Welcome to The Museum Store

Home Page
Membership Page
Museum Page
Events Page
Museum Store

This is the place to find "Books, Photos, Apparel and Gadgets" all of which are now available from the gift shop in our museum. Also available is a vast collection of research material for all who are interested in our local history.

All these items are available for purchase online through PayPal. Otherwise, please visit our museum or order by calling the museum at 661-245-7747 during museum hours. Our friendly personnel will be more than happy to take your order and process it as soon as possible!

CURRENTLY FEATURED BOOK

LOST HOTELS on California's Historic Ridge Route.
By Harrison Irving Scott

This is a paperback "Coffee Table" book having 120 pages with 100 pictures. Some of the pictures have never been published before. The book covers Hotel Lebec, the Gorman Hotel, Sandberg's Summit Hotel, the National Forest Inn, the Tumble Inn and the French Village in Newhall. The French Village although not on the Ridge Route was constructed by the family that built the National Forest Inn and the Tumble Inn. In addition to the pictures, a brief synopsis is given regarding the history of each site. 120 pgs - $21.95 Shipping free.

LOCAL HISTORY PUBLICATIONS
GATEWAYS TO SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
By John W. Robinson

Almost all overland passage to Southern California population centers was, and still is, funneled through a small number of passes. North to south these passages are Tehachapi, Tejon, San Fernando, Cajon, and San Gorgonio passes, the Carrizo-Vallecito Corridor and San Diego's Mountain Springs Grade. This book is about the history of these gateways to Southern California.- 489pgs Hardbound $50

A VIEW FROM THE RIDGE ROUTE: The First People
By Bonnie Ketterl Kane
Illustrated by Susan Sjoberg Hollander

Volume I - introduces the reader to the native peoples of the San Emigdio Mountains of Southern California. It gives an overview of what life might have been like for these early people, the influence that the Spanish explorers, the missions, the trappers and traders had on them, and the local reservation the surviving Indians were moved to.
7 X 10, black & white illustrated paperback, 177 pgs - $15

A VIEW FROM THE RIDGE ROUTE: The Fort Tejon Era
By Bonnie Ketterl Kane
Illustrated by Susan Sjoberg Hollander

Volume II - is about the founding of Fort Tejon in 1854. The Fort was located at the top of Grapevine Canyon between the Tehachapi and the San Emigdio Mountains of Southern California, along the major roadway of that time. The book includes military, civic and social activities at and around the Fort, the huge earthquake of 1857, the government's camel experiment, the arrival of the telegraph and then the closing of Fort Tejon due to the Civil War.
7 X 10, black & white illustrated paperback, 206 pgs - $15

A VIEW FROM THE RIDGE ROUTE: The Ranchos
By Bonnie Ketterl Kane
Illustrated by Susan Sjoberg Hollander

 

Volume III - is a collection of information and stories about the rise and fall of the Mexican Ranchos and how the Mexican land grants of San Emigdio and El Tejon came to be what they are today. Included is information on the first major industry of the area, sheep raising, the transition to cattle with stories of the vaqueros and bandidos of the late 1800's as well.
7 X 10, black & white illustrated paperback, 294 pgs - $18

RIDGE ROUTE: The Road That United California
By Harrison Irving Scott

A detailed history of the Ridge Route Road between Los Angeles and Bakersfield. Mr. Scott's collection of actual stories and photos of the road, and places along the road, is unprecedented. Numerous interview of people from the past fill the pages of this book.
6 X 9, black & white illustrated hardback, 326 pgs - $25

HEAP OF LIVIN': Memoirs From the Mountains of Southern California
By Dolores Mckenzie Atmore Gentry
Transcribed by Eloise A. Richer and Bonnie Ketterl Kane

Mrs. Gentry writes the true story of three generations of her family, the wagon train from Texas to the homestead on Tejon Ranch in Southern California. At age fifteen, she unknowingly marries the leader of an outlaw gang of cowboys and is left to prove up his desert claim. For years her only friends are the Joshua trees and a cowboy at a neighboring ranch. (prose & poetry) Here is an excerpt
8½ X 11, black & white illustrated paperback, 397 pgs - $20

HOMESTEADERS HEYDAY
By William deLancy with additional excerpts by Lewis C. Plush
Edited by Bonnie Ketterl Kane and Louella Plush Lee

Mr. deLancey wrote a series of articles for a New York newspaper about homesteading in the Lockwood Valley of Southern California in the 1920. This is a collection of those articles which gives excellent insight to what life was like in that area at that time. Stories include the wildlife and hunting as well as the social life and people of the Valley then.
8½ X 11, black & white illustrated paperback, 101 pgs - $12

MINES, MURDERS & GRIZZLIES: Tales of California's Ventura Back Country
By Charles F. Outland

This is a light hearted and entertaining book based on research in the early newspapers of the day. Many of the stories take place in the Lockwood Valley of eastern Ventura County.
6 X 9, black & white illustrated paperback, 151 pgs - $16


CUDDY CATTLE DRIVE: Frazier Mountain to Lancaster - 1921
By William de Lancey
Transcribed by Bonnie Ketterl Kane

An actual story of this cattle drive recorded by Bill de Lancey who helped out. The cattle are gathered in Cuddy Valley in the San Emigdio Mountains of Southern California and driven through Gorman, along the old Ridge Route Road - "as traffic whipped by at high speeds", through the Antelope Valley, to Fairmont where problems arise and on to the railroad at Lancaster.
5½ X 8½, black & white illustrated paperback, 20 pgs - $5

A FLOWER WATCHERS GUIDE
By Milt Stark

Mr. Stark has photo'd and thoroughly described the many wildflowers on the Western Mojave Desert and the Antelope Valley. The book is written for people with no botanical knowledge who happen to be curious about the common name of the California wildflowers they see along the road or trail.
5½ X 9½, color illustrated paperback, 158 pgs - $16 + $2 mailing

THE TRACKERS FIELD GUIDE
By James C. Lowry

This guide is arranged as a reference of common wild animal information and pictures. It has pictures of tracks as well as a lot of information on traits of the animal type. It can be invaluable to people in the field as they discover their visitors of the night. 6 x 9 Black & white illustrated paperback, 408 pgs -$18 (More info)

HEAP OF EATIN'
By the Ridge Route Communities Historical Society Members

This is a collection of recipes by old-timers and new-comers to the Frazier Mountain area. Recipes such as "Granny's Zucchini pickles", "Chuck Wagon Beans" and "Alberta's Boiled Spice Cake" grace the pages. Historic photos serve as dividers for the eight sections of the cook book.
6 X 9, black & white illustrated, hardbound, 122 pages - $12

THE ART OF GATHERING AND MAKING ELDERBERRY JAM
By Bonnie Ketterl Kane

The small booklet is a guide to identifying, gathering and preparing and making elderberry jam. This precious berry has been a source of food since the beginning of time. The jam has somewhat of a natural or wild taste unlike the sugary jams of today. The author also urges readers to plant an elderberry bush to preserve this dying breed of bush, and as well because the birds and bears love them!
5 X 7, color illustrated paperback, 12 pgs- $3

SAGA OF RANCHO EL TEJON
By Frank Forrest Latta

This reprint of the 1970's publication is a classic for local residents who live in and around Tejon Ranch, and for those interested in the history of early ranching in the mountains of Southern California. The author, Frank Latta, spent years interviewing the majordomo of Rancho El Tejon, Jose Jesus Lopez, to gather this unprecedented collection of historic events of the transition from the Mexican Land Grants to Ranchos of the late 1800's. . Paperback 293 pages - $25

EL CAMINO VIEJO A' LOS ANGELES
By Frank Forrest Latta

In "EL CAMINO VIEJO" author, Frank Latta, has recorded the history of the first inland trail between Los Angeles and points north. Beginning as a Native American trail the Spanish began to use it as early as the 1600's when traveling from their settlements of Santa Fe (NM) and Monterey (CA). In California, the route passed through the Antelope Valley, Gorman, Frazier Park, Cuddy Valley and to the north through San Emigdio Canyon. 25 pgs plus map $13

CHUMASH ETHNOBOTANY - Plant knowledge Among the Chumash People of Southern California.

By Jan Timbrook
From islands off the shore of Santa Barbara to the chaparral covered mountains of the dry inland regions, the land of the Chumash is a storehouse of plants, an area of great biological richness and variety. Living intimately within this land for more than nine thousand years, the Chumash developed an intense and sophisticated relationship with the plants around them. They collected and processed nuts, seeds, berries, roots, leaves, twigs, shoots, and wood from which they created practically everything they needed to live, from medicines to weapons to decorative items.

This book - is the result of three decades of research in archives and among native people.

6x9, color illustrated, paperback 271 pgs $28.00

THE CHUMASH
By Liz Sonneborn
Part of the Native American History series. For thousands of years the Chumash people have made their home on California's rich coast. Their story is one of survival and strength. Forced to work in Spanish missions in the 1700's, the Chumash lost much of their original way of life. Their struggle continued in the 1800's, when the Chumash land fell under Mexican control and they faced oppression, poverty, and homelessness. After many years of hardship, the Chumash have regained some of their traditions. Many still live in their native homelande, and they look forward to the future with optimism and pride.

7x9, color illustrated, paperback 56 pgs. $9.00

THE WORRY STONE
By Marianna Dengler

The Worry Stone is three tales woven together, the way human lives are connected despite distance and time. It pays homage to the first people of California's Ojai Valley, the Chumash Indians, and the power of folktales spoken aloud.
9 x 11 color illustrated, hardback, 34 pgs - $16

DAWN TO DUSK
By Florence Hollenbeck Cuddy

A collection of poems written by this very sensitive and creative woman about her life in the early 1900's in and between Lebec, California and the Cuddy Ranch in Western Ventura County. Especially moving is her ode to her husband, John - the first Forest Ranger in these mountains.
5 X 9, black & white, no illustrations, paperback, 27 pgs - $5

FIELD GUIDE TO THE SAN ANDREAS FAULT
By David Lynch

This is a comprehensive display of the San Andreas fault starting from the bottom up to the end in northern California and there are numerous examples of what to look for on the way. Available in either book or CD.

Book $28

CD $15
OVERVIEWS OF LOCAL HISTORY
  THE COMMUNITIES ALONG THE RIDGE ROUTE - $7
  THE FORT TEJON ERA - $3
  SANDBERG SUMMIT HOTEL - $4
  A CHRONOLOGY: Of the Greater Frazier Mountain Area - $4
  PETER LEBEC: Mountain Mystery Man - $3
 
OTHER PUBLICATIONS AND GIFT ITEMS ARE ALSO
AVAILABLE IN THE MUSEUM STORE


PUBLICATIONS MAY BE ORDERED BY GROUND MAIL
SO THAT A CHECK OR MONEY ORDER CAN BE INCLUDED
RRCM&HS
POB 684
Frazier Park, CA 93225