Guide to the Jessie Gourley Scrapbooks of Ernest Otto Articles Collection (1930s – 1950s)

Overview +

Collection Number

1996.27

Creator

Scrapbooks created by Jessie H. Gourley.

Extent

Number of Containers: One (1) box
Linear Feet: 0.5 feet

Abstract

This collection consists of only one box. It is divided into two series. The collection contains three scrapbooks. These scrapbooks are nine inches by eleven and a half inches. Two of these are completely filled with articles written by Ernest Otto in the Santa Cruz Sentinel. These articles span the 1940s to the early 1950s. The third scrapbook contains articles about various subjects that must have been of interested to the compiler.

Repository

Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History, Archives
705 Front Street
Santa Cruz, CA 95065

Location

The Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History, Santa Cruz

Preferred Citation

Jessie Gourley Scrapbooks of Ernest Otto Articles Collection, The Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History, Santa Cruz.

Publication Rights

All requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the head of Archives at MAH. Researchers may be responsible for obtaining copyright permission to use material not produced by museum personnel.

Process By

Shannon Barry

Date Completed

2015

History +

Ernest Otto was born in 1871 in his parents’ home at the corner of Cedar and Church streets in Santa Cruz. His father, George, had a checkered past and even spent five years in San Quentin prison for embezzling $25,000 of county funds in 1879. By the time he was eighteen Ernest was a reporter for the Santa Cruz Surf. Otto wrote the story in the Surf that detailed the first instance of surfing on the mainland. This article proved vitally important to the story of the three Hawaiian Princes who visited Santa Cruz and introduced surfing to the U.S. in 1885. Along with the Santa Cruz Surf, Ernest Otto served as a reporter for both the Santa Cruz Sentinel and the Associated Press for almost seventy years. When he passed in 1955, “Mr. Santa Cruz” was the most senior newspaperman in California. The prolific writer was loved by the people of Santa Cruz, upon his passing Ernest McPherson Jr (publisher of the Sentinel News) stated that “loyalty was the keynote to Ernest Otto’s character. He was loyal not only to the Sentinel News, but to everybody who came in contact with him… It can be truthfully said that Ernest never wrote anything detrimental to anybody. It was his wish to help his friends and beautify this world.”

Jessie H. Gourley was a descendent of two pioneer families. The Anthony and Hinton families came to Santa Cruz early on in its history. Her mother Sarah Gourley was born in Indiana and came to California on the second train around 1847. The family attended the First Methodist Church, and were related to its founder Elihu Anthony. Jessie Gourley was a teacher at Gault School for thirty years. She died at age 86 in February of 1962.

Contents +

SERIES I: ERNEST OTTO ARTICLES (1930s – 1950s)

Two (2) books

Series Scope and Content Summary

This series consists of two scrapbooks filled to bursting with articles written by Otto Ernest. The series of articles covers the 1940s and 1950s. The articles are part of a large series written by Otto entitled Our Old Santa Cruz or Old Santa Cruz. These regularly run articles discussed Santa Cruz history and how things had changed and evolved over time.

This series is divided into two (2) subseries

Subseries IA. Scrapbook One (red)
Subseries IB. Scrapbook Two (black)

Subseries IA. Scrapbook One – Red (1930s – 1940s)

One (1) book

Subseries Scope and Content Summary

This subseries consists of one large scrapbook with a red colored cover. The book has one hundred plus pages. Each page has at least one, usually two, articles from the Our Old Santa Cruz/Old Santa Cruz series. The years on the articles date from the late 1930s to the 1940s.

Box ID #: Folder (Book) ID #
1:1

Subseries IB. Scrapbook Two – Black (1940s – 1950s)

One (1) book

Subseries Scope and Content Summary

This subseries consists of one large scrapbook with a black cover. The book is one hundred fifty plus pages long. Each page has at least one, usually two, articles from the Our Old Santa Cruz/Old Santa Cruz series. The years on the articles date from the 1940s to the mid-1950s.

Box ID #: Folder (Book) ID #
1:2

SERIES II: NEWSPAPER CLIPPINGS – SCRAPBOOK THREE  (1930s – 1940s)

One (1) book

Series Scope and Content Summary

This series has one scrapbook. It is has a red/brown cover. The volume contains about one hundred pages with newspaper clippings pasted on all available surfaces. The contents include feature articles, local interest pieces, and articles about gardening and nature from the late 1930s to the 1940s. All of these numerous articles are about the Santa Cruz area. While the clippings do not have the name of the newspaper attached, it is safe to say they are from local Santa Cruz newspapers.

Box ID #: Folder (Book) ID #
1:3