Raid On The Buckhorn Club, 1923
Raid On The Buckhorn Club, 1923
Raid On The Buckhorn Club, 1923
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Buckhorn bars have been watering places in Kern County for more than 80
years, and there's been several of them. Today the pine-paneled Buckhorn Bar
and Restaurant is up Grocer Grade at New Cuyama, but there was also a
Buckhorn in the 1950s south of Bakersfield near Union and Chester, and there
was another one in the 1930s just north of Maricopa, about where 33 turns going
out to Taft. That one had ice-cream-parlor chairs, and walls covered with oil tools
and antlers.1
1 Author's interview with Charlie McCardy, West Kern Oil Museum, Taft, CA. March 2004,
and author's interview with Millie Munding, May 2004.
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During Prohibition, Oscar T. Buck ran a Buckhorn Club on Taft Highway
between Elk Hills and Buena Vista Lake. Despite the liquor laws, by 1923 Buck
was doing excellent business … excellent even though Sheriff Cas Walser knew it
was a speakeasy.
Month after month Walser had obtained warrants to raid the fashionable
Bakersfield people, repeatedly tipped him off. 2 Walser and Undersheriff Charlie
National liquor laws hadn't helped the sheriff. Judges in Kern County
expected Walser to show liquid evidence in court, which meant that moments into
a raid an officer had to snatch several bottles before anybody could smash them.
Another challenge to a making a successful arrest on the Buckhorn was the lay of
2 At this time the Westside had entered a boom in drilling. Los Angeles Times, Jun 17,
1923
3 Bakersfield Californian, Jun 30, 1923, p 6, c 1
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the land. The club stood all by itself on a treeless, mostly flat plain, which made it
easy for Buck's men to spot cars on Taft Highway several minutes before they got
to the Buckhorn. Walser couldn't come in behind the club because Buena Vista
Lake was there. Then there there was the matter of the club's floodlights, fenced
For several weeks, undercover officers had been asking around, and each
time they came back with a few more important details-- one of which was the
automatic trap-door in the floor behind the Buckhorn bar. It was just big enough
for a small man to fit through, but that wasn't its purpose. If the club was raided,
the barkeep could spring the trap open and sweep the bottles down into the rocky
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Detectives also learned that the club had few customers on Fridays at
noon when half the watchmen were off duty, and the rest were eating lunch.
Would they notice two unmarked sedans pull into the parking lot?
the big door behind them. A peephole slid open in a second door, and the men
were buzzed through. They took off their hats, loosened their ties, strolled to the
Jarvis set up two glasses but as he started to pour, the first deputy
grabbed for the bottle and his partner raced to open the outside doors. The
barkeep didn't miss a move. In seconds he'd sprung the trap and dumped
everything into the basement. By the time officers rushed in, the counter was
bare.
The only real evidence was a small glass of whiskey, but the situation
improved some after a deputy was lowered through the trapdoor and retrieved a
single, unbroken bottle of booze. It might be enough to take Buck and Jarvis to
court, but even if the district attorney got a prosecution, just one bottle wouldn't
As deputies searched inside, he sent one of his men out back to tie up the
dogs. Turning the corner the officer glanced over at the back door and noticed an
area of freshly-turned dirt. A little poking revealed a wooden box, and that lead to
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the discovery of more boxes. Inside each one were jugs of brandy, a total of 110-
gallons of moonshine. After that, quite some time passed before Buckhorn
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4 Charlie McCardy recalled a Buckhorn on Highway 119. He said it was near Valley Acres
and was on the "old road" to today's golf course. That places the building about where
the Buckhorn was in 1923. In 2004 the author looked at a vacant restaurant at 28323 Taft
Highway, where Hwy 33 makes its turn, but the place didn't seem to have a basement.
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