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Clayton Club Saloon
Clayton’s oldest continuously operating business, now known as The Clayton Club Saloon, is located on Main Street (6096 Main Street, Clayton, California). It was built by Jacob (Jake) Rhine circa 1873; Jake operated a Hotel/Saloon and ice cream parlor at the corner of Main and Morris Streets from 1874 - 1898. In 1898, the saloon was called The National Saloon. This popular saloon has continuously served the public and survived Prohibition, the Great Depression, several ownerships and name changes.

Inside National Saloon - circa 1903
In 1905, Carl Berendsen bought the saloon and it was renamed the Clayton Club. Berendsen added a building that he had shipped from San Francisco to Martinez and then transported to Clayton. The building was used as a saloon, a restaurant and the family’s home until Prohibition in the 1920s. From 1920-1933 the Clayton Club survived as a café, renamed the Clayton Café, and social club. During this prohibition period the Clayton Café offered non-alcoholic drinks, meals and entertainment.

Clayton Cafe (Club) circa 1920's
In 1959, Jennie and Carl Milano bought the Clayton Club, and in 1996 her daughter, Dolores Austin, restored Clayton’s longest surviving saloon and business. The current proprietors, Kim and Darrell Young, continue to operate the Clayton Club in its long tradition of lively, western hospitality.
On October 6, 2002, a historical marker was dedicated in front of the Clayton Club Saloon. The bronze marker, which is located on Main Street in front of the Clayton Club, is mounted on a monument constructed of stones from the Mother Lode country. It was constructed by the Joaquin Murrieta Chapter 13, E Clampus Vitus, under the direction of X Noble Grand Humbug Jon Wilson of Concord.
Lady remembers early Clayton days
By Harry Green
Brentwood News
Staff Writer
BRENTWOOD — Anna (Berendsen) Berkheimer has lived in
Brentwood since 1981, but Clayton will always be her home.
Berkheimer was born in Clayton, approximately 22 miles
west of Brentwood in 1913, in a
building that is known as the
Clayton Club, a country and western bar.
Her father had the building
shipped down river from San
Francisco to Martinez and transported to Clayton.
The building was used as a saloon, a restaurant and the family's home until Prohibition in
1920.

National Saloon 1910
"Before Prohibition my father
ran the saloon and mother took
care of the dining room. If the
women wanted a drink, their
husbands would bring it to them
in the dining room because at
that time it was considered improper for women to enter the
saloon. The names for women
who did go into the saloon
weren't very nice," Berkheimer
said.
Once Prohibition took effect,
Berkheimer's father opened picnic grounds along Marsh Creek
known as Indian Village.
Berkheimer was the daughter
of Carl Berendsen, who emigrated
to the United States from Denmark at the age of 17. Her
mother's parents were also from
Denmark.
"My father spoke seven languages but he didn't allow a foreign language spoke in the house
except when he and my mother
didn't want us children to under
stand what they were discussing.
He said he came to America to
be an American citizen and we
should speak English," she said.
Berkheimer had four brothers
and three sisters and all of them
kept busy as children playing
throughout the nearby hills.
"There weren't many homes
around, so we played a lot of
games with each other. We'd
ride on pieces of cardboard down
the hillside and played kick-the-can a lot," she said. "We'd also
put a board between two wagon
wheels, tie a rope on the wheels,
and ride on the board all the way
down the hill. If we wouldn't
jump off or steer the thing right
we would have ran right into a
barbed wire fence," she said.

Clayton Club Saloon 2002
In 1926 her father drowned in
Marsh Creek after driving his
vehicle off the bridge and her
mother subsequently married
Frank Schwendel, who was born
and raised in the Marsh Creek
area.
Schwendel owned 1,200 acres
between Brentwood and Clayton
and Berkheimer assisted with
many of the chores on the ranch.
"I learned how to milk cows,
drive a tractor, and quite a few
other things, but I really enjoyed
it even though it was hard
work," she said.
Berkheimer recalled her childhood as a time of family unity.
"Until I was 18 years old, any
time I went out on a date I had a
chaperone, usually one of my
older brothers. And, when you
went to a dance you stayed right
there inside until it was over and
then you went straight home,"
she said.
"Today families go in all directions. The parents go one way
and do their thing while each of
the children do what they please.
A lot of families don't enjoy the
togetherness of going on activities and playing games togeth
er," she said.
Berkheimer recently visited
the building that once served as
the Berendsen home, proudly
pointing out a picture of her father with a few friendly patrons
that hangs on the wall behind the
bar.
"There are a lot of memories
here, a lot of memories," she
said.
(Reprinted from an article that ran in the Brentwood News - August 13, 1987)
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