Mori Point Explained

Mori Point
Photo Width:400px
Photo Alt:Mori Point is a prominent bluff extending into the Pacific Ocean, seen from a viewpoint looking south from Pacifica Beach.
Map:United States San Francisco#USA California#USA
Relief:1
Map Label:Mori Point
Map Width:350px
Nearest City:Pacifica
Coordinates:37.6203°N -122.4983°W
Created:2002
Operator:National Park Service
Publictransit:samTrans, 110 or 112

Mori Point is a 1101NaN1 park located in Pacifica, California, that is part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area (GGNRA). Mori Point itself is a bluff next to the Pacific Ocean that provides scenic views of the peninsula coastline. In addition to the bluff and ridge, Mori Point contains a few small ponds and wetlands. Trails, many newly built, connect the ridgeline to the entrances to the park and to Sharp Park beach. A portion of the California Coastal Trail will run through Mori Point.

The ponds and wetlands of Mori Point serve as habitat for the threatened California red-legged frog and the endangered San Francisco garter snake.[1] Mori Point also has northern coastal scrub and California coastal prairie habitat in upland areas, and is well known for its spring wildflower displays.[2]

The park is bounded by Laguna Salada Marsh and Sharp Park Municipal Golf Course to the north; by Highway 1 and Sweeney Ridge to the east; and by the Calera Creek Wastewater Treatment Plant to the south.[3]

History

An archaeological survey in 1969 revealed a shell midden at Mori Point, demonstrating pre-Columbian Native American residency. The limestone at Mori Point has been quarried by Native Americans and, later, by the Spanish.[4] Francisco Sanchez received Rancho San Pedro in 1839 during the Rancho period, which encompassed much of present-day Pacifica, including the land that would later be called Mori Point.

The land now occupied by Mori Point was purchased by Stefano Mori and his family in 1888, who operated a farm and ranch at the point.[5] [6] The kitchen, built to feed employees, eventually became the Mori Point Inn, which remained in operation until 1965. The exact date of establishment is in question, but newspaper reports from 1910 cite Steve Mori as manager of the Inn in 1910.[7] During Prohibition, the Inn was a well-known speakeasy.[8]

Limestone from the Rockaway Quarry were used as track ballast for the Ocean Shore Railroad and to rebuild San Francisco after the 1906 earthquake. Highway 1, which divides Mori Point from Sweeney Ridge, occupies a cut first intended to accommodate the Ocean Shore Railroad.[9] A 1938 photograph by Dorothea Lange shows a fishing village and the quarry in the background.

During the 1920s, bootleggers used the site to bring alcohol into the Bay Area. Federal agents confiscated 24,000 cases of whiskey worth in 1923 from Jack Mori's farm, but Ray (or Rey) Mori was the only family member ever arrested for alcohol-related offenses during Prohibition. Ray was arrested in 1929 for serving alcoholic drinks[10] at the Francisco Sanchez Adobe, which was operated as a restaurant on the surface and clandestinely as a speakeasy and bordello. He received four months of probation and a $225 fine.[11] Ray and his wife Marie took over the operation of the inn by 1932, reportedly because Jack was being pressured by federal agents. The Inn closed in 1965 and it burned down on February 26, 1966, just three months after going out of business.[12] [13]

After the Inn closed in 1965, the hillsides were used for motorcycle racing and sand quarrying, creating scars on the hillsides that are still visible.[2] A development was proposed in 1984 and approved in 1988 by the City Council of Pacifica. The development would have encompassed 60 single-family homes, a horse show arena, and a 275-room hotel and conference center. The group "Pacificans for Mori Point" filed suit to block the development, charging the environmental impact report was incomplete.[14]

The National Park Service published the Pacifica Boundary Study in 1998, which identified several parcels of land in Pacifica it would like to add to the GGNRA.[15] The total proposed addition of land was fifteen parcels totaling, including the Mori Point parcel, and if completed, would result in nearly one-third of the entire land area of the City of Pacifica being controlled by the National Park Service. In 2000, Mori Point was put up for sale at auction, and the Pacifica Land Trust, the California Coastal Conservancy and the Trust for Public Land launched a campaign to purchase the property for preservation[16] with a successful bid of .[17] The property was purchased at public auction and donated to the Federal Government in 2002, when it was added to GGNRA.[18] [19]

By 2005, two ponds were dug on the north side of the Mori Point plot to restore habitat for the red-legged frog and Pacific tree frogs, hoping to establish frog colonies and attract their predators, the San Francisco garter snake. Frog eggs were spotted by the spring of 2005 and the snakes were seen foraging next to the ponds in 2007.

In the Fall of 2007, the Mori Point Project, made up of staff from the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, the Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy, and volunteers, completed the removal of soil contaminated with diesel fuel, the creation of a new pond and wetlands area and a new path with access steps nicknamed "Bootlegger's Steps" up to the top of Mori Point bluff.[20]

In April 2015, a 48feet long sperm whale washed up on the beach below Mori Point.[21] Although the whale was emaciated, a necropsy ruled out common causes of death such as disease, age, shark attack, or being struck by a ship.[22] A second whale, a 32feet long female humpback whale, washed up just north of the sperm whale three weeks later on Sharp Park Beach.[23] The second whale had injuries consistent with a ship strike[24] and due to the odor, both whales were buried later in May.[25]

In popular culture

Mori Point is featured in the climactic scene from the 1971 movie Harold and Maude. A customized Jaguar E-Type, modified to look like a hearse, is driven off the bluff, landing on the beach below.[26]

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: San Francisco Garter Snake . . 2016 . Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy . 10 January 2017.
  2. Mori's Story: Creating Habitat and Community in Pacifica . Rademacher, Dan . April–June 2009 . Bay Nature . 10 January 2017.
  3. https://www.nps.gov/goga/learn/historyculture/upload/San-Mateo-HRS-Part-IV-Mori-Point.pdf . Historic Resource Study for Golden Gate National Recreation Area in San Mateo County . Part IV: Mori Point . 199 . Postel, Mitchell P. . 2010 . National Park Service . 10 January 2017.
  4. Postel (2010), p. 200
  5. Web site: Mori Point . . 2008 . National Park Service . 10 January 2017.
  6. Postel (2010), p. 201
  7. Postel (2010), p. 228
  8. Postel (2010), p. 227
  9. Postel (2010), p. 209
  10. Postel (2010), p. 223
  11. Postel (2010), p. 229
  12. Postel (2010), p. 231
  13. Web site: Mori Point: Cultural History . 2007 . Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy . https://web.archive.org/web/20170113031601/http://www.parksconservancy.org/assets/visit-your-parks/park-sites/pdfs/mori-point-cultural-history.pdf . 2017-01-13 . dead . 10 January 2017.
  14. News: Abused Mori Point leaps back to life . Fimrite, Peter . 26 April 2008 . San Francisco Chronicle . 10 January 2017.
  15. News: Parkland Conflict Erupts in Pacifica: Plan to enlarge Golden Gate National Recreation Area . McCabe, Michael . 10 March 1998 . San Francisco Chronicle . 10 January 2017.
  16. Book: Delehanty, Randolph . Meyer, Amy . New guardians for the Golden Gate: how America got a great national park . University of California Press . Berkeley . 2006 . 187 . 0-520-23534-7 . 10 January 2017.
  17. News: Preserving Pacifica's gem: Geautiful Mori Point meshes nicely with mission of GGNRA . McHugh, Paul . 10 February 2005 . San Francisco Chronicle . 10 January 2017.
  18. Web site: Mori Point . National Park Service . . 2004 . 10 January 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20040722010643/http://www.nps.gov/goga/maps/bulletins/sb-mori_point.pdf . 22 July 2004 . dead.
  19. News: Mori Point hike offers expansive vistas . Todd, Gail . 9 November 2012 . San Francisco Chronicle . 10 January 2017.
  20. Web site: Mori's Warriors: November 10 Next Work Party in Pacifica's Own National Park . Bennett, Susie . 21 October 2007 . Pacifica Riptide [blog] . 10 January 2017.
  21. News: Beached sperm whale becomes pungent science lab in Pacifica . Rubenstein, Steve . 15 April 2015 . San Francisco Chronicle . 10 January 2017.
  22. News: Pacifica beached whale's cause of death remains a mystery . Rubenstein, Steve . 19 April 2015 . San Francisco Chronicle . 10 January 2017.
  23. News: Beach mystery: Another dead whale washes up in Pacifica . Rubenstein, Steve . Sernoffsky, Evan . 5 May 2015 . San Francisco Chronicle . 10 January 2017.
  24. News: 2nd dead whale on Pacifica beach may have been hit by ship . Aleaziz, Hamed . 6 May 2015 . San Francisco Chronicle . 10 January 2017.
  25. News: Smelly dead whales on Pacifica beach to get proper burial . Williams, Kale . 18 May 2015 . San Francisco Chronicle . 10 January 2017.
  26. Web site: The cliff where Harold drives his car over the edge . Meretzky, Steve . Steve Meretzky . April 2013 . The Harold and Maude Project . 10 January 2017.