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tales from the mountain
by Shanti Edwards
The forced relocation of Kashia Pomo from their ancestral lands on the Sonoma Coast — and a burgeoning era of European immigrant homesteading, ranching and logging — left its mark on the hills surrounding Cazadero. The post-gold rush era of Sonoma County history is characterized as a time of increased homesteading settlements into rural areas by European immigrants who engaged in farming, ranching, logging, the tourism industry and other related trades. Nearly the entire area was settled by 1897. By 1908, all land had been claimed.
Sonoma Land Trust’s Little Black Mountain Preserve is approximately two miles west of the town of Cazadero as the resident golden eagle flies. According to longtime neighbors, the name Little Black Mountain first appears on maps in the 1940s (likely due to the dark rocky outcrops). The issue is further confused by the presence of two other features named Black Mountain and Little Black Mountain in the vicinity. The property we know as Little Black Mountain was not unified under its current configuration until the 1950s. There are two homestead settlements on the property that remain today — the old Petersen Ranch homestead built in the 1920s, and what we currently refer to as the Hedlund Cabin. Old hunting cabins and early settlements may have utilized redwood post foundations, any remnants of which would have disappeared in the Creighton Ridge Fire of 1978.
The eastern section of Little Black Mountain was settled by Jack and Verlie Branstetter in 1937, who were the first ones to utilize the property regularly. Originally from Missouri, the Branstetters also resided in Sacramento and Jack was a salesman for Pillsbury. In addition to the construction of a quaint wooden cabin, Bransetter established a small concrete dam and water conveyance system on a neighboring parcel, which was registered in 1939 with the California Division of Water Resources. This source continues to be one of the best producing springs on the property.
In 1965, they sold the property to Joe and Margaret Key, who sold the property in 1966 to Roy and Sarah Jane Hedlund. Upon moving in, Jane Hedlund tells that there was a wooden plaque above the door engraved with the words “The house that Jack built.” Jane Hedlund was deeded the property in the late 1960s by her parents and lived there off the grid with her small pottery studio and garden until the 1980s. The cabin still stands today with Jane’s potter’s wheel positioned on a knoll with a view of St. Helena in the distance. Jane generously deeded the property to Sonoma Land Trust in 2005 to unify the preserve.
In 1952, Dr. William and Mrs. Rose Hatch acquired five parcels and unified them in the shape currently known as Little Black Mountain. During their ownership, portions of the property were leased for the purposes of logging. The property changed hands a number of times and was acquired in 1974 by Nion Robert “Bob” Thieriot (of the San Francisco Chronicle family), who donated the ranch to Sonoma Land Trust after the Creighton Ridge Fire of 1978.
Bob Thieriot’s conservation vision and legacy is deserving of an entire blog post of its own. Stay tuned for the next chapter in the history of Little Black Mountain …
