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Lick Mill & Mansion: Remnants of History Amongst Apartments

Mansion Grove Apartments

I traveled to Santa Clara, CA for the first time recently. And while down there, I visited an apartment complex called Mansion Grove. It’s located near the VTA Headquarters, Samsung, Cisco and other big companies.

The gated community features fountains, pools, a community garden, playground, tennis and basketball courts, and a fitness center. It even has a quaint cottage that residents can borrow for their families and friends. (With a fee, of course!)

Mansion Grove’s leasing office.
Little park and fountain by the leasing office.
Community garden and tennis court.
Fountain and the Cottage that residents can rent for their guests.

I was walking around this peaceful and rather large apartment complex when I spotted the following:

On the left is a circular brick building and on the right is a white wooden structure that looks like a mansion.

Even at a quick glance, these buildings didn’t seem like they belonged there. Though they sit right inside the gated community, something about them had too much of that historical charm. But the most I imagined was that they were old facility buildings from a previous apartment company. Never did I imagine that they were buildings of the richest man in California back in the 19th century!!!

The Lick Mill and Mansion.

James Lick: The Man

Portrait of James Lick
 (August 25, 1796 – October 1, 1876). Ca. 1870.
From the Library Company of Philadelphia.

When I finally got down to researching about the mysterious buildings, I was surprised to find that they were built and owned by a man named James Lick. According to Wikipedia, he was an “American real estate investor, carpenter, piano builder, land baron, and patron of the sciences.”

He was born in 1796 in Fredericksburg (nÊe Stumpstown) in Pennsylvania to Pennsylvanian Dutch parents. His grandfather was a German immigrant who served in the Revolutionary War and his father was a carpenter. After learning the family trade and how to make pianos in Baltimore, Maryland, he built his own shop in New York City. In 1821 at the age of 25, he moved to Argentina, where his piano-making business was successful.

Old photo of Main Street in Fredericksburg, Pennsylvania, circa early 20th century.
From the Matthews Public Library.

His Early Years

As I researched on, it was astounding to see all the drama he faced so early on in his life! Not only did he fall in love with a woman named Barbara Snavely, have his only child with her and never marry, but he also was taken as a prisoner of war at one point. He was coming back to Buenos Aires from his trip to Europe when the Portuguese captured the ship he was on. He had to escape on foot!

After the dramatic escape, he moved from Argentina to Chile due to the political instability at the time and then from Chile to Peru. He then decided to settle in California. In 1848, just a few days before the historic discovery of gold, James Lick arrived in San Francisco.

How the City’s Mission Bay looked like back in November 1848. Illustration by Bayard Taylor. From the British Library. 

What’s also fascinating is that James Lick’s friend and neighbor back from his time in Peru was Domingo Ghirardelli! And apparently, Lick told Ghirardelli to move to San Francisco. Ghirardelli made his name and fortune selling chocolate while Lick made his buying real estate.

Portrait of Domingo Ghirardelli by Gustavo Luzzati.
c. 1899. From the National Portrait Gallery.

Feats of the Richest Man in California

Illustration of the hotel Lick House by William Laird MacGregor, c. 1876.
Published by the S.F. News Company. From the California History Society.

James Lick was at one point the richest man in California, owning large areas of Santa Clara County and San Francisco, land around Lake Tahoe, a large ranch in Los Angeles County, and all of Santa Catalina Island!

He built a grand hotel called Lick House, which sadly burned down in the fire following the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. Aside from the ostentatious hotel that was destroyed by the fire, Lick had also…

  • donated to the University of California for the construction of the Lick Observatory,
  • built free public baths called the James Lick Baths,
  • founded the California School of Mechanic Arts,
  • erected bronze statues before the San Francisco City Hall,
  • built a memorial to Francis Scott Key (author of the national anthem, “The Star-Spangled Banner”) in the Golden Gate Park,
  • and contributed to the Conservatory of Flowers. (Lick had intended the Conservatory of Flowers for San Jose but it ended up being purchased by San Franciscans and placed in the Golden Gate Park.)
Photo of the Conservatory of Flowers in Golden Gate Park in 1895.
From the Western Neighborhoods Project.

The Lick Observatory

Photogravure of the Lick Observatory, c. 1900. From D. Appleton & Company.

The Lick Observatory was “the largest philanthropic gift in the history of science.” It began its operations in 1888 (Regents of the University of California). It was “the first permanently staffed mountain-top observatory” and “the world’s largest refracting telescope” at the time (University of California). There were groundbreaking discoveries and innovations made at the Lick Observatory, including…

  • “Albert Michelson’s use of interferometry to measure the size of Jupiter’s moons,”
  • Edward Emerson Barnard’s discovery of Jupiter’s fifth moon,
  • creation of a “photographic atlas of the moon,”
  • James Keeler’s study of the spectra of stars,
  • the discovery of “unimaginably large numbers of galaxies,”
  • Robert Trumpler’s “confirmation of the general theory of relativity,”
  • “studies of star clusters,”
  • and the discovery “that dark matter absorbs light in space.”

The Lick Observatory sits on Mount Hamilton, east of San Jose. Surprisingly, it’s also where James Lick is buried. The observatory sounds like a must-visit spot for historians and scientists alike!

Photo of the Lick Observatory by C. C. Pierce, ca.1904-1909.
From the California Historical Society.

The James Lick Mill

Per the City of Santa Clara website, this mill is a “a four-stone, water-powered flour mill” built in 1855.

Here’s a plaque placed by the order of the Santa Clara City Council:

According to the plaque, the flour mill was powered by the water from the Guadalupe River. It was converted into California’s first paper mill in 1873 and in 1882, a fire destroyed the original mill. So, the building standing today isn’t the original built by James Lick. In 1902, the newly-built mill became a plant for alcohol manufacture and in 1987, the building was included in the historic trust zone.

Photo showing how the Lick Mill and its surrounding area looked like back in 1905 on an information board in the Ulistac Natural Area.

The James Lick Mansion

Next to the mill stands the mansion. It was “constructed in 1858 and contains a lovely mahogany interior,” which I could not see as the mansion is not open to the public.

The front door. I SO wanted to get a good tour of the interior! For the time being, I am content with finding these photos shared by the Library of Congress.

It was a well-built, pretty structure with decorative yet simple designs.

And near the mansion was another plaque specifically for the Lick Mansion:

Here’s a close-up of the plaque “placed by order of the Santa Clara City Council”:

Per the plaque, this mansion has been built in “Italianate” style and with native redwood. And all 24 rooms have “imported marble fire places”! 👀

Reason Behind the Mansion

The mansion was large, even by today’s standards. And that got me thinking how, perhaps, James Lick would have felt lonely living in it by himself. When I read about the reason why he had built the mansion, I really think he would have been.

Once the construction of the mill was completed, Lick invited his only son, John Henry, to live with him in a small cabin he had. His son was 37 year’s old and had never met his father before! When he arrived, he let his estranged father know that his mother, Barbara Snavely, had passed away a few years ago.

Portrait of John Henry Lick (1818-1891),
only son of James Lick. Dated 1863.
From Matthews Public Library.

According to this snippet from James Lick’s biography, The Generous Miser, (shared HERE), James Lick couldn’t marry her because her father, a local miller and farmer, deemed him too poor at the time. The source shares that James Lick sent photos of the mill to Barabra’s father after it was built, which just shows how he never got over the refusal.

So this man couldn’t marry the woman he wanted to marry, met the child they had together when the said-child was 37, and never remarried. What’s all the more sad is that apparently, he built the Lick Mansion “in hopes of improving their [he and his son’s] relationship” (Misch and Stone 1998). It’s heartbreaking to read that their relationship didn’t improve, and so Lick didn’t bother to furnish the house properly.

John Henry went back to Pennsylvania in 1863 and only returned just before his father passed away.

Next to the Guadalupe River

Various sources mentioned that the Lick Mill and Mansion were located next to the Guadalupe River. I didn’t know just how close the two actually were to the river! They’re literally right next to it:

The Guadalupe River and the Lick Mansion in 2025.
There’s a biking trail and gates of the Mansion Grove apartments in between.

The Rich Yet Lonely Man

Guadalupe River up close.

Despite the wealth and opportunities James Lick had, he lived such a lonely life. He had someone he wanted to marry but couldn’t and a child he couldn’t become close to.

After reading about the reasons behind the construction of the mill and mansion (and the negligence of the latter), I can’t help but think how affected James Lick was by the things that weren’t granted to him.

One might say he would have had his friends. But apparently, many of his contemporaries thought him eccentric. On top of that, rich people are fully aware that most people approach them for their money. So I think it’s likely that he didn’t really have deep friendships.

James Lick was granted uncommon wealth, power and influence but not what he may have truly longed for: a family.

Ephemerality of the World

Chancing upon James Lick’s mill and mansion in the middle of the Mansion Grove apartment complex just made me realize, again, how transient everything in the world is. Yes, there are schools (i.e. James Lick High School, James Lick Middle School, and Lick-Wilmerding High School), as well as a street, park, freeway, and light rail station (i.e. Lick Mill Blvd, Lick Mill Park, James Lick Freeway, and Lick Mill Station) named in his honor.

VTA light rail station.

I mean, there is a crater on the Moon, an asteroid, a village, and even a species of lizard commemorating him! But most people don’t even know who he was. I chanced upon his mansion and mill in the middle of a modern apartment complex and only found out about his life after doing research on my own.

It doesn’t matter if someone was or is the richest person in California. Everyone fades into obscurity, albeit some leave behind names and/or contributions. James Lick did both, leaving behind his name and making big contributions to the public and to the sciences. And yet, he had also become a part of the oblivion of everyone and everything that once was and were.

Lick Monument, ca. 1876.
In Cedar Hill Cemetery in Fredericksburg, PA.
From Matthews Public Library.

As a practicing Christian, this reality affirms my belief: nothing in this world prevails except for God’s Word that continues to change minds, hearts, and souls:

The grass withers and the flowers fall,
    but the word of our God endures forever.”

Isaiah 40:8
Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will never pass away.

Matthew 24:35

Historical Site Neglected

And as a historian, seeing the mill and mansion of someone so significant to California’s history left as they are in the middle of the apartment complex (next to a parking lot!) is just sad to say the least.

Well… At the very least, the mansion and mill are noted in the apartment map.


P.S. I just realized – it’s called “Mansion Grove” because of the Lick Mansion! đŸ¤¯

P.P.S. Here are more posts where history and travel intersect:

P.P.P.S. And here are some aesthetic photos of the Lick Mansion to finally wrap up this post:


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Game of Shrooms 2024: Review & Tips for Future Artists & Hunters

Game of Shrooms 2024 Review

The Game of Shrooms has, once again, come and gone. And I must say…What whirlwind of fun that was! I had a blast creating mushroom-themed art and hiding them out in the world like some secret shroom Santa. Plus, I got to find more than one shroom this year! Here are my reflections & takeaways after participating in the 2024 Game of Shrooms.

Experience as a Shroom Artist

Photo by Steve Johnson.

After having participated in last year’s Game of Shrooms, I was determined to join in on the art-n-seek again. And so, I took my own advice from my previous blog post (tip #1) and started early, about two weeks before the day of the event (June 8, 2024).

My pin on the official 2024 Game of Shrooms Artist Map.

Not as early as I had wanted or planned (which was preparing months beforehand), but it was still early enough that I was able to follow my tip #2 and create more than one artwork:

The five shroom art I create for this year.

Thanks to listening to my own advice, I also had enough time to create promotional Instagram posts and reels for all my artworks:

It was so fun to choose the songs to go with my promotional IG posts!

I also created this promotional video a day before June 8th to spread the word online about my shroom art:

Where My Shrooms Were

As I did last year with Shroompoleon, I scattered my shrooms throughout the UC Berkeley campus. These were where I hid them:

  • Faith Series: “Hanging by a Thread” – under this mushroom shaped tree with lots of holes in the Faculty Glade area.
  • Faith Series: “Redeemed” – I hid it with “Hanging by a Thread,” as it was meant to complement the first art.

  • Praying for You – this was hidden along the Faculty Way (pathway between The Faculty Club and Hertz Hall), along mushroom-shaped lights.

  • Queen of Shrooms was hiding under a bed of yellow roses in front of Dwinelle Hall.

  • Can’t Take More Shiitake was under the Abraham Lincoln statue below The Campanile tower.

To my pleasant surprise, all my shrooms were found within a few hours. Thank you to all the wonderful shroom hunters! 🙌

This was a reel that I created for my hint reveal – it was shared around 9 AM on the day of.

Experience as a Shroom Hunter

Photo by Geeky Shots.

I didn’t initially plan on hunting for shrooms. But when I saw that a cute shroom was going to be hidden somewhere near The Cheeseboard Collective, I decided to go for it. I thought I was sure to find and keep it, as I went out to look for it early in the morning on the day of the game. Alas, another hunter had found and claimed it a day before!

After which, I tried to get to other shrooms nearby, but to my utter dismay, hunters were really, really good at finding the shrooms. Just as it was last year, shroom hunters were dedicated and competitive, determined to find and keep shroom art. Realizing that at the rate at which I was searching I would be shroom-less this year (as I almost was if it weren’t for the artist Tina Banda‘s lit (literally lit, too, as it glows in the dark!) shroom art that I got to find a day after the 2023 Game of Shrooms), I deciphered the location shared by a shroom artist using her hints, lyfted myself to the restaurant/bar and started searching with the fervor of other shroom hunters.

And lo and behold, I found 2 shrooms at the location – a 🍄 magnet and a 🍄 sticker!

More Shrooms!

I lyfted myself to another location where some shrooms were going to be dropped (per Instagram) and was so very lucky to find more shrooms and even meet the artists as they were dropping off their shroom art!

Adorable shroom pebbles by Saffuric and Francesca Sapien:

Aesthetic shroom art by Eli Wild:

I was able to find more aesthetic artworks by Eli Wild at The Compound Gallery in Emeryville. Here’s one I purchased:

Game of Shrooms 2024 Review

For the most complete experience, I think it’s best to participate as both shroom hunter and artist. As an artist, you get to experience the joy of creating and sharing your art with those around you. It’s quite an experience to have your art seen and appreciated by people you’ve never met, to have your shroom be picked up and kept by someone you don’t know. And it’s equally wonderful to go on a mushroom hunt, find beautiful, cute, aesthetic, or fun art by an artist you knew or didn’t know about and to keep the treasure of a shroom for free. And I think the whole searching and finding experience makes the shroom art really special. You get to have a fun story to the shroom art you’re keeping!

Game of Shrooms is such a unique experience celebrating creativity and community in a fun way. Not only is it an outlet for creative expression, but also it’s a way for artists to showcase their works to audiences around the world.

Plus, it’s a great way to spotlight and support local businesses, as done by The Inkcredibles. I mean, what a fantastic idea to feature local businesses while participating in an art-n-seek?

Game of Shrooms Tips: For Artists

  • Start Early, Make More Than 1 Shroom Art, Create Promotional Materials (Same Tips as Last Year). A year goes by more quickly than one expects! I highly suggest that you start as early as you can to create great shroom art with leisure. And as there seem to be more eager hunters than artists in most neighborhoods, it’s great for artists to create more than one artwork so that 1) they can promote their art more 2) there are more hunters who successfully find shrooms! And as this event is operated mainly via Instagram, promotional materials are key to spreading the word about your shroom to all hunters out there. And if you start early and share your promotional materials early, they might be shared by the Game of Shrooms IG account!

I was absolutely thrilled to find my reel shared by the official Game of Shrooms Instagram account! 😆

Plus, don’t forget about business cards/artist info to hide with your shroom art!

  • Collaborate with Local Businesses. I think it’s such a great idea to work with local businesses to promote both them and your art, as The Inkcredibles and Tina Banda had done.
  • Hide Early. I suggest hiding your artwork(s) at least an hour earlier than the time you tell your hunters and IG followers that you’ll hide your shroom, as you might run into hunters eager to find your art. This happens quite often!

Game of Shrooms Tips: For Hunters

  • Be Quick & Early. If there’s a shroom you really like, then start following the artist’s Instagram account as soon as possible and get all the hints as soon as you can! Sometimes artists start giving out hints a few days before the day of the Games. Don’t wait for the day of to look for it (like me); if they give out hints, go out there and find it! I had seen clues, yet I didn’t start looking until the day of the Games, and so I ended up losing the shroom to another hunter, who had searched for and found it a day before.
  • Best Chances of Finding Shrooms are in Your Own Neighborhood/Places You Know. Amidst the competition, you have the best chance of finding a shroom for yourself in your own neighborhood/places where you’re familiar enough to quickly use the hints to hunt down shrooms.
  • Vehicle & Comfy Shoes. It’s all about speed when it comes to shroom hunting! Walking and taking public transportation will NOT be quick enough (as I learned sadly last year). You have to have your own car/bike/electric scooters/Lyft/Uber to get to the shroom ASAP.
  • Let Artists Know If You’ve Found Their Shrooms. This saves everyone’s time! Plus it’s a great way to show appreciation for the artists’ works.

    The Countdown Begins!

    Another thing I so very much love about the Game of Shrooms is that the date of the next game is set right away. It has been announced by Attaboy that the next Game of Shrooms will take place on Saturday, June 14, 2025. So… Let the countdown begin!

    P.S. Here are some local Bay Area artists who participated this year and whose shroom art I really wanted to find!

    1. unconcealedbliss
    2. Cluster Mush

    P.P.S. I’ve noticed that not all artists from the 2023 Game of Shrooms participated in this year’s game. Hopefully they come back next year! Here are their wonderful shroom arts from last year:

    1. Sombean
    2. craftybish

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    Jane Eyre (1983): The Perfect Adaptation of a Classic Masterpiece

    Jane Eyre drawn by The Time Traveler.

    I’m happy to write that I have finished Jane Eyre just now. And boy, was it a fun literary ride! From a dramatically stopped wedding to the burning of Thornfield Hall, the last half of the novel was exhilarating (and heart-wrenching) as well as sweet when everything ended peacefully.

    From the BBC TV Mini Series Jane Eyre (1983). Image: BBC Video.

    Upon my rereading the classic, I can’t help notice the very religious undertone of it.

    Jane Eyre feels like a testimony of a devout Christian. Jane narrates her life story from the beginning to end with much references to her faith, and the novel even ends with the words of the very zealous St. John Rivers. I personally like it very much and find it inspiring. (And this religiousness of the popular classic reveals how Christian 19th century Western societies were.)

    And as an ardent fan of the novel, I created an image of Jane Eyre.

    It wants more artistic skills and accuracies from formal training, but I’m somewhat pleased with the result. My reference for Jane is Zelah Clarke from BBC’s 1983 Jane Eyre. 🙂 The pictures hanging in the back are a silhouette of Edward Rochester and a caged bird, which is referenced in the novel.

    As mentioned in my previous post, I’ve been watching the 1983 Jane Eyre (BBC TV series) while finishing the book.

    It was FANTASTIC. The actors delivered incredible performances (though everyone did, the ones that stood out for me were those depicting Jane Eyre (Zelah Clarke), Mr. Rochester (Timothy Dalton) and St. John (Andrew Bicknell)) and the casting was PERFECT – the producers and the director NAILED IT! I really do not have any complaints on the entire series, as they have stayed so true to the actual novel. I would really like to purchase the DVD of the TV show. It is THAT good.

    If you are a fan of Jane Eyre and haven’t watched the 1983 version yet, here is a short clip so you can have a preview of how good, how close to the original text it is:

    But the TV series is incredible because its source, the novel, is an incredible piece of writing written by the gifted English writer.

    Jane Eyre is truly an inspirational story about a young woman who, orphaned and unloved as a child, develops fortitude, faith, and independence through hard work as well as friends she meets along the way to rise from tribulations and, in the end, finds her home, happiness, and love.


    P.S. I would love to do a post about Mr. St. John Rivers. I have much to say about the character! (Including how his name is not pronounced as “Saint” John – but rather “SIN-jun” in the UK! And about his unrealized love towards Miss Rosamund Oliver – it was pretty tragic.)

    Miss Oliver (Moira Downie) and St. John Rivers (Andrew Bicknell) from the 1983 Jane Eyre. Image: BBC Video

    *Check out my previous post on Jane Eyre HERE.