Point Sur
By Carol O’Neil
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About this ebook
Carol O’Neil
Carol O'Neil is a volunteer and the historian for Pt. Sur State Historic Park. She writes extensively about Pt. Sur and its history. Her historic fiction book for children, Adventures at Pt. Sur, was published in 2002. She lives in Monterey and is actively involved in historic preservation issues.
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Point Sur - Carol O’Neil
project.
INTRODUCTION
Point Sur, a rock formation that juts into the Pacific Ocean along California’s Central Coast, was a landmark even before it had a name. Referred to as a moro
rock by the Spanish explorers, it was first mentioned in the logs of Juan Cabrillo in 1552. Other explorers followed, including a mapping expedition under the command of Sebastian Viscaino in the early 1600s. Viscaino’s map of 1603 identifies Point Sur as a Punta que parce isla
or a point which appears as an island.
Almost two centuries later in 1793, British explorer George Vancouver described the still un-named rock formation as a small, high, rocky lump of land lying nearly half a mile from the shore.
Meanwhile, Spanish missionaries were expanding their string of missions along the length of California. In 1770 and 1771, a presidio chapel in Monterey and a mission in Carmel were established on the Monterey Peninsula. The land to the south of these outposts was called El Pais Grande del Sur
or the Big Land to the South,
which today has been corrupted into the familiar Big Sur.
A large Mexican land grant, including the moro rock, was made to Juan Bau-tista Alvarado, a future governor of Alta (Mexican) California, in 1834. He named his holdings Rancho El Sur,
and the ranch was traded to his uncle John Cooper eight years later.
The discovery of gold in 1849 changed everything in California. People poured into the territory, which had become the property of the United States in 1846. By 1850, California had changed from a sleepy territorial Mexican outpost to a bustling state with a booming population and almost no infrastructure. A survey of the coast was ordered and carried out by the Navy in the early 1850s. The moro rock was now referred to as Point Sur,
taking its name from the surrounding rancho. The point was identified as a good mark for vessels
and a sketch was included on a coast map. It wasn’t until 1866 that Point Sur was officially set aside for a future lighthouse. Coincidentally (or perhaps not) 1866 was also the same year that the deed for John Cooper’s original Mexican land grant was certified by the United States government.
Topographic examinations of Point Sur noted its steep slopes and lack of level land for locating structures. Building a lighthouse on this isolated site would be difficult and expensive. A detailed topographic map was prepared in 1875, but it wasn’t until the wreck of the steamer Ventura nearby, during the same year, that the public began to clamor for some kind of lighthouse. From 1877 until 1885, the Lighthouse Board annually requested funding for building a lighthouse at Point Sur. Congress finally made an appropriation in 1886 and construction began in 1887. Funding ran out and construction stopped for several months until a new appropriation could be made. The buildings were finished in 1889 and the light in the tower officially lit on August 1, 1889. The light at Point Sur has been in continuous operation as an aid to navigation ever since.
The story of Point Sur Lightstation is both typical of most west coast lightstations but also unique to its place along the coast in the remote Big Sur area. Many lightstations used hoist railways to move equipment and supplies. They had keeper quarters and families. However, Point Sur was a large rock located a half mile from real land
with only a sand bar to connect them. Construction of buildings was difficult, roads were expensive to build and maintain, rock slides were a constant problem, and it was dangerous to deliver supplies. The keepers of the light and their families lived without modern conveniences long after their contemporaries were enjoying indoor plumbing and electric lights. Meanwhile, the most advanced technologies were employed to keep the light and the fog signal operating. When labor became more expensive than the technologies to run it, the station was automated and the keepers left forever in 1972.
In 1984, the Coast Guard turned over most of its lightstation buildings to the California Department of Parks and Recreation. The Coast Guard retained ownership of the lighthouse, oil house, and 1945 mess hall. In 1987, volunteers began giving tours at Point Sur State Historic Park. The Central Coast Lighthouse Keepers (CCLK) was formed in 1993 as a co-operating nonprofit for Point Sur to assist the state in funding projects there. In addition to helping state parks fund restorations of the carpenter-blacksmith shop, the barn, the garage, and reconstructing the water tower, CCLK was the