Coyote Lake Harvey Bear Ranch County Park marker - San Martin, California
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member hotshoe
N 37° 05.968 W 121° 34.522
10S E 626596 N 4106856
History lesson at one of the county's newest parks
Waymark Code: WM5720
Location: California, United States
Date Posted: 11/21/2008
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member Moag Ohana
Views: 14

Text of the plaque:

COYOTE LAKE - HARVEY BEAR RANCH COUNTY PARK

In the 1830s, most of what is now the park was located on the Rancho San Francisco de las Llagas granted to Carlos Castro. The reservoir is found on early public lands and also on the lesser Rancho La Polka granted to Isabel Ortega; her father, Ignacio Ortega, was
granted the Rancho San Ysidro. Another of Ignacio's daughters, Clara Ortega, married
John Gilroy for whom the City of Gilroy is named.

Martin Murphy Sr. brought his family to California as members of the Stephens-
Murphy-Townsend Overland Party in 1844, and the family purchased and settled on the
rancho to the north of Las Llagas, known as Rancho Ojo de Agua de la Coche. During the
Gold Rush, Murphy's sons, John and Daniel, struck it rich, made a fortune selling dry
goods, and established the town of Murphys. In 1848, the heirs of Carlos Castro sold
Rancho Las Llagas to sons Daniel and Bernard.

By the 1850s, Daniel Murphy operated Las Llagas eventually owning 7,800 acres of the
rancho. He also owned vast tracts of land elsewhere in California, Arizona, Nevada and
Mexico. In 1851, Daniel married Mary Fisher; daughter of neighbor William Fisher, owner
of the larger Rancho Laguna Seca found just north of La Coche. The daughter of Daniel &
Mary, Diana Murphy, married Hiram Morgan Hill, for whom the City of Morgan Hill is
named. In 1853, brother Bernard died in the Jenny Lind steamer explosion; was re-interred in the Chapel of San Martin, and the community later became known as San Martin. In the 1860s, the Martin Murphy Sr. family obtained patents to La Polka and Las Llagas demonstrating the family's control over most of the area's earlier ranchos.

The ranchos were subdivided after the 1890s with John Jay Baumgartner Jr. purchasing a
portion of the earlier rancho lands in 1949. He built a home on the hill above the reservoir
and later sold the ranch to Harvey Bear who raised his family and ran cattle there until his
death. The heirs of Harvey Bear deeded the ranch to the Santa Clara County Parks and
Recreation Department in 1997. Situated on the Calaveras Fault, the reservoir was
approved for construction in 1934. The park opened on May 14, 2005 after many years of
planning and development.


DEDICATED BY THE SANTA CLARA COUNTY HISTORIC HERITAGE COMMISSION
AND THE SANTA CLARA COUNTY PARKS AND RECREATION DEPARTMENT
OCTOBER 13, 2007

SPONSORED BY

MOUNTAIN CHARLIE CHAPTER No. 1850
E CLAMPUS VITUS INC.

"RIGHT WRONGS NOBODY"

This text, or words very nearly the same, are on an ordinary plastic park sign a little further along the trail. E Clampus Vitus wanted a more lasting inscription, so they installed this brass plaque on behalf of the park.
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