TWO DAYS BEFORE THE SEA:
DANA POINT

Story and photography
by Margaret & Eric Anderson

A lot has changed in the 165 or so years since Richard Henry Dana sailed, 60 miles north of San Diego, into the harbor now named after him. The bluff, however, still rears up above the jetty where a modern replica of his ship, the Pilgrim, bobs at anchor. It doesn't take much imagination to see Dana and his shipmates and Father Serra's missionary Indians dragging their flats of cowhide to the edge and tossing them skittering down the cliffs to the beach 280 feet below.

Dana was a Harvard law student when an attack of measles undermined his health. He felt two years in the outdoors might restore his vitality, as Teddy Roosevelt similarly thought when 50 years later he also became ill. Teddy would go off to the Dakotas but Dana went off to sea and in the year 1835 was abeam the shores of what then was called San Juan. In his best-selling book, Two Years Before the Mast, published in 1840, he recalls: "Coasting along a quiet shore of the Pacific, we came to anchor in twenty fathoms water, almost out at sea, as it were, and directly abreast of a steep hill which overhung the water, and was twice as high as our royal masthead."

Beyond the cliff, the sailors found -- a mile or two inland -- the Mission San Juan Capistrano still significantly damaged from the 1812 earthquake 23 years before, but standing and ready to supply cowhides in trade at the rate of $2 a hide exchanged for a 75c trinket from Boston. Dana writes he was amused supply ships could sell the locals shoes for $3 or $4 that had been cut in Boston from their own herd's hides, in effect "having been carried twice round Cape Horn."

Around the time of Dana's visits to San Juan, the mission was more than a church, it was the entire village of about 1400 "converted Indians" and as many as 30,000 animals. The hides were dried, stretched to prevent shrinking, folded once lengthwise and transported by oxen cart to the cliffs.

At low tide when they were heaved over the edge on to the beach below, they would sometimes catch in bushes on the cliffs. When Dana recounts how he once hung down the bluff on a pair of topgallant-studding sail halyards to save a half dozen hides, he never knew that one day he would be part of California's coast history.

 

PAGE   1   2   3 MORE >>
MORE STORIES

Orlando, Still the Best Show in Town

Summer in the Rockies Jackson: Out of the Hole

Portsmouth, New Hampshire: The Authentic New England Experience

Martha's Vineyard: Refuge from Chaotic America

Tribute to the World's Hardest Game: The World Golf Hall of Fame, Florida

The Mid-Atlantic Getaway: A Historic Church, A Funky Restaurant and an Elegant Inn

St. Charles, Illinois: Small Town America

The Road Less Traveled: The Wagon Train and Horse Adventure

Sawgrass:
Florida's Cool New Destination is Hot

America's Most Foreign City:
Santa Fe

Albuquerque's High: The International Balloon Fiesta

Movieland's Great Dames

Manteo, North Carolina: England's First American Home

Palm Springs: The Desert City That's Changing

A Short Trip on Long Island: The Land Hiding Below Manhattan

Cape Cod in the Spring: America
with the Volume Turned Down

Nonstop to Mazatlan: Aero Mexico's Offering to San Diego

New England Castles

Dallas & Fort Worth: Culture & Cowboys

Baja Whale Watching: Nature's Grand Parade

Healing Places:
Spas of the American Southwest

The Art of
Enjoying Taos

Chicago: The City
that Works

More Articles >>