How did Davis become a city?
Most people think it took half the town burning down to convince residents of what was then Davisville to incorporate 100 years ago.
鈥淚t was this day that created public sentiment to become a city,鈥 Bob Bowen, a spokesman for the city of Davis, told a crowd at a showing of historical photos on March 28, the anniversary of the city鈥檚 incorporation.
The devastating blaze in 1916 destroyed half of downtown Davis, burning unchecked because the city had no pressurized water supply or fire department. Davis residents could only futilely toss buckets of water on the inferno until a Southern Pacific train with a firefighting rail car arrived from Sacramento. Newspaper accounts from the time speculated the fire easily could have been stopped with proper water lines and a fire department 鈥 things that come with incorporation.
Just four months after the 1916 fire, Davis residents voted to formally become a city (a 1911 vote failed 92-103).
Still, some historians say a pro-growth community spirit, and not a fire, convinced residents to vote to become a city.
鈥淧eople buy a simple notion, which is a fire scared residents into voting to tax themselves,鈥 said Professor Emeritus Dennis Dingemans, a former Davis planning commissioner and the director of the Hattie Weber Museum.
He cited burgeoning industry in the town (an almond-hulling machine developed in Marysville was being manufactured in Davis) and a community of steadfast supporters, led by Davis Enterprise Editor and Justice of the Peace William Scott.
Professor Emeritus John Lofland, who has written several books about Davis history, wrote in 2004 that Scott was the town鈥檚 鈥渂ooster-in-chief,鈥 and cited one of his first editorials, which suggested people should always shop locally and never speak ill of their town.
鈥淲e were a town of boosters,鈥 Dingemans said.
One hundred years later, city leaders say that spirit is still alive.
鈥淒avis still has many, many boosters 鈥 individuals who have the desire and ability to improve the community and usually have a project or vision that is shared by many others,鈥 said Lois Wolk, who served as a Davis city council member and mayor before terms as a county supervisor and state legislator.
She said residents still strive to improve the town, citing as examples the 1993 construction of Sutter Davis Hospital and the regional water treatment plant completed in 2016.
On a smaller scale, former city council member Bill Kopper cited volunteer-service organizations, community-supported art galleries and other efforts to help the less fortunate.
鈥淒avis is in every way still a town of deep citizen involvement in the community,鈥 he said. 鈥淓verywhere you look people are volunteering to help.鈥
This year, boosters and casual observers alike will mark the centennial. A week after the centennial date, Davis city council members donned period costumes to reenact the first board of trustees meeting, complete with proposing ordinances to form a fire department and outlaw littering. The 2017 Picnic Day theme, 鈥淕rowing Together,鈥 acknowledged the centennial, and its parade featured former council members.
The city plans to dedicate a corner of Second and G streets as 鈥淐entennial Plaza,鈥 with artwork and historical signs, and a time capsule is in the works. And not just history buffs are getting in the spirit: This spring Sudwerk Brewing Company developed a 鈥渃entennial brew鈥 as a limited-release beer.
Library celebrates city鈥檚 centennial
The UC Davis Library shines a spotlight on the city鈥檚 centennial with its new exhibition, .
The exhibit features archival materials from the library鈥檚 Special Collections that illustrate the history of Davis over the last century and runs through June 18 at the Peter J. Shields Library.
Unlike most exhibitions, which highlight a single collection, the centennial display draws from more than 15 collections, ranging from professional and personal photographs to the institutional archives of The Sacramento Union and UC Davis.
Davis history and culture also come to life through aerial imagery, promotional materials from three of Davis鈥 best-known residential developments and personal papers from historical figures including Harry Hazen, a student at the University Farm (now UC Davis). UC Davis alum Norman E. Riley 鈥78 contributes photographs from 1982 to 2004.
鈥 Jessica Nusbaum