light
colored shale and of this latter the brick is manufactured. The clay is taken
toward the pit and wheeled a few yards into the clay shed, where it goes
through a natural sweating process, the moisture being better equalized here
under shelter, than if taken directly from the bank. Immediately adjoining this
shed is the mammoth and ingenious machinery, where the manufacturing proper is
carried on. This consists of two Steadman crushers through which the clay is
passed after being broken finely, hence through a roller crushers while this in
turn is treated by a centrifugal wheel, which beats up the lumps. It is now taken
in hand by a revolving screen which parts with every particle of hard or
non-assimilating clay before its is conveyed into the bin where it drops
automatically into the machine itself, where the bricks are given shape. The
machine is known as the St. Louis Hydraulic Brick machine and has a capacity of
45,000 daily. Its molds are of steel and developed a pressure of from 2000 to
4000 pounds per square inch. It makes ten impressions at each fall. To watch
these smooth surface, symmetrically shaped blocks, turned out here with so much
precision and regularity, is to observe one of the wonders of mechanical sills.
As fast as the bricks issue out they are taken directly to one of the kilns all
under the same roof and set therein fifty-three courses high.
It is
estimate tat when these works are in fair operation they will turn out 40,000
bricks daily. Besides the common building brick for general purposes, we
observe a face or “stock” brick, of a dark cherry color, as smooth as a planed
block and which is as fine as article of its kind as can e produced any where.
It is not difficult to designate the market for this product. That San Francisco will be the
chief point of supply is but natural when on considers that its capital is
derived from that city, and that transportation thereto is so easy. The company
has a wharf here 50x200 feet with an 800 feet approach, and now that they are
engaged in looking about for suitable vessels to do their own carrying it is
but question of a brief period when these works will be the scene of
considerable shipping activity. When once the works are in full swing keeping
pace with their capacity, from 60 to 100 men will dine work, no inconsiderable
pay roll for the merchants of Vallejo
to cater to and become interested in.
Pacific Brick Works
The works
of this company, located a few hundred yards north of the foregoing company’s
plant, exhibit it both as a neighbor and co-laborer in the brick-making
industry. They, too front on the Straits and kook towards San Francisco as a
market for their out –put. This company was organized in June, 1980, by San Francisco gentlemen.
Its officers are: Mr. R.V. Watt, President; L. J. Norton, Vice President; Mr.
R. D. McElroy, Treasurer; J. L. Case, Secretary and General Manager; M.S.
Wilds, Superintendent. Seventy –five acres of land here belong to the company,
out of any portion of which brick of a quality unsurpassed either in Philadelphia or Milwaukee
manufactured can be surpassed. The soil is of terra cotta based overlaid with
loose dark colored loam and practically inexhaustible for the purpose to which
it is now devoted. It is yet in its infancy, though it is passed that
experimental stage, in having proved to the satisfaction of its stockholders
and the gratification of the public that the article already manufactured
surpassed the most sanguine expectations. This was accomplished in burning the
first kiln of 250,000 brick. Many of these were of so fine a quality that
visitor carried them home with then, heavy as they were.
The machine
used here is the famous Penfield machine manufactured at Willoughby, Ohio,
used for making soft mud brick. It works rapidly commonly, seldom clogs and has
a capacity for molding 40,000 bricks per day. Connected with this machine are a
clay crusher and stone separator and a pug for refining and mixing the dirt.
A dry
house, 40x90, is an essential part of the plant of this company. Since they
design conducting operations every day in the year, once they get under
headway, is essential they should be independent of unfavorable weather. For
this purpose a dry hose was constructed. It is divided in to three “tunnels” or
apartments, where brick can be placed in various stages of drying. Coils of
iron pipe are stretched under the floor of these apartments, so constructed
that they contain the exhaust from the engine and boiler from the day and the
live steam during the night. The temperature of the dry hose is 140 degrees to
180 degrees. Brick are dried here sufficiently in forty-eight hours to permit
of their being set immediately in the kiln.
The engine
house is the model of neatness as well as a symbol of power. It contains a
large Atlas of seventy horsepower and manufactured in Indianapolis expressly for this work.
A two
hundred and fifty foot wharf runs out from the land and here with their own
barges and steam tug they will be in readiness to delivery under their own
management where ever their product may be in demand. These works are not in
operation at present, pending proposed improvement in construction of their
kilns. In the coming spring they will be started up."
Friday, May 10, 2013
Community Outreach Program
As part of the City of Vallejo's Participatory Budgeting process, the Museum
is seeking funding to implement a three-part community outreach program that will
increase awareness among Vallejoans about the city’s past and the important
contributions made by many of our city’s residents.
The first
part of the project consists of the design and fabrication of ten “pop-up” exhibit panels that will
be loaned to local schools, community centers, senior residence facilities,
libraries, retail centers, churches, Farmers Markets, City festivals, or other
high-traffic areas of the city. These panels will reflect ten different themes
of Vallejo and Mare Island history and will be designed for either
“stand-alone” use or in combination with each other. The themes selected for
the first ten panels include: 1) Vallejo as California’s state capital, 2)
Founding of the Mare Island Naval Shipyard, 3) Vallejo’s Hispanic Heritage, 4)
Growth of Vallejo’s African American community, 5) Filipino Immigration, 6)
History of Vallejo’s schools, 7) Vallejo transportation history, 8) Vallejo
sports history, 9) Mare Island’s role
in World War Two, 10) Vallejo’s wartime defense housing communities.
These ten
themes were selected because they reflect the areas of greatest interest
expressed by visitors to the Museum. The pop-up banners will be approximately
3’ X 6 ½ ‘. They are portable and free standing, requiring no installation
hardware or technical expertise by the borrower.
The second
part of the project consists of three portable display cases that will contain
artifacts (or reproductions) reflecting themes of Vallejo and Mare Island
history. Topics of these cases can be changed to suit the locations where they
are placed or the event where they are used. The topics may also augment one or
more of the banner themes described above. These locked exhibit cases will also
be available for loan and display at the types of locations described above.
The final
part of the project will allow local residents to share their stories via oral
history recordings. The Museum will purchase digital audio and video recorders
which will be used to gather oral histories at community events like
Juneteenth, Pista Sa Nayon, etc. or at senior citizens facilities, veterans’
organizations, schools, or other locations. More extensive oral history
recordings also can be done at the Museum, in a more controlled setting. Oral
history recordings can often augment written records or fill in gaps in the
community’s history. They provide first-person recollections and can be used as
a bridge between older and younger generations. Capturing the stories of
Vallejoans will insure that their history will be preserved at the Museum for
the benefit of future generations. These recordings can be loaned to schools or
churches with school services for educational enrichment programs. Total Project Cost: $29,413
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