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Mary Adams was born at Waldo, Ore., in 1861. When she grew up, she moved to Grants Pass to start a dressmaking business while working as a housekeeper to make ends meet.
In 1890, Adams homesteaded 22-acres in Gasquet, Calif., where she built a stage stop and hotel, calling it Adams Station. Her reputation for quality roast beef and chicken dinners followed by delicious fruit pies earned the establishment national recognition with a “Duncan Hines Seal of Approval.”
At age 47, Adams married Peter Peacock. Together, the couple continued to provide generous hospitality, becoming affectionately referred to as “Aunt Mary” and “Uncle Pete.”
Today, the Mary Adams Memorial Bridge spans the Smith River near Gasquet, and a nearby interpretive sign answers the question, “Who was Mary Peacock Adams?” Now you know.
Sources: Del Norte Record, 16 Apr. 1898. http://www.triplicate.com/csp/mediapool/sites/Triplicate/News/story.csp?... Accessed 4 Jan. 2018; "Historical Women of Del Norte County." Ibid, 30 Apr. 2007. Accessed 4 Jan. 2018; "Historical Women of Del Norte County-Updated." Ibid, 16 Feb. 2016; “Who Was Mary Adams Peacock?” Smith River National Recreation Area Interpretive Panel - Redwood Highway 199 - Mary Adams Peacock Memorial Bridge, Gasquet, Calif.; Nicole, Jankowski. "Duncan Hines - The Original Road Warrior Who Shaped Restaurant History" NPR, 26 Mar. 2017, https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2017/03/26/520866833/duncan-hines-t.... Accessed 5 Jan. 2018.