 
A TIMELINE
Prior
to 1853: Records indicate few non-native residents north of
Mt. St. Helena.

1845: Jacob P. Leese acquired title to the 21,200-acre Rancho Guenoc,
originally granted to George Roch on August 8, 1845. He had two years earlier acquired the adjoining 8,242-acre Rancho
Collayomi, now home to Middletown. Leese
established a cattle operation similar to that of his
brother-in-law Salvador Vallejo at Kelseyville. One of his
succession of managers built a log cabin where Stone House now
stands.
1852: Capt. A. A. Ritchie and Paul S. Forbes purchased
both ranchos from Leese. In accordance with the new U. S. Land
Act, they filed claims on both ranchos.
1853: Robert Henry Sterling and Capt. R. Steele started
building the Stone House of locally quarried stone.
Sterling had sent for his fiancée, Lydia Jane Wheaton, of
Guilford, Conn. It is assumed the house was completed for her
arrival. The couple married in Benicia May 19, 1854. She is
said to be the first white woman to live in Coyote Valley.

1856: A.A. Ritchie was thrown from his wagon and killed
instantly in July 1856. His executors took control of the
Rancho; those included Capt. Robert Waterman, uncle of Robert
Sterling and business partner of Ritchie, and John H.
Hamilton, Ritchie’s brother-in-law. The Sterlings moved to
Napa. Hamilton resided for a time in Stone House.
1857:
The official surveyor’s map conducted to validate the claims
shows a small native rancheria across the trail from
"Sterling's House." It also shows "Manlove's
place" near McCreery Lake and in the southeast corner an
unidentified "house," believed to be that of A.H.
Butts, who moved south to the canyon named for him.
1860: The general store of Herrick and Getz, probably in the
Stone House, initiated the growth of the village of
Guenoc, at the approximate location of today’s Hartmann
Bridge over Putah Creek. There are unconfirmed reports that Stone House was
briefly used as a saloon and dance hall. The 1860 federal
census tallied 131 residents in the Kayote precinct around
Guenoc.
1861: John Cobb, namesake of Cobb Mountain and Cobb Valley,
was named manager of both the Guenoc and Callayomi ranchos, by
the Ritchie estate. He lived in Stone House, presumably with
his wife and six children.
1863: The
claim to Rancho Collayomi was approved in December 1863.
1865: The claim to Rancho
Guenoc was approved. Hamilton briefly took over Stone House.
In
1867, Guenoc was recognized with its own post office
and A. A. Ritchie Jr. was named first postmaster. Stone
House served as both post office and polling place.
1871:
Middletown was founded on 80 acres in the center of
the Collayomi grant. Its post office replaced the
Guenoc post office in 1880.
1872: John McGreer purchased Stone House and more than
900 surrounding acres. Five of the McGreer’s ten
children were by then adults and had left home; their youngest
son, Hugh, died at Stone House in 1875 at the age of 16.
1885: Charles Marsh Young, one of the founders of
Middletown and owner of its Lake County House, traded that
hotel to McGreer for Stone House. The property was known as
“the Young place” well into the late 1940s.
1894: Young had Stone House deconstructed and rebuilt,
at the same site using the same stone plus additional stone of
the same type, to replace the original hand-hewn 12x12” oak
log foundation. The dimensions of the house were undoubtedly
expanded and a wooden second story added. At some later time,
a wood-frame expansion was added in the rear to house a
kitchen and crude bathroom with cold water piped from a nearby
spring.
1942: The Frank Hartmann family, farmers and ranchers who
owned a 720-acre property south of Hartmann Road, expanded
their holdings with the purchase of the Young place. Stone
House became a rental home.
1955: Fire ravaged the upper story. The roof was replaced
without the second floor.
1967: Hartmann obtained a permit, after years of effort, to dam the creek alongside Stone
House to create an irrigation pond.
1968: Middletown teacher Mildred Pearson housed her
collection of pioneer and Native American artifacts in Stone
House as a museum.
1968: Hartmann traded his holdings to U.S. Land Inc., a
division of Boise-Cascade Home & Land Corp., for a
360,000-acre cattle ranch in Idaho. The proposed development
of Hidden Valley Lake was announced and construction of the
dam began, demanding the rerouting of Spruce Grove Road as
portions were inundated. The land company also purchased
properties separating but adjoining the Hartmann parcels. By
Oct. 1969, Hidden Valley Lake was heralded as “well under
way.”
1988: Stone House had been used as a sales office, as
offices for the cooperative water company, as the security
office, as a makeshift recreation center for teens and
eventually simply for storage. It had not been maintained and
was seriously deteriorated. Concerned residents rallied to its
restoration.
1990: The Stone House Historical Society was formed as a
nonprofit entity. Donations, fundraisers and volunteer labor
have replaced the floor (with Douglas fir as in the original),
the roof, cleared bats and termites, and funded miscellaneous
upkeep. In recent years, the HVLA administration has
contributed to its maintenance.
The
house has been furnished throughout with donated period items
reminiscent of decades past, although few are as antique as
Stone House itself. It has been occupied in the past decade
only by our resident ghost, Camphor.

|
|
|
HOME
INSIDE
STONE HOUSE
A BIT ABOUT LAND GRANTS
Before the 1830s, coastal
California had been inhabited by Mexican “Californios” — about 800 families
solicited to follow the trail of Spanish missions northward
to establish the farms and ranches that made California a major exporter of hides and tallow.

Mexico wrested its independence from Spain in 1821, but the new government had few resources to devote to its
far-flung colonies in California. Its Colonization Act of 1824 initiated land grants to citizens
or any foreigner who would embrace Catholicism and become a Mexican citizen.
 
By mid-century a number of Americans and Europeans had
integrated into the culture, becoming Californios tby
marriage.

The first wagon train came into California in 1841, and scores followed.
Many became squatters, simply claiming the homestead
they wanted.

The rights of “foreigners” who had
been here for generations were of no importance.
Immigrants harvested crops,
stole livestock, erected homes on Californio land, and otherwise acted
violently against the landowners.

Boundary
disputes –- feuds, fights and lawsuits – would crowd the
courts and the jails for decades to come.

Legal settlement became the problem of U.S. courts in 1848
with the peace treaty that ended the Mexican-American War.

The U.S. Land Act of 1851 required that all land titles
be "patented," by U.S. courts. Cases often dragged on for years.

The bill, intended to secure fair treatment to the holders of Mexican
land grants, often worked in the reverse. Either side could appeal a
court decision, making the process of protecting one’s land so
expensive that only the wealthiest could afford the lengthy legal
process. In some cases, the land fell into the hands of the
claimants’ lawyers who acquired the land as payment for their fees.
|
|