Bill James Sr.’s Legacy in Madera
Pictured in 1920 inside the men’s department of Tighe and Breyfogle’s, Bill James Sr. can be seen in the center at the back of the store. Many of Madera’s early citizens learned the clerking business under Bill’s tutelage. Bill Griffin was his first employee when Tighe set out on his own in 1893. Young Griffin […]
Old Timers Day Parade began in 1931
It was early in the year 1931 when someone conceived of an idea to initiate something called “Old Timers Day” in Madera County. The idea percolated for a while and then took hold. A committee was formed, and by summer, preparations for an extravaganza were well underway. What resulted was not only an outpouring of […]
How Madera’s Bill Tighe grew his business
A short time after Bill Tighe went into partnership in a dry goods store with Mr. Harris, they bought out John Griffin, who ran a shoe store a little further up the street. This was a giant step toward success for Tighe, for by the time Madera County was created in 1893, Bill was in […]
The Tighe and Breyfogle department store
The Tighe and Breyfogle department store, which was the cornerstone of Madera’s business community for years, had an inauspicious beginning. When its founder, William Tighe came to town in 1891, he hopped off the train as it pulled into the local depot with just a few dollars in his pocket. It just so happened that […]
Early Madera Businesses
Pictured c. 1910, Charles F. Preciado’s sundry store was located on the northeast corner of Yosemite Avenue and D Streets. Since he had abundant help from his sisters in running the establishment, Preciado found time to run for Madera County Tax Collector. In what can only be described as a personal tragedy, Charles was charged […]
The Madera Fire Department’s First Fire Engine
Madera’s fire department was organized in 1885 and had only the most primitive equipment to use to fight the town’s worst enemy. By 1915, however, things had improved, as this photograph shows. A fire engine committee was formed, and it decided to purchase a Moreland fire engine, which arrived on March 15, 1915. Joe Scott […]
Yosemite Avenue in 1910
Looking west on Yosemite Avenue in 1910, the Alta Hotel is easily identified on the right (north side of the street) At this time, there were four hotels and several grocery stores in downtown Madera. Among the latter group were Franchi’s, Rochdale, Wehrman-Meilike (with its popular deli), Petty’s, and Friedberger and Harder’s downtown Madera also […]
Madera remembered Athletic Hall
In July 1966, somebody decided to change the appearance of downtown Madera by taking the top off of the Richard Mah building in the 200 block on the south side of Yosemite Avenue. The demolition project was the talk of the town and made the front page of The Madera Tribune. The landmark building had […]
Yosemite Avenue in the first decade of the 20th century
Sometime after 1908, probably in 1910, this photograph looking west on Yosemite Avenue was taken. It shows the first Rosenthal-Kutner store, a two-story affair on the corner of D Street and Yosemite. The top floor was occupied by Dr. Wing, an early Madera dentist. The Women’s Christian Temperance Union water fountain, which had been constructed […]
Yosemite Avenue in 1905
Yosemite Avenue is shown here in 1905. The view is from F Street looking east, and Mace’s Hotel can be seen on the left. The main part of town was only three blocks long with businesses scattered along the side streets. The unpaved avenue was dusty in the summer and full of chuckholes that played […]