Glennville, California Explained

Glennville, California
Other Name:Linn's Valley
Settlement Type:Unincorporated community
Pushpin Map:California#USA
Pushpin Label Position:bottom
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in California
Pushpin Image:California Locator Map with US.PNG
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:United States
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Name1:California
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name2:Kern County
Coordinates:35.7289°N -118.7036°W
Elevation M:968
Elevation Ft:3176
Population Total:131

Glennville (formerly Linn's Valley) is an unincorporated community in Kern County, California.

Geography

It is located 30miles north-northeast of Bakersfield, at an elevation of in the Greenhorn Mountains foothills, a range of the Sierra Nevada.

Climate

Glennville has a typically Californian Mediterranean climate (Köppen Csb, bordering on Csa). Summers are hot during the day, with 51.5 afternoons during an average year topping 901NaN1, but mornings remains pleasantly cool and dry. Winter days are comfortable with January's maximum averaging 56.41NaN1, but mornings are cold and 117.6 mornings fall to or below freezing each year, although no morning has ever fallen to 01NaN1 – the coldest temperature recorded since records began occurring on February 6, 1989 when the mercury fell to 1F.

Precipitation is heavily concentrated in the winter and averages around 19.3-1NaN-1 or about three times that of Bakersfield on the valley floor. The wettest month has been December 2010 with 13.77inches, whilst the wettest “rain year” has been from July 1997 to June 1998 with 42.51inches and the driest from July 1958 to June 1959 when only 7.82inches fell.[1] The wettest single day has been September 30, 1976 with 5.25inches; the only other day to top 41NaN1 being December 6, 1966 with 4.38inches. Snowfall averages 8.9inches; the most in a month is 19inches in January 1982 and the most in a season 35inches between July 1998 and June 1999.

History

The first white settlers in the area were George Ely and William Linn, who arrived together in 1854. Ely died in 1859 and Linn left the area around the same time. Linn's Valley post office opened in 1860 and the town changed its name to Glennville in 1872. The name honors James Madison Glenn, a blacksmith who settled the area in 1857 and opened the town's first hotel.[2] Glennville became the last stop on the stagecoach line from Visalia and the trading center for the surrounding valley after the decline of Lavers' Crossing. In 1860, a state-funded wagon road from Glennville to Kernville was laid out by Thomas Baker, a civil engineer and founder of Bakersfield. A tribute to his ingenuity is that today's State Route 155 still follows Baker's route, originally known as the McFarlane Road, almost entirely.

Glennville remains a quiet country town with one restaurant and no gas station. The southernmost grove of Giant Sequoia trees, Deer Creek Grove, is located about ten miles northeast of Glennville. The Glennville adobe, built before the Civil War, still stands along Route 155 next to the fire station and is the oldest building in Kern County. The oldest standing church in the county, dating to 1866, stands nearby.[3] [4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. [National Weather Service]
  2. David W. Kean, Wide Places in the California Roads: The encyclopedia of California's small towns and the roads that lead to them (Volume 1 of 4: Southern California Counties), p. 71
  3. David W. Kean, Wide Places in the California Roads: The encyclopedia of California's small towns and the roads that lead to them (Volume 1 of 4: Southern California Counties), p. 72
  4. Web site: Henrietta Ellis Case, By Casey Gaunttlis Case . December 3, 2020 . November 30, 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20201130112143/https://www.writemesomethingbeautiful.com/2011/11/30/almost-ellisville/ . live .