|
By Shirley Streshinsky
|
 |
|
The coastline still enchants artists.
|
|
James Dean got
to Mendocino a few years before I did. He came in 1954 for the filming
of East of Eden because Monterey, the real setting, could
no longer pass for a California seaside town of 1917, but Mendocino
could. When I came along in 1961 the old coastal town 120 miles
north of San Francisco still looked late 19th century; weatherworn
Victorians and New England church spires stretched out along a headland
wrapped on three sides by the sea. Main Street, with its collection
of board-and-batten buildings, faced a pasture where cows grazed
between the street and cliffs that dropped off into the sea.
Old Portuguese
men spent the day on benches on Main Street near the Mendocino Hotel;
the wooden sidewalks were riddled with tiny holes, like cleat marks,
and so was the floor of the bar in the hotel lobby. The bartender
told me the holes had been poked by lumberjacks' boots. By then,
the redwood forests were dwindling and the town's mill had closed.
Mendocino was a fading remnant, a forgotten New Englandstyle
village on a windblown coast, visual high drama.
On that 1961
trip, I met a young artist/builder named Bill Zacha, who wanted
to turn Mendocino into a center for the arts. Respected California
artists moved north to live and work there, and in 1962 Look
magazine did a story about Zacha titled "Young Man Saves a Dying
Town." Over the next two decades, I made the drive to Mendocino
a number of times and watched the art colony grow. Zacha's Art Center
became a resounding success, offering classes that attracted creative
people from all over the country. Somewhere along the way, the Portuguese
men withdrew from their benches on Main Street, and the old wood
sidewalks were replaced with new boards. Galleries took root; tourists
followed and some of them bought old houses and turned them into
vacation homes. The Men-docino Hotel was doing a sparkling business
and some grand old houses were turned into B&Bs.
When word got
out that the headlands were going to be developed by their lumber
company owners, artist Emmy Lou Packard mobilized a citizens' group
which succeeded in preserving the open space that surrounds the
town. Eventuallyin 1972the Mendocino headlands became
a state park and the entire town was listed on the National Register
of Historic Places. Its appearance, familiar to television viewers
as Cabot Cove, Maine, in Angela Lansbury's Murder, She Wrote,
is not about to change; the Men-docino Historical Review Board meets
monthly to make sure of it. Chairman Bart Grimes says, "The state
agreed to swap forest land to acquire the headlands as a park only
if the county would protect the historic architecture and character
of the town." The state park people even suggested that local merchants
dress up in period costume reminiscent of an old logging town. The
townspeople would have none of it. But keeping the town a living
community would prove to be a delicate balancing act, especially
when by 1995 tourism topped timber as the county's No. 1 moneymaker.
Last winter,
after a hiatus of almost 20 years, my husband and I returned to
see what time and tourism had wrought. Approaching from the south,
we saw Mendocino spread out before us exactly as it was that first
time. It was not until I got into town that I began to notice changes.
All of the houses were painted soft, blending colors; empty lots
were free of old car carcasses and there were no more tie-dyed curtains.
It was as if Martha Stewart had been turned loose with instructions
to create a "Victorian country ambience." Gardens had a planned
casualness; upscale was written all over the place. A night at Blair
House B&B, Lansbury's home in Murder, She Wrote, costs from
$80 to $225, depending on the room and season. In 1961, I had paid
$8 for a room in the Mendocino Hotel with a rose chenille bedspread
and a bath down the hall. That room, considerably gussied up, now
goes for $85. I began to worry that tourism might be draining the
lifeblood out of the old lumber town.
We arrived
at the height of crab season and checked into the Packard House,
a grand Carpenter Gothic built in 1878 on what is now called Mansion
Row. Our room was beyond elegant, with a tiled jet tub and steam
shower. That evening we walked over to the Kelley House Museum (1860)
for a party to kick off the first "Mendocino Crab & Wine Days,"
andmirabile dicturight into what felt like the
beating heart of the town, with local fishermen and their families
gathered to talk Dungeness. We would have stayed all evening and
learned a lot more about crabbing had we not had reservations at
Stevenswood, a fine dining establishment that might have been in
San Francisco, and where even the dinner tip for two can top $25.
The next morning at breakfast (bountiful) we met a couple who had
dropped by the Kelley House as well, but had found the gathering
"too down-home" for their tastes. I sighed, reminded myself that
people travel with different expectations, and set out to walk Main
Street, joining a Saturday procession that filed in and out of art
galleries, bookstores, and pricey shops offering fan-cy gardening
tools and handmade baby clothes. Then I wandered down to Portuguese
Flats on the western edge of town where I encountered one spunky
old house that made me laugh out loud. It was elaborately decorated
with abalone shells and all manner of beachcomber flotsam, with
a few hubcaps, Halloween decorations, and flags tossed in. Just
like the night before at the Kelley house, I could feel the pulse
of the old town throbbing in my ears.
An excellent
place to catch up on local gossip traditionally has been Ole's Bar
in Little River Inn, a consummate Vic-torian two miles south of
town. Built by lumberman Silas Coombs in 1853, it was turned into
an inn by his granddaughter and her husband, Cora and Ole Hervilla,
and their children run it today. The Inn has been spiffed up since
the days when James Dean hung out here (and Ole tossed him out of
the dining room for putting his feet on the table). We checked into
a commodious room, opened the drapes for a view of the storm-tossed
sea, lit a fire in the fireplace, and from the video library borrowed
one of my favorites: The Russians are Coming, the Russians are
Coming (filmed in Mendocino in l966). We found that we still
laughed in all the same places, that the filmlike the townhad
aged well.
|
 |
|
A stroll through town takes you past many preserved
old structures, including some dating back to the 1870s.
|
|
Has tourism
spoiled Mendocino? Yes, if spoiled means pampered, yuppified, pricey.
You could argue that tourism has helped save a pristine example
of California history, and provided jobs. Prices drop considerably
in the winter, especially on weekdays. (The average daily high in
summer is 65 degrees; in winter, it is 64.) And there is much to
do on this coast that costs nothing at all. From November to March,
some 3,500 gray whales pass by the headlands. The town is surrounded
by state parks with wondrous hiking trailsVan Damme to the
south, Russian Gulch to the north, both fern-filled redwood places
that only nature is allowed to decorate.
Will Mendocino
eventually exist more for outsiders than for the people who live
there and in the process become an ossified historical town without
any life of its own? Possibly. The population1,008is
stable and aging. Houses in town are considerably more expensive
than in neighboring parts of the county. But the art community flourishes,
continuing to set the tone, along with three local theater groups,
and a popular music festival in the summer, mostly run by volunteers.
Young families, especially cybercommuters, are beginning to move
into the area, which may bode well for the high-wire act required
to keep a popular tourist destination a viable place to live.
|