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Showing posts from 2016

BUILD A CRAFTSMAN BUNGALOW FOR $2500. PLANS $10

The Broadmoor Neighborhood in San Leandro is just one of the many neighborhoods in our Bay Area that graced with the California Bungalow/Craftsman homes.  This booklet is the building plans that were available to build your home for as little as $2500. See if you can find a familiar style home you live in, grew up in or know of. Let's see what styles are the most identified.   Post a comment and the style # you remember and where.  This should be fun. As you look at the plans you will notice all of them have sleeping porches.  Here is a link to the history of the sleeping porch. Here is the link to the Broadmoor Bungalow Book.   Be sure to follow me so you don't miss other fun posts. Brought to you by Joy Elliott, Re/Max Accord.  Please consider contacting me for your real estate needs.  RE/MAX #1 - 510-326-2716  joy@joyelliott.com  Search for classic homes at joyelliott.com

LOOK BACK IN HISTORY AT SAN LEANDRO NOW AND THEN

"Then and Now Dinner" ​ Saturday, October 15 at 6:00 p.m. San Leandro Main Library , 300 Estudillo Ave., San Leandro TICKET SALES CLOSE OCTOBER 8 — No tickets at the door $40 Members / $50 Non-Members Click to buy tickets online with a credit card or PayPal Click to download a ticket purchase form to mail with a check Download a Sponsor/Donor form Download a flyer ​ The first ever "Then and Now Dinner" is coming to town! What used to be where Bay Fair Mall is?  What did Dutton Avenue look like in the 1800s?  Has city hall always been where it is now?  Join friends for a great dinner catered by Cuisine Catering (your choice of NY York Strip Roast, Chicken Chardonnay, or vegetarian Stuffed Acorn Squash), enjoy a slide show and stories of old and new San Leandro, win raffle items, and help the San Leandro Historical Society raise funds to enrich the future by preserving the past. Monetary donations from sponsors and raffle item donations from donors help us r

CASTRO VALLEY SOLD FOR $400,000 IN GAMBLING DEBTS !!!

Castro Valley sold for $400,000 worth of gambling debts! Castro Valley was part of the original 28,000 acre (110 km²) land grant given to Don Guillermo Castro, called  Rancho San Lorenzo . This land grant included  Hayward ,  San Lorenzo , and Castro Valley, including Crow Canyon, Cull Canyon, and Palomares Canyons.  Don Guillermo Castro - The San Lorenzo Land Grant Don Guillermo was born in California, then a Mexican possession in 1810. The son of Don Carlos Castro of Las Lagas Rancho. His birthplace was located near the village of Coyote in Santa Clara County along what is now highway 101.A career soldier, he served in the Mexican army as a lieutenant of militia at the pueblo of San Jose. In 1838, he was listed as a surveyor of government lands in San Jose, and it is about this time he acquired his land grant, roughly 28,000 acres, then known as Rancho San Lorenzo. This land included those areas we now identify has Hayward, San Lorenzo, Castro Valley, as w

15 TONS OF CHERRYS GIVEN AWAY!

Saturday, June 4, 2016 Parade (1 0-11 am) &  Festival  (11am-6 pm) Downtown San Leandro #SLCHERRYFEST It was a lovely time to be alive and the most spectacular sight of all was the cherry trees in blossom, thousands of cherry trees as far as the eye could see...There were little villas hidden in the valleys of blossoms." June 5, 1902 San Leandro hosted the 1st Cherry Festival.  Bessie  Best....was considered on the San Leandro's fairest maidens was chosen queen of the Cherry Festival.  The festival was opened with parades, flag raising and a 21 gun salute. An estimated 25,000 people attended and 15 tons of cherrys were given away!  This year on June 4, 2016, the 107th Cherry Festival will again celebrate the tradition. Come visit the San Leandro Historical Society Booth.  I'll be there between 1-3pm. Download the app on Google Play or Itunes

WHAT DOES SAN LEANDRO'S "BEST MANOR" HAVE TO DO WITH CATERPILLERS?

Daniel Best was San Leandros' original industrialist.  He is best know for the invention of the steamplow which eventually evolved into the Caterpiller Tractor earth moving machine.  Caterpillar was a large employer in SL.  The San Leandro Agricultural Plant was located on Davis just below the railroad tracts where the Gateway Apartments now sit.  The original entrance arch is still preserved there. San Leandro Agricultural Plant on Davis Daniel Best Bldg Estudillo Ave @ E.14th After Daniel died, his daughters sold land below Hayward Blvd (E.14th) where Dutton turns into  Best Ave.  Streets incorporated into this area are Best Ave, Cherrywood, Leo, Lafayette, Lorraine,  Great Starter neighborhood with 2-3 Bedroom Homes, 900-1400 Sf, $400,000 to $500,000.  Built between 1925 - 1938.  Lots of character and nice size lots.  Check out the currenty inventory or homes for sale in this area click this link  Best Manor, Farrelly Pond, Toler Homes for Sale/Sold The hom

LAVISH CHAMPAGNE PARTIES AT THE ESTUDILLO HOME IN 1850

There are many fine historic homes in historic San Leandro that I will cover in a later blog.  This home, however, was the first of the grand residences. The Estudillo Home "In 1850 SeƱor Estudillo saw the completion of a fine family home, the Estudillo Home. Lavish champagne parties costing thousands of dollars were held in the stately home.  Eventually the home became part of St. Leander's Church and remained standing for almost one hundred years before it was torn down in 1949 to make way for the construction of St. Leander's rectory."* " Jose Joaquin Estudillo died at this residence on June 7, 1852.  Upon transfer of the county seat to San Leandro in 1854 the Estudillo home was offered for temporary use to the county.  During that period a fire broke out and forced evacuation of the court then in session.  To avoid any objection to the transfer to another location, Judge Hester is said to have reconvened the court as close to the original site

ONE CHERRY TREE ON ESTUDILLO AVE YIELDS 1100 LBS. OF FRUIT

I.H. Begier reported that one cherry tree on the Rindespacher place on Estudillo Avenue yielded 1100 lbs of fruit. In 1900 agriculture was still the mainstay of the San Leandro communiity. Cherry and apricot orchards furnished both local and eastern markets. The shipments to San Francisco in July 1901 were reported at 100 tons per day.....some fruit averaged but four to the pound. Mr. Begier planted rhubarb in 1902 and a year later shipped 40,000 rhubarb plants to Jersey Island on the Sacramento River. A 40-lb box of aspargus sold for 40 cents a pound and the first box of cherries shipped to Phildephia that year brought $22 for 10 pounds. Another crop of some importance was "horse beans" or "favas". At the end of th 1901 season M.M. Avelas reported having shipped 18 carloads of this crop to the east. Some 240,000 pounds also was reported as having been shipped to Cuba. In addition to the fruits mentionsed, currants, raspberries were raised in cons