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The Tustin Area Historical Society will meet Nov. 17, at 7pm, in the multi-purpose room at the Tustin Senior Center, 200 South C St. Jim Cortese will portray Bernardo Yorba in “The Passions of the Rancho Period,” a interactive and educational program featuring “storytelling, laughter and song.”
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California Heritage Day will be celebrated Sunday, Nov. 14, from 10am to 4pm at the Heritage Museum of Orange County (a.k.a the Kellogg House). The day marks the signing and ratification of the original California Constitution which took place (actually on Nov. 13,) in 1879. Activities throughout the day will include music of early California with dance demonstrations, Fiesta Grupo Folklorico, oral histories, a blacksmith demo, panning for “gold,”, exhibits, crafts, and more. (Be sure to say hello to the grizzled prospector at the gold mine!) A reenactment of the Constitution signing will be held at 2pm, and descendants of the actual signers will be honored. Admission is free.
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I will be the featured speaker at the Nov. 18th meeting of the San Juan Capistrano Historical Society. I’ll be discussing the Orange County Archives and the resources available there. The meeting will be held at 7pm at the Community Center in the Sports Park at 25925 Camino del Avion.
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One more reason to attend the Orange County Historical Society's meeting Thursday night: The new 2010 Orange Countiana historical journal is now available! OCHS members will each receive a free copy, which they can pick up early by attending the meeting. Copies are available to non-members for $20 each.
Hey, thanks for the info...and I dig those sideburns, LOL!
ReplyDeleteThe ORIGINAL Constitution, the one we are celebrating, was ratified in 1848. It was published in both English and Spanish. It guaranteed significant rights to the established Spanish-speaking population. Most of these were withdrawn when the NEW 1897 Constitution replaced it.
ReplyDeleteSharon Brown from Heritage Museum of Orange County
So sad that Bowers will abandon the key purpose for which it was created. This is not what Charles and Ada Bowers wanted when they endowed the museum. Orange County deserves its own local history museum. There are scores of museums in Southern California where you can learn about people and cultures from other parts of the world. But where else will we be able to go to learn a little more about ourselves?
ReplyDeleteSo true.
ReplyDeleteOne of the very few land owners that was granted his property rights. Such a shame, white settlers were the savages!
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