Eric;  Very interesting.  I don't think though, that this is where my day
meant his dad walked to.  Dad was pointing over the hill south rather than
north and we were on Sierra Rd. in the San Jose hills at the time.  Don't
know if I mentioned in my previous post or not but; my dad said my
grandfather used to have to be very careful on payday because there would be
bandits/muggers who would try to rob him on his walk home.  My granddad,
from the picture I have of him and the description, was a small man so, I
don't imagine he stood much of a chance against the muggers.

 

Thanks again for the link and information.  Sam in Maz

 

From: azores@googlegroups.com [mailto:azores@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of
eric edgar
Sent: Wednesday, January 26, 2011 10:01 AM
To: azores@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [AZORES-Genealogy] Brokers/Jobers, how immigrants found work

 

Here's more

 


LEONA SULPHUR MINES 1906



In 1906 the Leona Heights sulphur mines were opened east of the Laundry Farm
Canyon. A bunker was built at The Car Barn site in the Laundry Farm Canyon,
which connected aerial cable tramways to the sulphur mines, and later rock
quarries, in the hills above. The mines were the project of Francis Marion
'Borax' Smith, who made a fortune in Oakland, but fell into bankruptcy in
1913. 

The sulphur mines frequently caught fire, and had to be abandoned. With
miles of tunnels, they were played out by 1929. The creeks were forever
polluted with sulphur after that. In 1997, the surface asphalt of nearby
Redwood Road was badly eaten away by sulphuric acid that bubbled up from the
underground springs for a few weeks. No environmental remediation was done
in those days, so the sterile mine tailings remain today, piled some 150
feet high at the head of Leona Creek.



On Wed, Jan 26, 2011 at 8:59 AM, eric edgar <noblankt...@gmail.com> wrote:

Sam, 

 

Check out this page describing mine in the Leona Heights area of East
Oakland.

 

http://oaklandgeology.wordpress.com/2008/05/25/sulfur-mine-creek/

 

Eric

On Wed, Jan 26, 2011 at 8:38 AM, Sam Koester <sam...@surewest.net> wrote:

Eric;  Thanks for this information.  Interesting that from what you and Mary
have shared with me, there were no sulfur mines in the area.  I thought that
my dad had said his dad worked in the sulfur mines.  Maybe it was the
Mercury Sulfide mines and he got confused...  I only know that I picture my
grandfather making that long hike over the hills to  work in mines and I
shake my head at the tenacity of our ancestors.

 

Thanks again to both you and Mary for your information.  Sam in Maz

 

From: azores@googlegroups.com [mailto:azores@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of
eric edgar
Sent: Tuesday, January 25, 2011 10:36 AM 


To: azores@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [AZORES-Genealogy] Brokers/Jobers, how immigrants found work

 

Sam, 

 

Over the hills from Milpitas to me means following Calaveras Road east into
the Diablo Range south of Livermore, This has long been a mining district.
Coal was mined at Tesla and Corral Hollow, Magnesite at the Red Mountain
district farther south. Magnesite is used in steel and rubber production.

 

 It could have also meant the New Almaden quicksilver mines south of San
Jose. Mercurey Sulfide (Cinnabar) has been mined here since 1845.

 

Eric Edgar

On Mon, Jan 24, 2011 at 5:56 PM, Sam Koester <sam...@surewest.net> wrote:

I don't think this is too off subject....My father told me his dad used to
walk "over the hill" to the mines.  At this point in time they lived in
either Milpitas (San Jose, CA area).  I think, from the back of my mind,
that it was a sulfur mine.  Does anyone know anything about this?  Thanks,
Sam in Maz


-----Original Message-----
From: azores@googlegroups.com [mailto:azores@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of
Mary Bordi
Sent: Monday, January 24, 2011 2:59 PM
To: azores@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [AZORES-Genealogy] Brokers/Jobers, how immigrants found work

Regarding Brokers and Jobbers--

I got an broadsheet published by Murray and Ready, SF California in
August 1905 that advertised (their words not mine) "White male help of
all kinds furnished free of charge". It was issued four times daily
and I imagine posted various places for people to see and sent to
outlying areas, perhaps. All sorts of jobs were listed by category,
such as waiters, blacksmiths, cooks, laborers, ranch hands, Saw mills,
boys, married help etc.

Something that might have appealed to our Azorean ancestors might be:

Man run gang plow s. Joaquin Co. $1.25 day bd
4 Teamsters 2 horses Solano Co $1.50 fare
Hay baler JM press 50c fare 14ctn
Boy milk 3 cows and work on ranch 50c fare
Milker 24-28 cows run hand separator feed etc. Merced Co fare 4.25
Farmer and wife 5 people to cook for $45 fd

There were also city jobs and railroad jobs.

Another broadsheet, undated, was a "Special list of corporations,
syndicates, trusts and banking corporations jobs" (all labor, not
office) and had this ad in Spanish, German, Greek, French, Italian and
Portuguese: "Do you want secure and steady work? We need 100
Portuguese in 5 states and 2 territories, including all counties in
California. If you want to work see Murray & Ready." At the bottom of
each ad it said "In 1902 we found jobs for 45,000 men".

Since we were on the subject I thought this might interest some folks.

Mary Bordi

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