Browse Items(53 total)

  • Subject is exactly "Salz Tannery"
http://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/salz_sccfu/salz-029.jpg
Jeremy Lezin took this aerial photograph of the Salz Tannery sometime in the 1980's. River Street/Highway 9 and the Tannery are in the foreground and the growth of trees marks the path of the San Lorenzo River.

Date: 1980's
Type: PHOTO

http://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/salz_sccfu/salz-028.jpg
Salz Tannery employed about 185 people in 1985. Though staff from every department was represented in this group photo, there were usually only 60-70% of the staff present at any given time. Whimsical cow cutouts were part of the courtyard scenery.…

Date: 1985
Type: PHOTO

http://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/salz_sccfu/salz-027.jpg
The Salz sculpture was hoisted by crane and paused on River Street prior to its installation in the tannery courtyard. The man in the picture is unknown.

Date: 1975
Type: PHOTO

http://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/salz_sccfu/salz-026.jpg
The installation of the Salz fountain in 1975 required an enormous crane to move the sculpture from River Street down into the courtyard. Its placement was further complicated by the presence of a mature oak tree that once filled in the courtyard…

Date: 1975
Type: PHOTO

http://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/salz_sccfu/salz-025.jpg
Santa Cruz artist Gene Flores designed a sculpture for Salz Tannery that was both beautiful and functional. Salz Tannery required a cooling tower for a particular piece of equipment. Norman Lezin decided that one of Gene Flores' fountain sculptures…

Date: 1975
Type: PHOTO

http://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/salz_sccfu/salz-024.jpg
Hides were stacked after being removed from the salt pits. They could be stored for months in salt. Hides were brine cured and dosed with rock salt to preserve them in transit.

Date: Undated
Type: PHOTO

http://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/salz_sccfu/salz-023.jpg
Stripping tanoak from trees was a labor intensive process. Salz Tannery purchased tanoak bark from suppliers who found a good supply along the Mendocino coast. The man in the photograph worked for a supplier.

Date: 1950's
Type: PHOTO

http://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/salz_sccfu/salz-017.jpg
San Lorenzo Tannery employees used sharp knives to "hand flesh" or separate the flesh from the hides. The San Lorenzo Tannery began its relationship with Kullman-Salz in the 1880's. It was later sold to Kullman-Salz in 1917. It closed in 1929 due to…

Date: 1897
Type: PHOTO

http://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/salz_sccfu/salz-015.jpg
This Salz Tannery greeting card featured a product display that included fine saddles, personal leather goods and luggage. Salz California Saddle Leather TM was distributed nationwide. The company had an agent in Mexico as well. In later years Salz…

Date: 1955
Type: PHOTO

http://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/salz_sccfu/salz-014.jpg
Green bark was removed from a tanoak tree. Salz started harvesting tanoak outside Santa Cruz County in the 1940's and 1950's when the local supply dwindled. The Mendocino Coast was deemed the best source at the time. Bark stripping was always…

Date: 1950's
Type: PHOTO

Output Formats

atom, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-json, omeka-xml, rss2