You'll actually have to look about 30' to the
southwest of this cache to figure out why this is IHO PW. We
decided to place the cache here to allow 7/24 access. My
daughters wanted to alter the figures on the tranquil place to
expel a fine mist to more closely duplicate Mr. Wind's trail
image but I didn't think that would be becoming of Yeshua's
Girls. O:-)
We know how Mr. Wind loves the most challenging hikes so we
considered placing a cache at the top of Mt. Aarat where Noah's Ark
is said to be hiding under the ice (hey, maybe IN Noah's Ark!!! But
I digress...) West Coast Administer wouldn't approve it because he
thinks it is out of our normal caching territory! So this Ramona
cache will have to do to honor Mr. Wind for now.
Mr. Wind lives in Ramona, California. History of Ramona The area
of Ramona was first inhabited by the Diegueno Indians, a
semi-nomadic people who traveled between the coast and the
back-country, living in Ramona when it became too cold for them in
Mesa Grande.
The Diegueno Indians left considerable archaeological evidence
behind them. Etchings and paintings on rocks, and many grinding
stones. Their grinding stations were always located near stands of
rocks, oak groves, and streams. They ground the acorns from the
great oaks into a meal that was used to bake a type of travel
bread.
Records show that in 1775 Spanish soldiers came to what became
know as the Santa Maria Valley and attacked a native village called
"Pamo" in retaliation for the destruction of a nearby mission. This
was the first recorded contact with white men and may have been in
what is now Ramona, or possibly Pamo Valley.
The next contact came when a Catholic expeditionary mission led
by Father Sanchez and escorted by six Spanish troops, traveled
through the Santa Maria Valley from the Presidio in San Diego.
Passing through Ramona, north of Goose Valley they stopped to have
breakfast in Ballena. Ballena means whale in Spanish and was named
for the mountain that looks like a large whale. Afterwards they
continued on to Santa Ysabel and the Warner Springs area. The Padre
remarked that the Ramona area looked like it would be a good area
to raise hay.
The original mission grant of 18,000 acres in the Santa Maria
Valley and Santa Ysabel was made to Jose Joaquin Ortega in 1843.
Three years later the Ortega house was visited by General Stephen
Watts Kearny, when he passed through Ramona on his way to fight the
Battle of San Pasqual, with the Californio ranchers. Kearny lost
his dragoons to the superb lancers and horsemen who had raised
cattle in the area all their lives.
Ramona had several connections to the battle. When visiting
several homes in the area Kearny met one of Ramona's earliest
settlers, Edward Stokes who was originally from England. They met
when Kearny was encamped in Warner Hot Springs. Stokes, a former
British sailor was the son-in-law of Jose Joaquin Ortega and built
his own adobe ranch house in 1843 in Goose Valley. The trail that
Kearny and his dragoons took in December of 1846 still exists in
sections today and is known as Old Survey Road 97.
In 1849 a Lieutenant Dave Couts brought the first four wheeled
wagon into the valley.
The gold rush that flourished in Julian after 1870 led to the
creation of a stage line that ran between San Diego and Julian, and
passed through Ramona. The trip began at 6 AM and arrived in Ramona
at 3 PM.
The first house built in present day Ramona was the Verlaque
House. It is still standing and houses the Guy Woodward Museum. It
was build as a store on two acres given for that purpose by a
Bernard Etcheverry, who acquired the land grant that had originated
with the Ortega Family. Etcheverry raised sheep until driven out of
business by drought and Ramona's native burrs, which made the wool
worthless.
At first Ramona was called Nuevo, because there was another town
named Ramona farther north. When that town became defunct, Ramona
acquired the name permanently. Helen Hunt Jackson, writer of the
famous fiction book "Ramona" had no connection to the town, nor did
the story.
The town site of Ramona was laid out in the 1870s, with Main
Street following the original San Vicente Road. Ramona was
developed by the Santa Maria Land and Water Company, which
purchased 3200 acres and sold them off. The head of the development
was a man named Milton Santee. The plan also was to build a
religious seminary here, but nothing ever came of it.
Water was first brought into town by pipelines from Hatfield
Creek.
In 1886 Augustan Barnett made bricks to build the Ramona Hotel,
later called the Kenilworth Inn and opened in 1887. Barnett, a
wealthy man originally from New York, decided to share his wealth
with his fellow citizens by building the Ramona Town Hall, which he
gave to the town. The first grammar school built in town was
constructed from brick left over from these building projects.
The first drug store opened in 1889 and in 1895 John C. Bargar
opened the first blacksmith shop. Bargar also built a lumber yard
which he sold to the Ransom Brothers in 1924. The Ransoms still own
it today.
The first locally owned bank was established in 1911. It
operated until 1928 when it was taken over by the Bank of America.
Electricity arrived in Ramona in 1926, the same year the first
paved highway was completed.
In 1925, at the instigation of the Chamber of Commerce and the
Farm Bureau, a water company was created to deliver water from
Santa Maria Creek to Ramona. A bond issue passed 93-3 to
appropriate money for the project.
In the 1920s Ramona was the site of some of the largest turkey
ranches in the world and called itself "The Turkey Capital of the
World." In 1947 one of the turkeys from Ramona was presented to
President Harry Truman.
In the 1930s Ramona received an interesting distinction by being
awarded a silver cup for having the best voting record in the state
six times. The voting percentages ranged from 93.3% to 98.8% during
this decade. The cup can be seen on display at the Chamber
office.
Ramona connected to the San Diego Aqueduct in the 1950s and
1960s and established a sewer system.
In 1967 the current high school was built on Hanson Lane, and
the old high school became first the junior high and finally the
district school office.
In the late 1960s, poised for the development that continued
ever since, Ramona had a population of about 5000. Today the
population is 40,000 plus.
Article taken from Ramona Chamber of Commerce
web page, 2005