Thursday, September 11, 2014

For an intimate look at some of the tapestry stitchers at work, visit our video  link below. If you would like to support the project with a contribution, send your check to the

     North Columbia Schoolhouse Cultural Center
     17894 Tyler Foote Road
     Nevada City CA 95959

http://youtu.be/WdSeaZbCcXk

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Fundraisers

We will be selling poster and card replicas of our tapestries at the Sierra Storytelling Festival, so make sure to check that out here: http://sierrastorytellingfestival.org/. All the money we raise will go to materials for our ongoing project. 

We will also be launching a crowdfunding campaign on indiegogo.com on Saturday the 19th. Check back soon for the links once the campaign launches. If you're new to this kind of thing, crowdfunding is a way to collect monetary donations through the web. Perks (Items we'll send to you to show our gratitude for donating) include your name being sewn onto the back of the newest tapestry, greeting cards, posters, jigsaw tapestry puzzles, and various other things.

Make sure to share this post and spread the tapestry project's exposure to the community.

- Josh Tecklin


Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Don't Mine Our Water

  Don’t Mine Our Water 

This tapestry, 5th in the series of 13 tapestries planned for the North Columbia Schoolhouse Cultural Center, describes events between 1975 and 1997 on the San Juan Ridge. During these years there were a number of attempts at gold mining in an old Diggings near North Columbia.  The community-organized San Juan Ridge Taxpayers Association led the resistance against these mining efforts.

 Some of the proposed mines were open pit mines, one tunneled deep into the gravels.  In order to tunnel, millions of gallons of groundwater a day were pumped out to dewater the gravels.

The water well for Grizzly Hill School dried up along with many other wells in the neighborhood.  The miners dug new wells, but the new wells were many times deeper, required more expense to pump and the water was undrinkable.  Grizzly Hill School has had to buy bottled water for more than 10 years. 

Community members researched mining issues, the effects on groundwater, the creeks, the ecosystem, and the effects of dust and other types of mining pollution.  Internal coordination was by a phone tree. The Taxpayers Association raised money for experts and lawyers by holding auctions and poetry readings.   The Association coordinated with other neighborhood groups in the County, and gave testimony at public meetings.

In 2012, a new dewatering mine was proposed.