Remembering
By Joseph Celentano
TCMM Historical Research Committee
What did the Tuolumne Lumber Jubilee
mean to the
A great celebration was held and it was called the Tuolumne
Lumber Jubilee. In those five long,
dreary years of depression the 2500 people living in this community had reached
the depths of despair. Despite the
efforts of County, State and Federal agencies to alleviate the distress and
suffering by means of the dole, work relief projects, etc., it was all so
pitifully inadequate and unsatisfactory, that everyone was exceedingly
unhappy. Many prominent families who
were forced by these heart-rending circumstances to accept this humiliating
public charity were bitterly pessimistic over the outlook for the future.
Then the thrilling announcement came
that the huge West Side Lumber Company plant would reopen at once. It meant that the men could go off the hated
relief rolls, but far more important, it meant a restoration of that spirit of
pride and independence so vital to the welfare and progress of every decent
American citizen.
The pent-up feelings of five miserable years burst
into a wild, spontaneous desire to celebrate.
A mass meeting was called, a program committee was appointed, and it was
unanimously decided to call the event "The
Tuolumne Lumber Jubilee" as the appropriate name for a truly joyful
occasion. The celebration was held on June 8, 1935 and it was estimated that
over 7000 people were in attendance. The
longest parade in the history of
Fred Ellis,
the general manager of the West Side Lumber Company, as parade grand-marshal,
mounted on a beautiful white horse, led the parade. Miss Mary Frances Gurney was attended
by the lovely Hallock twins and was crowned "Queen Prosperity.”
An interesting feature was the enthusiastic hanging in
effigy of "Old Man Depression" from a telephone pole. At the park, Supervisor Ernest H. Hodge, then Chairman of the Tuolumne
County Board of Supervisors, welcomed the throng, and expressed thanks that
better times had come to the long-distressed community.
With the exception of the World War
II years, the Jubilee had been observed annually under the sponsorship of the
Tuolumne City Progressive Association in commemoration of the 1935 lumber
revival, and also to impress upon the minds of the citizens due gratitude for
the improved economic conditions of the day.
In 1948, it took on the centennial aspect, with the appearance of scores
of bearded men, and women in gowns of the Gold Rush period. Also for the first time, the legendary Paul
Bunyan took a prominent part in the festivities.
The highlight of the early Lumber Jubilees was the
tug-of-war between a team of
The 58th Tuolumne Lumber Jubilee event,
June 22, 23 and 24, 2007 is open to all lumberjacks, mountain men and women,
and visitors of all ages. More information can be obtained
at www.Lumber-Jubilee.com
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06-07]