Escondido is the lilting Spanish name meaning "hidden" and was given to an irregular-shaped inland Southern California valley where an investment group planted 100 acres of grapes in the early 1880s. The dry-farmed grapes grew unusually large and sweet, which prompted business leaders to envision an attraction similar to Pasadena's Tournament of Roses. The first Grape Day Festival in 1908 commemorated an auspicious occasion in Escondido's water history and celebrated the grape as a symbol of the agricultural abundance of the region. The event attracted thousands of guests who could view the valley, farm displays, a grand parade, and entertainment while eating their fill of free grapes. But by mid-century, Grape Day disappeared along with the grape in Escondido. With the memory of the grape remaining clear, the Escondido Historical Society began the revival of the celebration in the 1970s. The centennial Grape Day Festival took place September 6, 2008.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Lucy Jones Berk is a retired librarian/historian for the Escondido Times-Advocate and an active volunteer with the Escondido History Center and Escondido Library Pioneer Room Archives. She and her husband, Bill Fark, have lived in Escondido for nearly 50 years and were happy to serve as king and queen for the 2007 Grape Day Festival. Stephen A. Covey, a member of the Pioneer Room Friends and the Escondido History Center, is an Escondido native and the author of Early Escondido: The Louis A. Havens Collection.
Title: Escondido and San Diego Filipinos featured in new history photo books
Author: Roger Showley
Publisher: Sign On San Diego
Date: 8/11/2010
Escondido's fabled Grape Day Festival started in 1908 and petered out by mid-century before the Escondido Historical Society revived it in the 1970s.
Local history Lucy Jones Berk and Stephen A. Covey have chronicled the colorful festival in a new picture book from Arcadia Publishing. (Movie star Agnes Ayres, crowned queen in 1923, appears on the cover.)
The authors say the festival originated when Mayor Sig Steiner suggested a picnic to mark California's admission day to the Union on Sept. 9, 1908, and businessman W.L. Ramney came up with a celebration of the grape as an homage to Escondido vineyards.
"A six-car train from San Diego war arranged," they wrote. "So many visitors joined the 1,500 townsfolk that the population doubled for the day."
In another title from Arcadia, "Filipinos in San Diego," Judy Patacsil, Rudy Guevarra Jr., Felix Tuyay and the Filipino American National Historical Society review Filipinos' role in shaping San Diego from their arrival as students in 1903 to the exploits of Kim Tuyay, a leading volleyball player, who was named player of the year among San Diego high school athletes in 2000, selected twice for the Junior Olympics team and earned a spot on the NCAA national championship in 2002, when he was on the University of Hawaii team.
But as the authors remind us, Filipinos visited the California shores long before that. They were part of a 1587 Spanish expedition that mapped Morro Bay and sailed on the Spanish galleons that crossed the Pacific between the Philippines and Mexico.
Once the Philippines became a U.S. territory after the Spanish-American War in 1898, Filipinos traveled to the U.S. to work and study. Pensionados were government-funded students who received scholarships to study in San Diego and other cities. Eleven attended the State Normal School (precursor to San Diego State University), three enrolled at San Diego High School (then called Russ School) and National City High School.
A photo in the book shows four of the young men in the first wave in that program.
Both books cost $21.99 and are available at local bookstores and online from arcadiapublishing.com
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Soft cover. Condition: New. Arcadia Publishing. 2010. Softcover. Mid-size. Book is loaded with fabulous vintage photographs chronicling this southern California town's jubilant 'Grape Day Festival,' which began in 1908. Includes accompanying text as well. 127 pages. Securely packed in a lidded box. Seller Inventory # 014730
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Paperback. Condition: new. Paperback. Escondido is the lilting Spanish name meaning "hidden" and was given to an irregular-shaped inland Southern California valley where an investment group planted 100 acres of grapes in the early 1880s. The dry-farmed grapes grew unusually large and sweet, which prompted business leaders to envision an attraction similar to Pasadena's Tournament of Roses. The first Grape Day Festival in 1908 commemorated an auspicious occasion in Escondido's water history and celebrated the grape as a symbol of the agricultural abundance of the region. The event attracted thousands of guests who could view the valley, farm displays, a grand parade, and entertainment while eating their fill of free grapes. But by mid-century, Grape Day disappeared along with the grape in Escondido. With the memory of the grape remaining clear, the Escondido Historical Society began the revival of the celebration in the 1970s. The centennial Grape Day Festival took place September 6, 2008. Escondido is the lilting Spanish name meaning "hidden" and was given to an irregular-shaped inland Southern California valley where an investment group planted 100 acres of grapes in the early 1880s. The dry-farmed grapes grew unusually large and sweet, which prompted business leaders to envision an attraction similar to Pasadena's Tournament of Roses. The first Grape Day Festival in 1908 commemorated an auspicious occasion in Escondido's water history and celebrated the grape as a symbol of the agricultural abundance of the region. The event attracted thousands of guests who could view the valley, farm displays, a grand parade, and entertainment while eating their fill of free grapes. But by mid-century, Grape Day disappeared along with the grape in Escondido. With the memory of the grape remaining clear, the Escondido Historical Society began the revival of the celebration in the 1970s. The centennial Grape Day Festival took place September 6, 2008. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9780738559490
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Condition: New. Über den AutorLucy Jones Berk is a retired librarian/historian for the Escondido Times-Advocate and an active volunteer with the Escondido History Center and Escondido Library Pioneer Room Archives. She and her husband, Bill Fark, h. Seller Inventory # 898533654
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Paperback. Condition: new. Paperback. Escondido is the lilting Spanish name meaning "hidden" and was given to an irregular-shaped inland Southern California valley where an investment group planted 100 acres of grapes in the early 1880s. The dry-farmed grapes grew unusually large and sweet, which prompted business leaders to envision an attraction similar to Pasadena's Tournament of Roses. The first Grape Day Festival in 1908 commemorated an auspicious occasion in Escondido's water history and celebrated the grape as a symbol of the agricultural abundance of the region. The event attracted thousands of guests who could view the valley, farm displays, a grand parade, and entertainment while eating their fill of free grapes. But by mid-century, Grape Day disappeared along with the grape in Escondido. With the memory of the grape remaining clear, the Escondido Historical Society began the revival of the celebration in the 1970s. The centennial Grape Day Festival took place September 6, 2008. Escondido is the lilting Spanish name meaning "hidden" and was given to an irregular-shaped inland Southern California valley where an investment group planted 100 acres of grapes in the early 1880s. The dry-farmed grapes grew unusually large and sweet, which prompted business leaders to envision an attraction similar to Pasadena's Tournament of Roses. The first Grape Day Festival in 1908 commemorated an auspicious occasion in Escondido's water history and celebrated the grape as a symbol of the agricultural abundance of the region. The event attracted thousands of guests who could view the valley, farm displays, a grand parade, and entertainment while eating their fill of free grapes. But by mid-century, Grape Day disappeared along with the grape in Escondido. With the memory of the grape remaining clear, the Escondido Historical Society began the revival of the celebration in the 1970s. The centennial Grape Day Festival took place September 6, 2008. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9780738559490
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