The blue arrow is the location of the Tunnel Rock quarry; the red arrow is the reported location of the Kaiser Sand & Gravel quarry. The pink camera icon is where I actually took the photo. |
First off, let me congratulate the searchers! Ramón, Rosemary, Maca… you’re doing great
work!
Like Hans, I also wrote to Steve Edwards—he also told me
that he wasn’t really a historian. A
great guy, but he didn’t really know when the quarries operated.
As several people pointed out (I think Ramón was
first)—there is a great collection of the papers of Henry J. Kaiser at the
Online Archive of California (OAC.cdlib.org).
http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf2v19n6d0/entire_text/
If you search, you’ll find that Kaiser Sand & Gravel
began in 1923, but they had sites in many locations (Santa Barbara,Radum near Livermore, Clayton, Hetch Hetchy (near Yosemite)
And so on…
But then Ramón found ftp://ftp.consrv.ca.gov/pub/dmg/pubs/cg/1956/09_08.pdf with his query:
["tunnel rock"
site:ftp.consrv.ca.gov]
In this document from 1956, the Tunnel Rock quarry was explicitly
mentioned as having opened “near the east end of the Broadway Tunnel” which is
exactly in the Sibley Volcanic Regional Preserve. This document says it was operating in 1954,
and that “for the past few years, crushed rock has been produced from the
volcanic rocks of the Moraga formation (Pliocene) at the Tunnel Rock quarry in
the hills southeast of the Broadway tunnel.”
(What we now call the Caldecott Tunnel was once called the “Broadway
tunnel” since Broadway ran into the tunnel.)
This makes it sound as though Tunnel Rock opened around 1951
and the Kaiser Sand & Gravel pit opened in January 1954. The text (which I read carefully several
times through) makes it implicit that
the Kaiser quarry opened then.
As several people pointed out, the tunnel construction
started much earlier (1934) and completed in 1937. But the approach to the tunnels needed major
improvement, and THAT started in the 1950s.
That’s when the Division of Highways started to improve the road leading
to the tunnels (Highway 75), upgrading it to a freeway. That would have required a good deal of
crushed rock… and that’s when the quarries were opened to provide crushed volcanic
rock for road construction. (See: http://www.caldecott-tunnel.org/index.php/project-overview/history-caldecott
)
And I still haven’t made it over to Stanford library to
check out that book by Steve Edwards.
But if his email is any indication, I bet there’s not much in it to
answer our questions.
Search lessons: First off, the willingness to stick-with-it and learn from other people's searches... that's a key lesson. The idea to search at Consrv.ca.gov was a great idea.
Also, sometimes a social network is what you really need. Thanks for pitching in and making this a great search problem! (And solution.)
Hi Dr. Russell
ReplyDeleteI used the query ["Tunnel rock quarry" california closing] to find ftp.consrv.ca.gov I used this because you mentioned Tunnel Rock quarry. Searched for opening day and closing day.
Maca used the query you mention in the post.
Didn’t get a chance to work on the original question(s) as work has been so crazy but I am surprised no one suggested looking at the map collection at the US geological Survey. I have actually been asked to research old mines previously which is why I knew about this resource –
ReplyDeletehttp://nationalmap.gov/historical/index.html
The area in question is covered by the Oakland east maps which has the most detail but is also covered by the Concord maps. Looking at the 1949 Oakland east map you can see the one area marked as quarries and then the 1959 has the 2 quarries marked and in fact shows a road that goes to a access/side tunnel to the main Broadway tunnel. Both are not on the 1997 map but there is a pond where the quarry was which is a good reference point.
It has been really interesting. Dan's find of the mine's name has opened a breach in that mine of information that I knew (I knew!) was in the domain ftp.consrv.ca.gov. The sword in the stone.
ReplyDeleteMarcella