Andrea and Sofia
17 SepShot using luminous late afternoon sunshine as our guide …
If buildings could talk, the Tassajara School House would tell of children reciting lessons, ciphering and singing in a classic one-room school. Students from Tassajara Valley ranches attended this school from 1889 to 1946.
Students from first to eighth grade walked, rode horses and took buggies to get to school. In 1889 Richard D. Williams was the teacher and 41 students attended that August. Roger Podva (born in 1884) began school in 1890 and said there were 42-75 students at the school when he attended, sitting two to a desk. They learned mental arithmetic, reading, geography, spelling and writing. A picture of George Washington hung on the wall.
Today the School House sits in rural, restored splendor on its original site at 1650 Finley Road in Contra Costa County’s Tassajara Valley. A belfry with bell, old outhouses, a restored stable, picnic tables and a new redwood water tower complete the picture.
Tiffany and Andrew
16 SepShot at the Old School House and accompanying fields and ranches nearby, in the late afternoon.
If buildings could talk, the Tassajara School House would tell of children reciting lessons, ciphering and singing in a classic one-room school. Students from Tassajara Valley ranches attended this school from 1889 to 1946.
Students from first to eighth grade walked, rode horses and took buggies to get to school. In 1889 Richard D. Williams was the teacher and 41 students attended that August. Roger Podva (born in 1884) began school in 1890 and said there were 42-75 students at the school when he attended, sitting two to a desk. They learned mental arithmetic, reading, geography, spelling and writing. A picture of George Washington hung on the wall.
Today the School House sits in rural, restored splendor on its original site at 1650 Finley Road in Contra Costa County’s Tassajara Valley. A belfry with bell, old outhouses, a restored stable, picnic tables and a new redwood water tower complete the picture.
Family Night Dinner
9 SepMost weeks, my entire family gets together for dinner. This particular dinner featured the antics of my Uncle Joe who is hilarious. He played MASH with me, ate corn like it was a typewriter and conducted himself like a Flinstone at the dinner table. Since he’s a big boy now, no one could stop him. Not his older sister, my mom. Not my grandmother.
And he was much adored by all the little kids who couldn’t wait to see what he would do next.
Viva Family Time

























































































































People are talkin', talkin' bout people