John Muir National Historic Site
History
Mansion
The mansion was built in 1883 by Dr. John Strentzel, Muir's father-in-law, with whom Muir went into partnership, managing his 2,600-acre (1,100 ha) fruit ranch. Muir and his wife, Louisa, moved into the house in 1890, and he lived there until his death in 1914.
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c5/Jomu_Martinez%2C_Ca_020419pu.jpg/220px-Jomu_Martinez%2C_Ca_020419pu.jpg)
Alhambra Trestle
In 1897, for the sum of $10, Muir and Louisa ceded a right of way to the San Francisco and San Joaquin Valley Railroad. The document describes the land upon which the Alhambra Trestle is located. The railway was completed in 1900 and used by the Muirs to ship their fruit.
Preservationist
While living here, Muir realized many of his greatest accomplishments, co-founding and serving as the first president of the Sierra Club, in the wake of his battle to prevent Yosemite National Park's Hetch Hetchy Valley from being dammed, playing a prominent role in the creation of several national parks, writing hundreds of newspaper and magazine articles and several books expounding on the virtues of conservation and the natural world, and laying the foundations for the creation of the National Park Service in 1916.
The home contains Muir's "scribble den," as he called his study, and his original desk, where he wrote about many of the ideas that are the bedrock of the modern conservation movement.
Archive and Landmark
The Muir house was documented by the Historic American Buildings Survey in 1960.
It became a National Historic Site in 1964, is California Historical Landmark #312 and a National Historic Landmark, and is on the National Register of Historic Places.
In 1988 nearby Mount Wanda Nature Preserve (named for one of John Muir's two daughters) was added to the Historic Site.
The John Muir National Historic Site offers a biographical film, tours of the house and nature walks on Mount Wanda.
The site includes the Vicente Martínez Adobe.
Gallery
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John Muir home windmill
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John Muir home, Martinez, CA
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Farm wagon, John Muir home, Martinez
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Hiking trail along Mount Wanda within the Historic Site
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John Muir house, Martinez
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The 1680-foot-long, 80-foot high steel "Muir Trestle", a.k.a. "Alhambra Trestle", in Martinez, owned and operated by the BNSF Railroad.
See also
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Contra Costa County, California
- History of the Yosemite area