Report on Plague Requests R. Steres
February 2, 2016
105 Monterey Avenue
Request for Plague Replacement. The existing plague reads, "W.H. Murray
1911". The owner, Barry Bedwell, believes it should be "W.H. Murray
1910" and is probably correct.
Photo taken in 1991 (2 yrs. after the first plague was approved).
The tax rolls for 1911 clearly show that it was assessed. The tax rolls for
1910 are not readable. I have access to Xerox copies and to digital copies
but not to the originals. The Assessofs office claims they do not have
access to the originals.
However, a letter written by Adam Weiland and dated 1998 says, "the
house at 105 Monterey was built in late 1909 or early 1910 and first
assessed in 1910". At that time the public had access to the original
records.
»090!2
, OCR Text: Report on Plague Requests R. Steres
February 2, 2016
105 Monterey Avenue
Request for Plague Replacement. The existing plague reads, "W.H. Murray
1911". The owner, Barry Bedwell, believes it should be "W.H. Murray
1910" and is probably correct.
Photo taken in 1991 (2 yrs. after the first plague was approved).
The tax rolls for 1911 clearly show that it was assessed. The tax rolls for
1910 are not readable. I have access to Xerox copies and to digital copies
but not to the originals. The Assessofs office claims they do not have
access to the originals.
However, a letter written by Adam Weiland and dated 1998 says, "the
house at 105 Monterey was built in late 1909 or early 1910 and first
assessed in 1910". At that time the public had access to the original
records.
»090!2
, Heritage Society of Pacific Grove,Historical Collections,Historic Properties of Pacific Grove,MOnterey,105 _ 107 Monterey,MONTEREY_023.pdf,MONTEREY_023.pdf 1 Page 1, Tags: MONTEREY_023.PDF, MONTEREY_023.pdf 1 Page 1
Request Content Removal .
General Content
If you are requesting removal of general content, please fill out the form below and state your
reason for requesting the removal.
To report inappropriate content or copyright concerns, click here.
Newspapers
Newspapers only print Public Information
First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
Newspapers produce and deliver news and information which they feel is important -- most often
from public information such as arrest reports, traffic infractions, accidents, indictments,
lawsuits, jury verdicts, property records, legal notices, and many other sources of information
which is freely available to anyone at any time. Newspaper publishers do not have access to any
information which is not also available to the public at large. All information published in a
newspaper is "public information."
The use of your name in an article does not mean you own it. Newspapers deliver news on all sorts
of public matters which, in addition to information found in the public registers, may include
statements you make to a reporter or official, your photograph, background and other information
provided by you or others, rebuttals, opinions, and other information such as court-ordered
legal notices, and historical and statistical data.
"The Press of the United States of America" is constitutionally protected from interference,
including by the government. If you are an attorney, law enforcement officer, officer of the
court, or other investigator, by law you must reveal that to us.
Request Content Removal : Verify Request
When you submit your request, we will record your IP
address as:
216.73.216.136
Report Content .
Report Content
This is where you can report inappropriate content you find on ArchiveInABox.
If you are looking for the place to Request Content Removal, click here.