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A History of Twain Harte
Tall pines and an idyllic mountain lake have drawn people to
Twain Harte from the earliest days.
Before golf courses, summer homes and dinner houses were
Twain Harte's landmarks, the Mi-Wuk Indians called home a
lakeside camp near Twain Harte Lake's popular "Rock". ("The
Rock" as residents call a sweeping expanse of granite near
the Twain Harte Lake Dam, is the area's oldest landmark).
There the Indians built houses or "oochums" from limbs of
trees and bark and wove fine baskets from the willows that
grew in the damp places.
But in nearby Columbia, Sonora and Jamestown, the discovery
of gold in 1849 was drawing white men to the foothills by
the thousands. When the easy gold was exhausted, then came
the lumbermen and the ranchers bent on tapping the area's
other riches its forests and grazing lands.
Apple and Pear orchards, cattle ranches and later, lumber
mills began springing up around the Indian enclave at "The
Rock".
In 1861, the U.S. Congress authorized construction of a road
to run from the foot of Twain Harte Grade over Sonora Pass,
connecting the growing commercial center of Sonora with the
boom mining town of Aurora. A contractor named J. B. Carter
was paid $400,000 to build the road, but when the sum proved
inadequate, another company with private finances completed
the construction. Two toll gates were put in to defray
expenses, one at Twain Harte and one at Sugar Pine.
Alfred Fuller, an Ohioan who came to the area during the
1850's, took a Mi-Wuk wife and lived near "The Rock" on what
was then the Calder Ranch, was hired to operate the Twain
Harte Toll Gate of the Sonora-Mono Toll Rd. He continued in
that job until the 1890's when the county took over
maintenance of the road.
In 1862, Patrick Williams acquired 540 acres of land,
including the meadow where the Twain Harte Golf Course is
now located. Williams planted apple and pear orchards, ran a
few head of cattle and maintained a watering place for the
freight wagons bound for the east slop mines. Williams water
trough was located where Twain Harte Lodge is today.
Williams' son, John D. Williams, inherited the ranch at his
father's death, but in 1923 sold out to Keturah C. Wood.
Wood subdivided the area in 1924 and named it Twain Harte
Lodge after two famous Mother Lode authors, Mark Twain and
Bret Harte.
Twain Harte is belived to be the first private recreational
subdivision in the Sierra Nevada according to Carlo
DeFerrari, county historian. Earlier, the U.S. Forest
Service had in 1916 and 1917 subdivided the area around
Strawberry Lake (now Pinecrest) and sold lots and leases to
permittees, he said.
Twain Harte Lodge Realty was organized in 1925 to sell stock
in the development. In 1926, Albert L. Nevins and Dr. E.
Turner bought into the Twain Harte Development Co. Wood
retained only a 40 acre piece that came to be known as Lilac
Terrace.
Nevins and Turner energetically pulled together plans for
the subdivision. They started Twain Harte Dam during the
summer of 1927 but ran short of funds. Edward M. Marquis
agreed to to put up the money needed to complete the dam.
But when the company failed to pay off the note in 1934,
Marquis foreclosed and took over the company, changing the
name to Twain Harte Realty.
By that time, Twain Harte, was a thriving summer colony.
Cabin sites, available for a modest $100 and up sold
steadily.
Turner and Nevins constructed imposing homes on the hill
near the present-day site of the Twain Harte Market.
The first school in the area had been located before the
turn of the century at the nearby Centrecamp millsite, one
of many millsites operated by the Tuolumne County Water Co.,
while it was constructing the open ditch water system
operated by the County today.
The first Twain Harte School opened in 1928 in a schoolhouse
moved in from the nearby mining town of Confidence to a site
near the Williams ranch house.
Nearly all community activities centered around the
subdivision clubhouse located near where the Twain Harte
Fire Station stands today. The clubhouse doubled as meeting
hall, social hall and church for all denominations.
Marquis added a lodge, then a bar, then a modest hotel.
The wooden arch, today the town's trademark, was built in
1933.
Ray Eproson, who bought the Twain Harte Grocery in 1930,
allowed the development company to construct a golf course
in the Twain Harte Meadow exacting as his share a rent of $1
a year. The golf course became popular with well-known
personalities of the day, including Mario Giannini, Late
president of the Bank of America.
In 1943, Nevins and Eproson bought out the Marquis holdings,
which included the subdivision, a hotel, service station and
some outbuildings. In 1947, they sold the hotel to Joch
Rocca who operated the establishment until it burned to the
ground in 1953. The present lodge was built in 1958.
State Department of Forestry firefighters camped at Twain
Harte with one engine for many summers before building a
permanent fire station at the edge of the meadow in 1944.
Twain Harte has grown rapidly since the close of World War
II. Once the summer retreat of a few hundred, the community
is today permanent home for several thousand. Since the
original subdivision, there have been many others. Nevins,
Turner, Marquis and Eproson completed five subdivisions.
Baunhauser, Broadhurst, Gunther and Morrow added a sixth.
Today, according to the latest census, Twain Harte is one of
the fastest growing areas in Tuolumne County.
Residents are attracted today by the same qualities that
drew the Mi-Wuk Indians there over 100 years ago.
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