From its earliest days, Fresno was a violent town

You’ve all heard the old saying there’s nothing new under the sun, right? Well here in the Central Valley, that’s certainly the case. Today on KVPR’s Central Valley Roots, we go back to look at Fresno’s earliest days…and the issue of crime and violence.

You’ve seen the Hollywood stereotype of the lawless frontier town of the old west. While that image is largely fiction, Fresno in the 1870s came very close. Early Fresno resident George Bernhard wrote that when trains would arrive at Sycamore, today known as Herndon, the conductor would give passengers a warning. “Fresno is the next town…you had better get your guns ready.”

Violence was a fact of life in early Fresno. The Fresno Weekly Expositor newspaper said in the 1870s, it was common to see men going to religious and social gatherings with guns in their holsters. Bernhard wrote that in the early days, a shooting before breakfast and another before dinner was not uncommon…

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