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Shasta County, California

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Profiles

  • PFC Warren Gail Miller (1920 - 1970)
    OREGON PFC INFANTRY WORLD WAR II
  • John Read Hulbert, Jr (1922 - 2004)
    Military service : Sep 17 1942 - Portland, Oregon, United States* Residence : 1930 - Multnomah, Oregon* Residence : 1935 - Same House, ,* Residence : 1940 - Portland City Election Precinct 59, Portland...
  • Michael Marko Medonich (1924 - 1990)
    Reference: Ancestry Genealogy - SmartCopy : Jun 15 2019, 22:50:42 UTC * Reference: U.S. Veterans Burial Sites, 1775 - 2013 - SmartCopy : Jun 15 2019, 23:53:11 UTC
  • Wayne Cecil Wallace (1910 - 1981)
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  • Audrey Estelle Dikes (1908 - 2000)

Shasta County was one of the original counties of California, created in 1850 at the time of statehood. The county was named after Mount Shasta; the name is derived from the English equivalent for the Shasta people. Their population declined in the 1850s due to disease, low birth rates, starvation, killings, and massacres, as White settlers moved in. The name of the tribe was spelled in various ways until the present version was used when the county was established. The 14,179-foot peak of Mt. Shasta is visible throughout most of Shasta County. Originally within the county, it is now part of Siskiyou County, to the north. Parts of the county's territory were transferred to Siskiyou County in 1852, and to Tehama County in 1856.

The Fountain Wind project, proposed by energy firm ConnectGEN LLC, includes up to 71 wind turbines, 679 feet (207 m) tall, with the capacity to generate 216 megawatts of electricity. In 2021, the Shasta County Planning Commission voted unanimously to reject the project's use permit, followed by an appeal to the Shasta County Board of Supervisors that similarly resulted in a 4–1 vote to deny the appeal. Wildfire risks and firefighting challenges, among other issues, were given as a primary reason for the rejection of the project. In early 2023, ConnectGen resubmitted its application to the California Energy Commission under Assembly Bill 205 which established a new certification program for non-fossil-fuel powered plants of 50 megawatts or more and related facilities.

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