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In
the beginning, Sleepy Hollow was a river bed. The fertile valley
attracted first inhabitants, the Miwok Indians. As proof of their
stay, many artifacts have been found: A shell mound, arrow heads
and grinding stones. This era closed with the "white man"
and epidemics of measles, mumps, smallpox and other diseases.
The
first recorded history of the Hollow is from 1839. A Mexican land
grant was given to Domingo Sais, a soldier at the Presidio is
San Francisco. His land consisted of 6,659 acres, including part
of San Anselmo, Fairfax, and Sleepy Hollow.
Legend
has it that in 1836 Domingo left the Presidio on a raft and traveled
with the tide or drift until he was able to land at what is now
Point San Quentin. Traveling as far as San Anselmo, he built his
first house of rushes. Domingo called his grant "Canada de
herrera" or "Valley of the Blacksmiths".
It
had huge stands of oak trees, which for several years were cut
and shipped by schooner from Ross Landing to San Francisco or
to the saw mill near Lagunitas.
Domingo
Sighs died in 1853 leaving his land to his widow and six children.
Sleepy Hollow went to his oldest son Pedro.
Harvey
Butterfield leased the property from Pedro for a dairy farm and
it was fenced for the first time. Cowboys referred to the dirt
road leading to the ranch house as "The Road to Butterfield's
place." Thus the birth of Butterfield Road.
Pedro
Sighs died in 1879 and the land was sold to Peter Austin for $16,000.
Austin planted the first eucalyptus and poplar trees for shade
along Butterfield road. He planned a million dollar hotel, a mile-long
lake and golf course, but was forced out by a mortgage foreclosure.
Anson
P. Hotaling bought the land in 1887. A wealthy San Franciscan,
his son Richard developed a beautiful estate and called it Sleepy
Hollow. Building a mansion at the end of Butterfield Road reflected
his love for the theater. The living room had a stage complete
with a Romeo and Juliet balcony. Many plays and Bohemian parties
were held there.
Hotaling
also imported 200 Holstein cows from Holland and carried out the
Washington Irving theme by naming prize bulls after the names
in the Legend of Sleepy Hollow.
After
living in his mansion for four years, he tired of the dairy business
and moved back to San Francisco, leasing his 1600 acres to Sigmund
Herzog. Herzog founded, in 1910, the first certified milk dairy
in the United States.
In
1925, a Chicago syndicate bought the land from Herzog. With the
depression and stock market crash, plans by the syndicate for
development ended and they sold the land.
George
Kaenel and H.A. Willard bought the land in about 1930 and installed
an 18-hole, 8,000 yard golf course, the first pay-as-you- play
golf course in the West. It was considered the second largest
course in the world and acclaimed by famous players for its natural
hazards and boundless beauty.
Lang
Realty and David Adams bought some acreage in 1932 and subdivided
the parcel into one-half and ten-acre plots.
In
1939 the golf course closed due to lack of water. For a time during
World War II, the U.S. Army occupied part of the Hollow as a secret
ammunition storage depot. Barracks housed 30 men. There were two
batteries composed of four inch antiaircraft cannon manned by
five soldiers on a 24 hour basis. One battery was on Stuyvesant
Drive and the other on Oak Springs Hill. At war's end, the Army
departed.
A.G.
Raisch bought 500 acres and the Hotaling mansion for $50,000 around
1946. Raisch modernized the house and added gardens and barbecue
areas. An artificial lake was created. Fifty head of cattle grazed
the property. Gala parties of at least 600 people enjoyed the
dance pavilion with roast steer for dinner and martinis made in
a cement mixer. In the early fifties, the Raischs moved to San
Francisco.
While
the mansion was unoccupied it burned to the ground, leaving only
a concrete wall and steps, visible today.
The
Dominican Order of the Catholic Church then purchased the property.
It was dedicated as the San Domenico School for Girls on April
30, 1966.
May all who visit or live in this beautiful valley of Canada de
Herrera - Sleepy Hollow enjoy and protect the land. Ours is indeed
a special heritage, so let us preserve it for future generations.
Audre
LaBelle~ Sleepy Hollow Historian

Photogragh
taken about 1890. Looking west at Alta Loma at the corner of what
is now Van Winkle and Butterfield.
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