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Table of Contents Preface |
Early Lafayette Cattle brands |
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A mottled brown book with fading ink recording transactions made by Elam Brown at his grist mill beginning January 8, 1859, is a treasured memento of Lafayette's early farming days. Now kept in the vault at the Pleasant Hill Central Library, the old volume notes bills paid, money advanced to customers, accounts of hay and beef hides sold. | ||
Hailed as the first man of industry in the village and possibly in the county, Elam Brown established a horse-drawn grist mill. This eliminated a time-consuming trip to San Jose for local farmers wishing to have wheat and barley converted to flour. The mill, located on Lafayette Creek near modern First Street, was set up in 1853. One of the wheels from this old mill, which was dismantled and moved to Modesto in 1880, was imbedded in the wall of the Lafayette Plaza in 1955 as a memorial to town founder Brown. |
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Lafayette's infamous "adobe" soil was a problem for the early farmers as recorded in the handwritten comments around this 1867 Lafayette Mills receipt. Wrote the clerk: "You can not expect the best of flour where their is adobe in the wheat, mixed all through it 'done the best I could'." The receipt also indicates that twenty-five cents was deducted from the total bill for "1/2 sk. adobe". | ||
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In 1915 Louis L. Stein, Sr. bought a ranch just east of the present Acalanes High School. The land and ranch buildings are shown following a rare snow storm in 1922. | ||
![]() Farming was still the basic pursuit in Lafayette in the early 1900's. Here a crew harvests hay for a local farmer named Dunn. |
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![]() Drought in the summer and flood in the winter often plagued farmers in Lafayette. About 1910 Lafayette Creek raged out of control and spilled over its banks just below Mt. Diablo Boulevard near Oakland Avenue. Today much of the creek is contained by underground pipes. |
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Mt. Diablo Boulevard was shared by autos and cattle alike as late as 1938. The cattle were driven by local farmers down the main road, through the old tunnel to Berkeley and on to the slaughter house in Emeryville. |
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© 2007, Lafayette Historical Society