Free Speaker's Series
Hosted at the RB History Museum located at the Bernardo Winery
13330 Paseo del Verano Norte
San Diego, California 92128
Upcoming Speakers
Recent Speakers
November 9, 2024 11 a.m.
The History of Japanese Americans in San Diego
Linda Canada, former archivist and past president, Japanese-American Historical Society of San Diego
For more information call 858-775-5788
October 12, 2024 11 a.m.
Kumeyaay-Ipai Interpretive Center
Robert Holton, Docent
The Rancho Bernardo Historical Society Speakers Series presents Robert Holton, docent at the Kumeyaay-Ipai Interpretive Center of Poway, speaking on “How the Kumeyaay Have Lived in Harmony with Nature for the Past 12,000 Years.” Admission is free, 11 a.m., Saturday, October 12, 2024 at the Rancho Bernardo History Museum in the Bernardo Winery.
For more information call 858-775-5788
“Demystifying Aztec Culture,”
Javier Gonzalez-Meeks, Professor of history at Grossmont College
“Come celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month by demystifying some misconceptions about the Aztecs,” says Gonzalez-Meeks. He notes that a lot of information about this ancient indigenous culture comes from Spanish Colonial-era sources “so that even today, they are labeled as ‘Cannibals, Savages and Heathens.’ This presentation will help demystify common misconceptions about the Aztecs, or, as they called themselves, the Mexica.”
For more information call 858-775-5788
The Sugar King of California: The Life of Claus Spreckels
Dr. Sandra Bonura
Bonura calls her book “the rags-to-riches story” of a man “who came to America with only 75 cents in his pocket and became one of the richest Americans in history.” Along the way Spreckels and his family played signficant roles in the development of Hawaii and then California, including San Diego. But, she adds, “there’s always a cost for single-minded determination and his story is one of both triumph and tragedy, a portrait of a family torn apart by money, jealousy and ego.”
For more information call 858-775-5788
July 13, 2024 11 a.m.
A Willow Tree Becomes a Forest – The Story of Hop Lee
Dr. Russell Low, Retired radiologist and former medical professor at Sharp and UCSD
Will discuss his new book: A Willow Tree Becomes A Forest: The Story of Hop Lee. Based on his research into his immigrant roots, Dr. Low’s book, in his words, “explores the trials of establishing roots and pursuing dreams amid the era of Chinese Exclusion. It commemorates the enduring immigrant American spirit that resonates with us today,juxtaposed against the backdrop of Anti-Chinese laws and biases endured by the Chinese community from 1882 to 1943.”
For more information call 858-775-5788
Presented June 8, 2024
Video Not Available
Leo Carrillo Ranch Historic Park
Rick Evans, Docent
For more information call 858-775-5788
Monsters On the Loose: The True Story of Three Unsolved Murders in Prohibition Era San Diego;
Dr. Richard Carrico
For more information call 858-775-5788
Searching for Calle Judeo: Old Town San Diego State Historic Park’s Forgotten Street of Pioneer Jewish Merchants
Alexander Bevil
In 2012, while researching the history of a Caltrans office building in Old Town, Alex Bevil discovered the site of an 1850s-era dry goods store. His subsequent research uncovered a community of Jewish men and women entrepreneurs who, from 1850 to 1872, helped transform Old Town from a small farming village to a market-driven American town
For more information call 858-775-5788
The Allure of the San Dieguito River Valley
Christopher Khoury,
San Dieguito River Valley Conservancy
Chris will share “My personal review of some of the river valley’s many intriguing features and the decades-long community effort to preserve and protect it.”
For more information call 858-775-5788
Behind the Mask
Javier Gonzalez-Meeks, Professor of history at Grossmont College
The Historical Zorro and Mexican-American Experience in Early California
For more information call 858-775-5788
USS Midway Carrier Museum
Brian Butler and Steve Walker, Longtime Midway Docents
“Our two-part presentation details the whole history of the U.S. Navy’s longest serving aircraft carrier of the 20th century,” says Butler, “including a visual tour aboard the museum today.”
For more information call 858-775-5788
The Nate Harrison Historical Archaeology Project
Dr. Seth Mallios,
SDSU anthropologist
Spoke on the latest discoveries of the Nate Harrison Historical Archaeology Project.
For more information call 858-775-5788
Presented October 14, 2023
Ghost Stories of San Diego County
Marilyn McPhie
Storyteller
Marilyn McPhie is President of the Storytellers of San Diego. She has telling stories professionally since 1985, performing for groups of all ages from Massachusetts to California as well as in England, Scotland, Ireland, Denmark and Germany.
For more information call 858-775-5788
The History of San Diego Through Music
Many Strings Musical Group
with Jamie Burns and Chris Burns
For more information call 858-775-5788
The 130,000 Year-Old Cerutti Mastodon Site
Tom Demere,
Curator of Paleontology, San Diego Museum of Natural History
In the early 1990s a team of scientists from the San Diego Natural History Museum and other institutions, working at a site near San Diego Bay, discovered the bones of a mastodon and evidence of humans processing those bones with tools. Their discovery made this the oldest archaeological site in the Americas, in the words of the museum’s website, “pushing back the record of early humans on this continent by more than 100,000 years.” Dr. Deméré, who was part of that team of discoverers, will discuss their findings and the reactions that followed.
For more information call 858-775-5788
A Brief History of San Diego’s Chinese-American Community
Jacinta Wong,
Executive Director of the San Diego Chinese Historical Museum
Michael Yee,
Historian and Educator
Speaking on A Brief History of San Diego’s Chinese-American Community and the San Diego Chinese Historical Museum
For more information call 858-775-5788
Black Vacqueros
Javier Gonzalez-Meeks,
Assistant Professor of History, San Diego Miramar College
“This presentation highlights the lesser known story of Black Vacqueros or Cowboys of the ‘Wild West,’” says Professor Meeks, “such as Bass Reeves, who inspired the story of The Lone Ranger.”
For more information call 858-775-5788
Block 112: The Untold Story of San Diego’s Working Class in the 1880s
Cindy Stankowski
San Diego Archaeological Center
Will speak on the Untold Story of San Diego’s Working Class in the 1880s
For more information call 858-775-5788
Presented April 8, 2023
See Video on YouTube
The Railroad Project that Never Happened
Bruce Semelsberger
The Pacific Southwest Railway Museum
The 1887 railroad project connecting the Escondido, Poway, Bernardo and El Cajon valleys never came to be. Find out why.
For more information call 858-775-5788
Presented March 11, 2023
Video Not Available
Dan Rios Photographic Collection
Alexa Clausen
The Escondido History Center
Sean Visintainer
Cal State San Marcos Library
In 2018 Dan Rios, a former photographer for the Escondido Times-Advocate newspaper, donated
his entire collection of photographic negatives to the CSUSM University Library. The collection
holds an estimated one million images showing people, places and events covering almost 40
years of North County history.
For more information call 858-775-5788
The History of Oceanside
John Daley
Co-founder and board member, Oceanside Historical Society
“I will hit the highlights of Oceanside history and add some insights as a third generation Oceansider,” says Daley. “My great-grandparents came to Oceanside about five years after it was incorporated in 1888.” Daley’s business ventures include “running and owning the 101 Café, the oldest café along Historic US Highway 101, and helping to “start many non-profits, including the Oceanside Historical Society,” which he helped found in 1986.
For more information call 858-775-5788
Presented January 14, 2023
Video Not Available
Resources for Historic Research at the San Diego County Archives
Aditi Worcester, County Archives Manager,
Kiera Sullivan, Archivist and Records Manager,
Val Handfield, Assistant Recorder/County Clerk
Located within the Office of the Recorder/County Clerk in Santee, the San Diego County Archives was established in 2020 as the repository for official county records going back to the creation of San Diego County in 1850. Those records range from property deeds and mortgage documents to birth, marriage and death records. Our speakers will describe how to access these documents which provide historic snapshots of county life.
For more information call 858-775-5788
Past Programs from Previous Years
Click on a Month Below to View Video on YouTube
2022
November 12, 2022 – The Sikes Adobe and the San Dieguito River Park: Our Natural and Human History Saved (Video Not Available)
Leana Bulay, Senior Interpretive Ranger, San Dieguito River Park,
Blanca Drapeau, Interpretive Ranger, Sikes Adobe Historic Farmstead
October 8, 2022 – The Latest On Our Past: New Discoveries from the Harris Site
Richard Carrico, Instructor of American Indian Studies, San Diego State University
September 10,2022 – Hidden Treasures in the San Diego City Archives.
Samantha Ely, Archives Program Manager
Anne Miggins, Deputy City Clerk
June 11, 2022 – From Measures to Missiles
Vincent Rossi, Historian and Author
May 14, 2022 – Brewers, Bootleggers and Bosses: Women in San Diego Brewing History
Judith Downie, Retired Special Collections and History Librarian at Cal State San Marcos
April 9, 2022 – The Floating City at Sea
Jean Harris, A veteran navy officer and longtime docent at the U.S.S. Midway Museum,
March 12, 2022 – Rancho Guajome and its Cast of Characters
Ron Quirk, Ranger at Rancho Guajome
February 12, 2022San Diego’s Forgotten Empire: The Legacy of John Diedrich Spreckels
Sandra Bonura, Author
2021 – Speakers Series on Hold
2020
SPEAKERS SERIES PUT ON HOLD
February 8 – Native Sons of the Golden West
Luke Bramon
January 11 – The Story of Wilderness Gardens County park
Jake Enriquez
2019
October 12- Rediscovering the Historic MiraMar Restaurant and Hotel
Annemarie Cox
September 14 – The History of Indian Gaming
Ethan Banegas
August 10 – The La Jolla Atlas and Map Museum
Richard Cloward
June 8 – 10,000 Years: Prehistory of the San Diego Region
Cindy Stankowski
May 18 – The Mexican War – How It Shaped Two Nations (No Video)
Blaine Davies
April 13- The Kings Highway
Max Kurillo
March 11- Rancho Bernardo Study of Healthy Aging
Linda McAvoy and Gail McLaughlin
February 9- History of the Bernardo Winery
Ross Rizzo Jr.
January 12- Prayer and Politics: The Hawaiian Revolution
Dr Sandra Bonura
2018
September – Louis Rose, San Diego’s First Jewish Settler
Donald Harrison
July- What Rock Art Tells Us About San Diego’s Original Residents
Greg Erikson
June- Old Town San Diego: Living History
Greg Giacopuzzi
May- 1915 Point Loma Road Race
D.A. (Mac) MacPherson
April- History of San Diego Trolleys
Douglas Mengers
January- USS Midway Museum
Steve Walker and Brian Butler
2017
October – The Poway Midland Railroad
Chuck Cross
September – The History of Water Development in San Diego
Garry Butterfield
August – Local History Stories for Children
Marilyn McPhie
July – Palomar: Bridge to the Stars
Mark Carlson
May – SD County Agricultural History
Eric Larsen
February – Times were tough but pioneers were tougher.
Marilyn McPhie
January – Flights to Oblivion, Flights to Fame, The New York to Paris Race
Mark Carlson
2016
November – A History of Wine and Wine Making in San Diego County
Richard Carrico
October – From Daguerrotype To Digital Images – How to Preserve, Protect and Share Your Photographs
Susan Hill
September – The Bounty of Poway’s Farms
Mary Shepardson
July – Los Californianos is dedicated to preserving the heritage of early Hispanic Californios in Alta California
George Grey
April – San Diego County’s gem mining activities
Jeff Swanger
January – San Diego Toy and Doll Museum
Rex Ballard
2015
October – Hiking around San Diego
Tom Leech
September – Contributions Made by the Women of Vista
Jack Larimer
Director of the Vista Historical Society Museum.
July – Evaluation, valuation and care of precious works of art and artifacts.
Jennifer Garey
Museum Director
June – Background of the Escondido History Center
Wendy Barker
Executive Director, Escondido History Center
May – Significance of Native American placenames in our region.
Richard Carrico
April – Origins of the San Diego County fair, which has been in existence since 1880.
Linda Zweig
March – Story of Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton.
Faye Jonason
Museum Division Officer MCB Camp Pendleton.
January – The story of the Californios
Bonnie Martland