LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. m*W l n — UNITED AMEEICA. SANTRAKOSCO JSEW& PFBOSMING COo AND ALL BOOKSELLERS. PRICE S5 CENTS ' Sj^iFRASTCIS C O . as a o . SEE OTWEK COMER V DRY GOODS Clothing HATS ^The Largest* Assortment (TRADE MARK.) PATENTED JUNE 13, 1876. These Goods have been sold during the past three years. All who have tt-om them pronounce the mode of fastening ABSOLUTELY PERFECT The many annoyances connected with the old system of Button Gloves are entirely overcome, and the following advantages secured : 1st— The perfect ease and rapidity with which it is laced. 2nd— Its adjustability to fit the different sized wrists. 3rd — The advantage gained by gradually straining the Kid, instead of the old system which ruins so many pairs the first time buttoned. 4th — Strength of Hooks and mode of clinching them. The fastening will outlast any glove, which is a very rare occurrence with buttons. Independent of Improvement in, fastening the quality is guaranteed equal, if not superior to any other glove in the tnarTcet. FOR SALE BY rywYvwy^fVWYYJ FANCY GOODSi Boots&Shoes* CAPS TIHIIE 03STIE PEICE Cor. Pacific Avenue and Church Street, IN THE CITY. CASH HOUSE. &c SONT, Santa Cruz, Cai. For full and reliable information respecting Santa Cruz & Monterey COUNTIES and the PACIFIC COAST generally, Address the Real Estate Exchange & Mart, SANTA CRUZ, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A. [Copyright 1880, by Hknry Meyrick.] Santa Cruz and Monterey ILLUSTRATED HAHD-BOOK. Compiled by HENRY MEYEICK. INTRODUCTORY. The object of this little book is to supply really reliable informa- tion as to the advantages and enjoyments to be found on a bit of sheltered bay coast, four hours from San Francisco, easily accessible by two railroads and numerous steamers, at moderate fares. The labor of the compiler has been a great pleasure ; fortunate in finding kind and valuable assistance from the best authorities, and fortunate, above all, in his material, knowing that, in attempting to describe the beauties and advantages of Santa Cruz and Monterey, he can well afford to understate his case, and so avoid all possible risk of disappointing even the most exacting of readers who may afterwards visit either the " Long Branch " or the " Newport " of the Pacific. The shortcomings of this first edition are numerous ; many important points have been merely glanced at, some overlooked altogether, but the little book will be found absolutely free from intentional exaggeration or distortion of facts. SANTA CRUZ COUNTY. Santa Cruz County, of which the City of Santa Cruz is the county seat, has an area of a little over 300,000 acres, about one-third being fertile valley, plateau and rolling hill land, and at least 40,000 acres bottom land of the very richest description. The county has some fifty miles of coast along the ocean and the Bay of Monterey, running back to the summits of the Santa Cruz range of mountains, and forming an amphitheatre of almost perfect aspect, facing the sea on the south and protected from N. W. to E. by high, well wooded hills, the highest point, Loma Prieta, some Tr •40 fSfrl SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. 3 4,000 feet above the sea ; the whole area being in full enjoyment of a S. S. E. to W. exposure. High ridges and small valleys, gorges and canons run down from the mountains, partly clothed in redwood, pine, fir and various ever- greens, as well as oak, maple and many other varieties of deciduous trees. Scattered through this mountain forest region, are many lumber mills and small agricultural settlements, many of the latter more or less devoted to fruit and wine growing. .Most of the orchards and vineyards are still in their infancy, but every one gives proof that all the valuable fruits of temperate and semi-tropical latitudes will grow in great perfection on these hill-sides, and may, very soon, cover sufficient area to warrant the starting of large fruit canning and drying establishments, to supply remote and less-favored spots with fruit of maximum excellence at minimum prices. Railroad and other facilities of transport are now being rapidly improved, and soon fresh fruit of early varieties and finest quality can be rushed away to the Eastern States, long before they can be ripened there, finding ready market and obtaining good prices, from the richest community the world has ever known, now being developed in the United States of America. Countless streams run down from these sylvan regions, emptying into the ocean and bay close to Santa Cruz, affording good facilities for the construction of roads along their valleys, so that the city has comparatively easy access to vast stores of valuable timber and fuel for manufacturing purposes ; also, to numerous quarries of a superior limestone, of which is made the very finest lime known to commerce; and to forests of " tan-bark " oak, and of various trees, from which the finest charcoal, suitable for gunpowder making and other pur- poses, can be produced. All this seaward slope is verdant and crop-producing, even in the ' driest seasons, and, in this respect; differs entirely from the Santa Clara slope, on the other or inland side of the mountains. Intending settlers would do well to study this important point, and look for southern seaward exposures, protected, if possible, from the drying heats and winds of the inland valleys with N.W. to N.E. exposures. At present, excellent farms in sunny situations, with ample supplies of timber and water, producing ' ! 'good crops every season without irrigation" many of them with more or less excellent land, still uncleared, can be bought at prices which must prove profitable to the judicious investor. Some portions of such land, still partially 4 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. covered with brush, will amply repay clearing and produce in great perfection the finest fruits, tomatoes, early potatoes, etc., frost being almost unknown in many such locations. These hill-side farms produce wheat, barley, oats, corn, potatoes, flax, sweet potatoes, hops, apples, pears, peaches, plums, cherries, almonds, grapes, and all the small fruits, in perfection and abund- ance, while fine specimens of orange and lemon trees, figs and olives are to be found in sheltered spots round almost every homestead, proving the extraordinary capacity of both soil and climate ; and the best experience goes to show that, for people of limited capital, this class of mixed farming on a moderate scale is not only the safest, but also the most profitable on the average, and surely such fair prospects of profit amid such surroundings, where outdoor occupation is a luxury at all seasons of the year, ought to satisfy the most fastidious searcher after a home. For the produce of such a farm Santa Cruz iife. sc 3^ "Anxious Moments— Waiting for a Roller." itself furnishes a good market, especially in the summer season, when its 10,000 or more visitors create quite a demand for first-class small farm produce of every description, and, in this district, the owner of the little farm, well tilled, who "feeds off" a good proportion of his produce, and sends it to this home market in the forms of beef, pork, milk, butter, poultry, eggs and fruit, will be easier in mind and pocket than the big farmer who goes in for growing grain, or any exclusive crop, by the i?iile. PAJARO VALLEY. The richest land in the country is to be found in the valley of the Pajaro river, which forms the southern boundary of the county. This valley, over twelve miles long and seven miles wide, may be called garden land, of the richest and deepest kind, some portions seeming still inexhaustible after twenty-five years of cultivation. Of course, such land would command good prices in almost any loca- tion, but this little happy valley is situated close to the sea, with a ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. 5 railroad running right through it, and is made up of beautiful fields and orchards, deep alluvial bottoms and fertile hill-sides ; winding streams fringed with trees ; several beautiful lakelets, like diamonds set in emerald • a range of mountains to the north, and the dancing surf to the south ■ while the fertility of the soil is proof against the* driest seasons. CITY OF SANTA CRUZ. The city of Santa Cruz is situated close to the 37th parallel of N. latitude, looking out on the bay of Monterey and the Pacific Ocean. The big Panama steamers may often be seen passing, and Monte- rey is generally visible, twenty miles across the bay, looking, in clear w r eather and early morning, more like five miles distant, with its white beach shining in the sun, and a few of its houses visible through a glass. Behind Monterey looms up the Santa Lucia range of moun- tains, 3,000 to 4,000 feet high, and to the left, or south-east, the Gabilan mountains stand in bold relief, guarding, as it were, the entrance to the Salinas river from the bay of Monterey. Sixty miles to the east, and beyond the Pajaro valley, are seen the Pacheco and other peaks in the Mount Diablo range. To the north-east and twenty miles distant, stands Mount Bache, (" Loma Prieta,") the high- est point in the Santa Cruz mountains. Leaving the little city and mounting the hills in any direction the scene changes and enlarges every few yards, and from any fair emi- nence, looking out to sea and up and down the coast to the right and left, we feast our eyes on the green slope, dotted with spreading live oaks, clustering orchards and white farm houses, while directly below us lies the little city* looking like some New England town washed ashore on this distant coast, every object in its tree lined streets dis- tinctly visible ; its half dozen churches, its splendid public school house, with several other handsome public buildings, and its hun- dreds, approaching thousands, of happy looking homes, each one separate and distinct and fairly embowered in roses and flowering shrubs, roses in bushes, roses in trees, roses in clumps, roses in hedges, roses in arcades, roses, roses everywhere and blooming al- most every month in the year. For roses, Santa Cruz is certainly the Nice and Mentone of the Pacific, and at least one Italian traveller has pronounced the combination of alpine, marine and woodland scenery on this coast to be quite equal to any part of the celebrated Corniche Road. The sidewalk on Pacific avenue, the main street of Santa Cruz, is 6 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. almost 20 feet wide, and nearly a mile long from the Post-office to the bathing beach, and along this sidewalk, during the next few Summers, a large percentage of the very best people in California must certainly promenade more or less. SANTA CRUZ BEACH. The Bathing Beach is of the finest sand, almost level, smooth and clean to perfection ; there are good bath-houses, furnishing W^ 'Going for a Header." bathers with everything necessary for bathing, and many luxuries and comforts. Sunny dressing rooms, bathing costumes of the latest, most becoming and comfortable styles, and obliging attendants always in readiness to assist bathers, and serve hot coffee or other light refreshments if desired. The temperature of the surf during the bathing season is 5 8° to 62°, while at Santa Barbara it is 6o° to 66°, the variation being exactly proportionate to the difference in the atmospheric temperature of the two places. CLIMATE OF SANTA CRUZ. While the climate is mild, it is really bracing and invigorating, in fact stimulating, to a considerable degree ; it is comparatively free from the colder fogs and higher winds of San Francisco. It will be found warm and dry enough to compel but little or no confine- ment in doors, and while it is remarkably free from extremes of heat and cold, (highest temperature in three years, 88°; lowest, 31 ,) it has just sufficient range of temperature to give the zest of variety without the violent changes which endanger health by shocking the vital system — no excess of heat, fostering indolence, or of warm humidity, relaxing and debilitating. Above all, never a hot night, a good blanket being the last but not the least enjoyment of a happy day in Santa Cruz County at any ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. 7 season of the year — no searing frosts, no scorching heats, no tempests. " Where simply to feel that we breathe, that we live, Were worth the best joy that life elsewhere can give." All the best attributes of fruitful, sunny, salubrious California are certainly to be found on the shores of the Bay of Monterey. WINDS. The cool dry '" trade winds" that blow from the northwest pretty constantly during the summer months, pass Santa Cruz a little to seaward, across the Bay and up the Salinas Valley. The timber- covered mountains, on the northerly side, break and temper these winds, while the strong air-current, passing a mile or two outside, produces an eddy, near the center of which, during a great part of time, stands the City of Santa Cruz. These important points, the movements of the air-currents, have been closely observed by Prof. Davidson of the Coast Survey, These circling currents are always mild, warmed by the land and sun, and they are highly favorable to vegetation. Santa Barbara has the advantage of similar currents. With a strong " nor' wester " blowing down the Pacific, its currents just touching the capes and promontories, the " white caps " distinct- ly visible a mile or two outside, we find Santa Cruz and its entire bay shore enjoying, if not a perfect calm, at most a mild, gentle breeze. Of course, at certain seasons, generally preceding or during heavy rains, Santa Cruz gets a good, steady, wholesome and pleasant blow, usually from the S. or S. E., but the general climate will be found exactly as described, quite free from excessive or bad winds, especially such as the siroccos which blow from the deserts eastward ; indeed they are seldom felt north of Santa Barbara, certainly never on the bay of Monterey. FOGS. The morning fogs, which are not unusual during the early summer season, are caused by a cold current of air penetrating a warm one, or vice versa, the vapor contained in the warmer body of air is con- densed, becoming cloud on or near the surface of the earth ; the condensation of this vapor, giving out its heat, usually renders this so called fog mild in temperature, and, to most people, pleasant and refreshing. It is really not fog af all, but cloud or pure white mist, warmer and much less wetting than a " Scotch mist," and differing 8 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. entirely from the true British fog, facetiously spelled ' ( smog," because always colored and strongly impregnated with smoke, a mixture as un- wholesome as it is unpleasant. Santa Cruz summer fog is refreshing alike to animal and vegetable life, bringing healthful roses to the cheeks of beauty, and preserving the verdure of the surrounding hill-sides through a great part of the summer, long after higher tem- peratures and drier atmospheres have parched up all vegetation in the inland valleys. As soon as the temperature of the different bodies of air are equal- ized, the mist disappears, leaving all nature refreshed by the moisture, and prepared to enjoy thoroughly the bright and balmy sunshine which always follows. During almost every night succeeding a hot day, this delicious sea mist sets in, enwrapping us perhaps from midnight until eight or nine o'clock in the morning, cooling, moistening, and refreshing every- thing out of doors. SEA BATHING SEASON. The fashionable season at Santa Cruz is from about the istof May to the ist of October, but the enjoyable season, the season of good climate, and even of sea bathing, may be said to last from the ist 'Just once More!" day of January to the 31st day of December inclusive. In stormy winters the sea bathing is more uncertain than in the summer months ; for a few days, or sometimes for a week or two, the rough- ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. 9 ness of the sea or heavy rains may interfere with the surf bather, but as good and enjoyable bathing may often be had in midwinter as at midsummer, and the air and water will both be found as pleasant on many days in March and November as in any months of the year. The extreme variation between the winter and summer tempera- ture of the surf is only a few degrees, so there is much less difference between the temperatures of the air and the water in winter than in summer, which sensibly reduces the shock of the first plunge. HEALTH. A few extracts from the report of an experienced physician, pub- lished in the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, No. 14, Vol. 54, * 9 "Sometimes Three ARE Company." may not be out of place here. After describing the varieties of soil and the geological formations, he says : " There are many mineral springs in these mountains, some already having a good reputation for medicinal virtues ; there is generally a large percentage of lime, sodium and iron, in the form of sulphates and carbonates ; some have, in addition to a small quantity of soda, borax and iron, what are called ' magnetic ' properties, probably obtained by passing over magnetic iron ore. These latter springs must be considered valuable on account of their stimulating and tonic effects. Steel implements become magnetic by remaining a short time in the water. Soft, clear, cold water, almost free from solutions, is abundant almost everywhere in this region, issuing often in large springs from the mountain sides. Aside from all other tests of climatic character — character of more value than thermometer, hygrometer, wind or rain gauges, is the vegetation of a country that will tell us what the cli- mate is now and what it has been in ages past. Nearly all this re- gion is covered with a luxurious vegetation. The number of species 10 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. included in this small area is comparatively very large. There are about fifty species of what might be called forest trees. Some of these trees measure twenty feet in diameter and three hundred feet in height, and are one thousand to eighteen hundred years old. A large proportion are evergreen, and they include redwood, pine, fir, oak, poplar, alder, buckthorn, dogwood, maple, buckeye, madrona, manzanita, sycamore, bay tree, etc. These give an index to the other lesser vegetation. "Looking out to Sea through the Natural Bridge, Santa Cruz." The mean annual temperature is 59.5° F., and the months of De- cember, January and February give a mean of 52 , while July, Au- gust and September give a mean of 62 F. With occasional excep- tions, the same kind of clothing may be worn all the year round with- out discomfort. The mean annual rainfall is twenty-three inches, and from one-third to one-half more rain falls near the summits of the mountains than at the sea level ; hence, the springs do not be- come dry. Snow falls on these summits in some winters, more or less, but seldom at any place in the county does the thermometer fall as low as 30 F. ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. 1 1 Humidity is greatest at the beach or sea level, gradually diminish- ing as we go inland, so one may select almost any degree of moist- ure. The wind that blows ill or good, that motion of the air, fickle and inconstant, yet so important to invalids, deserves particular men- tion in connection with this locality. From April to November we are more or less subject to the influ- ence of the N.W. trade winds, accompanying the Japan ocean "A Quartette." current, which come down the coast from the direction of the Aleutian Islands, including the circuit of Alaska, and which help to- create an even temperature of about 42 ° F. for a long distance above or north of the Farralone Islands, but when they come within the latitude of the Bay of Monterey these air currents expand more rapidly, and, as their moisture has been mostly precipitated in the north, they now, by reason of expansion, take up from the region over which they pass the moisture from water, vegetation and air, and with them is borne along a large proportion of the fresh salt sea air, or watery vapor of these southern latitudes, hence a humid or sultry atmosphere cannot exist within the circuit of this air -current. As the Pacific Coast, from Puget Sound to the " Golden Gate," is an almost closed wall parallel with the flow of the Japan Current,, having few wind gaps, the stream of air is compressed and flows with considerable rapidity. When a gate or opening occurs, the cur- rent is forced through and spreads out on either side, mingling with the land air. This double motion sets up a series of eddying cur- rents, so that when, on the ocean, the north-westerly wind is tossing the "white caps" about, inland there is an opposite current mildly 12 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. flowing in circuits, according to the conformation of the land, and this eddying current is mild and genial and refreshing — an air delightful to breathe. It carries enough ozone to purify the little basins, valleys and recesses along the coast, and has force enough to sweep away any malaria, yet so mild as not to irritate the most sensi- tive lungs. In such a climate epidemics are rare and of short duration. Im- mediately on the coast, catarrhal affections prevail at times, and consumptives with strong catarrhal tendencies will do well to keep a little inland at a good elevation, say 1,200 to 2,000 feet above the sea, and in winter, when southerly winds prevail, living down near the coast becomes better for invalids of the class named. A com- pilation of the death rate of twelve of our largest cities and towns of California, including Santa Cruz, gives a mean annual mortality of 16 to each 1,000 inhabitants. This is a favorable showing com- pared with the Eastern States and cities in Europe, where the "mor- tality is from 20 to 30 per- 1,000. Santa Cruz, with its population of over 5,000, gives an annual mean of only a fraction over 8, and of course this includes many invalids in advanced stages of disease, whose deaths go to swell the mortality list. This place should become a favorite winter resort for invalids, as the mild southerly winds which prevail during the winter, often bringing showers, are always warm and they have a pretty even temperature of 62 ° F. at or near the beach. The air becomes cooler as we ascend the mountains, at the rate of one degree for every 250 feet, so we can select any reasonable degree of mild temperature. Many invalids would certainly not be benefited by coming here from long distances ; some persons and some diseases may be found for whom all these 'Caught Dripping. conditions, so generally desirable, may not be exactly favorable, but if there is an accessible place in the world, combining as many or more of the natural essentials of a health -giving-and-health-restoring ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. 13 resort than the shores of Monterey Bay, the person who will make it known to mankind will, at least, deserve the blessings of all health seekers." TROUT FISHING. Since the first settlement of California, Santa Cruz county has been known as the fisherman's paradise of the Pacific Coast, abound- ing in first rate trout streams. Within a range of thirty miles of coast, extending from Aptos on the south to Pigeon Point on the north-west, there are upwards of twenty streams rising in the moun- tains and emptying into the ocean, and into any of them the skillful angler may cast his line with a generally safe prospect of a catch. Mountain brook trout of the speckled variety, abound in all the creeks heading in the Santa Cruz mountains, and, at certain seasons, are very plentiful in the lagoons at the mouths of those streams. The lagoons at the outlets of the Laguna and Waddell creeks are during the summer months alive with fish, and in these places ladies and children can fish successfully without danger or fatigue. In these lagoons, and others of the same kind, fine salmon trout are plentiful in their season, and are often captured far up the streams, having worked their passage during the fall, or spawning season. Splendid catches are frequently made on these mountain streams. On one authentic occasion a hundred and fifty fine trout were taken within a couple of hours out of a tributary of the Soquel creek. A number of the best trout streams are situated within easy walking distance of Santa Cruz : The San Lorenzo, running right through the city, the Branciforte creek, emptying into the San Lorenzo, inside the city limits, the Soquel, Aptos and Zeyante, within eight miles of town, and distant still farther the Newell, Boulder, Bean, Bear, Majors', Laguna, San Vicente, Scott's, Big, Little, and Waddell creeks with their tributaries, and all of these afford good fishing, generally, through their entire length. Higher up in the mountains, on the head waters and tributaries of all these streams, the fish are smaller but more plentiful, and up there the more adventurous followers of " the gentle craft," will find a few days' good sport amidst grand and varied scenery, for through this region the scenery is just as good as the fishing, and the true and enthusiastic angler, always a lover of Nature and the beautiful, can feast his eyes and heart on the picturesque, as he fills his basket with the " speckled beauties," forgetting all fatigue in the midst of good sport and delightful scenery. H SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. The favorite baits are " angle- worms," found in moist ground, and " sand-fleas," easily obtained by digging in the sea sand. Flies take us into science and out of our unscientific province. OCEAN FISHING. Along the cliffs, from the points of jutting rocks, and from the wharves, good fishing is constantly to be had ; perch of various kinds, smelt, tom-cod, sea-bass, rock-fish, and one of the finest and "gamest" of sea fishes, the barracuda, is frequently taken here by trolling. To enjoy deep-sea fishing it is only necessary to make an Triton and Minnows. arrangement for a visitor's seat in the safe and commodious boat of some obliging Santa Cruz or Soquel fisherman, and go with him to his fishing grounds, from one half to three miles from shore, where he catches some of the choicest fish supplied to the San Francisco and other markets, including the following, with many others: Eastern shad, one to five pounds weight, only four years in those waters. Pompinoes, a delicacy celebrated amongst epicures, ^ to 1^2 pounds weight. Mackerel, two kinds, i to 5 pounds weight. Sole, weighing x /> to 3 pounds each. Halibut, 50 to 75 pounds. Sea bass, three kinds, weights 1 to 75 pounds each. Bonita, an excellent fish like mackerel, 10 to 14 pounds. Barracuda, better still, 3 to 8 pounds. Flounders, 5 to 8 pounds. Sea trout, 1 to 2 pounds. ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. I 5 Blue fish, i to 8 pounds. Smelt, three kinds, all good. Sardines, very abundant at .times. Crabs of splendid size and quality can always be taken in reason- ably smooth water from the wharves with little baited crab nets. This crab is to most people a delicious luxury. Sea bass and barracuda are caught from March to October. Also the rightful king of food fishes, the Salmon Trout, from i to 10 pounds weight, as well as big Salmon of excellent quality, 20 to 40 pounds weight, and the regular retail price of choice fish delivered at the doors of consumers every morning by obliging fishermen is 6 to 10 cents per pound. WILD FLOWERS. And this "paradise of the angler" is surely also the " promised land," or happy hunting ground of the naturalist, the botanist and the florist. The herbaceous flowering plants of this region are so numerous that we can only speak briefly of a few members of some prominent families. The Buttercups are represented by the Ranunculus Calif omicus , which, during the whole year, may be found blooming in moist, grassy places. A Clematis may be seen climbing over trees and bushes, along the margins of creeks, and when the white, silky flowers are gone, the fruiting of this creeper, with its long white tails (1 to 2 inches), gives the tree over which it twines a beautiful appear- ance during the winter months. We have the little "wind flower," Anemone Nemorosa, so much loved in the East; here it grows larger and none the less beautiful. Of the Barberries we have three or four shrubby plants, all "worthy members" of that family, of which some are used in medi- cine and others bear edible berries. The Poppy family is represented by three or four beautiful species worthy of cultivation, the Eschscholtzia and two species of Platy- stigma being among them. There are four species of beautiful violets, three in the woods and one in the fields, and two species of " Spring Beauty " are found in abundance. The Lupines are numerous and nearly all handsome — about ten species of the forty or fifty known to belong to California. We have also a large proportion of the clovers — ten out of the twenty-six credited to California; many of them are showy and singular in shape, and nearly all furnish good forage. Wild peas abound, and cattle fatten on them in the mountain ranges. Two wild Roses are l6 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. found, one kind in the woods and the other in the open fields and vales, and they are both very fragrant and both beautiful. Evening Primroses are numerous and two or three kinds are well worthy of cultivation, notably Zauschneria, Clarkia, and one or two species of Oenothera and Godetia. Twining over trees and undergrowth is a vine somewhat like a cu- cumber ; it is Megarrhiza, commonly known as " big root." It bears- iVt-^z^} " What are the Wild Waves Saying ?■' a fruit about the size of a peach, covered with prickles, and the root is often twelve to fifteen inches in diameter and four or five feet long, while the vine itself may be fifty feet long. Another vine common here is a Convolvulus C. occidentalism with white flowers, large and handsome. Conspicuous along the shaded streams and moist hill-sides, are several species of the " Monkey flower," Mimulus Douglassi. M. luteies, M. Moschatus (the musk plant), and on dry, grassy hills the M. glutinosus, while with the last, and about moist cliffs, grows the Collinsia bicolor, a beautiful flower, often cultivated. Amongst the wild flowering shrubs, the fragrant and beautiful Cal- ifornia Lilac, Creanothus, is conspicuously abundant both on the hill- sides and in the valleys, and there are several species, mostly with pale blue flowers. But the glory of the woodsides and openings in bloom and per- fuming the air all the year round, is the thrice lovely Azalea ; its gorgeous beauty and fragrance cannot be described. Alas ! that it does not submit kindly to cultivation. FERNS. In the woods and mountains about the Bay of Monterey a large variety of ferns abound, and they are all beautiful, and many of ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. 1 7 them worthy of cultivation. So far some 15 species and several va- rieties have been found. Some little nooks, shaded and moist with springs, yield 8 or 10 species, within an area of half an acre. These plants add much to the beauty and attractiveness of woods, brooks and hillsides. On moist rocks, logs and roots of trees near the beach, and further back, a California Polypodium — somewhat like the Eastern species — may be found in abundance. The "gold" or "silver back" is everywhere, and no fern is more attractive. On the cliffs of sandstone or metamorphic rocks bordering many creeks, a rare and beautiful little fern is found, commonly known as the " Lace fern." There are 3 species of the " cliff fern " (Pellsea^). One is known as the Bird's foot fern. This is found on sunny hillsides, growing in the loose sand among rocks and bushes. The Pteris or common brake is abundant everywhere, forming tall and dense thickets in many places. There are two species of "Maiden-hair" ferns, not excelled in beauty by any foreign variety. An exquisite Lomaria is somewhat rare, but pays well the trouble of finding it in deep, cool canyons. The Woodwardia is very abundant, but none the less handsome, growing about springs, 5 to 6 feet high. 'A Beaeh Boulder." There is an Asplenium, large and fine, found near the mountain streams. Of the Aspidium or Shield fern there are 3 or 4 species, all desirable. 1 8 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. The Bladder fern (Cystopteris) a delicate and pretty little plant, is also not uncommon on cliffs bordering streams. To lovers of ferns our region is particularly attractive- " A GLORIOUS SIGHT." From March to June a magnificent variety of wild flowers array the plains and hillsides in large solid patches of brilliant colors, pre- senting one of the most gorgeous spectacles imaginable, and filling the air with a combination of wild and delicate perfumes. The va- rieties of the flowers are beyond counting ; in such a glorious pres- ence, enchanted by color and fragrance, we forget science, names and Just Four of Us." classes, barely recognizing many " old world " favorites in these big- ger and brighter forms which they attain here in their native wilds. The Lupine, the Orthocarpus, Grindelia, Wyethia, Eritrichium, Madia, the Malvastrum, and many others mingle colors and fragrance in this magic field of the " cloth of beauty." In July, August and September, after these beauties have passed away, the forest flora are in perfection ; in shady nooks by the cool refreshing streams, under alders, bay trees, buckeyes, redwoods and oaks. Then and there will be found the numerous family of Ferns, Wood Mosses and Li- chens, and the Lilies, Saxifrages, Equiseta, Orchids, Sedges, Holy Grass, and Liverworts. ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. 19 The birds sing joyously from the tree-tops, and the brook warbles contentedly on its happy way to the sea ; the glancing trout tempt us to a cast or two of the fatal line, but, under the gentling influen- ces of such peaceful surroundings, we actually resist the temptation and scamper away to fill our fish-basket with floral treasures for home decoration, leaving the speckled tempters a longer day. WINES. On the Santa Cruz mountains, eight to ten miles back from the coast, and 1,200 to 1,500 feet above sea level, some of the finest common red wine of the world is now being made from the old Mis- sion grape. This is the genuine, natural " vin du pays " of Califor- nia, and can be sold profitably at fifty cents per gallon, retail. It is entirely pure, free from added alcohol, and equally free from all earthy taste or other objectionable flavor. Very soon, too, the finer wines of these Santa Cruz mountain vine- yards will be sufficiently matured to go into successful competition with the first vintages of Europe. EXCURSIONS. Santa Cruz will certainly be found the place of places for excur- sion parties, attractive spots on various little beaches, and in the woods and mountains, by spring and stream, are beyond number, and at all the City Stables well appointed excursion wagons, carrying four to ten persons, and built expressly for this business, can be hired at very moderate rates, with careful, steady, experienced drivers, who know the country, its woods and scenery and roads thoroughly, and who, at the right time and place, can broil you a steak or a bird and prepare you a cup of coffee to absolute perfection. MANUFACTURES. Santa Cruz has a natural position and many facilities and capabil- ities likely to make it some day an active manufacturing center. Already it has the largest and finest lime kilns on the Coast, several tanneries, a first-class gunpowder manufactory, a fine new paper mill, extensive cement works, producing finest " Portland Cement " from materials found on the spot; numerous saw-mills, lumber manufac- tories and machine shops, a fuse factory, four or five flour and grist mills, two or three boot and shoe factories, wagon and carriage shops, 20 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. and many minor industries. Santa Cruz is the shipping point of large quantities of timber, lumber, firewood, shingles, pickets, lime, leather, gunpowder, fish, fruit, butter, eggs, poultry, and farming pro- duce of all kinds. All this exporting trade will increase every year, and it has been calculated, in the item of timber alone, that Santa Cruz County can supply fifty million feet of redwood annually for the next fifty years. Mouth of the Santa Cruz River— 4 P. M. " PLACES OF INTEREST AS NUMBERED ON MAP OF SANTA CRUZ. i. — Mouth of San Lorenzo River.— This is a fine place for bathing in the Summer season, as there are all temperatures of fresh and salt water. Sometimes the tides close the mouth of this river with sand, and the water accumulates for days, giving fine oppor- tunities for boating in the river channel for half a mile up. 2. — Santa Cruz Beach. — This always, except at very high tide, affords a pleasant drive, and abounds in interesting objects, the wharves of which there are three, extend out some 300 feet, afford- ing good landing for the larger steamers. The bathing facilities are excellent. Beach Hill, overlooking this beach and the town, is adorned with many pretty cottages and beautiful residences. 3.— Light House. — All the way to the Light House there are numerous attractions, either along the water's edge at low tide or on the cliff. The scene is ever varying, and no two visits, even on the same day, will reveal the same features. Sea-weed is abundant, and of much interest to those who wish to collect for study or ornament. "Shells may also be found of no mean beauty. A. visit to the Light House will be found interesting and Miss Laura Hecox's Museum of Natural History and Curiosities in the same building may be con- sidered a collection worthy of any place. 4. — Race Track and Beaches. — There are several pretty and interesting beaches in this neighborhood, with shelving rocks and tide pools, filled with numerous animals and plants. Here is a hotel and other buildings, and the race track is excellent. The road be- tween the Light House and this place is for the most part delightful, on account of the beautiful fields on one hand, and the wild cliffs 22 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. and sea on the other. There are some curious sandstone concre- tions at th:s beach similar to those at the Ancient Ruins. One mile west of Santa Cruz. 5. — Moore's Beach includes first, a natural bridge with three arches, then a sand beach, and lastly, a rock-shelving beach with numerous tide pools, noted for their fauna and flora. This is also a favorable picnic place. It is reached from the coast road through the Natural Bridge Dairy Ranch, or through the Moore place. Two and and a half miles west of Santa Cruz, should be visited at low tide. 6. — Natural Bridge and Beaches. — At the outlet of Meder Creek, which passes through the Terry and Baldwin Dairy Ranch, is found a very sandy beach, and further on a curious and grand natural bridge. It is a span over the mouth of a short gulch and is well worth seeing. The surf flows under the arch, and at high tide, a short distance up the gulch, washing beautiful pebbles and shells. The rocks under the arch are covered with limpets, barnacles, snails and many other curious things. The beaches on either side of this bridge are full of interest to those who would spend an hour or two in walking the sands or climbing the rocks. Four miles west from Santa Cruz. 7. — Parson's Beach. — Consists, at low tide, of easily accessible shelving rocks extending far into the water. There are many crevices and tide pools filled with a great variety of plants and animals peculiar to this coast, It was once famous for clams and abalones, but they are not so plenty now. Six miles west from Santa Cruz. 8. — Laguna Creek. — A beautiful little stream coming from springs in the high mountains that divide the San Lorenzo river from the ocean. Here is a neat little school-house, a forest of large trees, and a good camping and picnic place. The beach at the mouth of the creek is more noted for its white sand than anything else. Eight miles west from Santa Cruz. 9. — Laguna Falls. — Some two miles up Laguna Creek, a beau- tiful little cascade tumbling over hard metamorphic sandstone, and embowered with evergreen trees. Here Mr. Gushee takes a stream in ditches around the hills to his dairy ranch, by which he keeps forage plants green and growing rapidly all the dry season. 9 ^.—Yellow Bank Dairy or Laguna Milk Ranch.— Here are some fine buildings. Nine miles from Santa Cruz, west. ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. 23 1 i.i — Williams' Landing, no longer used, and its decaying build, mgs show that its glory has departed. Vessels used to be loaded from a large cable stretched across a little cove, the vessel moored under the cable. Lime, lumber, tanbark, and fuel came down the valley of a little creek, to be sent to San Francisco. Up this little valley the country is worth visiting on account of its wild scenery. This leads. up to Battle Mountain, some three miles from the coast, from which a splendid view can be obtained. 12. — San Vicente Creek (or Joaquin Major's Creek), a stream of considerable size. Near the mouth of this creek, one-fourth of a mile from the shore, lies a flat island of rock, an acre or so in area. This once was a great resort for seals, whose roaring could be heard for miles at certain seasons. Recently their numbers have decreased thro' wanton rifle shooting by campers and others. "Castle Rock" also stands near this beach, bare to the base at low tide. Twelve miles north-west from Santa Cruz. 13. — Davenport's Landing. — This little cove, scarce wide enough for a landing, contains the remains of two wharves and quite a number of dwellings. Some shipping continues to be carried on here. Fourteen miles north-west from Santa Cruz. 14. — -Scott's Creek. — Passing the Archibald Dairy, where there is about 100 acres level, rich land, we enter the valley of Scott's Creek, a fine stream, or rather number of streams coming together near the beach, their sources being shaded by large forests of pine, redwood, nutmeg, etc., and wildest mountains. This is a great resort for hunters and fishers; deer, grizzly bears and California lions abound. Trout and salmon in season are abundant. There is hardly a prettier camping ground in the State. Sixteen miles from Santa Cruz, westerly. 15. — Scott's Creek Falls is some four or five miles from the coast. The fall is almost 100 feet, and is a gem in its way, worth more than all the trouble necessary to reach it. Nineteen miles north-west from Santa Cruz. 16. — Petroleum. — At this place some years ago works were erect- ed for the manufacture of coal oil from the petroleum-saturated sand- rock of the mountain near by. For some reason or other the enterprise did not prove remunerative and the buildings have gone to ruin. In this region there are large deposits of sandrock and shale bearing coal oil and other bituminous material. Petroleum can be 24 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. reached best from the Ben Lomond road. It is a fine hunting region for deer, quail and rabbits. Six miles north-west from Santa Cruz. 17. — Ben Lomond Road. — This road follows along the high lands that lie between the San Lorenzo and its tributaries and the ocean, and for a part of the way overlooking both. It starts out of Santa Cruz on High street, and there is a constant and gradual ascent to the lime kiln of Davis & Cowell, thence thro' Cave woods. It reaches an elevation west of the town of Felton of some 1,200 or 1,500 feet, where it passes around the head of Gold Run. This is a little stream in the canon of which many years ago some person found a boulder which yielded about $30,000 of gold, all of which was expended in trying to find more, but as yet no one has succeeded in getting more than ordinary day's wages in mining there. This road passes over a wonderfully varied region of rocks, timber and soil. The scenery is unequalled. It is wildly romantic. As yet there are but few settlers. x\fter 'passing the lime kilns, there are but one or two houses on the road for a distance of ten or twelve miles, altho' there are many charming spots where small farms might be opened and pleasant homes be made. 19. — Davis & Cowell's Lime Kilns and Quarries. — Out- croppings of hard crystalline limestone occur all thro' this region, of which as fine lime as can be produced anywhere is manufactured. Two miles north-west from Santa Cruz. 20. — Pebbly Beach. — Famous for the great variety of curious and interesting pebbles of various forms of silica. It is but a small nook or indentation in the coast line, something like two miles be- yond Laguna Creek, and less than half a mile after crossing a wooded sedgey lagoon. Over a bridge a path leads down to the beach. Ten miles from Santa Cruz. 21. — Dodero Spring. — This gushes out of the limestone in a huge volume and flows through the city, forming what in the early settlement of this place by the Spanish Missionaries was called Santa Cruz creek. It, with the Major's spring, further down, were used to run a grist mill for many years. One mile A>rth-west from Santa Cruz. 24. — Evergreen Cemetery. — This is pleasantly situated on the side hill in the edge of a redwood grove, and overlooking the Potrero to the east. There are but a few acres in the plot, but the ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. 25 improvements are costly and tastefully made, and it is the frequent resort of persons* having the remains of friends buried there. Half a mile north from Santa Cruz. 25.— Site of Mrs. E. W. Farnham's Residence, made famous by her book entitled, "California, In Doors and Out." Scarcely a vestige remains of what she had made with so much toil, trouble, and gladness. One mile north from Santa Cruz. 26.— Reservoirs of Santa Cruz Water Works.— The water is forced into these reservoirs from the San Lorenzo by an engine. The elevation of the higher one is ninety feet. 27. — Cement Works. — This establishment is used to manu- facture Portland cement chiefly from post tertiary lime deposits found abundantly in this vicinity. This deposit has come from springs containing a large excess of minerals in solution, mainly lime, and in trickling over grass, mosses, etc., the water has evaporated, leaving the solution as an incrustation, after the manner of stalagmites in caves. This cement is proving equal to any in the world. The process of manufacturing is new and interesting and the manager is always pleased to show and explain it to visitors. 28. — Hebrew Cemetery. — A well-chosen place, commanding a view of the ocean, bay, city, and mountains. Near Davis and Corwell's lime kilns. Two miles north-west of Santa Cruz. 29. — Cave, Wood sand Meder's Grove. — Pleasant picnic places on the Ben Lomond road. The cave is only a few steps from the road, just at a little bridge over a small stream about three miles from town. It is not very remarkable so far as explored. After passing into a large room near the mouth, there is a narrow passage where it is necessary to crawl on the wet rocks and through water to reach the next room. But few persons have ventured so far, and all beyond is fable and uncertainty. 30. — Kron's Tannery, on the road to the powder mill • and Felton. Near this is Fischer's tannery, and also Kunitz's soap and glue factory, and a little further the engine~station for forcing water into the Water Co.'s reservoirs. 31. — Water Company's Pump Works.— Half a mile from Santa Cruz, north, on road to powder mill. 32. — Powder Mill Works. — Extensive and costly works worth a million dollars or more. Situated along the San Lorenzo river for 26 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. nearly a mile. Mr. Bernard Peyton, the superintendent, resides in a sightly house overlooking all the works. From one and one-half to three miles from Santa Cruz, north, near road to Felton and railroad to San Francisco. At a time when gunpowder, impaired by a six months' voyage, commanded in California the high price of $13 per keg, these works were started by the California Powder Com- pany. They found here a water power of 80 feet fall, and many other important advantages, especially that of an equable climate. The location is also faultless, with high hills completely sheltering the surrounding country from any effects of a possible explosion. The machinery is of the highest class, much of it unique. The whole process is of great interest, and visitors are always welcome to inspect the works. 33. — Big Tree Grove. — Famous for many years as the site of Gen. Fremont's camp, and also as containing one large and beautiful redwood tree, 300 feet high and 20 feet in diameter. There are many other very large trees here, but none, straight and solid, quite so large. The railroad to San Francisco passes through the edge of this grove. Five and a half miles from Santa Cruz. A charming resort for pleasure seekers. 34. —Entrance of Gold Run into the San Lorenzo. — A little farther and the town of Felton, a thriving little village, is reached. Here are stores, hotels, livery stables, and many neat cottages. About six miles from Santa Cruz. 35. — Bennett's Lime Kilns. — One mile west of Felton. 36. — Odd Fellows' Cemetery. — One mile north of Santa Cruz, on road to Felton, east of San Lorenzo river. 37. — Road to Zeyante and Felton, over Thompson's Flat and Graham Hill. 38. — Graham Hill. — At the foot of this hill is the Zeyante creek, a brisk and charming little stream. 39. — Fuse Factory. — This manufactory has been in successful operation for ten or twelve years. It is run by water power ; the water is taken from Bean creek, a tributary of the Zeyante. Six miles northerly of Santa Cruz, on railroad to San Francisco. 40. — Locke's Ranch, remarkable for its great variety of surface, springs and beautiful meadows. In the edge of Scott's Valley, seven miles northerly of Santa Cruz. ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. 2J 41. — Ancient Ruins. — On D. M. Locke's Ranch, is a curious formation of sandstone, resembling the crumbling columns of some ruined building with massive pillars. The sandstone contains frag- ments of marine shells and fossils. On Bean creek, half a mile from Mr. Locke's residence. 42. — Hepzedam. — This place for awhile was the home of the late Dr. Kittridge, and he gave it this odd name as suggestive of his " flee- ing to the mountains." It is a wild and retired nook on the side hill, overlooking a forest of redwoods rising out of the valley of Bean creek. Seven miles north of Santa Cruz. 43- — County Hospital and Poor House. — Two miles north of Santa Cruz ; an admirable situation for a sanitarium. 44- — Hihn's New Water Reservoir. — On the old San Jose road, three and one-half miles from town. 45- — Strawberry Valley, DeWolf's place. — A spring situated here is said to possess magnetic properties. Near here is a brook that deposits a mineral on sticks, stones and grass, similar to the cement material near Santa Cruz. About eight miles north of Santa Cruz. 46. — Magnetic Spring. — This is a charming resort for either well people or invalids. The water is tonic, the climate is delightful, and the scenery extremely beautiful. Hotel and cottages kept by Mr. Haight. Nine miles north of Santa Cruz. 47. — Vine Hill, one of the finest vineyards in this district, is quite near Magnetic Springs. This is a great grape and peach growing region \ scenery, splendid ; nine miles north-east of Santa Cruz. 48. — Water Company's Reservoir of the Branciforte, two miles north-east of Santa Cruz. 49- — Isbell Grove. — One of the most beautiful groves in the vicinity of Santa Cruz, two miles north-east of Santa Cruz. 50. — Squabble Hollow, so called, on account of ancient land troubles, three miles north of Santa Cruz. 51. — Happy Valley. — Here, in the midst of charming scenery, is the home of Judge Rice, once our representative in the State Legislature ; four miles up the Branciforte Creek. 52. — Elliott's Old Mill. — Near here the road forks, one going to Vine Hill, the other, on the right, going to Fitch's Vineyard ; five miles north-east. 28 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. 53. Fitch and Lay's Vineyard, and near by is the Daken Ranch. All this country is well suited for fruit and wine growing, and is full of picturesque beauty. 54. Mason's Grove. — A dense and beautiful grove for picnic parties or camping. 55. — Cahoon's Mill. — This is converted into a chair factory. 56. Soquel Beach. — Camp Capitola. — The mouth of ■ the Soquel Creek. This has always been a favorite resort for campers, in the summer months. Four miles from Santa Cruz, on the Santa Cruz Railroad. 57. — Sugar Refinery. — A costly establishment, turning out an excellent quality of beet sugar. Between Soquel and the beach. 58. — Soquel Paper Mill. — A new and flourishing establish- ment manufacturing an excellent article of paper. 59. — Hihn's Grove. — A favorite place for pic-nic parties. Just north of Soquel. 60. — Lake Marina (formerly Wood's Lagoon). — Naturally, this is one of the most charming places of public resort on this or perhaps any other coast; and with the new arrangements for camping, boating and bathing, together with other improvements now in pro- gress, it will become still more attractive to visitors generally. One mile east of Santa Cruz. 61. — Corcoran's Lagoon. — Fine place for duck hunting. Two and a half miles east of Santa Cruz. 62. — Catholic Cemetery, and Arana Gulch. — Two miles east of Santa Cruz. 63. — Uriah Thompson's Ranch. — Where the lower Soquel and Santa Cruz road crosses the Rodeo Gulch. J. S. Mattinson, and Henry Winkle, are situated on the upper road. 64 — Aptos. — A small village near the beach, on the Santa Cruz Railroad. 65. — Aptos Hotel. (Spreckles). — A well appointed hotel, and numerous cottages for the accommodation of visitors and families wishing to occupy a separate cottage. In full view of the bay, and near the Santa Cruz Railroad. Seven miles east of Santa Cruz. ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. 29 66. — Orel's Grove.— -An exceedingly pleasant resort for large parties, or celebrations. It extends to the beach, where there are high cliffs of strata, bearing numerous kinds of fossil shells. Five and one-half miles south-east of Santa Cruz. 67.— Aptos Beach, near the Aptos Hotel, at mouth of Aptos Creek. ; 68.— Nichols's Iron and Magnesia Springs.— This water is rich in iron, (per-sulphate,) and in magnesia, lime, and soda. It possesses powerful medicinal qualities, and has already a reputation for cures. 69. — Spreckel's Lagoon. — This is a small lake just beyond Aptos, on the Castro Ranch. 70. — Loma Prieta. — The highest point in the Santa Cruz Moun- tains. A splendid view can be obtained from this mountain on a clear day. There is a trail leading to the summit from the south side at the source of one branch of the Soquel Creek. Altitude, nearly 4,000 feet above the sea. New Almaden Quicksilver mines are sit- uated at the eastern base of this mountain. 71. — Wright's Hotel. — This is located on what once was the Burrell place, and about one mile from the railroad to San Jos£. It is a pleasant location, and the house is comfortable. There is a fine orchard attached. 72.— Hotel de Redwood. — On the stage road to San Jose ; pleas- antly situated near a big hollow redwood tree, which served at one time a kind of room where a man kept refreshments. 73. — Judge Miller's Ranch. — This is on the spur of a moun- tain, commanding a fine view of country and ocean towards the south. The ranch is well suited for fruit raising, and is a healthy location. Altitude, about 1,500 feet above the sea. 74- — Slaughter's Boarding House. — Is still higher than Judge Miller's, and similarly located. 75. — Aiken's Ranch. — Situated nearly over the long tunnel of the railroad. 76. — Mountain Charley's. — This for a long time was a stage station, and Mountain Charley was a character of renown ; but the proprietor has moved to San Jose, and the station is deserted. Temperature and Rainfall from Sitka to San Diego. 3 \5 REMARKS. Sitka •Steilacoom Astoria Humboldt Bay. San Francisco . Benioia Santa Cruz Watsonville San Joaquin Valley. Monterey Santa Barbara Wilmington, (port of Los Angeles . . . Los Angeles San Diego 56 58 61 56 61 42.00 50.00 45.00 57.00 55.23 58.00 59.50 57.90 55.00 61.08 61.75 62.16 62.11 95.00 90.00 86.35 34.00 21.19 19.43 23.00 22.05 12.00 18.27 14.71 14.00 13.00 10.00 27 years. Parts of 10 years. 2 years. good average yr. ul r\art r\f vol lav ) 1872, a good average yr. J central part of valley. 8 years. 1 or 2 years. 2 years. 21 vears. This table is compiled from various sources, and shows only approximately the temperature and rainfall at some points. Many years are required to obtain a correct mean. It gives the average monthly and yearly means of temperature. It shows the gradual de- crease of rain and increase of temperature as we go south from Sitka, and will prove interesting as a comparison. Table of Temperature and Rainfall at Santa Cruz, Cal. Meterological observations have not been regularly made at Santa Cruz until the last three years. W. A. Lawson and Capt. Sager furnish the material from which the following table is compiled. Most of these observations are made at the beach, where the tem- perature is a little lower than " up town," say about four or five degrees in the summer season. In the winter the difference is not so . much, being nearly equal. The rainfall of 1878 is much above the average, which may be placed at about twenty inches at the beach. But as we ascend the mountain slopes toward the north, the rainfall increases rapidly. At a distance of six miles and an altitude of 800 or 1000 feet, the precipitation is double. 1878. 1879. Thermometer. Rain. Thermometer. Rain. 01 I 3 n * O ►J si m 1 Q i % 3 03 i 3 ■a O! 67 70 " 65 72 77 78 80 78 88 85 70 70 75 30 40 39 39 46 52 52 46 49 42 38 31 52 52 53 51 57 59 61 60 61 59 56 50 10.76 14.71 4.04 2.06 15 15 10 5 64 76 86 78 87 90 90 97 90 90 72 70 32 34 40 42 40 50 50 55 48 42 32 32 45 55 56 58 60 62 65 60 64 60 53 44 4.74 4.42 3.64 2.14 1.41 0.05 9 7 * ft ft July 1.27 2.75 0.30 1.34 4 1 2 4 0.02 1.06 3.76 2.50 1 3 November December 7 9 Yearly Mean 42 1 57 37.23 66 42 56 23.74 California Poppies. Monterey. As is now generally known, and for which thanks may be rendered the Southern Pacific Railroad Company, the hitherto sleeping muni- cipality of Monterey has been aroused from its Rip Van Winkleism, and assumes a condition as one of the most attractive places and pleasure resorts upon the Pacific Coast. Situated upon a bay which has no superior in point of beauty, safety, and eligibility, we salute our neighbor, and wish her all the success imaginable as the offspring of the new hope within her. " Like a maiden musing sadly o'er her suitors turned away, " Long she sat in lonely beauty close beside her crescent bay, " Heeding not the world of action that beyond her -portals lay, "Careless of the strife of nations, living only for to-day. " Dreaming of a golden future, while the present drifted by, "'As a ship becalmed may linger 'neath the storm-cloud in the sky. " All her passions wrapped in slumber ; slowly through her languid veins , " Flowed her blood as in midsummer creeps the stream across the plains. " Never lover came to woo her, never woke she from the trance, " Like the mystic Sleeping Beauty in the pages of romance — " Till the fairy ' Prince of Progress' smiled upon her hidden charms, " On her ripe lips quickly kissed her, reached and drew her to his arms. * * # % * * " Soon a queen among the cities that adorn our golden coast " Shall she stand, and in her glory, of her noble lover boast." RETROSPECTIVE. Two hundred and seventy-eight years ago last December, or about 109 years after the distinguished Genoan first sighted land in the Carribean Sea, Don Sebastian Vizcayno, acting under in- structions from Philip III., of Spain, sailed into the placid waters of what is now known as the Bay of Monterey, and subsequently came on shore with two priests and a number of soldiers, and took possession of the same in the name of the King of Spain ; the party then erected a cross, improvised an altar in the gracious 34 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. shade of an umbrageous oak, and, with no listeners but the birds,, no spectators but the stars, and no choral symphonies but the winds, gave sublime meaning to their Latin hymn, while their Christian zeal and ardor found utterance in the solemn chant — " Vexilla Regis prodeurit, Fulget Crucis Mysterium." Vizcayno called the spot Monterey, in honor of Gaspar de Zuniga, Count de Monterey, at that time Viceroy of Mexico, and who had. fitted out the expedition. The appearance of the coun- try made a deep impression upon the enthusiastic navigator, and the hope of his heart was to return to his native land and present a record of his discoveries, and then again to set sail for that lovely crescent of the Pacific with material for the founding of a church, and for the erection of a permanent abiding-place. But his dreams were never realized, and it was 166 years after his departure before the foot of a white man again pressed the soil of Monterey. In the fall of 1769, Gaspar de Portala, Governor of Lower California, at the head of two priests and sixty-three sol- diers, came overland from San Diego, and erected a cross near the Bay of Monterey, although he failed to identify the place accord- ing to the map and other descriptions furnished 166 years before by Vizcayno. The above Christian incident has been exquisitely apostrophized in verse by Bret Harte, as follows: portala's cross. Pious Portala, journeying by land, Reared high a cross upon the heathen strand, Then far away Dragged his slow caravan to Monterey. The mountains whispered to the valleys, "Good !" The sun, slow sinking in the western flood, Baptized in blcod The holy sfandard of the Brotherhood. The timid fog crept in across the sea, Drew near, embraced it, and streamed far and free, Saying, " O, ye Gentiles and Heathen, this is truly He !" All this the Heathen saw; and when once more The holy Fathers touched the lovely shore — Then covered o'er With shells and gifts — the cross their witness bore. ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. 35 THE ARRIVAL OF FATHER JUNIPERO SERRA. In June, 1770. Father Junipero Serra, the best-known and noblest of the Franciscan missionaries, and who had arrived in Monterey Bay in the packet vessel San Antonio, on the last day of May, cele- brated the Day of Pentecost by the erection of a cross, the building of an altar, the ringing of bells and blessing of water. Then both the land and sea parties, that had left San Diego simultaneously on the 15th day of April, chanted the Yeni Creator, sang the Salve Regina, hoisted the royal standard, took possession of the country in the name of the King of Spain, amidst a discharge of musketry, and concluded with a Te Deum. From that time up to 1830 Monterey was one of the largest shipping points on the coast, and had one of the most flourishing mission churches. It early became the capital of the Territory, and maintained that distinction not only after Mex- ico became an independent country in 1822, but also after the ac- quisition of California by the United States in 1846. INTERESTING REMINISCENCES OF THE OLD CAPITAL. Commodore Sloat hoisted the American flag on the 7th of July, 1846, and in a few weeks thereafter portions of Stevenson's regiment arrived. On the 1st day of August, 1849, the old town was enliv- ened by arrivals from all parts of the State of delegates to the first California Constitutional Convention. There were forty members, a majority of whom could not speak or readily understand English ; but these forty gentlemen, in forty working days, made a Constitu- tion that lasted thirty years, and under which we have become a happy and prosperous people. It may be remarked that the Con- vention of '49 had two chaplains, one a Catholic and the other a Protestant. Prayers were uttered in Spanish and English each day. The present survivors of that Convention are Charles T. Botts, A. J. Ellis and William M. Gwin, residents of San Francisco ; Pacificus Ord, now in the East; R. M. Price, since then Governor of New Jersey; P. Sainsevain, for the past twenty-five years a resident of Los Angeles, and the manufacturer of the celebrated Cucamongo wine ; John A. Sutter, one of our most famous pioneers, now a resi- dent of Pennsylvania; M. G. Vallejo, who resides in Sonoma county; and O. M. Wozencraft, of desert reclamation celebrity. Monterey was the capital for many years, and many of the Gov- ernors under Spanish, Mexican and American rule made the place 36 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. their homes. Among the Spanish Governors were Jose Arguello, Diego de Borica, Jose de Arrillaga and Pablo Vincente de Sola. The latter was the last Spanish Governor, and served from 1815 until 1822. He also served one year as Governor under Mexican rule, but retired in 1823, and was succeeded by Luis Arguello, who held his seat until June, 1825. Then followed eleven Mexican Gov- ernors, ending with Don Pio Pico, in July, 1846. American rule commenced with Commodore Sloat on July 7, 1846. Sloat was succeeded by Commodore Stockton, August 17, 1846; the latter was succeeded by Colonel John C. Fremont, who assumed the Territorial Governorship in January, 1847. - General S. W. Kearney followed on March 1st, of the same year, and Colonel Mason on May 31st, and served about two years, when he gave way to General Riley, April 13, 1849, who was succeeded a short time afterward by Gen. Persifer F. Smith, who directed the helm until the inauguration of Peter H. Burnett, the first Governor of the State, which took place on December 20, 1849. THE ACME OF SOMNOLENCE REACHED. In the meantime the capital was moved to San Jose, and then commenced that dolcefar niente which has characterized the condi- tion of the ancient and honorable pueblo for thirty years, and which culminated in peaceful somnolence, when the little, saucy, aspiring, successful town of Salinas, on the 6th of November, 1872, snatched from it its title to the county seat. This was, to use an old expres- sion, the "straw that broke the camel's back." Twenty-five years antecedent there were balls, theatrical performances and minstrelsy every night. The city was filled with officers of the United States Army and Navy, and at times with the leading men of California and their families. There were hundreds of beautiful women, too, whose delightful presence imparted a zest to the bailes and frolics of that day. Then came the long nocturnal era, and the halcyon days departed ; no more efforts at minstrelsy by " Tips," " Taps" and " Tops f no more Thespian travesties by Lieutenant Derby (" Phoenix,") Ned Bingham, Mrs. Bingham and Mrs. Kettlebottom, (" Phoebus, what a name!") " No more beneath soft eve's consenting star " Fandango twists his jocund castanet." V ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. 37 In all the ebbings and flowings of California life, nearfyft .4 the storms, in all the calms — Monterey was as completely s^ated^ for a time, from all active participation in exterior eventis theO Caspian is separated from all other seas. It became the ] Leepy Hollow of the Land of the Setting Sun." " One of those little places that have a run " Half up the hill beneath a blazing sun, " And then sit down to rest, as if to say, " I climb no farther upward, come what ma" : I 5 THE TRANSFORMATION. The building of a narrow-guage railroad from Salina s t0 Monterey, in 1874, had much the effect that a well-developed' thump from a passing temblor has on any community — it stirred it 1 jp a little. But upon its completion the old town returned to her somnolence anG - was again lost in the ambrosial phantasmagoria of her interrupt dream. The awakening from that dream transpired in December, 1879, upon the knowledge of the fact that the managers of the Southern Pacific Railroad had concluded that an oceaia suburb was one of the needs of the metropolis of the Pacific Coast — some de- lightful spot on the sea-shore far enough away to shut off the din of city life, and yet not so distant as to use up the best part of a day in journeying thither. These managers bethought themselves of Monterey, the ancient capital, with its lovely beach, its magnificent drives, and its incomparable climate, where the midday sun gleams from an undimmed zenith three hundred days in the year ; where the broad expanse of waters, on each succeeding sunset, stirred to lightest ripples by a gentle west wind, shines like a vast floor of shat- tered diamonds ; where earth, air, sea and sky are instinct with ma- jesty, and where, thirty odd years ago, before even the infancy of our State, the beauty and the chivalry of the Territory of California gathered. The great desideratum, however, was an elegant hotel at Monte- rey ; for how could the principal watering-place of the Pacific be made immediately and permanently attractive without a splendid caravansary? and, as no one could be found who would erect a spacious mansion of entertainment, the railroad managers placed the matter in the hands of their own architects, and at once turned their attention to the purchase of a tract of land for the erection of their hotel and for ground surrounding. In the meantime, a railway track 38 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. of f ^dard gauge was laid from Castroville to Monterey, and daily *r; set to running regularly between the latter place and San Fran- iF ~i r In a short time thereafter the grounds were put in excel- v Jer;rder and the hotel erected thereon, which will be described unc the heading of " Hotel del Monte." Is it to be wondered at that onterey at last awoke to the importance of her hopes and f espon Jlities ? "The whirligig of time," it has been said, " brings Ir * his reviges." In view of the fact that Monterey — the ancient Jandrnaric ' r California civilization — has been transformed from an uninviting Jobe town into a fashionable watering-place, we may declare that * tne whirligig of time" brings in something better than r evenge. MONTEREY BAY. The bay of MV nterev * s a magnificent sheet of water, and is twenty- ei ght r^iles from point to point. It is large enough to shelter the nav -\es of the world, while its anchorage is secure except during very stc rmy weather. The harbor, properly, is in the shape of a horse- shoe, the mouth opening to the north; it is amply protected from the south, east and west, and with a breakwater extending half a mile into the bay from the northwestern shore the harbor would afford perfect safety from winds from any and all points of compass ; as it is, the largest ships may generally ride with safety any gale. The bay is delightfully adapted to yachting; and many kinds of fish (and especially rock-cod, baracouta, pompino, Spanish mackerel, and flounder,) may be taken at all seasons of the year. For bathing purposes the beach is all that could be desired — one long, bold sweep of wide, gently sloping, clean white sands — the very perfection of a bathing beach, and so safe that children may play and bathe upon it with entire security. There are also great varieties of sea- mosses, shells, pebbles and agates scattered here and there along the rim of the bay, fringed as it is at all times with the creamy ripple of the surf of its broad, blue, beautiful waters. CHARACTER OF THE BEACH FOR BATHING PURPOSES. The beach is only a few minutes' walk from the Hotel del Monte, and is a very fine one. Mr. W. H. Daily, the champion swimmer of the Pacific Coast, and who has made himself well acquainted with the character of several of the most noted beaches from San Francisco to Santa Monica,' says, in a letter dated Monterey, December 15, 1879: "I have made a careful examination of the beach at this ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOC)k 39 place, as to its fitness for purposes of bathing. I finpi it an easy, sloping beach of fine sand ; no gravel, no stones arJS ^re below high water mark. I waded and swam up the beach a c\rd \er of a mile, that is, toward the east, and also westward toward the ware- house, and found a smooth, sandy bottom all the way; no rocks, no sea weed and no undertow. The whiteness of the sand makes the water beautifully clear. I consider the beach here the finest on the Pacific Coast. I was in the water an hour yesterday, and found it, -even at this time of the year, none too cold for enjoyable bathing." THE SCENERY OF MONTEREY. There is probably no place upon the Pacific Coast more replete with natural charms than Monterey. Her exquisite beauty and variety of scenery is diversified with ocean, bay, lake and streamlet ; mountain, hill and valley, and groves of oak, cypress, spruce, pine and other trees. The mountain views are very beautiful, particularly the Gabilan and Santa Cruz spurs. That which will the quickest engage the observation of the visitor is the pine-fringed slope near town, and the grove that surrounds the "Hotel del Monte." There are a number of delightful drives to points of interest, all of w^hich will be found graphically described elsewhere. The time is not far distant -when Congress will be called upon to reserve a township for a State Park among the redwoods a few miles south of Monterey — indeed, a bill for that purpose has already bee 1 offered. THE CLIMATE AND HEALTHFULNESS OF MONTEREY. The weather at Monterey is not so warm either in summer or win- ter as in other parts of California further south, but there is an even temperature that can be found nowhere else. From January to De- cember, year in and year out, there is no summer nor winter weather. Indeed, the weather .at Monterey, from one year's end to another, partakes of that delightful interlude known in the East and South as Indian summer. The same balmy zephyrs breathe a delicious atmosphere all the year round, and summer and winter, so-called, serenely face each other and exchange compliments. The west wind, moist with the spray of Pacific billows, and laden with sugges- tions of spices in the far Cathay, comes in every evening with ozone and healing on its wings. All writers and meteorological observers .agree in pronouncing the temperature of Monterey one of the most 40 SAM^\ CRUZ AND MONTEREY. equable in thja.^Vlm of Hygeia. The pure oxyde contained in every atom of ao ru:;'a snuffed in at every breath has a most efficacious .effect u#n ?.ne system. Here, in this ambrosial latitude, " Reviving sickness lifts her languid head ; " Life -flows afresh, and young-eyed Health exalts " The whole creation 'round. Contentment walks " The sunny glade, and feels an inward bliss "Spring o'er his mind beyond the power of kings to purchase." The following carefully-prepared table presents the mean tempera- ture of Monterey and many other health resorts and places through- out the world : PLACE. Monterey San Francisco Los Angeles Santa Barbara San Diego. Santa Monica . . Sacramento ■ Stockton Vallejo Fort Yuma Cincinnati New York New Orleans Naples. Honolulu Funehal Mentone Genoa City of Mexico Jacksonville St. Augustine Jan. July. DifT. degs. degs. degs. 52 58 6 49 57 8 55 67 12 56 66 10 57 65 8 58 65 . 7 45 73 28 49 72 • 2 3 48 67 19 56 92 36 30 74 44 3 1 77 46 55 82 27 46 76 3° 71 77 6 60 70 to 40 73 33 46 77 3i 52 63 11 58 80 22 59 77 18 Latitude. deg. min.. 36 36 37 48 34 04 34 24 3 2 4i 34 00 38 34 37 5 6 38 05 3 2 43 39 °6 40 37 29 57 40 52 21 16 32 38 43 7i 44 24 19 26 30 5° 30 05 The table of temperature for Monterey was kept in 1874 by Dr. E. K. Abbot, a correspondent of the United States Signal Service ;. that for San Francisco by many parties, and is a mean of most any three years; Los Angeles by W. H. Brodrick (for 187 1), who took observations four times a day for seven years. The Santa Barbara record is for 1869, and was kept by officers of the Coast Survey. ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. 4 1 The Santa Monica record is for 1876, and was kept by Captain Chase of the Coast Survey. That for San Diego was kept by Dr. W. S. King, of the army, in 1853. The Fort Yuma record wasfcept by officers of the army in 1851. All others are taken from notes of travelers or from books written from friendly and sometimes enthu- siastic standpoints. It is probably as accurate a table as can be made, and is a representative "one, embracing, as it does, the most noted health resorts in the world. It will be seen by the above table that the Bay of Monterey has only one rival (Honolulu) in equability of temperature. It must be understood, however, that there is a great deal of hot, disagreeable weather on the islands, and a multi- plicity of drawbacks which Monterey does not possess. There are seldom any high, cold winds at and around Monterey, and never any hot ones. There is more or less foggy weather in the spring months, as there is all along the coast, and occasionally foggy mornings in summer. The latter, however, are really agreeable, as they infuse new life and freshness into tree and shrub and flower, and are not in the least detrimental in their influences upon human beings at that season of the year. OBJECTS OF INTEREST IN AND AROUND MONTEREY. 1. — The Town of Monterey and its Attractions. — Aside from its historical celebrity, its climate, healthfulness and delightful situation, there are many attractions in the old town not previously enumerated and which may be properly presented in this paragraph, such, for instance, as the Cuartel, on California street ; Colton Hall,. the old Block House and Fort, the old Custom House, Calaboose and Commissariat, Catholic Church, Cemetery, and whaling and fishing points, .nu^^f the above-named places are objects of more or less in- terest, accora.rig to the fancy of the beholder. The Catholic Church was built in 1794, or nearly 100 years ago, and is constructed of fine white stone ; the altar is the work of an Italian, and is regarded as a fine piece of art ; there are also life-sized paintings of the Saints, and there are other paintings of great age and beauty. As many as five and six hundred people may worship in this church at a time. The Cemetery is situated across the estero, or slough, and is about half- way between the church and the new hotel grounds. It overlooks the bay and is covered with trees and flowers and grasses. Near the center of this enclosure are the remains of a stone wall that formerly marked the boundaries of the original cemetery as laid out by the Franciscan padres. Graves are scattered irregularly about, and are 42 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. for the most part hardly discernible. A little more than half a mile from town is what is known as Whaling Point, and a quarter of a mile further is the Chinese Fishery. Adjacent is the spot where the vessel which took Napoleon Bonaparte from off the Island of Elba was wrecked ; a portion of the wreck may still be seen at low tide. Hotel del Monte. 2.— Hotel del Monte and Grounds. — To those who resort to Monterey as a fashionable watering place, the above-named hotel is looked upon as the greatest of all the attractions, not only on account of its being the most magnificent structure of the kind on the Pacific Coast, but because it is one of the largest, handsomest, and one of the most elegantly furnished sea-side hotels in the country. Indeed, no ocean house upon the Atlantic approaches it in its plan of exterior, while its interior finish, accommodations and appointments are much superior to those of any like establishment in the United States. It is built in the modern Gothic or Eastlake style, and is 385 feet in length and 115 feet in width, with wings; there are two full stories, an attic story, and several floors in the cen- tral tower or observatory. Its ground floor in some respects resembles that of the Grand Union at Saratoga; and, as in that and other eastern summer hotels, the lady guests have access to all the public rooms, and especially to the office, or lobby, in the front center of the building, which is 42x48 feet ; connecting with the lobby is a reading room, 24x26; then a ladies' billiard-room 25x62 ; then a ladies' parlor, 34x42, and then, with a hall or covered verandah between, a ball-room 36x72. There is a corridor extending the whole ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. 43 length of the building, 12 feet wide. The dining-room is 45x70; a childrens' and servants' dining-room is attached, and apartments for parties who may prefer dejeuners a la fourchette. The kitchen is 33x40 feet. There are 28 suites of rooms on this floor, each with bath-room and all other modern improvements. There are three staircases, one at the intersection of each of the end wings, and a grand staircase leading from the lobby. In the second story there are 48 suites, or about 100 rooms, with bath-rooms and all other modern improvements. There is also a promenade the whole length of the building, 1 2 feet in width. In the attic story there are 13 suites and 29 single rooms, 65 apartments in all. The central tower, or observatory, is 25x30 and about 80 feet in height; there are 10 rooms in the observatory; the end towers are about 50 feet in height. The hotel is lighted through- out with gas made at the works upon the grounds, and supplied with water from an artesian well upon the premises. No pains have been spared to' provide against fire, both in the perfect construction of flues and in the apparatus for extinguishing flames. The house is elegantly furnished throughout. The ladies' billiard-parlor is the largest and one of the most elegantly appointed in the United States. Adjacent to the hotel building is a bar-room and bowling-alley and smoking rooms for gentlemen. At a short distance from the hotel is -a stable and carriage house, large enough to accommodate sixty horses and as many carriages ; there is telephonic communication between the hotel and stable. There is hot and cold water throughout the hotel and all other modern appli- • ..^^ j ^.,_. ances and improvements. The grounds, consisting of about ■■ , _■.- 106 acres, are entirely enclosed and are beautifully wooded with pine, oak, cedar and cy- press. There have been about 1,200 young trees added, most of which are English walnut. s^nmBeai*. Croquet plats, an archery, swings, etc., are provided, and choice flowers and shrubs are being planted by an experienced gardener. The hotel will accommodate four hundred people; it is only a stone's throw from the station, which is connected with it by a wide gravel and cement walk. 3- — The Beach and Bath House. — The beach is about a quarter of a mile from the Hotel del Monte, and is connected with the latter by walks and drives. A more perfectly desirable bathing 44 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. place in every respect would be hard to find on any coast. There are ample accommodations in the bath houses, which will be added to, if occasion requires. 4. — Race Track. — The hotel managers have purchased fifty-one acres of land, half a mile from the hotel, and have already com- menced the construction of a mile race track, grand stand, stable, and other buildings. The track occupies a remarkably fine position, over- looking the bay, and is supplied with water from a spring near by. 5. — Laguna del Rey. — About a quater of a mile from the hotel is a small lake, called Laguna del Rey. It is a very pretty little sheet of water, and will be provided with boats and step-landings. Perch, carp, and trout will be introduced as soon as possible. 6. — Landing Spot of Father Junipero Serra. — A large wooden cross, near the bridge, in the town of Monterey, indicates the landing place of that most clebrated of all of our pioneers, Father Junipero Serra. 7. — The Pacific Grove Retreat Association Camp Grounds. — The eastern boundary is about one mile west of the town of Monterey, and following the sea-shore, the tract extends to the line fence of the dairy farm east of the Light House. This last boundary is marked by a conspicuous pile of rocks, which, looking as if it might be a Druidical monument, is the termination of a promontory that breaks the force of the northwesters, and shelters the sea line of the tract. Under the lee of the promontory is a beautiful little cove, possessing a smooth beach, and being almost entirely free from surf. Overlooking this cove are pine woods, interspersed with oaks, covering a surface of sufficient extent and smoothness for the accommodation of any congregation of auditors. Here is placed the stand for the preachers. The hotels occupy ground centrally located with reference to the sea, upon which the buildings, therefore, look out. A broad avenue traverses the grounds, with side streets, &c. The general arrangements of the Encampment are based upon the principles guiding those of the Eastern States, especially the one held at Ocean Grove, in the vicinity of Long Branch, N. J., and are under the control of the Board of Trustees. One hundred acres are divided into residential lots, a park, a pleasure ground, a grand avenue, minor streets and avenues, and the town. The lots are divided into sections, ranging from 30x60 to 30x125. The principal buildings are the preachers' stand — containing a platform for the ministers and seats for the choir. It faces the congregational ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. 45 ground, which is arranged in a perfect circle 200 feet in diameter and a roadway of seventy-five feet. The aisles range from four to twelve feet in width. Benches are provided to accommodate about 5,000 people. The whole is covered by the shade of the pines — tall, straight, young trees — through whose gothic branches the sun- light falls subdued. The restaurant is a commodious building, 33x90 feet, placed but a short distance from the congregational ground. In close proximity are the grocery and provision store ; the meat market and furnishing and clothing store. On the opposite side of the street are six dormitories, each 24x50 feet. There is also a laundry. The stable accommodations are a few rods off, on the Monterey side, around a large well. The Encampment commands a splendid view of the Bay of Monterey, and the magnificent scenery surrounding it, with pretty bays for bathing places and beautiful groves for rambles. 8. — Point Pinos and Light House.— The stately beauty which ornaments Point Pinos is situated on an eminence or point of land forming the extreme western shore of the Bay of Monterey, and distant from the town about three miles. The building is a dark gray stone structure, one and a half stories high, built in the strongest and most substantial manner. Rising from the center or ridge of the roof is a brick tower painted white, on which is firmly placed the iron lantern and illuminating apparatus, the exterior of which is painted red. This light station was erected by order of Hon. Thomas Corwin, Secretary of the Treasury, in the year 1853. The light was first exhibited to mariners on January 20th, 1855. The light is classed as a third order Fresnel, with catadioptric lenses, of immense and powerful magnifying capacity. The light, in ordi- nary fair and clear weather, should be discernable from a vessel's deck sixteen and one-half nautical miles. The height of center of focal plane above high water on sea level is 9 1 feet. The arc illu- minated is four-fifths' of the entire horizon, or 228 degrees. The description of the light, as given to mariners in their charts, is a third order, fixed white, Fresnel light. The drive to the Light House is pleasant and pretty, and well shaded. The road passes the grounds of the M. E. Encampment. The view from the tower well repays the visitor for his pains, and those in charge are always pleased to see visitors and to show them every attention. p. — Moss Beach. — This is a stretch of a mile from the Pacific Grove, or about three miles from Monterey. This is one of the pret- 46 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. tiest spots on the coast. At low tide a person may walk out on a beach nearly a half a mile upon sand as hard as rock. The moss gatherer may spend hours at this point. 10. — Seal Rocks. — A little further on are a cluster of rocks, upon which hundreds of seals rendezvous, so to speak, at all times during the year. An enjoyable sight maybe had of the seals on the tops of these rocks, as the water dashes over them. ii. — Cypress Point. — Cypress Point, says some writer, is the one spot more perfectly adapted than any other point in the State for . *. ^ssm* ««, , ' . --j-r ggg^. picnics and camping out. n, Start out along the Carmel road, and take the path through the woods ; climb the hill, and, testing on the flower -bedecked turf, sur- rounded by ferns and groves, take in the view. Adown cypress Point. the wooded slope, carpeted with a profusion of flowers of all colors under the sun, the brown, barren- looking moorlands of the Salinas plain rising and falling like an inanimate sea of motionless billows, with here and there a bright emerald patch of some small, well-tilled farm shining like a rough-set jewel. The stern and sombre Gabilan range, with its serrated ridges and dark clusters of pine woods, mellowed down with a filmy haze enshrouding its base. On our left, the beautifully blue waters of the Bay of Monterey, as smooth as a lake, crescented with the lofty Santa Cruz range, its pine-feathered ridges, the white sands upon which the milk-white foam creeps and crawls with a sinuous motion like some huge leviathan of the deep. The azure heavens flecked with clouds. The whole panorama is one which the all-souled artist loves to paint. Surely the " Naples of the New World " is the Bay of Monterey. On once again. We now enter a well shaded road, and catch charming glimpses here and there of the grand old Carmel range, and then suddenly there bursts upon our entranced sight a panorama of sky, ocean, and woods. The broad Pacific is only distinguishable from the heavens above it by its glittering sheeen as the sunlight plays upon its heaving breast. Anon, a little snowflake of foam dances on the molten surface as one billow, more playful than the rest, ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. 47 shakes its snowy crest, or the white sails of a ship appear, as swan-like she glides along the water. The weird forest, with its gaunt, ghost-like, black pines, moaning in harmony with the ceaseless roar of the waves as the breeze plays through the branches. Enter the forest, and as you pass through the flowery glades the fragrance of the shrubs and the songs of the birds fall pleasantly on the senses. Pass on, and crossing an open space of green turf, startling the rabbits and quail, we enter another grove; the sun-flecks through the moss- hung and bearded trees, creating a pleasant, subdued' light, such as is met with in the ancient minsters and Moorish alcazars of Europe. An involuntary thrill of delight runs through one, and from the store- house of the mind rushes a flood of memory of childhood's days with its ancient legend of enchanted groves and fairies. A few steps fur- ther, and the mystical grove is reached and crossed, and we gaze with rapture on the beauty of the sea. Surely God's world, beautiful as it is, can scarcely show fairer spots. Landward the imperturbable cypress grove, silent as the Pyramids, mystical as the Sphinx, the gnarled gray trunks supporting the golden green branches — oh, fit haunt for departed spirits, a Merlin, or a slumbering cot for a child of Cain ! The sierra of the Santa Lucia droop down into the sea, brown, and velvety, like some dust-begrimmed tome in the old at home, uninviting on the outside, but containing untold under its gloomy and unforbidding garb. The ill starred Moro lifts its dome-shaped head with threat- ening aspect, warning mariners of the dan- gers of a rock-bound coast. The craggy spurs jut out into the ocean, and the playful breakers as they dash upon them send aloft showers of spray white as driven snow, while the sunlight shines through the bright green billows as they curl and dash along in their impetuous, never-ending race. At our feet the silvery crystal sands are sprinkled with abalone shells, sea polished, and the varied colors of the sea mosses. Little pools teem with marine life, forming perfect aquaria, and the broad Pacific sweeps on in its uncontrollable course, bearing upon its bosom the wealth of empires. Cross the point through the woody glades toward Point Pinos, passing pretty bays with white crystal sands and shelving beaches. Here the billows barren, library riches Coast Scene near Point Lobos. 48 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. charge in with a greater impetuosity, but well inland they break in a creamy ripple at the foot of the green-patched sand dunes. The black pines from which the point was named three hundred years ago, almost skirt the water. The mountains of Santa Cnu bound the view. The many-plumaged sea-birds flit by, and the sea lions dive under the foaming billows. Stay and watch the setting sun gild the trees and cast a golden haze upon the swelling waters, and then ride home through the moonlit groves, and if your trip to Cypress Point has not been a happy one blame yourself, for possibly you may have forgotten that — " He who joy would win, Must share it — happiness was born a twin." 12. — Pebble Beach. — This beach is reached by a lovely cypress drive of one mile from Cypress Point. It is a small, pretty beach, and contains many pretty agates and water drops. 13. — San Carlos (or Carmel) Mission. —At a distance of about four miles from Monterey is the ruins of the San Carlos (or Carmel) Mission. This Mission, one of the four established towards the end of the eighteenth century in Upper California, by Father Junipero Serra and his coadjutors in the work of civilization, was founded on the 3rd of June, 1770. This was more than two centuries after the first discovery of the country. These missions were sent out by the Church, acting in harmony with the wishes of the Spanish Gov- ernment, which had given instructions to the Viceroy of New Spain to establish presidios for the protection of the new settlements at points named, notably at San Diego and Monterey. Among the edifices erected in Upper California by the missionary fathers, that of San Carlos was one of the best in style and material. There were good ideas of architectural form in the head that planned this solid build- ing. The two great towers gave an air of dignity to the vast con- struction, and one sees, now that ruin has overtaken them, what it cannot be merely fanciful to suppose was intentional with the designer, that there is a prevailing slope of the walls from the main building from the ground to the roof, so that the general form of the church, seen vol d'oiseau, recalls that of a mound, the very shape of the Syrian Mount Carmel. It is a noble building, standing in a land- scape full of enchanting beauties. Inland, the eye looks across the broad leagues that once owed the beneficent sway of the priests, to the distant hills, vaporously blue. Here and there one of the Mon- ILLUSTRATED- HAND-BOOK. 49 terey cypresses stamps the scenery with an astonishing likeness to points of view common in Italy, so strong is the resemblance between this tree and the Italian stone-pine, dear to the recollection of all travelers ; while the view seaward is one not to be surpassed on the Pacific Coast. Nowhere is the water of the Great Ocean more bril- liantly varied in hue ; sapphire, opal, emerald, cream-white and topaz, mother-of-pearl and crystal of every shade, play before the eye with every rush of the mighty wave into the carved and chiseled rocks and long rifts of the coast. Rarely is the aspect of nature more beautiful in loveliness, more sympathetic with the train of thought roused by the sight of a stately ruin, with falling towers, the stairs trodden by the priests through long years now crumbling away, the halls and the deserted chapel open to the sad sea-wind. In the church- yard of the Mission lie the remains of fifteen Governors of this Province and State, and the tomb , of the Apostle of California, Jun- ipero Serra, who died in 1784, still zealous in his great work. The lands surrounding the Carmel mis- sion were fertilized by a perennial stream of pure water, and thus offered advantages which the fathers were not slow to avail themselves of, for the cultivation of many kinds 0armel Missien Chutch - of vegetables and fruits. It was on the lands of this mission that the first potatoes grown in California, were raised, in 1826. The privilege of planting this esculent was given to the natives without limit, and they so improved their opportunities that the whalers, which made a regular stopping place of Monterey, supplied themselves with great quantities. The temporal welfare of the estate had reached a great development in the year 1825, when the fathers possessed 90,000 cattle, 50,000 sheep, 2,000 horses, 2,000 calves, 370 yoke of oxen, with merchandise to the value of $50,000, and over $40,000 in silver. In 1835 the property, by a decree of the Mexican Congress, was converted to secular uses. To look back on the peaceful existence of this little community, during its sixty-five years of steady development from insignificant beginnings to the material success indicated by the figures given, is almost to lay one's hand on the middle ages and the conquest of barbaric races by the culture and the religion of the Roman world. The simple trust, the heroic faith and self-abnegation of these mission- 50 SANTA CRUZ AND MONTEREY. aries are of a very different stamp from the qualities we too readily associate with the name of the pioneers. It is one thing to seek a far-off land for the sake of wealth denied to us by fortune in our native country; it is quite another to leave family and friends and old associations, and the sweet charities of familiar scenes, at the call of a religion which accepts no half-hearted devotion, and go to bury one's self forever in a remote corner of the world, among savages, uncouth in form and dull in mind, and there to toil in planting the seed, to which God alone can give the increase. These apostles of the Indians are so near us in time that we can almost touch their hands; but. in spirit they are as far from our self-satisfied, loud-bab- bling days as the east is from the west. If it be not too late, something should be done to save this noble ruin from utter de- struction. It is the greatest historical monument in the State, and every Californian, of whatever creed or no creed, should feel a per- sonal interest in its preservation. A trifling appropriation is all that is needed to save what the elements are destroying; and a generous State pride should need no second appeal in such a case. 14. — Garmel River Road.— At the foot of Carmel Hill, three miles from town, the disciple of Isaak Walton will turn to the left and follow up the Carmel river, and he will find some fine trout fishing. At the mouth of the Carmel river, in the fall of the year, there are lots of salmon of good size that can be taken. The San Clemente, Garsus, and other creeks have an abundance of trout. 15.— San Jose Creek. — At the crossing of the Carmel river you continue along the coast road, and after a drive of a mile you arrive at San Jose Creek, about eight miles from Monterey, where there are also splendid fishing grounds. 16. — Point Lobos. — The first point to the right after crossing the San Jose creek is Point Lobos. 17. — Road to Little and Big Sur Rivers. — Ten miles from the San Jose creek, over a bluff for the greater part of the way, the tourist comes across a succession of creeks, all of which contain trout. The road is bounded on one side by redwoods, and on the other by the ocean. Arriving at Serra Hill the tourist continues on for seven or eight miles, when the Little Sur river is reached, twenty- six miles from town. Here there is an abundance of as fine trout fishing as can be found in the State. It takes some time and trouble to get to this point. A good team, however, will take a party from ILLUSTRATED HAND-BOOK. 51 Monterey to Little Sur in five hours ; thus, an afternoon may be spent in fishing, and the following morning. A good trouter, a short time ago, took ninety-five fish out of this river, from ten inches to a foot in length. It will be seen, therefore, that it will pay to make the trip and stand one night's camping out. Four miles further, or thirty miles from Monterey, is the Big Sur, one of the finest trouting streams along the coast. Mountain trout, weighing two pounds-, have been taken out of this stream in June and July. A mile or two from the road grizzlies may be found, if there are parties who think they have lost any. [This mot is old, but good.] 18. — County Road to Salinas. 19. — Southern Pacific Railroad, in operation daily each way between San Francisco and Monterey. ^5UNCEM^ : -^-.=3>t<^=— *>- Summer Season, IIW l©Ufl (BROAD GAUGE) The New Watering Place of the Pacific Coast. -He LOW RATES *<- AND TO THE MANY CHARMING SUMMER RESORTS ON THE LINE OF THE Southern Pacific Railroad. 6&: See following pages. SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY. THE SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD CO. BEGS LEAVE TO INFORM ITS PATRONS and the TRAVELING PUBLIC THAT WITH THE OPENING OF THE -H{C 3{hs- THE ELABORATE AND COSTLY IMPROVEMENTS WHICH ARE BEING CARRIED FORWARD AT WILL BE COMPLETED AND THE NEW AND MAGNIFICENT STRUCTURE TO BE KNOWN AS THE "Hotel Del Monte WILL BE THROWN OPEN FOR THE RECEPTION OF GUESTS. 55 tttttil liiai SOUTHERN PACIFIC UAlUiOAD COMPANY. IN ANTICIPATION OF A LARGE NUMBER OF TOURISTS AND PLEASURE SEEKERS VISITING THIS SEASON, The S. P. R. R. Company will equip its Line with New and Elegant Coaches AND IN ADDITION TO THE MOZRHSTHsTG- TEAIN FZROIMI S^DT FRANCISCO TO WHICH WILL BE ATTACHED ELEGANT PARLOR CAE8 WILL RUN AN AFTERNOON EXPRESS TRAIN ON EXCEEDINGLY FAST TIME. With the view of accommodating heads of families and such others as may wish to spend their Sundays in Monterey the Company will issue EXCURSION TICKETS at very low rates, good from Saturday until Monday, inclusive. Tickets trill also be issued from the Principal Stations on the Line of the Central Pacific Railroad. *frjp THE CLIMATE AND HEALTHFULNESS OF MONTEREY. 'HE weather at Monterey is not so warm either in summer or winter as in other parts of California further south, but there is an even temperature that can be found nowhere else. From January to December, year in and year out, there is no summer nor winter weather. Indeed, the weather at Monterey, from one year's end to another, partakes of that delightful interlude known in the East and South as ' ' Indian Summer. " The same balmy zephyrs breathe a delicious atmosphere all the year round, and sum- mer and winter, so-called, serenely face each other and exchange compliments. The following carefully pre- pared table presents the mean temperature of Monterey and many other health resorts and places throughout the world : PLACE. Jan. July. Diff. Latitude. PLACE. Jan. July. Diff. DEGS. DEGS. DEGS. 31 77 46 55 82 27 46 76 30 71 77 6 60 70 10 40 73 33 46 77 31 52 63 11 58 80 22 59 77 18 50 60 10 MONTEREY San Francisco Los Angeles Santa Barbara San Diego . . . Santa Monica Sacramento. . Stockton .... Vallejo Fort Yuma . . Cincinnati. . . 52 49 55 56 57 58 45 49 4S 56 30 DEGS. 58 57 67 66 65 65 73 72 67 92 74 DEGS. 6 8 12 10 8 7 28 23 19 36 44 )EG. MIN. 36 36 37 48 34 04 34 24 32 41 34 00 38 34 37 56 38 05 32 43 39 06 New York .... New Orleans . . Naples Honolulu Funchal Mentone Genoa City of Mexico Jacksonville . . St. Augustine . Santa Cruz. . . . )EG. MIN. 40 37 29 57 40 52 21 16 32 38 43 71 44 24 19 26 30 50 30 05 37 00 *s-r T will be seen by the above table that Monterey has only one rival (Honolulu) in equability of temper- ature. It must be understood, however, that there is a good deal of hot, disagreeable weather on the islands, and a multiplicity of drawbacks which Monterey does not possess. There are seldom any high, cold winds at and around Monterey, and never any hot ones. There is more or less foggy weather in the spring months, as there is all along the coast and occasionally foggy mornings in summer. The latter, however, are really agreeable, as they infuse new life and freshness into tree and shrub and flower, and are not in the least detrimental in their influence upon human beings at that season of the year. SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY. LLI z o _l H CO ^ H 3C K 1- pa . >- ^ "£T CO O £ ea §S LU 9 d X o < «! «i QC £ t> LLI CC M™ < e>g CO ^5 H ^3 QC Ph# O £%.. CO S^ UJ ■r •' CC ULI S s 3 CO o 3o > ^Pn u. A o 0 H z «! DC M a. « (0 fc h Si 0^ CO g ol yi ffi CQ & H CO < a. ti < h H H B Pi H Ph B R Hi n hi <\ H H ft SD 'ew Zealand and Australia, $650. Tickets also issued from San Francisco to New York via New Zealand and Australia. FOR NEW YORK, via PANAMA, On 3th and 20th ------ of every month. Taking Passengers and Freight for MEXICAN, CENTRAL AMERICAN and SOUTH AMERICAN Ports; for HAVANA and all WEST INDIA Ports ; for LIVERPOOL, LONDON and SOUTHAMPTON ; for ST. NAZARIE, and for HAMBURG, BREMEN and ANTWERP. FOR VICTORIA, B. O-, PORT TOWNSEND, SEATTLE AND TACOMA, Connecting at Tacoma with Northern Pacific Railroad for Portland, Oregon, and at Seattle with local Steamers for Skagit River and Mines, . On 10th, 20th, and 30th of every month. ' WILLIAMS, D1MOND & CO., Cen. Agts BRAVERMAN & LEVY, Importers and Manufacturing Jewelers, 119 MONTGOMERY STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, OFFER A FULL ASSORTMENT OF FINE DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY, CALIFORNIA GOLD QUARTZ WORK, and an attk active line of STER- LING SILVER WARE, and TRAVELING CLOCKS. All their Goods Marked in Plain Figures at the very Lowest Prices. H. S. CROCKER & CO. IMPORTING STATIONERS, AND COUNTING-HOUSE PRINTERS, AGENTS FOR Shaw & Go's Blank Books and Memorandums, Brown's Ledger Papers, Leroy W. Fairchild's Gold Pens and Pencils, National Safety Paper, Imperial Parchment Writing 1 Papers, Chelmsford Writing Papers, Arnold's Inks, Stephen's Inks, Dickson's Carmine, David's Carmine & Mucilage, Crown Brand Mucilage, Gillott's Pens, Esterbrook's Pens, Barnett's Zinc and Platina Pens, Dixon's Pencils, etc., etc. SAN FRANCISCO 1 SACRAMENTO. OCCIDENTAL HOTEL SA.TST FRANCISCO. HEADQUARTERS ARMY AND NAVY. Terms, - - - $3.00 per day with Board. Rooms, without Board, - $1.00 per day and upwards. Parlors and Rooms, with Bath attached, Extra. CHAS. L. WETHERBEE, Manager. SLAVEN'S YOSEMITE COLOGNE. MADE FROM CALIFORNIA FLOWERS. Sweet, Fragrant and Refreshing. Trial Size, 25 Cents. ITESHER & OO. •^S" :S-9 HATTERS, 9 Montgomery St., San Francisco. THE MOST COMPLETE ESTABLISHMENT IN THE STATE LEBENBAUM & CO., 121 Post Street, LEBENBAUM & CO., 529 & 531 Kearny Street, LEBENBAUM & GOLDBERG, 1447 and 1449 Polk Street, SAN FRANCISCO. The Leading G-ROCEES, TEA and WINE Merchants OF THE PACIFIC COAST, Import direct in every possible case, thus securing middle men's profits. The finest Teas direct from the Plantations in China and Japan, specially picked from the first crops. Their genuine Garden Leaf Japan Tea put up in 5, 10 and 50 lb. boxes is the finest Japaa Tea in the world, and their English Breakfast, Souchong, Congou, Oolong and Mandarin Mix- tures are all of the finest possible selections. Their enormous Cellars are stocked with Champagnes of all the best Brands, Burgundies, Ehine Wines, Sauternes, Ports, Sherries, Clarets, Madeira, Malaga, Muscatel, Angelica, etc. , etc., by the Gallon, Case or Bottle, and their Brandies and Whiskies, old and genuine, are sold in the same way. Travelers and Tourists will find in any of their stores an enormously varied and most .select stock of high class LUNCH GOODS such as BONED CHICKEN, BONED TURKEY, Whole Boned Turkey Truffled, Whole Boned Chicken Truffled, Lunch Hams, Lunch Tongues, Cooked Corned Beef, Whole Cooked Ham, Boneless; Devilled Ham, Chicken, Turkey and Tongue; Sardines, Jardellas, Anchovies in Oil, Anchovies in Salt, Sardines in Mustard, Sardines Spiced, Crosse & Blackwell's Pickles all kinds, Windsor Manor Pickles of all kinds, Jams, Jellies and Preserves, all kinds of Pates, a large selection of Lunch Baskets always on hand. Roquefort, Stilton, Cheshire and Cheddar Cheese, Neufchatel and Fromage de Brie. COFFEES, All of their own direct importation, Ground and Roasted on the premises PURITY GUARANTEED. VISITS OF INSPECTION are respectfully solicited from all families in search of superior goods at moderate prices. Goods will be shown and sample quantities supplied with great pleasure. BRADLEY & RULOFSON SAN FRANCISCO, Artistic Portraits AND HIGH -CLASS PHOTOGRAPHY IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. Gold Medals, Vienna, Philadelphia and San Francisco. LihLiLUUiLiLUUlhLiLnLiLllQggBt^ iliflUil & WATBY, SCIENTIFIC OPTICIANS, #8? KEARNY^ STREET, Bet. Pine and California, SAN FRANICISCO. The only Opticians on this Coast who make Spectacle Lenses to order. GEO. C. SHREVE & CO. DEALERS IN WATCHES, DIAMONDS, JEWELRY, SILVER WARE, CLOCKS, OPERA GLASSES, ETC. 110 Montgomery St., San Francisco. Have the Largest and Finest Stock of Goods in their line on the Pacific Coast. They have but One Price, and all goods are Marked in Plain Figures. MORE POPULAR THAN EVER. THE a-E3ST"0"I3STE Singer New Family Sewing Machine. The Strongest, The Simplest, The Most Durable Sewing Machine ever yet constructed. The popular demand for the GENUINE SINGER in 1879 exceeded that of any previous year during the Quarter of a Century in which this " Old Reliable " Machine has been before the public. In 1878 we sold 366,422 Machines. In 1879 we sold 431,167 Machines. Excess over any previous year, - 74,735 Machines. REMEMBER That every REAL Singer Sewing Ma- chine has this Trade Mark cast into the Iron Stand and em- bedded in the arm of the Machine. Represented by 500 Subordinate Offices in the United States and Canada, and 3,000 Offices in the Old World and South America. The Singer Manufacturing Company Principal Office, 34 Union Square, New York. Genekal Agency for the Pacific Coast, No. 118 Sutter Street, - San Francisco. For the accommodation of the public, we have a Branch Office in every large city, and an authorized agent for the sale of our Machines in every County on the Pacific Coast. 5 ^^PB OALIFOENIA THE NEWPORT OF THE PACIFIC. Pacific Ocean House The principal hotel in the city, containing ioo rooms, with all modern improvements, also extensive grounds containing swings and croquet grounds for the accommodation of guests. Two lines of street cars pass the door for the bathing beach. Sportsmen will find good hunt- ing and fishing. Trout and Quail N in abundance. Coach and Car- riages attend all steamers and trains to convey passengers to the hotel free of charge. E. J. SWIFT, Proprietor. Eiverside House, SANTA CKUZ, CAL. FRED BARSON, Proprietor, Charmingly situated on the East bank of the River, in its own grounds of 30 acres, midway between the Post Office and Bathing Beach, within a few minutes easy walk of both. Fred Barson supplies his guests with his own well-appointed carriages and horses at moderate charges ; also, pleasure boats and fishing free ; nine acres orchard ; extensive archery and croquet grounds, shuffle-boards, swings, etc. Abundance of fruit and berries, and vegetables of all kinds grown on the premises, also poultry, eggs, milk, butter, etc. First-class furniture and appointments, and all good large cheer- ful rooms. Riverside carriages meet all trains and steamers, carrying arriving and departing guests free of charge. . Families seeking a really pleasant seaside home for long or short period, please write for tariff, etc. ttfWW l^liHPfli *® PACIFIC AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ, CAL. P. V. WILKIN S, Proprietor. A First-Class Family Hotel and Boarding House, well situated on main street leading to the Bathing Beach; one Block from Post Office, Express and Telegraph Offices; Garden back and front. Street Cars pass every few minutes. gSg'A Coach will carry Passengers from the Cars and Steamers to the House free of charge. M. YOUNG-, ©HI S^HSTT-A. OETJZ mmmw Begs to inform the people of this and adjacent Counties that he MANUFACTURES, WHOLESALES AND RETAILS in all its branches, having been engaged in the business for many years. WEDDING O^TtJG TO ORDER. ICE CREAM IN VARIETY. Mm, WlfflM&WHBk iM#ffct Manufacturer of and Dealer in best Quality of iraesst Saddles, Bridle WHIPS, BLANKETS, Spurs, Collars/ Brushes, Etc. SANTA CRUZ. Near Walnut Avenue, THE POPE HOUSE AND COTTAGES, THE LEADING FAMILY HOTEL OF SANTA CRUZ, MISSION STREET. Highest and Healthiest Position in Town. Regular Street Car service from the door to the Bathing Beach. Special arrangements with families for Cottages and Suites, at prices to suit the times. H. W. POPE, Proprietor. W. H. HOBBS, BOOKS I STATIONERY Two Doors below the Pacific Ocean House, SANTA CRUZ, CAL. WW ] % w 9 DEALER IN Hardware, Machinists' Goods AND Agricultural Implements, BERNHEIM'S BLOCK, PACIFIC AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ, CAL. The Courier Loeal Item, A NEWSPAPER Devoted to the best interests of Santa Cruz County. PUBLISHES DURING THE SEASON A COMPLETE LIST OF VISITORS. Specimen Copies Gratis on Application. OFFICE IN ELY'S BLOCK, ABOVE POST OFFICE, SANTA CBVZ. PICNIC LUNCHEONS # DINNERS IN THE BEST STYLE AND AT MODERATE PRICES AT THE Big*. Trees -Hotel, SANTA CRUZ. Large Dancing Platform, > Most Romantic Groves, Railroad Station in the Grounds, First -Class Cookery, CHOICE WINES, LIQUORS and CIGARS. Quincy Hall Seminary, SANTA CRUZ, CAL. Mrs. JOHN L. GAMBLE, - - Principal. TTJT7 well-known healthfulness of Santa Cruz, its admirable location, easy of access Il-Lv both by land and sea, renders it a desirable place for the establishment of a Seminary for Young Ladies and Children. The Course of Instruction embraces all the branches of a thorough English education and "Kindergarten" for the younger pupils. THE MODERN LANGUAGES. MUSIC : Vocal and Instrumental. UNUSUAL ADVANTAGES ARE ALSO OFFERED for acquiring proficiency in Pencil and Crayon Drawing, Pastel, Water Colors and Oil Painting. At Quincy Hall special attention is given to the cultivation of the manners as well as the minds of the scholars. The games and exercises are superintended by the teachers, and the laws of health carefully observed. The number of boarding pupils s limited to fifteen. LiLiLUUlLUitaLUlLiLiEflnE^^ LAKE MAKINA ( On the Beach one mile South of Santa Cruz ) Damping Ground, Driving Park and Bathing Beach. S. A. HALL, Lessee, for many years Lessee of CAMP CAPITOLA, Boating, Bathing, Fishing, Hunting, Horseback Riding, Rifle Shooting, Archery, Etc. Beach Drive two miles. Circular Driving Track one mile. TENTS AND COTTAGES, FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED, with or without First-Class FARM HOUSE BOARD. Stabling and Board for Fifty Horses. Pleasure Boats for Hire with or without Experienced Boatmen. ALL TERMS MODERATE. See illustration on opposite page. I i &\ ; iEtna Insurance Co. of Hartford, The Leading American Fire Ins. Co. in Business, Capital and Surplus. Incorporated, tMm^SX^c^SStSS^^' Year 1819 Cash Assets, January 1, 1880, . . $7,078,224.49 Cash Capital, January 1, 1880, . . 3,000,000.00 Pacific Branch Office: : : 311 California Street. HENRY MEYRICK, GEO. C. BOARDMAN, Agent, Santa Cruz. General Agent. Aggregate Assets, $40,607,942. Imperial Fire Insurance Co, of London, London Assurance Corporation of London, Northern Assurance Corporation of London, Queen Insurance Company of Liverpool, W. LANE BOOKER, Agent and Attorney. EOB'T DICKSON, Manager. 317 California Street , San Francisco, Agents at Santa Cruz, MEYRICK & CO., Real Estate Exchange & Mart. 0€E MS, mil. THIS POPULAR PRIVATE HOTEL AND J^ BOARDING HOUSE WITH COTTAGES stands close to the Bathing Beach, 40 feet above tide mark, in its own well-wooded grounds of six acres handsomely laid out and ex- tending to the river's edge, affording Rare Facilities for Boating, Fishing and Bathing. GUESTS TAKEN FREE To and from OCEAN VILLA by Special Carriages meeting Cars and Steamers. THE LOCATION OF OCEAN VILLA IS UNEQUALLED, and must strike the visitor arriving by water : it stands on the right . entering the Harbor. GEO. H. BLISS, Proprietor, p. o. Box 106. SANTA CRUZ, CAL. nSlS15lSl5l5lSl5l5l5l5l5l515l5 LUUiLUUUUUUUilnlnEfoLi^ J. F. CHRISTAL, Druggist and Apothecary, ITearlt Opposite Post Oitice, importer of PURE DRUGS AND MEDICINES, PERFUMERY AND TOILET ARTICLES, DRUGGISTS' SUNDRIES of all Kinds, Etc., N. B.— Compounding Physicians' Prescriptions a Specialty. FURNISHED 1 UNFURNISHED HOUSES Farms, Ranches, Vineyards and Timber Lands, FOR RENT AND SALE AT THE REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE & MART, SANTA CRUZ, CAL. REAL ESTATE OF EVERY DESCRIPTION BOUGHT, SOLD and EXCHANGED. Descriptive Lists Free by Mail. REFERENCES IN LONDON, Eng., AND SAN FRANCISCO. MEYRICK & CO., Proprietors. Representing Imperial, London, Northern, and Queen Insurance Co's, Assets, $38,000,000. ^Etna Insurance Co. of Hartford, Assets, $7,078,224, jfoiin bbheBi & w POSV 'OVITOB9 UNDER THE TOWN CLOCK The CITY STABLES, SCOTT & JONES PACIFIC AYE., SANTA CRUZ, CAL. All orders for Carriages, Buggies, Rockaways and Picnic Wagons PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. 1111 I. & CABBU S. MM SANTA CRUZ, CAL. »ss mm wmm mmm IN GREAT VARIETY AND MADE TO ORDER. Local Views and Native Flowers Painted on Cards, Shells, etc., a Specialty. ■CABINET SIZE. IN PACKAGES, CONTAINING CHOICE SPECIMENS OF SANTA CRUZ ALG/E CORRECTLY NAMED. H. C. CHACE, THE LEADING DEALER IN lion's and i@ji' J Fine Clothing, FURNISHING GOODS, Trunks & Valises, and Tobacco, PACIFIC AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ, CAL. DENTIST. F. W. BUSSj D. D. S. All Branches of Dentistry performed skillfully. Satisfaction guaranteed. Nitrous Oxide (Laughing Gas) and other anaesthetics administered for painless extraction of teeth. OFFICE: BEENHEIM'8 BLOCK:, Pacific Avenue, Santa Cruz, Cal. Office Hours : 8 a.m. to 12 m,, 1 p. m. to 5.30 P. M. TOURISTS and others will always find the largest and best selected stock of Watches, Biamo&cfs JEWELRY -AT — WILLIAM EFFEY'S PIONEER JEWELRY STORE, 212 PACIFIC AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ, CAL. A BEAUTIFUL WOODLAND SUMMER RESORT. GLENWOOD MAGNETIC SPRINGS HOTEL and COTTAGES. Nine miles north of Santa Cruz, three miles from Glenwood Station on South Pacific Nar- row Gauge Railroad ; located in the warm belt, 1,300 feet above sea level, good climate at all seasons. The waters of this Spring are highly magnetic and have quite a reputation in cases of rheumatism, liver, kidney and nervous diseases, insomnia and general debility. MAGNETIC BATHS (hot and cold) ALWAYS READY. Every desirable facility and accommodation for visitors. Good Saddle Horses, Splendid Views, Romantic Scenery, and excellent Fishing- and Gunning* in the immediate neighborhood. The Hotel Carriages meet all trains. OSCAR L. GORDON, ^ OFFICE, DIE I^JVI^TIEIR'S BUILDING, PACIFIC AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ. OFFICE HOURS : 8 A. M. to 12 M.,1to6P. M. Anaesthetics carefully administered for painless extraction of Teeth and other operations in Dental Surgery. JACOB GUNDLACH. CHAS. BUNDSCHU. ®N$^ v&B, FINE OLD TABLEWINES RHINE FARM, *t.&CHnr/or 4f QQ. *'< CUM ST. Vineyards, Sonoma, Cal. Depot, cor. Market & Second Sts., San Francisco. BUILDING LOTS FOR SALE In SANTA CBUZ and SOQUEL, AT FROM $50 TO $1,000. TERMS : — 10 per cent, cash, the balance in nine annual installments with interest at 8 per cent, per annum, payable annually, in advance. LIFE INSURANCE CLAUSE. In ease of death, all matured installments having been paid, the heirs of the purchaser are entitled to a conveyance without further payment. For Maps and particulars apply to F. A. HIHN, Santa Cruz. Camp Capitola, near Soquel, Santa Cruz Co., Cal. A FAVORITE WATERING-PLACE On the Line of the Santa Cruz Railroad. GOOD SEA BATHING. CAMPING GROUND OR COTTAGES TO LET, With or without Board. EVANS & JONES, Soquel. JJ. ®!i!l! DEALERS IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE, PACIFIC AVENUE, OPPOSITE POST OFFICE, The Oldest, Largest, and Most Reliable Mercantile Establishment in Santa Cruz. fine liquors and first-class wines a specialty. FUN AMONG THE BREAKERS. IilBB&AXniY'S Original Bathing Establishment STILL FURTHER IMPROVED AND ENLARGED THIS SEASON. Hot, Cold and Tepid Shower and Hip Baths, Sunny Dressing Rooms, Latest Styles in Costumes, Spring Board, Safety Line attached to Buoys, Etc. Street Cars pass every few minutes. E UV1 BOOK STOR NEARLY OPPOSITE POST OFFICE. n i Is ALL THE STANDARD AND LATE PUBLICATIONS. A- FINE VAEIETY OF if m immws mm Wmm d®®©5 Sea Mosses and Ferns arranged in Novel Styles. S.H.BAILEY DEALER IN CLOCKS, JEWELRY, AND SILVERWARE, PACIFIC AVE3NTTJE, Opposite Court House, SANTA CRUZ, CAL. SANTA CRUZ, CAL. U. S. Examining Surgeon for Pensions. UAV1I A IfBIl, STOVES AND HARDWARE Water Pipe, TINWARE, Gi-^S IFITTIICTGh, PACIFIC AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ. JOSEPH LYNAM, LADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S Boot & Shoemaker PACIFIC AVE., SANTA CRUZ, RIGHT OPPOSITE THE COVERED BRIDGE. FIRST CLASS WORK MADE TO ORDER. REPAIRS NEATLY DONE AND PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. J. T. HAZELS, PACIFIC AVENUE, Next Door to Ocean House, SANTA CRUZ, CAL. PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COMPOUNDED. SANTA GRUZ TRANSFER GO. FREIGHT AND BAGGAGE Delivered to all Parts of Santa Cruz — Promptly Delivered to Address or Shipped to Destination. Mark care Daniels' S. C. Transfer Co., or send orders to the OFFICE : Pacific Avenue, opp. Locust Street, SANTA CRUZ.