Tahoe World
Where all the Action is
Sugar Pine Point hosts Living History Day PDF Print E-mail
Written by Submitted to the World   
Tuesday, 24 July 2007

This site requires Flash 8. Download for free here.
Ad-HomewoodBig
The elegance of summering at the lakefront, in the high style of Old Lake Tahoe, returns to Sugar Pine Point State Park on Living History Day, Saturday, July 28.

The public is invited to visit the park from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. to take advantage of open house at the famed Pine Lodge and enjoy many family activities, free of cost. These include nature walks through the estate’s 2,000 acres, use of its two miles of beach, music, games for children and displays of antique cars and famous wooden boats. Parking is also free.

Pine Lodge, also known as the Ehrman mansion, is a three-story, shingled home built in 1903 by Isaias Hellman, a pioneering California banker. The estate is about 10 miles south of Tahoe City on Highway 89. (Tours of the mansion are usually priced at $5.00 for adults and $3.00 for juniors.)

For 15 years Isaias Hellman and his wife Esther entertained family members and friends in the summertime. The estate remained closed to the public until Esther Lazard, daughter of Florence Ehrman and granddaughter of Isaias Hellman, sold the property to the state of California in 1965.

“This is our 11th Living History Day,” said Ranger Heidi Doyle of the California Parks Department, “and already it is one of the largest summer events in the Tahoe Basin. There’s fun for everyone in the family.”

On Living History Day visitors walking through the mansion will watch volunteers in period costumes act the roles of members of the Hellman-Ehrman family, as well as the family’s butler, the upstairs maid and the cook.

The Sierra State Parks Foundation sponsors a variety of educational and historical exhibits, including an annual favorite, a display of vintage cars.

The Tahoe Maritime Museum this year is joining with the California State Parks as a partner in presenting Living History Day. According to Dottie Batchelor, the director of the museum, local authors will be on hand to tell the history of the famous wooden and aluminum boats that will be on display.

Elders of the Washo tribe, whose ancestors were the original residents of the Tahoe Basin, will relate their people’s history. Other historical talks will be presented throughout the park, and visitors can take guided nature hikes through the Z’berg Natural Preserve to the “highest lighthouse in the world” or along the Washoe Path of the Water Babies.

Frances Dinkelspiel, a great-great granddaughter of Isaias Hellman and author of a book about him and his banking empire, will give a presentation on the history of the family and the lodge. Her book, Towers of Gold: Isaias Hellman and the Creation of California, is to be published by St. Martin’s Press in the near future. No reservations will be required for her lecture, which will start at noon.

For younger visitors, Living History Day will offer games popular in the 1930s, including a watermelon-seed spitting contest. They will also be helped to create pictures of the lodge to take home as souvenirs.

Three prominent local artists will demonstrate their talents at various points on the grounds throughout the day. Bill Clausen, of Homewood, has created many watercolor paintings of Sugar Pine Point; Cathy McClelland, of Kings Beach, works mostly in acrylics, many portraying bears and other wildlife of the lakeshore; Andy Skaff, of Tahoma, specializes in works of the plein air genre, such as landscapes.

Living History Day gives visitors their only opportunity of the year to go inside General Phipps’s Cabin. Frontiersman William Phipps came to Tahoe in 1860 to homestead 160 acres that eventually became part of Sugar Pine Point State Park. Guides playing Phipps’s friends will tell stories of pioneer life as they demonstrate use of their tools and black-powder rifles.

Visitors will want to bring swimwear and towels to take advantage of the estate’s beach. A bathhouse is available for changing clothes. Those who would like to picnic on the vast lawn overlooking the lake can bring their own lunch or, for about $5 for a full meal, buy hamburgers, hot dogs, barbecued chicken and soft drinks.

Further information and a full schedule of events can be obtained by contacting Ranger Heidi Doyle at the California State Parks Sierra District office, (530) 525-9528, or visiting the website for the event, www.laketahoelivinghistory.com.
Comments

Only registered users can write comments.
Please login or register.

Powered by AkoComment 2.0!

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 24 July 2007 )
 
< Prev   Next >

Aug 2008   >>
S M T W T F S
          1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
31            
Full Calendar
Submit an Event

City:
Event Type:
Venue:
Keyword:
Cuisine:
City/Zip:
Powered by Fandango




contact usRSS 2.0

(C) 2008 Tahoe World