Secret Ravine
History
The Rocklin Cemetery is very close to the ravine. An old Indian cemetery was farther up the drainage.
In 1869 some laid-off Chinese railroad workers moved to Secret Ravine to mine. They also raised vegetables which they marketed locally. They were driven out during the anti-Chinese pogrom of September 1876. This area is still known as China Gardens.
- Drainage area: 19.7 square miles (51 km)
- Stream length: 10.5 miles (16.9 km)
- Elevation at source: 1,285 feet (392 m)
- Elevation at confluence: 165 feet (50 m)
The Secret Ravine Post Office operated from 1854 to 1868. The U.S. Census for 1860 lists it as the address for Jean Baptiste Charbonneau - mountain man and son of Toussaint Charbonneau and the Lewis and Clark Expedition's guide Sacagawea.
Parks
- Loomis Basin Community Park is off King Road just east of Loomis. The park consists of a North and a South division on each side of Secret Ravine. Giant boulders dot this wooded area.
Places named for the Secret Ravine tributary
- Secret Ravine Parkway, in Roseville
- Secret Ravine Road, in an unincorporated area east of Loomis
- Secret Ravine School, Newcastle, California
- Secret Ravine Vineyard and Winery, in Loomis
- Secret Ravine Way, in Rocklin
NOTE: A second Secret Ravine, also in Placer County, flows into the North Fork of the American River near Colfax. It was alternatively called Robbers Ravine.
References
- ^ Ruhkala, Roy (1974). "History of Rocklin California: From Gold to Granite". www.rocklinhistory.org. Rocklin Historical Society. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ^ postalhistory.com
- ^ "About". Secret Ravine Vineyard and Winery. 2008-05-09. Archived from the original on 2008-05-09.
- ^ California's Geographic Names - "Secret Ravine"
External links
- Secret Ravine Adaptive Management Plan
- Wintering at Secret Ravine (tale from the Gold Rush days)