Traces of
Cambria’s past are everywhere…from rock mortar grinding
holes left by the first people, to the historic buildings still
in use as restaurants and shops... the past has an immediacy here
that lends a feeling of continuity to this special little town.
The first
inhabitants of the area of California’s central coast now
called Cambria were a gentle native people who lived and prospered
here for thousands of years. Following a seasonal migration from
inland riparian areas to the coastal zone, these people traveled
light, and thus have left few artifacts. They excelled at basketry
and net-weaving and conducted trade with their relatives inland
in the Salinas Valley area. In their canoes sealed with pismo,
or beach tar, they also roamed far to the north and south.
When the Spanish
arrived with the Portola expedition of 1769, the coastal trail
from Morro Bay to San Simeon and northward was already well established,
with numerous spurs inland following the creek canyons. The Spanish
found large Indian camps near Villa Creek and were greeted warmly
and generously. They were not the first outsiders to arrive. Chinese
ships had shipwrecked here, the Russians had visited the coast
in search of otters to take, and even Sir Frances Drake had moored
nearby to make repairs to his vessel. A pretty cosmopolitan list
for such a wild and remote coastline!
With the founding
of three nearby missions by the Spanish padres from 1771-1779,
the peaceable era of native habitation was drawing to a rapid
close. Many natives were lost to diptheria and measles; many more
escaped inland to the interior valleys, blending their culture
with that of the Salinan people. By the year 1800, for the most
part, only the outsiders remained.
The secularization
of the missions in 1838 turned vast tracts of land over to private
Spanish hands and the era of the dons began. From Rancho de la
Piedras Blancas in the north, to Rancho San Simeon and Rancho
Santa Rosa near present-day Cambria, the majority of the coastal
lands were held by the wealthy ostentatious dons. None of the
owners actually occupied their coastal holdings, however. Their
home territories were on the inland side of the Santa Lucia mountains,
where they ran massive horse and cattle operations, using their
distant ranchos for supplemental cattle range, and to maintain
their secret beach landings for the illegal hide trade with coastal
smugglers.
After a brief
period of Mexican rule, California became a state in 1851. Shortly
afterward, the first American settlers arrived in the Cambria
area. A certain wily young man named Domingo Pujol bought the
entire Santa Rosa Rancho for $12,000 from its debt-laden owner,
and began subdividing and selling off parcels to settlers.
Much of the
area was homesteaded by squatters, who eventually gained legal
ownership of their property via the preemption laws or the Homesteader’s
Act of 1862.
In 1869 the
controversy over the name of this little outpost was finally settled
at a town meeting. Sometimes called Slabtown because of the rough-finished
lumber on some hurriedly constructed buildings, the little town
was stuck with an identity crisis that had to be solved. Unhappy
with the post office-chosen name of San Simeon, and unable to
use Santa Rosa or Rosaville (after the creek) because the names
were in use elsewhere in California, the weary citizens impulsively
took a suggestion from someone who’d just returned from
a small mining town in Pennsylvania that reminded him of his California
village. The name they chose that night was Cambria. Or so the
story goes…
Cambria had
many attractions for ambitious settlers willing to work hard.
Dairies, ranching, coal and cinnabar mining, and the lumber trade
all offered rich opportunities for those hardy first families.
Initially, though connected to towns to the north and south only
by a frequently impassable wagon trail, Cambria was better supplied
than many remote areas by virtue of a regularly scheduled coastal
steamer route that picked up and delivered cargo.
The lack of
a safe, deep-water harbor caused endless difficulties, however.
Cargo had to be floated ashore at one of only two sandy beaches
in the area, and bundles of hides often had to be dropped a hundred
feet from the top of the cliff to the sand below and then towed
out by rowboats to the ships waiting offshore. Passengers boarding
the steamer waded out into the surf where they were picked up
by small boats.
Numerous attempts
to build deep-water piers at San Simeon point whaling station
and Leffingwell Landing all met with ultimate failure, as the
strong ocean swells and dangerous storms continually destroyed
the structures. It wasn’t until George Hearst built a substantial
pier at San Simeon Bay in 1878 (north of the present fishing pier)
that a reliable port served the area. His fees and tarrifs were
so high, however, that many people continued to use the old primitive
methods of landing cargo on the beaches!
The civil
war combined with a severe regional drought to bring hard financial
times to the central coast, and George Hearst took advantage of
the general misery by buying up land whenever he could. By the
1870’s he owned over three thousand acres and had built
a large horse farm where he raised fine race horses, just below
the current site of Hearst Castle.
When the drought
ended, recovery was quick, and by 1875 Cambria was the second
largest town in San Luis Obispo county, second only to San Luis
Obispo itself. All the residents in the outlying areas relied
on Cambria for services and supplies, and the town had a well-developed
business center, with four large general mercantile stores, two
drug stores, two hotels, several saloons, a carpenter shop, butcher
shop and Wells Fargo and Western Union offices, serving about
two-thousand total area inhabitants.
The town was
not without its wild and wooly aspect, however. With its mud streets
and wooden boardwalks, in many respects it was a classic Wild
West outpost, with shootings, drunken miners and mysterious disappearances
spicing up the daily round. But at its core, the community was
composed of people with a strong vested interest in its continued
prosperity.
The terrible
fire of October 1889 was a significant set-back. It completely
destroyed the downtown area, composed entirely of wood-framed
buildings. When the townspeople rebuilt, they chose brick structures
if they could afford to. The invention of the automobile was embraced
wholeheartedly in Cambria, and finally spelled the end of Cambria’s
role as a coastal shipping center.
Dairy and
mining dominated the area for decades. A close-knit community
of hard-working families formed the backbone of the Cambria identity.
Elaborate community picnics and deep-pit barbeques were famous
throughout the county for their rowdy horse racing, music, and
baseball games with the local team, the Cambria Kelp Eaters.
An oiled and
improved road into town in 1924 eventually attracted land developers
who formed the Cambria Development company in 1927. They built
a mountain lodge in the woods overlooking the village and subdivided
a large wooded tract of land into small lots in what is now called
Lodge Hill. The depression slowed growth for a time, but around
1950 the expanding population of California, looking for isolated
recreational areas, rediscovered Cambria.
It was mostly
a seasonal village, active for a few months each year, until 1958,
when the state opened Hearst Castle to public tours, bringing
large numbers of visitors to Cambria year-round.
The Cambria
Historical Society conducts history walks periodically for those
interested in identifying historic structures and learning more
about Cambria’s colorful past.