Old Store at La Honda
Old Store at La Honda | |
---|---|
Location | 8865 La Honda Road, La Honda, San Mateo County, California |
Coordinates | 37°19′10.9″N 122°16′28.8″W / 37.319694°N 122.274667°W |
Built | between 1862–1870 |
Built for | John L. Sears |
Governing body | California State Parks |
Designated | 1939 |
Reference no. | 343[1] |
Old Store at La Honda sat at the Northwest corner of CA Highway 84 at La Honda Road and Sears Ranch Road, this location is now listed as 8865 La Honda Road, La Honda, San Mateo County, California. This is a California Historical Landmarks in San Mateo County since 1939.[2] A store is open and functions as a neighborhood market at this location, under a different name and ownership - nothing is left of the original store.
History
[edit]When John Howell Sears had to leave Searsville because of the decline of the lumber industry in that area,[3] he settled in the La Honda area in 1862, bought 400 acres of land, and built a store.[3][4] The exact date of the building of the store is unknown but estimated between the 1860s to 1870s.
The store was nicknamed the "Bandit-Built Store" because it's rumored that Jim, Cole and Bob Younger (of the bank robbing James–Younger Gang) helped build the store and worked there too, while hiding out in La Honda and pretending to be lumberjacks.[5] However in Bob Dougherty's 2007 book named La Honda, "...the story of the 'bandit built' Sears store is improbable because the Younger brothers were already in prison in the summer of 1876 for the Northfield Bank robbery before the store was built the following year."[3]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Old Store at La Honda". Office of Historic Preservation, California State Parks. Retrieved 2017-08-05.
- ^ "San Mateo". State of California State Parks. Retrieved 2017-08-05.
- ^ a b c Dougherty, Bob (2007). La Honda. Google Books. Chicago: Arcadia Publishing. pp. 22, 46. ISBN 0738547387.
- ^ "California Historical Landmark #343: Old Store at La Honda in San Mateo County". noehill.com. Retrieved 2017-08-03.
- ^ Noack, Mark. "La Hondans revisit past of an outlaw haven". Half Moon Bay Review. Retrieved 2017-08-04.