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WALKING
TOUR
The National Steinbeck Center offers weekly Literary Walking Tours
in the summer season, led by docent volunteers. The 75 minute tours
cover Steinbeck literary locations in historic Oldtown Salinas,
the city of John Steinbecks birth. Focusing on the downtown
area, this tour visits places like Bells Candy Shop from East
of Eden and the J.E. Steinbeck Feed Store at 332 Main Street (now
The Cherry Bean Coffee Shop) where Johns father tried his
hand at being a shopkeeper.
Other tour locations include: the site of Steinbecks elementary
and high schools, the Courthouse where Steinbecks father worked
as County treasurer, Mullers Funeral Parlor on Main Street
(from East of Eden), the site of the family church, and the Steinbeck
House, his birthplace and boyhood home.
Selected readings from Steinbeck and personal anecdotes from the
oral histories from the Center archives have been incorporated into
the tours. Designed and led entirely by a team of local docent volunteers
who are long time residents, this tour is a great way to establish
the sense of place so crucial to John Steinbecks
works.
Tours have a limit of 12 people on a first come, first served basis.
The route is flat and approximately 1 mile in length. More walking
and bus tours will also be offered during the annual Steinbeck Festival,
held the first full weekend in August. For more information call
(831) 775-4721.
In
his novel East of Eden, Pulitzer Prize winning author John Steinbeck
said of his hometown:
Salinas
was the county seat, and it was a fast growing town. Its population
was due to cross the two thousand mark any time. It was the biggest
town between San Jose and San Luis Obispo, and everyone felt that
a brilliant future was in store
for it
Salinas
was to be John Steinbeck's home for the formative years of his life
and the catalyst for some of the finest literature produced in America
in the twentieth century. Much of Central Avenue is still as it
was in John Steinbeck's day, including many of the changes he witnessed
over time. A number of large dignified turn of the century family
homes remain, many now in commercial rather than residential use.
Some have been listed on the National Register for Historic Places
such as 154 and 146 Central and 66 Capitol. The evolution of changing
tastes and economic conditions are apparent along the residential
Central Avenue as well as the commercial 100-200 blocks of Main
Street which are also included in this district.
This
walking tour begins on Central Avenue at Salinas Street, proceeds
west to Capitol Street, turns right on Capitol Street to Archer,
turns right on Cassidy Street, crosses Central to Cayuga Street,
turns left on Gabilan Street and turns left on Main Street.
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TOUR
LINKS
Alameda
Street
Archer Street
Capitol Street
Cayuga Street
Central Avenue
El Paso Place
Los Laureles
Main Street
Maplepark
Santa Lucia
Walking
Tour Home
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