Sacramento’s history is underfoot. Take note of these manhole covers that dot downtown

Uniquely is a Sacramento Bee series that covers the moments, landmarks and personalities that define what makes living in the Sacramento area so special.

Look at the ground as you walk on 14th Street in downtown Sacramento and you might spot artifacts from a bygone era of craftsmanship in the form of manhole covers.

The street is dotted with at least four covers made by long-defunct Berry’s Foundry which operated in the mid-20th century at 1817 29th St. in Sacramento. Looking something like a battle shield or coat of arms, they have crosses and T’s circled around the name of the foundry and its city.

These aren’t the drab, flat and economic manhole covers that have become the norm in recent decades. Those who look into who made these nearly century-old metal castings will find stories of people who came from far away to make our city their home and left their mark on our streetscapes.

Making a start in America

By 1923, Robert Berry had made it.

A history of notable Sacramento residents published that year by G. Walter Reed proclaimed Robert Berry “a master of an important industry of the capital city.”

Reed wrote that Berry, who was then about 60, had worked in the foundry industry since even before coming to the U.S. with his wife and son from their native England in 1907. Berry started Berry’s Foundry around 1920, employing five men in the busy season.

Robert Berry was born in England in 1863. He came to the United States when he was 43 years old and arrived in Sacramento in 1907. He was trained as a boy in the founder’s trade. He worked in Sacramento foundries and opened his own around 1920 at 1817 29th St.Robert Berry was born in England in 1863. He came to the United States when he was 43 years old and arrived in Sacramento in 1907. He was trained as a boy in the founder’s trade. He worked in Sacramento foundries and opened his own around 1920 at 1817 29th St.

Robert Berry was born in England in 1863. He came to the United States when he was 43 years old and arrived in Sacramento in 1907. He was trained as a boy in the founder’s trade. He worked in Sacramento foundries and opened his own around 1920 at 1817 29th St.

“The product of the plant is shipped all over northern California and the concern does a very large and satisfactory business,” Reed wrote.

It was a long way from where Berry had come, both literally and symbolically.

In England, Berry had also had a foundry. When he discovered that his business partner had cheated him, Berry severely beat the man, according to Berry’s great-grandson Blaine Gaustad. Given a choice between prison or the army, Berry opted for the latter, serving in the Boer War in South Africa around the turn of the 20th century.

Following his service, Berry found a better life for himself and his family in Sacramento. Aside from his success in business, he served as secretary of the Sacramento Valley Soccer League which, as Reed wrote in 1923, “had its inception sixteen years ago and now has 1,500 training in the schools here.”

Berry’s granddaughter Kathleen McCann adored him, calling him Papa.

“She loved her grandfather,” said Dan McCann, a Sacramento man once married to Kathleen McCann, who died in 2003. “She said he was the joyous one.”

Foundry work could provide a good life for competent operators. “It sort of made our family middle class,” Gaustad said.

Certainly, foundry work could be plentiful. A 1985 article in the Sacramento Bee noted that there were then around 29,000 manhole covers in the city (with updated figures not available before press time). That doesn’t necessarily include all of the other local items a foundry could produce, from pipes to light posts and much more.

“We have an expression that most people are 10 feet away from a casting but never know it,” said Doug Kurkul, CEO of the American Foundry Society, based in Schaumburg, Illinois. “Castings are really everywhere.”

Sisters, Sally Styles-Zanotti, left, Linda Moore, Glory Styles and Katy Styles-Rogers, right, stand in July by a manhole cover from Berry’s Foundry that was founded by their great-grandfather.Sisters, Sally Styles-Zanotti, left, Linda Moore, Glory Styles and Katy Styles-Rogers, right, stand in July by a manhole cover from Berry’s Foundry that was founded by their great-grandfather.

Sisters, Sally Styles-Zanotti, left, Linda Moore, Glory Styles and Katy Styles-Rogers, right, stand in July by a manhole cover from Berry’s Foundry that was founded by their great-grandfather.

The decline of foundries

Berry died in 1941 at 77. At some point, his son Robert H. Berry took over the family business. Born in 1897, the younger Berry was an educated man, having earned a degree in electrical engineering from University of California, Berkeley after attending Sacramento High School and serving as a wireless operator for the British Navy in World War I.

Harold Henderson described the younger Berry as a “bibliophile of the first water,” in a 1958 article in Foundry magazine.

“His den, living room, bedrooms and other rooms were stacked high with rare books – first editions, last editions, and single editions, bound in every material that the imaginative brain of an artistic bookbinder could dream up,” Henderson wrote.

The younger Berry was health-conscious, with exercise habits that would help him live to 98, according to his granddaughter Glory Styles, who knew him as Pops.

Gaustad, who is now 75 and lives in Massachusetts, was a favorite grandchild of the younger Berry. Gaustad can still remember the smell of coke – coal used in furnaces – as he rode in his grandfather’s truck to the foundry. He also remembers, though, that for all of his grandfather’s intelligence, he lacked business acumen.

Robert H. Berry, pictured far right, was the owner of Berry’s Foundry after his father Robert Berry opened the foundry.Robert H. Berry, pictured far right, was the owner of Berry’s Foundry after his father Robert Berry opened the foundry.

Robert H. Berry, pictured far right, was the owner of Berry’s Foundry after his father Robert Berry opened the foundry.

The younger Berry was gruffer in personality than his father, something other family members echoed. “I know he had PTSD from that war because he had horrible nightmares every night,” Styles said. “He would toss and turn and yell in his sleep. And that’s not unusual for World War I vets.”

Berry’s Foundry’s 29th Street headquarters burned down in the 1950s, with the land today a parking lot adjacent to the Capital City Freeway. The foundry appears to have shut down around 1963 when it held a public auction for its components.

This grate casted by Berry’s Foundry is June 26, 2024, in Fat Alley between 14th and 15th streets in Sacramento.This grate casted by Berry’s Foundry is June 26, 2024, in Fat Alley between 14th and 15th streets in Sacramento.

This grate casted by Berry’s Foundry is June 26, 2024, in Fat Alley between 14th and 15th streets in Sacramento.

Some of the younger Berry’s struggles in business might not have been entirely of his own making. The foundry business has contracted a fair amount over the years. Where the U.S. had 5,000 foundries 40-50 years ago, there are just over 1,700 now according to Kurkul. About 6-8 companies do the bulk of municipal business, Kurkul estimated.

The manhole cover business has turned over the years, from the sort of ornate covers that a business like Berry’s Foundry might have crafted to drabber covers that dot Sacramento’s streets today. The 1985 Bee article noted that the newer manhole covers were cheaper and easier to clean.

In time, technology might help usher in a new era for manhole covers. Bruce Dienst, president of Norcan North America and a 42-year veteran of the foundry industry based in Aurora, Illinois, said foundries now have the technology to customize manhole covers with designs like city logos.

Dienst said that foundries have “actually had the opportunity to become much more sophisticated and artistic with the castings that they can provide communities.”

It’s unclear when or if this era will unfold in Sacramento. Kevin Waller, a supervisor in the city’s Department of Utilities didn’t respond to a request for comment.

How the foundry lives on

Kathleen McCann didn’t speak often about the foundry, having had a difficult relationship with her father. She would have four daughters – Styles and Katy Styles-Rogers, who each live in Oakland; Sally Styles-Zanotti, who lives in Acampo; and Cindy Moore, who lives in Sacramento.

The Berry’s Foundry manhole covers were something as if in the periphery for the family, though to some extent, they were also inescapable.

Styles-Zanotti said she remembered one near Melarkey’s, a defunct bar and music venue she worked at on Broadway.

One time when Moore’s son Colin Moore was visiting Sacramento, his grandmother pointed out a Berry’s Foundry manhole cover. He spotted a familiar sight when he got back to Shasta High School in Redding, where he lived.

“I have this very distinct memory of walking through the campus one day and noticing that this was a Berry’s Foundry manhole cover and telling my friends who all thought this was an incredibly lame thing to notice and point out,” Moore said.

There are those who care a lot about the covers, though, such as Dienst. “Every time I walk through any city, I’m always looking around to see who made the fire hydrants or who made the valves and things like that,” Dienst said. “That’s kind of a professional hazard for a lot of us.”

The covers sometimes inspire creative work, too. Moore has a 1994 book, “Manhole Covers” by Mimi Melnick and Robert A. Melnick in which Berry’s Foundry is featured.

Those Sacramento-casted covers have also inspired beer coasters.

In August 2016, artist Russ Muits made a print of a Berry’s Foundry cover that rests on a hole at 14th Street and Victorian Alley, behind Urban Roots Brewing & Smokehouse near Southside Park. He estimates he’s made prints of 300-400 manhole covers over the years. The design elements of Berry’s Foundry’s manhole cover jumped out at him.

Artist Russ Muits displays a print of a Berry’s Foundry manhole cover in Sacramento in 2016.Artist Russ Muits displays a print of a Berry’s Foundry manhole cover in Sacramento in 2016.

Artist Russ Muits displays a print of a Berry’s Foundry manhole cover in Sacramento in 2016.

“I’m always looking for something that has a foundry name plus a city name,” Muits said.

Muits began selling coasters of the print online thereafter.

Styles said she found the beer coasters on Muits’s website. She had done a search online related to her family’s foundry after becoming concerned upon reading a news story that manhole covers in Sacramento were being stolen.

Styles-Rogers remembered her reaction to when she saw the coaster herself.

“I’m looking at the coaster, I’m like, ‘Oh my God, that’s one of the manhole covers that my grandfather’s foundry made,’” Styles-Rogers said.

Muits said that Styles-Rogers reached out to him and that he eventually sent her the original print. She gave it to a cousin who cared for Robert H. Berry later in his life.

The descendants of Robert Berry and his son expressed pride that their family history is embedded in the alleys and streets of Sacramento.

“When I was a kid and still as an adult, when I see those manhole covers, I feel really rooted in Sacramento,” Styles said.

Descendants of the founder of Sacramento’s Berry’s Foundry, Sally Styles Zanotti, Linda Moore, Glory Styles and Katy Styles Rogers, stand around a manhole cover from their great-grandfather’s foundry Tuesday, July 16.Descendants of the founder of Sacramento’s Berry’s Foundry, Sally Styles Zanotti, Linda Moore, Glory Styles and Katy Styles Rogers, stand around a manhole cover from their great-grandfather’s foundry Tuesday, July 16.

Descendants of the founder of Sacramento’s Berry’s Foundry, Sally Styles Zanotti, Linda Moore, Glory Styles and Katy Styles Rogers, stand around a manhole cover from their great-grandfather’s foundry Tuesday, July 16.

Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

Active weather weekend dies down Sunday, then picks back up for the rest of the week

Active weather weekend dies down Sunday, then picks back up for the rest of the week

Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what’s in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience.Generate Key Takeaways It’s been an active start to the weekend, but lower rain chances are likely for Sunday. A few showers will be possible this evening,

Chief of Defence Staff General Anil Chauhan after a panel discussion during the 22nd Shangri-La Dialogue summit in Singapore on Saturday. (AP)

Lost jets, fixed mistake, hit back hard at Pak: CDS | Latest News India

India lost fighter jets on the opening day of the recent military confrontation with Pakistan due to tactical mistakes that were swiftly rectified before the Indian Air Force returned in big numbers and carried out precision strikes deep inside the neighbouring country, chief of defence staff General Anil Chauhan said in media interviews in Singapore

A person with their hands up in frustration.

The Ultimate Growth Stock to Buy With $1,000 Right Now

There’s a predicament when it comes to investing because the best companies to buy aren’t always the ones that investors are buying. Sometimes, emotions get the better of Wall Street, and stocks are bid up to levels that are hard to justify. At the same time, however, there are companies that seem to be forgotten

Gaza aid trucks rushed by desperate and hungry crowds, WFP says

Gaza aid trucks rushed by desperate and hungry crowds, WFP says

Reuters World Food Programme (WFP) trucks waiting at the Kerem Shalom border crossing between Israel and the Gaza Strip on 26 May Crowds of civilians have rushed aid trucks in Gaza, the World Food Programme has said, as hunger and desperation create chaotic scenes. The humanitarian organisation said it had brought 77 trucks loaded with

They helped oust a president. Now women say they are invisible again

They helped oust a president. Now women say they are invisible again

Getty Images Women played a key role in the protests leading up to the impeachment of South Korea’s former president Yoon Suk Yeol An Byunghui was in the middle of a video game on the night of 3 December when she learned that the South Korean president had declared martial law. She couldn’t quite believe

The Israeli embassy in France said it was "horrified by the coordinated anti-Semitic attack".(AFP)

Paris Holocaust memorial, 3 synagogues vandalised | World News

France’s Holocaust memorial and three Paris synagogues and a restaurant were vandalised with paint overnight Saturday, in what the Israeli embassy denounced as a “coordinated anti-Semitic attack”. The Israeli embassy in France said it was “horrified by the coordinated anti-Semitic attack”.(AFP) An investigation has been opened into “damage committed on grounds of religion”, the Paris

China's J-36 Very Heavy Stealth Tactical Jet Photographed Head-On For First Time

China’s J-36 Very Heavy Stealth Tactical Jet Photographed Head-On For First Time

The TWZ Newsletter Weekly insights and analysis on the latest developments in military technology, strategy, and foreign policy. New imagery of China’s ‘J-36’ very heavy tactical 6th generation jet has just emerged out of China. The photos shows a long-awaited perspective of the aircraft — taken from the front — that confirms our analysis that

“Toxic Nation” features several voices in the health and wellness space

MAHA: ‘Toxic Nation’ says 4 things are making us sick. Here’s what research shows

Facebook Tweet Email Link Ultraprocessed foods, seed oils, pesticides and fluoride: They’re all targets of the “Make America Healthy Again” movement, whose chief proponent is US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Now, MAHA Films, a production company dedicated to promoting the movement’s values, has released its first documentary. “Toxic Nation: From

California Police Hit Speeding Porsches With 34 Tickets In One Stop

California Police Hit Speeding Porsches With 34 Tickets In One Stop

Read the full story on The Auto Wire California Police Hit Speeding Porsches With 34 Tickets In One Stop California Highway Patrol sure is busy these days, with an officer stopping two speeding Porsches, giving out 34 tickets between them. That might sound excessive, but CHP was so proud of what its officer did, the

AccuWeather.com

Northern lights to glow over US Sunday night

The northern lights are seen from East Helena, Mont., Monday, Oct. 7, 2024. (AP Photo/Amy Hanson) The biggest display of the northern lights since 2024 could unfold at the end of the weekend and start of the new week following a massive eruption on the sun. On Friday evening, satellites detected an explosive solar flare

Indian-American student delivers graduation speech supporting Palestine at MIT: 'We are watching Israel try to wipe off...'

India slams Pak over Indus Water Treaty; China preparing for war in Asia, claims US and more

India has strongly pushed back against Pakistan’s claims that it violated the Indus Waters Treaty, accusing its neighbour of using terrorism to interfere with the agreement’s proper functioning. Tensions flared between the United States and China on Saturday after US Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth claimed that Beijing is “credibly preparing” to use military force

Man arrested in connection with vandalism of war memorial in Brighton

Man arrested in connection with vandalism of war memorial in Brighton

A man has been arrested in connection with the vandalism of the war memorial in Brighton. According to Boston Police, the war memorial, located at the intersection of Cambridge and Henshaw streets in Brighton, was vandalized on Wednesday, May 21, between approximately 6:10 p.m. and 6:15 p.m., police said Thursday. Police described the suspect as

Health Check

Obese patients denied knee and hip replacements to slash NHS costs

Sign up for our free Health Check email to receive exclusive analysis on the week in health Get our free Health Check email Get our free Health Check email Obese patients are being denied life-changing hip and knee replacements and left in pain in a bid to slash spiralling NHS costs, The Independent can reveal.

Regina Hill’s team wants key witness barred from testifying

Regina Hill’s team wants key witness barred from testifying

Attorneys for suspended Orlando Commissioner Regina Hill have asked a judge to bar a key witness from testifying against her, saying she has exhibited a pattern of dishonest behavior as the attorneys gear up for trial. Sandra Lewis, a notary whose stamp and signature appear on a mortgage application Hill filed several years ago, gave

a gloved hand presents several yellow caterpillars with a stick-like growth from their heads

Lightning strikes make collecting a parasitic fungus prized in traditional Chinese medicine a deadly pursuit

In the remote Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, a rare fungus grows inside dead caterpillars. In traditional Chinese medicine, this parasitic fungus is prized for its purported medicinal effects. Known as Ophiocordyceps sinensis – colloquially, caterpillar fungus or “Himalayan gold” – it can fetch astronomical prices on the herbal medicine market: up to US$63,000 per pound. Ophiocordyceps sinensis

GM Chart

3 Reasons to Buy This Top Auto Stock Before It’s Too Late

General Motors (GM 2.10%) may be an afterthought when it comes to investments for many, but it may also be the best automotive stock for investors to get their hands on today. Not only does the company thrive with sales of full-size trucks and SUVs, but it’s making strong progress with electric vehicles (EVs) and

Two adults looking at a laptop.

This Is the Average Social Security Benefit for Early Claimers

If you’re getting your Social Security checks at the earliest age possible, your average benefit may be lower than you’d think. Social Security benefits can be claimed between the ages of 62 and 70. However, every retiree has been given a full retirement age (FRA) based on their birth year. FRA is the age you

0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x