Sirviendo al corazón de California desde 1892

Madera soldiers beat their swords into plowshares

Photo - George W. Mordecai, the Prince of Cottonwood Creek.

Frederick Quant and George Mordecai were bitter enemies.They just didn’t know it.Given half a chance, either man would have killed the other, for they were soldiers who were on opposite sides in the American Civil War. In April of 1865, these two corporals squared off for one final showdown at Appomattox and thereby wove a […]

Madera’s fight with Jack Dempsey

Photo of Attorney Joe Barcroft got boxer Jack Dempsey off on a speeding charge in Madera County, but he couldn’t help him in the ring.

Life as a Madera traffic cop in 1926 was not the most exotic way to spend one’s days (or nights). Traffic along the state highway near town was light. That’s why traffic officer M.A. Harrison was keeping watch from the shoulder of the road. That’s where he was when he saw the roadster speeding south […]

Madera received too much of a good thing

Photo - The floodwaters of 1955 threatened everything in Madera — even the D Street railroad bridge.

Nothing is permanent but change. Maderans have always remembered this as they approached the winter season, casting worried and frequent looks at the skies. Too often drought conditions have made them wonder if there would ever be enough water. In 1955, however, it was a different story. They still looked toward the skies, but this […]

Madera loved Dr. Ransom

Photo - This home on North C Street belonged to Dr. Dow Ransom. He died here in 1946. In the 1950s, The Madera Tribune purchased the property. The building was torn down, and apartments replaced the historic structure.

On Saturday, April 6, 1946, Madera lost one of its most beloved and most colorful homegrown physicians, Dr. Dow Ransom. This early physician and surgeon was mourned by hundreds of Maderans whom he had tended for more than 40 years. Death came to Dr. Ransom at his beautiful home at 301 North C Street. Although […]

Judge Barcroft remembered

Photo of Judge Joe Barcroft.

A few folks in Madera still remember Joe Barcroft. He was one of Madera’s most colorful judges and a prominent attorney in the early 20 century. In 1933, in collaboration with Lilbourne Winchell, he co-authored the highly popular history of Fresno and Madera County — a work that is much sought after today. Judge Barcroft […]

El deshollinador se metió en un lío.

Photo of Sheriff Jasper Lewis, shown here, was helpless to prevent the jailhouse bee attack of 1915.

La cárcel del condado de Madera apenas tenía 20 años en 1915 cuando el sheriff Jasper Lewis asumió el cargo de principal agente de la ley del condado. Cuando el otoño dio paso al invierno, decidió que era hora de “instalar la calefacción”. Sin embargo, como preparación para su instalación, había que limpiar el conducto de humos, por lo que Lewis llamó a Chauncey […]

Madera’s ‘Soiled Doves’ — Happy Valentines Day

Photo of Sheriff John Barnett (right) came up against Madera’s flourishing Redlight District and lost.

Prostitution was a fact of life in Madera from its early beginnings. The town had barely been founded when entrepreneurs of the world’s oldest profession descended upon the little village, and by the turn of the century the illicit traffic in human flesh was an embarrassment to most of the “law-abiding” folks. Although occasionally a […]

Nothing could keep the doctor away

Photo - Dr. C.E. Brown, Madera’s first physician, conducted business in this building, the Yosemite Hotel, Madera’s first structure.

The doctor came to Madera in April 1877, when it was just six months old. The young, upstart village then consisted of 25 buildings, most of them dwellings. It could hardly compare with the mining community of Buchanan, from whence C.E. Brown came, but it had promise. That’s why he decided to remain and become […]

Madera’s Journey from Jim Crow

Photo of General Waldo Sims, Madera’s first black police officer.

The first recorded African-American resident of Madera was Dexter Hunt, a 31 year-old porter who worked for Captain Russel Perry Mace in his hotel. He arrived here in 1880. For the next 20 years, Madera continued to grow, from 217 residents in 1880 to 2,500 in 1900. By comparison, the African-American population of Madera grew […]

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