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                Jose Moya del Pino Library  ~  Ross Historical Society

A Ross History Timeline 

Area up to 1800 ~ The Coast Miwok Indians occupied Ross Valley and its environs. They were a gentle people who lived softly on the land gathering berries, seeds and acorns, hunting game and fishing the streams. There were seven mounds in what is now the Town of Ross.

1800-1830  ~ Coast Miwok culture and local population decimated by Spanish incursion and the settlement in 1817 of Mission San Raphael with its vast land holding. Reduced by disease, the survivors moved away from their land. 

1834  ~ After the Mexican Revolution of 1822, the "Land Grant" system of parceling out land comes to what we now know as Marin County.

           Corte Madera Creek

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1840
 

Captain Juan B. R. Cooper, a sea captain from Boston, was granted "Rancho Punta de Quentin" (an 8,877 acre property) by Mexican Governor Juan Bautista Alvarado. Cooper was licensed to hunt otter, prevalent at the mouth of the Corte Madera Creek.

               Ross Valley

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1848
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ended the war between the United States and Mexico. California was annexed tot he United States. Gold was discovered in California. Gold Fever brought thousands to California, some to Marin. This signaled the end of the "Spanish Era."

1849 ~ James Ross, a Scot from Inverness Shire, Scotland, came to California to find gold, leaving his wife, Annie, and three children waiting behind him in Australia.

         The James Ross Story ~ compiled by Carla Ehat, 1991

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One day in the early 1850's, James Ross stood on "the Embarcadero" wharf that later was to bear his name, Ross Landing, chatting with Benjamin Buckelew whose Rancho he had decided to purchase. Ross realized the possibilities and saw the beauty around him. There was still much timber to be cut! 


The sale included a busily working steam saw mill at Point San Quentin, all the machinery and equipment, two sloops, a yawl, plus horses, cattle, and pigs. There was continuous revenue to be made from lumber, so in 1857, for $50,000 gold coin, James Ross became the landowner of the 8,877 acre "Rancho Punte de San Quentin y Canada de San Anselmo."


1852 ~ "Rancho Punta de Quentin" sold by Juan Cooper to Benjamin Buckelew for $50,000 in gold coin. Buckelew continued the timbering and sold 20 acres to the State of California for a prison site (San Quentin today). The price was $10,000. Annie Ross and children arrived from Australia and joined James, living in San Francisco where James had established a successful wholesale liquor business.

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The land was roughly two square leagues and ran from from Point San Quentin over the hill to San Rafael Creek northwest to Red Hill - crossing San Anselmo and Fairfax today up to the Meadow Club and south across Water District property - Bon Tempe Lake, Lake Lagunitas on south to the creek flowing by Lark Creek Inn and then north to Kentfield Corners.


This was a huge estate, a dream that Ross as a lad of seventeen had leaving Scotland had never thought possible. Now, he was ready for the country side and a long life to enjoy his success!

1857 ~ James Ross (for whom the Town of Ross is named) bought "Rancho Punta de Quentin," from Buckelew for $50,000 in gold coin, continued timbering the land, established Ross Landing (now Kentfield Corners) and ran tri-weekly packet schooners from there to San Francisco. The Ross family moved into the Buckelew home (the site is 111 Redwood Drive today) and planted extensive gardens. 

James Ross became a "Country Squire"

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James Ross had come to California from Scotland via Australia to seek his fortune in the 1849 Gold Rush. Unlike thousands who came and were unsuccessful, Ross did very well; not a s miner, banker, lawyer nor commission merchant, but as a wholesaler of wine and spirits. Within eight years he had become affluent enough to indulge himself, his wife and famility of three children in a life connected to a "Country Squire." 


1862 ~ James Ross died, age 50, living only five years on the "Rancho."

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Packet Schooner at Ross Landing, circa 1860's



1863 ~ Annie Ross, the Ross' eldest daughter, married George Austin Worn.  The young couple chose a rancho site of  21 acres and built their estate, naming it "Sunnyside," site of the Marin Art and Garden Center.

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Annie Grayling Ross


1864 ~ The first building constructed at Sunnyside was this Octagon House designed as a tank house for the well on the property. The tank was housed on the second floor while the first floor served as the newlywed's temporary dwelling until the main house was completed in 1865. The Worns were interested in horticulture and planted many lovely trees, including the magnificent Magnolia grandiflora that stands in the center of the lawn today. From their extensive travels abroad, the Worns brought back many specimen plants that still beautify the Art and Garden Center grounds.
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1865 ~ The Worn family moved into their "Sunnyside" home.

1866 ~ Ross Landing School was built (site of Kentfield Fire House today). William Barber, one of the first purchasers of the Ross estate acquired 71 acres, 61 acres of which comprises "Winship Park" in Ross and the remainder, the "Barber Tract" in San Anselmo.

1870 ~ Probate proceedings staated on the James Ross will. Annie Ross was forced to sell large parcels of her land to meet the stipulations of James' will.
Albert Dibblee bought 78 acres named "Fernhill" and the Ross estate. Mr. Dibblee was given permission to continue use of the name. The Branson School occupies some of that land today. Annie Ross Worn and her four children went abroad for a two year European tour. Livery stables were built, now the site of the Ross Garage Building.

1872  ~ 
Annie Ross Worn returned from Europe. George Worn suffered financial reverses in the Comstock Mines. The Worn family temporarily vacated "Sunnyside" and moved to San Francisco.

1873 ~ "North Pacific Coast Railroad" acquired "right-of-way" through Ross Valley for a steam railroad.

1875 ~ The Worn family moved back to "Sunnyside." Annie Worn opened her home to boarders. The family remained there until 1879 when they moved to their ranch in San Anselmo (this site is the western part today oif the San Francisco Theological Seminary).

1881 ~ San Anselmo Chapel, the first church in Ross was built at the corner of Lagunitas and Sir Francis Drake. The church later became St. John's Episcopal Church, now located at the corner of Shady Lane and Lagunitas Road.

1882 ~ Annie Ross deeded 1.4 acres of land to the North Pacific Coast Railroad with the stipulation that the Railroad Station be named in memory of her husband and son. Jonathan G. Kittle purchased "Sunnyside" for $12,000  after financial reverses necessitated sale by the Worns of their beautiful estate. Mr. Kittle remodeled and enlarged the original home and he and his descendants resided there for over 50 years. In the early 1930's the main home was damaged by fire, but the Octagon house was unharmed. The property lay idle for 15 years.

1887 ~ 
The first Ross Post Office was erected (present site of Sam  the Butcher). The widow of James Ross built a smaller house at the corner of Lagunitas and Ross Common. This home was later moved to Lagunitas Road at Willow where a second story was added.

1890's  ~ Many beautiful estates were established in Ross by prosperous families from San Francisco looking for country property. Some of the names included William Barber, James Moore, Clinton Jones, Robert Davis, Pelham Ames, Henry Allen, William Boole, James Coffin, and further down the valley; Hall McAllister and Albert Kent.

1901 ~ Annie Ross, widow of James Ross, died

1903 ~ The Lagunitas Club was founded under the direction of Mrs. E. G. Schmiedell and Mr. Seward McNear. The club was built around the old "Pink Saloon." Tennis Courts were built on an old Indian shell mound.

1904 ~ The first automobiles arrived and chauffeurs met the 5:05 commute train in the newest automobile models instead of the former horse and coach.

1906 ~ The Great San Francisco Earthquake brought many families over form San Francisco who decided to reside permanently in Ross.

1907 ~ St. Anselm's Catholic Church was built at the corner of Shady Lane and Bolinas Avenue.

1908 ~ The first Ross Fire House was erected and the Town of Ross was incorporated. There were 750 dwellings including summer residences.

1909  ~ The new Town of Ross contracts to build five reinforce concrete bridges in the Town, hiring now famous bridge designer, John Buck Leonard. This was a farsighted decision by our first trustees.  

1911 ~ "Ross Common" was given to the Town of Ross by Annie Ross Worn. St. John's Episcopal Church was built on its present site. The property was donated by Mrs. James Coffin. Ross Grammar School was erected.

1918 ~ Ross Hospital was founded as a sanitorium, with 18 beds.

1922 ~ Katharine Branson School moved to Ross from San Rafael. It offered grades one to eleven and was co-educational through the fourth grade.

1926 ~ The Town of Ross voted $100,000 to buy the Shotwell estate upon which to build the present Ross Town Hall and Fire House.

1927 ~ Annie Ross Worn died.

1930 ~ Mordecai's Soda Fountain and Grocery opened at the corner of Ross Common and Redwood Drive (today commonly known as Eddie's and owned by the Ahrens family).

1931 ~ The original Worn/Kittle home was destroyed by fire.

1937 ~ The Golden Gate Bridge opened and the population of Ross increased.

1941 ~ The "new" Ross Grammar School was erected on the present site.

1945 ~ When realtors and developers began to cast covetous glances upon the land of Sunnyside, Caroline (Mrs. Norman)  Livermore, President of the Marin Conservation League, convinced eight organizations of which she was a member that this beautiful property with its gardens and trees should be preserved as a cultural center and a living memorial, not only to the dead of World War II, but of others. A mortgage of $25,000, due in five years, was taken out with Mrs. Livermore's home as collateral, and volunteers have been supporting Marin Art & Garden Center ever since. The Octagon House was quickly put to use as a store-room, office, meeting room and even a tea room. The Marin County Fair began being held at the Marin Art & Garden Center annually.

1958 ~ A "new" Ross Post Office was built on the site of the old North Pacific Coast Railroad Station.

1967 ~ Twenty-five acres of Phoenix Lake land was given by the family of Natalie Coffin Greene for a park in her memory.

1968 ~ Helen Moya del Pino authorized the complete restoration of the unusual structure, the Octagon House, in memory of her husband Jose Moya del Pino, one of the founders of the Marin Art and Garden Center. It was his inspiration to utilize this charming building as an art and garden reference library. 

1969 ~ The Octagon House was moved away from the well to its present site and placed upon a new foundation. Layers of old paint were removed from the walls to reveal the original tongue and groove wood. The second floor was replaced by a handsome balcony, giving full view of the original ceiling. All windows were mended and shutters hung.  A Williamsburg chandelier and a circular iron staircase from North Carolina were added, as well as bookcases and custom-made furniture. Roger Hooper, A.I.A., was the architect and Carla Flood, A.I.D., the decorator for this project. The Octagon House was renamed the "Jose Moya del Pino Library." The "Thomas Jefferson" serpentine brick wall surrounding the Marin Art & Garden Center was constructed, a donation from the Stratford family.

1970 ~ The Marin County Fair was held at the Marin Art & Garden Center for the last time. After twenty-five years, it was moved to the Marin County Civic Center grounds.

1971 ~ A sculpture created by Benjiamino Benvenuto Bufano was given to the town as a gift from the Jerome Flax family, and became the town symbol.                               

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The "Ross Bear" 
by Benjiamino Bufano

1979 ~ The "Ross Ditch" was built to contain the flood-prone Ross Creek.

1982 ~ The first "100 Years of Ross Celebration" was held at Ross Common to commemorate the establishment of Ross Station in 1882. Dedication took place of the Frederick Allen Park on 20 June 1982. Mr. Allen was Mayor of Ross for seventeen years and proudly carried "ROSS 1" as a personal license plate on his car.

1983 ~ The Ross Historical Society was founded to collect, preserve, exhibit and stimulate interest in the history of the Town of Ross and its environs.

1984 ~ A Town Hall Restoration Fund was established by the Ross Historical Society to raise $25,000 to restore the Town Assembly Hall. Monies and project fulfilled by November 1985. Ross was the only Town in Marin County to celebrate the anniversary of "Admission Day" in California 9 September 
1850 with a program of speeches, a parade of antique cars, a picnic supper, music and tours of the newly restored Town Hall.

1986 ~ Ross Historical Society learned that all five of our concrete bridges were elegible for landmark status and inclusion on the list of the "National Register of Historic Places." This creates great honor and distinction for our Town and the Ross Historical Society moved forward in an effort to preserve the bridges.

1987 ~ The Ross Historical Society received a foundation grant for per review of the Army Corps of Engineers flood control project in Ross. This was an educational study to determine what flood control measures and levels of protection might coexist with the preservation of existing natural and historical amenities in the Town of Ross. 3 November marked the 100th Anniversary of Postal Service in the Town of Ross. Willis C. Morris, station master was appointed the first Postmaster.

1994 ~ The Moya Library became home to the Ross Historical Society and its collection of maps and pictures. Today, ever mindful of our Marin heritage, we offer the Octagon House and its collection of rare books and pictures and a living example of historic preservation.

2006 ~ The Marin Art and Garden Center mourns the loss of its 135 year old magnolia tree.

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The Magnolia 
"The Center is mourning the demise of its magnificent 135 year old magnolia. Armillaria (oak root fungus) had destroyed its root system so that one of its double trunks blew over in a December storm. The other trunk was so unstable it had to be taken down. 

The tree is directly related to the history of Ross. In 1859 James Ross bought 10,000 acres in central Marin from Pt. San Quentin to Bald Hill. When his daughter, Annie, married George Worn in 1862, Ross presented them with the ten acres that are now the Marin Art and Garden Center.  

George Worn, who was very interested in horticulture, planted a small magnolia in 1870. It exceeded all height and longevity expectations and became a beloved symbol of the Center. We are left with the small forest of trees that formed when the lower branches of the magnolia bent to the ground and rooted. They will be a living memorial to the Grand Old Tree. Interest in horticulture runs in the Worn Family. A daughter of Annie and George Worn was one of the designers of the Filoli Gardens down the Peninsula, and other descendants, Tom and Ross Perry, operate Sunnyside Nursery in San Anselmo."

Kay Slade, The Center Post, March/April 2006

Marin Art & Garden Center, 30 Sir Francis Drake Blvd., Box 437, Ross, CA 94957 - (415) 258-9595 - moya.rhs@gmail.com
The Octagon House (c.1864) - California Heritage Council Preservation Award

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