The Mendocino Beacon

All bets are off in Little River

- By Katy Tahja

Stopping by to visit the Little River Improvemen­t Club and Museum these days, visitors may not realize the small white structure was once the social center of town.

The building itself, located 1.5 miles south of Mendocino on the east side of Highway 1, was built in 1885 for the Good Templars social improvemen­t order. It served as the local gathering place for weddings, funerals, church services, town meetings, voting, painting and craft classes, a temporary school and all kinds of parties.

When the ladies of the Little River Improvemen­t Club took possession of the Hall back in 1915, after the Templars had abandoned it, they knew the building would need some upkeep. Card parties were the answer — because their admission fees raised money for the materials. The menfolk, who also enjoyed playing cards, were then available when their labor was needed for the improvemen­ts.

This party ticket, found in the Kelley House archives, is a relic from a 25year period, the late 1920s to the early 1950s, when local folks were particular­ly fond of card parties.

So why were card parties so popular in that era? As a historian, I would guess part of it was the ease of transporta­tion, and the fact that games are just plain fun. This time period encompasse­d the Great Depression and World War II when cash was scarce and there wasn’t always gasoline to drive to nearby towns for entertainm­ent.

Plus, card parties don’t require a lot of equipment. All that was needed was a warm dry place with tables and chairs, light to see by, some decks of cards and food.

Bridge was one of the popular card games, as was Whist, Rummy, Canasta and a game called “Pedro” (pronounced “pee-dro.”) The highest scores were rewarded with prizes, like homemade quilts or blankets. Consolatio­n or “boobie” prizes were handed out for the less lucky. Participat­ing in

card games also earned you some local notoriety — the names of both the high and low scorers were reported by the Beacon’s Little River correspond­ents.

And you couldn’t beat the admission price. The first Card Party I found advertised, in November 1928, cost just 25 cents for games and dinner. For a woman, an evening out sounded fun after a long day of cooking, cleaning, sewing or whatever. Likewise for a guy who, after a day working in the woods or fields, could put on clean clothes and head to the hall with his wife on his arm or the expectatio­n of meeting up with friends of both sexes. A good way to find a spouse!

Games started at 8 p.m. and dinner and coffee must have been served late. Sometimes there were potluck buffets and box socials.

Do you know what box socials are? A woman made a meal for two and put it in a decorated box that was auctioned off, with the proceeds benefittin­g the Hall. The male bidder got to eat dinner with the woman who made the box. In 1946, a box social was reported to have made $37, with boxes selling for $1-$2.

Card parties could be private — invitation­s sent to Little River Improvemen­t Club members only, or public — with everyone invited and advertised on posters and in the Beacon. By 1948 only the “Annual” Card Party was being advertised in the newspaper. By 1952 Bingo games seem to have replaced the Card Parties as popular fundraiser­s.

Here’s one last little peek at the social life of the historic Little River

Improvemen­t Club: the group enjoyed sponsoring “Old Fashioned Dances.” Attendees arrived in oldtimey costumes and danced to the music of their grandparen­ts and great-grandparen­ts — like the foxtrot, the Charleston, or even the quadrille. The elders must have loved that.

Can you imagine an “Old-Fashioned Dance” today? You’d come all dressed up in your best tie-dye T-shirt with your fringe leather vest and a skirt made from a bedspread, wearing your hippie beads and dance the Twist or the Jerk to music of the 1960s.

The Little River Improvemen­t Club is still in existence and its charming hall with its Little River Museum are normally open on weekends in the summer.

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 ?? JENNIE HECKEROTH — KELLEY HOUSE MUSEUM ?? Card parties have always been popular, as seen in this 1898image of young coastal people playing cards and hamming it up for the photograph­er. The back of the photograph says, “This is a flash light taken in Feb. Will Petersen and I are standing up behind.”
JENNIE HECKEROTH — KELLEY HOUSE MUSEUM Card parties have always been popular, as seen in this 1898image of young coastal people playing cards and hamming it up for the photograph­er. The back of the photograph says, “This is a flash light taken in Feb. Will Petersen and I are standing up behind.”
 ?? VINCE JOHNSON COLLECTION — KELLEY HOUSE MUSEUM ?? The ticket for a 1948Little River Improvemen­t Club card party.
VINCE JOHNSON COLLECTION — KELLEY HOUSE MUSEUM The ticket for a 1948Little River Improvemen­t Club card party.

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