Bookstore

All profits from bookstore sales support our non-profit organization. Purchasing a book about Humboldt County History, gifts, or ephemeral items from our bookstore is a great way to support the work we do!

Bookstore

Humboldt Historian Back Issues

Back issues of the Humboldt Historian are available in the bookstore or by phone order. Due to the wide variation in shipping and handling costs, issues cannot be purchased online. Please call (707) 445-4342 during open hours to place your order. Bulk discounts are available!

Book Reviews

New! Instead of the former short descriptions, we now have book reviews by archivist and local author, Pam Service. Check them out for information about our books.

Used Books & Memorabilia

We have added a selection of used books to the website. If you are looking for a particular book and don’t see it, please give us a call at 707-445-4342. We’ll be happy to check the shelves for you!

We have a small selection of vintage memorabilia including booklets from the Ingomar Club (Carson Mansion), the1964-65 Flood, the Humboldt County Centennial, and the dedication of the Humboldt County courthouse. Vintage yearbooks are also available. Please call 707-445-4342 or email bookstore@humboldthistory.org for details and pricing.

If you have used books about Humboldt history that are in good condition and need a new home, please consider donating them to HCHS as an addition to our library, or for resale. This makes history even more available to the public while helping fund an institution that furthers that cause.

Shipping and Pick-Up Information

We generally mail books on the Friday following receipt of your order. If you choose to pick up your book(s), you will receive an emailed notification when your order is ready.

Book Prices

Members receive a 10% discount on all regularly priced books. Please do not use this option if you are not a member.

OR … consider becoming a member!

 

Book of the Month
Saving the North Coast Redwoods
by Susan J.P. O’Hara

20% off during the month of February 2025


 
 

Two Peoples, One Place

Two Peoples, One Place

from $26.96

      Those of us interested in history soon learn that it is nearly impossible to synthesize the history of even a small community into a single book.  Those books we carry at the Historical Society bookstore usually focus on one period or aspect of local history.  Few authors can handle anything more in one volume.  Ray Rafael and Freeman House pull it off in Two Peoples, One Place.

      They are helped by the fact that this is a big book, some 360 pages enriched with many illustrations and maps. However, that does not explain the book review in the San Francisco Chronical calling this "a community history that ranks with some of the best published during the last 40 years."

       The explanation is that these are knowledgeable historians with approachable style thoroughly presenting a fascinating and complex chunk of history.  And by focusing on a limited span from "time immemorial" to 1882 they could manage all the intertwining historical elements.

       The first portion of this book deals with the geologic and environmental nature of this area and the Indigenous people who claimed it for thousands of years.  The archeological and cultural information is handled sensitively, emphasizing the Native ties to the land and the responses when other cultures imposed themselves. The early "discoveries" by the Russians and Spanish are presented  followed by the tidal influx of Euro-American gold seekers and settlers and the near decimation of Native lives and cultures.

    Those next decades are explored in refreshing variety, detailing business enterprises from timber to retail while highlighting notable characters and everyday people, major events  and daily life as well as the persistence of native culture. Throughout the book, wonderful and varied illustrations give immediacy to the narrative, while the endnotes are incredibly useful.

       It is impossible to summarize or properly praise this book in one short review. However the North Coast Journal did a good job in theirs.  "A fascinating and incredibly well researched account of early life in our community. Everyone who lives here should have a copy of this book.  Buy one for your neighbors, one for your kids' teachers, one for your school library, and stash one in your guest room to satisfy your friend's curiosity about how this place came to be."

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Tankoak Tree Front.jpg Tankoak Tree Back.jpg

The Tanoak Tree: An Environmental History of a Pacific Coast Hardwood

from $27.00
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Mills of Humboldt County

from $22.49
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In the Land of the Grasshopper Song USED

$11.95
From Plowshare to the Palace: A Frontier Family in Ferndale (USED)

From Plowshare to the Palace: A Frontier Family in Ferndale (USED)

$10.00
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Eel River Valley and Its People USED

$15.00