1860 Shipwrecks & A Cemetery in the Sand Dunes, Part I (short version)

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Thick fog often hugs the rugged coastline near Point Ano Nuevo–but since 1872 the lighthouse at Pigeon Point has warned ships away from the nasty reefs that had once doomed many a vessel.

Before the lighthouse existed, many ships perished in the fog along that perilous coast, including the sailing vessels “Sir John Franklin”, “Coya” and “Hellespont”.

Without the warning beacon of a lighthouse, all three captains believed they were far enough out at sea, safely away from the spectacularly beautiful but dangerously deceptive coastline.

Carrying a cargo of pianos, dry goods and liquor bound for San Francisco in the winter of 1865, the Sir John Franklin lost her bearings in a dense fog and mopuntainous sea.

The weather cleared–but it was too late to save the “Sir John Franklin”. Caught by the fast moving breakers, the vessel screeched loudly as she slammed into the open fist of the reefs. Upon discovering a gaping hole in the vessel’s hull, all aboard abandoned ship.

The captain, first mate and eleven crew members struggled against the powerful surf but all met a watery death.

…To be continued…

Photo (1970s): courtesy Raymond E. Watson

Wilkinson School/Preschool News Flash!

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News Flash From Ed Wilkinson:

“Our dear daughter Sara, who was born in the house, where she and her lovely family live, has always
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The latest is this: The Martins (Sahl, Sara, Gabrielle, Benjamin, Elizabeth and Joseph are moving to Washington so that Sahl can begin a new career as a fireman.

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The house at 130 Santa Anna Street will soon be on the market to be sold and our pre-school will be moving across the street to the Wilkinson School.

If you are interested in the house or have any questions or concerns, please call us at 650- 759-8883 or 650-726-4582.”

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Backstory: The house was originally built, circa 1930, by California State Senator Harry Parkman. It is said that Senator Parkman hired a Swedish stonemason to build the gorgeous rock wall surrounding the home as well as the large fireplace inside.

Thanks for the “Thank You”

Thank you for your great site. I grew up in Half Moon Bay. As you know it is a very special place with special people. I live far away now, but it is nice to keep tabs our wonderful town through site’s like your and the Review. Please keep up the good work and thank you!

Clyde Wilson | Accounts Payable Coordinator
Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP

“Babagi” Comes To The Coastside: Part IV Conclusion

In Part III Babaji sat cross-legged on the Indian rug under the orange chute. A tanned, barefooted woman wearing a green and white sarong dropped a small bouquet of wildflowers at the master’s feet.

Then the woman sat down in front of Babaji and said: “You know I am fasting. This is the ninth day. I only have two more days to go.”

Babaji wrote on a large chalkboard that she looked well. His words were read out loud by one of his followers.

“But I don’t know how to explain to my friends why I am fasting.”

“Because you are,” Babaji wrote matter-of-factly. The woman, satisfied with the simple answer, closed her eyes as if meditating.

A young man asked whether dreaming was good.

“Yes,” wrote Babaji. “Dreaming is good for the imagination.”

There were many more questions–mostly from the followers–but the Coastsiders remained strangely silent. Then soft music began to fill the air as Babaji’s entourage played drums and a woman sang and played the flute.

In the early 1990s I asked Peggy Bazarnick, a follower of Babaji, if the master still lived in Santa Cruz. She said he did, although he regularly visited India. The Hunuman Foundation owned land, Peggy said, on Mt. Madonna on Summit Road, between Santa Cruz and San Jose, and Babaji was driven there weekly to give his followers personal interviews.

“He still never tells you what to do,” Peggy told me. “He wants people to be strong.”

Babi Hari Dass’ visit to San Gregorio did make one new convert. Hard as I have tried, I’ve been unable to recall who the Princeton resident was who took to wearing a chalkboard (see my post, “The Chalkboard Man”) around his neck.

Two Books Cover 20 Years Of Convoluted Relations Between CIA/FBI & Muslim Radicals

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After reading the last riveting page of “The Looming Towerâ€? [Knopf: 2006] by The New Yorker staff writer Lawrence Wright, something tugged at my memory. One of those annoying nudges that won’t let go—so I was relieved when I remembered it was a book I had read a few years earlier.

That book was called “Charlie Wilson’s Warâ€? [Atlantic Monthly Press: 2003] written by veteran 60 Minutes Producer George Crile. (I have since learned that Charlie Wilson’s War is going to be a major motion picture, starring Tom Hanks, with a release date of 2007. I don’t know if the fact that Hollywood is weighing in diminishes my little book review but I thought I should tell you that).

“Charlie Wilson’s War” and “The Looming Tower” should be read together. They are parts of a whole or maybe a partial whole if such a concept exists.

“Charlie Wilson’s War” tells the truly incredible story of a womanizing, hard drinking, partying US Congressman and the huge role he played in “the CIA’s secret war in Afghanistanâ€?. That congressman was Charlie Wilson—and this very tall Texan with a booming voice became enthralled with the idea of the colorful mujahideen, who, armed with ancient weapons, risked their lives to fight off the Soviet superpower that had invaded their country in the 1980s.

See why it has all the makings for a movie with Tom Hanks?

Wilson sat on the powerful Defense Appropriations subcommittee and with one phone call was able to increase funding to the mujahideen but a great deal more money was needed and that’s where the CIA comes in. At the time, according to author George Crile, the CIA was backing anti-communist causes in Central America, like the Contras—in fact, until Wilson convinced them to focus on Afghanistan instead, the CIA believed Central America was the focal point of the Cold War.

Once on board, the CIA came to believe that Afghanistan was an excellent project for them– and by focusing on the mujahideen, the Muslims might forgive the US for having supported the Shah of Iran and, of course, continued support for Israel.

Wilson’s influence and role is so big that when the Soviets are booted out of Afghanistan and the Cold War is officially declared dead, the 6’8â€? Texan was honored at CIA headquarters— a hallowed place where outsiders are rarely welcomed.

While Crile’s book echoes the role of the CIA in Afghanistan, Lawrence Wright’s “The Looming Tower”* talks about the rise of radical Islam and gives a lot of credit to the FBI for their anti-terrorism activites.

Most intriguing is the description of the Egyptian educator Sayid Qutb, who attends a university in the American Mid-West, appears to like the school and the people, when he actually despises everything about what he views as the superficiality of American culture. After leaving the US and returning home to Egypt, Qutb becomes famous as an intellectual writing about what later became well known as Islamic Fundamentalism. His work attracted many followers, who in turn became more and more radicalized—finally interpreting as moral, the killing of anyone who is not a true Muslim, the present definition of a Muslim terrorist.

Given an understanding of the roots of modern Islam, the author Lawrence Wright moves on to terrorist bombings including two American consulates in Africa, the bombing of the Cole, the ultra modern naval vessel that was refueling in Yemen, and the 1993 bombing of the Twin Towers.

These events bring in John O’Neill, the FBI chief of counter terrorism and his futile attempts to find and charge all of the major terrorist culprits.

(John O’Neill and Charlie Wilson share many personal traits: both were larger-than-life characters, womanizers, spending more money than either had.)

Author Lawrence Wright makes it clear that the FBI’s John O’Neill’s efforts are continually frustrated by the CIA– by the wall of silence that falls between the FBI and this other powerful spy agency. O’Neill, after resigning from the FBI, went on head up security in the Twin Towers where, ironically, he died on 9/ll.

*I have just learned that ABC-TV will be airing “The Path to 9/11” a miniseries, with Harvey Keitel starring as FBI counter terrorism chief John O’Neill.

Marion & Bill Miramontes Interview (1980) Part III

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In Part 2 Bill Miramontes was telling me about the rise & demise of the Ocean Shore Railroad– that the main reason for its failure was the stiff competition from cars and trucks (that could transport vegetables from Half Moon Bay to market in San Francisco faster).

Bill: The train just ran out of passengers and freight because it was so much better to buy fresh vegetables picked the same day and have [the produce] at the market the next day. If they put the vegetables on the train they had to pick it, sort it and then bring it down to the train and it would stay there one or more days on the tracks. It could be three or four days before it got to the market.

Bill: When they got solid tires, trucks were better than cars. They were slow, even 8-10 miles per hour but they’d leave at 10 and get to San Francisco at 1 or 2 in the morning.

Bill: The artichoke was a big item in those days, fresh and green. When shipped by the train artichokes would be–after you pick them–and they sit for 2, 3, 4 days–they get kind of withered and dark.

Bill: People started buying Fords or cheap cars and they’d go to San Francisco in an hour and a half. On the train it would be an all day trip. The Ocean Shore Railroad ran out of passengers and that’s why they failed.

…To be continued…

Babaji Comes To The Coastside (1975) Part III

According to Miramar Beach kayak enthusiast and photographer, Michael Powers, most of the Coastsiders “were curious and interested” about Babaji’s visit to the farm at San Gregorio.

What he captured on film were “a lot of kids and ‘flower children’ running all over the place. Fresh fruit and blossoms were placed at the master’s feet,” said Powers. “It was theatrical and wonderfully staged. There was a genuine feeling of generosity, of spirituality.”

One Coastside source–who recounted her experience on the condition that I not use her name–said she wore a leaf green tunic with rust-orange stripes and white muslin pants. “I wanted to wear something loose and comfortable,” she told me. “I had seen many photos of the Beatles and the Maharaja and I based my outfit on that image.”

Then a resident of San Gregorio, this source also recalled meeting Babaji as he ascended the hill.

“I was introduced to him,” she recalled. “The white robes told me he was someone to be revered. I wondered if it was good luck to shake his hand. It put me in a good mood.”

When Babi Hari Dass arrived, he was accompanied by some 50 of his followers from Santa Cruz, all of them wearing white and ecru gauzy fabrics. Some of them held strands of sandalwood beads. Michael Powers noted that the followers tended to be “fanatic and committed.”

With a peaceful smile on his face, Babaji sat cross-legged on the Indian rug beneath an orange parachute. All eyes turned to watch the tanned and barefooted young woman in the green and white sarong drop a fresh bouquet of wildflowers at the master’s feet.

…To be continued…

Note: I have misplaced a lovely color photo of Babaji taken at the San Gregorio Farms event.I’ll post it when I find it–the photo really helps define the story.