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I have been sent more great 1915 - 1920 pictures. These came from Steven Faulkner of Oregon. Please check them out. With the exception of the Liberty flag postcards these pictures cam from Steven's grandfather Phillip C. Eberwine and grandmother Edna Moberly-Reynolds-Eberwine. They met and were married in Trona.
Dr. Jim Kennedy of
Dover, NJ sent me some pictures of Trona in 1920 while his father worked
for AP&CC. Please take a look and see if you can help identify anyone in his photos.Photos
A
troubled town's grit expectations -- latimes.com
Source: www.latimes.com The Trona High School 8-man football squad practices before the home opener on the school's dirt field. Football in the dirt is a tradition at Trona and a point of pride. (Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times)
Football in the dirt is a tradition in Trona, where grass is tough
to grow in the heat and saline soil. A patch of test grass planted
by coaches in 1966 was mysteriously doused with kerosene and set
ablaze.
Juanita Howell
(Class of 77) of
AwesomeBusinessSystems.com sent me a
link to a 1973 Dessert
Magazine article to her father's travertine mine in the Slate
Range. When I woke up this morning I had no idea what travertine was
but my wife tells me that travertine tile is all the rage now. Jump
the the article here:
Aquaris Mine
Trona Railroad Stove
Dear Sir:
Let me introduce myself
and why I am e-mailing the Trona Railway. My name is John
Giannini and I live in Riverside, CA.
Several years
ago, about 15 to be more or less exact I bough a Pot belly
stove from an antique store in Pomona CA. The store owner
told me that they believed that the stove had once been in
an old school and the stove need to be restored some what.
I started cleaning up the stove about a week lated and
found a Trona Railway, property tag attached to the base of
the stove (pictured above).
I removed the tag
before I had the stove sandblasted and then reattached it
after all welding and stove blacking was completed. Could
or would anyone know when this type of property tag was used
by the Trona Railway. Any information provided would be of
great help, thank you for you're time
John
Giannini.
If anyone can
help John with his question please email me. My guess is
that this stove came from a Trona RR caboose.