San Diego Union-Tribune

STORIES BEHIND THE NAMES

How some of San Diego County’s most famous parks and mountainto­ps got their designated monikers

- BY MAURA FOX

San Diego County has thousands of acres of parks, open space preserves and state-protected land. It’s obvious that for anyone who likes the outdoors, this is an ideal place to be.

What’s less obvious is how the most iconic mountainto­ps and local parks got their names. While many are named after San Diegans of yesteryear, others have a more complicate­d history.

Here are the condensed stories of the people and inspiratio­n behind eight parks and peaks in San Diego County.

Mount Helix

In 1872, Swiss biologist Louis Agassiz was exploring eastern San Diego

County when he came across a small animal that would eventually lend its name to Mount Helix. Agassiz was a well-known scientist at the time, but today is largely remembered for his racist ideas and support for White supremacy.

He was near the mountain when he saw the helix aspersa, a European garden snail, that had not, until that point, been identified in San Diego. Agassiz shared the discovery with Rufus King Porter, the influentia­l landowner and writer in the area who gave Spring Valley its name, who decided to name it Mount Helix after the snail.

Jim Newland, a San Diego-based historian and planner for the California State Parks, said it’s possible that the nonnative snail arrived in San Diego on ships carrying cattle or livestock feed. Today, the helix aspersa is found throughout the region.

Cowles Mountain

Sitting at 1,593 feet, Cowles Mountain is the highest peak in the city of San Diego. The peak’s name is credited to George A. Cowles, a prominent rancher in East County from 1877 until his death in 1887. The town surroundin­g his ranch became known as Cowlestown; however, after his death, his widow went on to marry the engineer Milton Santee, and Cowlestown became known as Santee, as it remains today.

The city and county purchased the mountain in 1974 and dedicated the name of the peak in 1984. For many years prior, though, it was known locally as “S’’ Mountain, after hundreds of San Diego State University students painted the letter on the mountainsi­de in 1931. The “S” stood for “State” and was a point of student pride, especially during Homecoming week.

Anza-Borrego Desert State Park

Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, described by one historian as a “vast, open, essentiall­y monochroma­tic world of subtle beauty,” is California’s first desert park and the largest park in the state’s system.

In 1928, in a feasibilit­y report on a desert park, the project was given the name Borrego Palms Desert State Park, taken after the nearby Borrego Valley and the date palms

that grew there. The word “borrego” is Spanish for “sheep,” and bighorn sheep live in this area.

A few factors led to the park’s eventual name change. In 1930, the historian Herbert E. Bolton published the translated diaries of the Spanish colonizer Juan Bautista de Anza’s expedition in California, which brought more attention to the desert and its history. Anza traveled west across a portion of the desert from the Imperial Valley to San Diego in 1775.

Over the years, and coupled with land transfers and overcoming bureaucrat­ic hurdles, the park’s boundary shifted and expanded as well, as historian Diana Lindsay described in her book, “Anza-Borrego A to Z: People, Places, and Things.” When, in 1933, park officials received approval for a park extension south of Highway 78, Guy Fleming, the Southern California State Park District Superinten­dent, proposed that it be named Anza Desert State Park. The name, thought to be historical­ly significan­t and more fitting for the whole park, was approved for the entire area in 1938.

In the early 1950s, officials opened a second park in the area: Borrego State Park, which quickly grew in popularity. As visitation at the two parks increased, the parks’ superinten­dent was ordered to “either solve the problem or get rid of the parks,” Lindsay wrote.

The two parks were ultimately consolidat­ed into one park, merging their resources, services and personnel, and given the new name of Anza-Borrego

Desert State Park in 1957.

Palomar Mountain

The 18th-century Spanish colonizers who climbed this 6,000-foot mountain in north San Diego County were leaving nothing to mystery when they called it “Palomar”; the word “palomar” is Spanish for “dovecote,” or a place where pigeons or doves live, and thousands of band-tailed pigeons were nesting in the area. The Indigenous Luiseño tribe called the mountain Paauw.

But for the latter part of the 19th century, the peak went under a new designatio­n: Smith Mountain, named after Joseph Smith, a reportedly well-liked homesteade­r and public official who was, according to news reports and local accounts from the time, killed in the area. As outlined in Catherine M. Wood’s 1937 book about the history of Palomar Mountain, community members renamed the mountainto­p after Smith, though later, in 1901, residents circulated a petition to the United States Board on Geographic Names to restore

the name to Palomar. While it isn’t exactly known why they wanted to revert the name, it’s possible that enough time had passed and Joseph Smith didn’t mean as much to the current residents.

Woodson Mountain

Woodson Mountain, also known as Mount Woodson, was named after Marshall Clay Woodson, who reportedly served in a medical capacity for the Confederat­e Army during the Civil War. Originally from Kentucky, Woodson moved to the Ramona area in the late 1870s and lived on 320 acres of land near the base of the 2,800foot tall peak.

Long before Woodson arrived in San Diego, the Kumeyaay people referred to the summit as Ewiiy Hellyaa, translated in English to the “mountain of the moonlit rocks’’ or “moon mountain.” The mountain is known as a place of power for the Kumeyaay, related to a mythical rabbit and the moon.

The rocks at the top of the mountain, Steele Valley

granodiori­te and Cajalco quartz monzonite, do appear to glow in the dark and give off a moon-like quality. Today, the peak is best known for “Potato Chip Rock,” a thin piece of granodiori­te that resembles the snack food and has become a favorite for hikers seeking a photo op.

Cuyamaca Rancho State Park

The area encompassi­ng Cuyamaca Rancho State Park has throughout history been home to Indigenous tribes, Mexican rancheros, Spanish missionari­es and American settlers. The word Cuyamaca is a Spanish appropriat­ion of the Kumeyaay term Ah-ha Kweah-mac, meaning “the place where it rains” or “the mist behind the clouds.”

Though the translatio­n to Spanish and English isn’t exact, the Cuyamaca mountains are one of the few places in San Diego County that still hold an Indigenous-related name.

The second part of the park’s name can be attributed to the history of California

ranchos. In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, before California became a U.S. state, the Mexican and Spanish government­s offered land grants called ranchos, or large sections of land used to primarily raise cattle, to people willing to settle in California. In 1845, a Mexican named Agustín Olvera was granted the land that today holds the state park and called it Rancho Sierra de Cuyamaca. Decades of land disputes, mining and gold discoverie­s would ensue before the state opened the park in 1933 under the name Cuyamaca Rancho State Park.

Stonewall Peak

While no battles of the Civil War were fought in San Diego County, many of the county’s landmarks were named after members of the Confederat­e Army. Stonewall Peak, in Cuyamaca Rancho State Park, shares its name with the nearby Stonewall Mine, named in 1870 after Confederat­e Gen. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson.

A

William Skidmore, is most often cited — including on the state park’s sign posted at the location — as the person who found the mine and named it the Stonewall Jackson Mine. Skidmore is reported to have traveled to San Diego County with his family from Texas in a mule wagon train and let his mules graze in the mountains where he found the mine.

The Union-Tribune reported in 2020 that state park officials said a project is under way to update informatio­n panels at the mine site that “will include a more expanded historical context based on more recent scholarshi­p and public engagement.” As of this writing, the panels have not been updated, but the Union-Tribune confirmed that officials are reviewing a possible name change to a Kumeyaay name for the peak and surroundin­g natural features.

Chicano Park

Located in Barrio Logan, Chicano Park is an important cultural landmark and gathering place for the surroundin­g community.

In 1970, residents and Chicano activists protested the developmen­t of a highway patrol station at this location, advocating that the space should be a community park instead. They occupied the area for 12 days until an agreement was reached between the community, state officials and the city of San Diego to support the creation of the park. In some early references, the park was called Chicano Peoples’ Park, but was later shortened to Chicano Park to differenti­ate from the Peoples’ Park in Berkeley, establishe­d in 1969.

 ?? U-T FILE ?? Cowles Mountain is the highest peak in the city of San Diego. The city and county purchased the mountain in 1974.
U-T FILE Cowles Mountain is the highest peak in the city of San Diego. The city and county purchased the mountain in 1974.
 ?? PEGGY PEATTIE U-T FILE ?? Families climb to the top of Stonewall Peak at Cuyamaca Rancho State Park.
PEGGY PEATTIE U-T FILE Families climb to the top of Stonewall Peak at Cuyamaca Rancho State Park.
 ?? NELVIN C. CEPEDA U-T ?? Hikers on the Palm Canyon trail at Anza-Borrego Desert State Park last month.
NELVIN C. CEPEDA U-T Hikers on the Palm Canyon trail at Anza-Borrego Desert State Park last month.

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