Browse Items(166 total)

  • Tags: Industries
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/cov/cov-022.jpg
Salz sales manager Howard Halper presented Miss California (name not known) with a leather gift at the tannery. Occasion unknown.

Date: 1950's
Type: PHOTO

http://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/aa/aa-037.jpg
Salz plant superintendent, Joe Bellas, holds the finished product. The Ansel Adams photograph was part of a series documenting each step of the leather making process in 1954.

Date: 1954
Type: PHOTO

http://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/misc/sen002.jpg
The Salz Leathers sign includes the logo as well as the phrase "natural leather since 1861". The buildings were painted a distinctive barn red and were a landmark along the River Street/Highway 9 corridor. This photograph was taken by Shmuel…

Date: 2001-08-04
Type: PHOTO

https://history-omeka-dev.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/articles/AR-052.pdf

Date: 8/4/2001
Source: Santa Cruz Sentinel, August 4, 2001. Sources include Sentinel archives and historian Carolyn Swift.
Type: ARTICLE

https://history-omeka-dev.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/articles/AR-053.pdf

Date: 8/4/2001
Source: Santa Cruz Sentinel, August 4, 2001. Staff writer Stett Holbrook contributed to this article.
Type: ARTICLE

http://scplweb2-dev.santacruzpl.org/files/local_history_temp/69607-04.jpg
Landmark Photo Project

Date: May-01
Source: Santa Cruz Public Libraries
Type: PHOTO

http://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/aa/aa-009.jpg
Salz employee Red McCafferty and a co-worker work with a machine called a "splitter" to separate the hide structure into two distinct layers. Splitting the leather into a thinner, more pliable form, increased its markets.

Date: 1954
Type: PHOTO

http://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/aa/aa-006.jpg
Mel Stubendorff and an unnamed Salz Tannery co-worker tack the hides up to large boards prior to drying. The drying process usually took several days.

Date: 1954
Type: PHOTO

http://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/cov/cov-019.jpg
Salz employees Chuck Anstead (left) and Joe Bellas work with a Sheridan Press. Sheridan Presses were large machines designed to create heat and pressure. When leather was sandwiched between these huge plates, the surface was flattened, brightened and…

Date: 1955
Type: PHOTO

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