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Nut Tree train. The original Nut Tree opened on July 3, 1921 [1] [2] on the Lincoln Highway (old U.S. Route 40).It was created by Helen and Ed "Bunny" Power as a small roadside fruit stand, and built near the site of Helen's childhood home ('Harbison House' dating from 1907), which she and her husband purchased from her parents not long after their 1920 marriage.
The Harbison House remained on the grounds of the Nut Tree until the original Nut Tree was closed in 1996, when responsibility for the house was given to the Vacaville Museum. [1] The Harbison House is currently located at the Nut Tree Harbison Event Center on property that the city's former redevelopment agency used to own. [2]
The railroad's main station was the Nut Tree Toy Shop where riders would purchase their tickets. Famous riders of the Nut Tree train included Ronald Reagan, Shirley Temple, Fred MacMurray, California governor Pat Brown, champion boxer Max Baer, Bozo the Clown, and Julia Child. [1] [2] Following the 1955 expansion of the Nut Tree Railroad to the ...
Pages in category "Vacaville, California" ... California's 11th State Assembly district; E. ... Nut Tree; Nut Tree Railroad; P.
Local bus service is provided by Vacaville City Coach on lines 1, 3, 4, 5, and 6 which connect the center to Leisure Town, downtown Vacaville, Browns Valley, Kaiser Vacaville, Nut Tree, and Vacaville Transit Plaza.
Don R. Birrell (1922–2006) was director of the Crocker Art Museum in Sacramento, California, from 1951 to 1953, and was the design director for the Nut Tree in Vacaville, California, from 1953 [1] until his retirement in 1990. [2]
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Harbison House (Vacaville, California), located on the site of the Nut Tree; Harbison House (Scotts Station, Kentucky), listed on the National Register of Historic Places; Harbison House (Shelbyville, Kentucky), listed on the National Register of Historic Places