The Mercury News

Make Time for Mariposa, Gateway to Yosemite

- By Melissa Curtin and published on ParksandPo­ints. com

Yosemite National Park is the size of Rhode Island. Yosemite first sparked the idea of national parks 150 years ago, when President Lincoln signed the Yosemite Land Grant, safeguardi­ng the Yosemite Valley and Mariposa Grove as protected wilderness areas.

While often visitors head directly to the heart of the park, the former gold mining town of Mariposa, just outside park borders, is well worth exploring, while also being quite close to the park’s main natural features. With a population 1,800, this gateway town feels like an old Western movie set due to its abundance of preserved pioneer history. Founded in 1849 and the southernmo­st in the Gold Rush chain of towns, you won’t find a stoplight here. About an hour drive from the entrance to Yosemite National Park, the cute town also has all the convenienc­es, plus affordable lodging. One gem is the newlyrenov­ated 1930’s boutique hotel in town called Mariposa Tourist Homes (@tourist.homes on Instagram). Many rooms come with outdoor seating areas, full kitchens, washer and dryer, and huge bathrooms. Room 7 felt like a mini apartment and was our favorite due to its historical

highlights shelf and upstairs balcony view of the town.

Visitors can feel the Old West by strolling historic main street filled with shops, bakeries, tasting rooms, art galleries, and an old jailhouse, or by touring the 1854 courthouse, the oldest courthouse still in operation west of the Rockies. It was named Las Mariposas for the large number of beautiful butterflie­s in the area.

Stop in town at the Mariposa Museum and History Center filled with fascinatin­g mining artifacts, a one-room miner’s cabin, and an operationa­l stamp mill. Admire unique items like gold from 1934 mines, Victorian hair art, a coffee grinder from 1893, and maps of Mariposa from 1859, where lots sold from $200- $500 just ten years after the Gold Rush. Founded in 1957 and named one of the best small museums in America by the Smithsonia­n Institute, exhibits showcase Native American, Spanish Settlement, California Gold Rush, Yosemite and Mariposa County History.

The new Yosemite Climbing Museum, created by local climbing legends, materializ­ed thanks to Ken Yager amassing a lifetime of climbing gear, including equipment used to install the cables at Half Dome. This 3-gallery space provides a forum of curated historical climbing artifacts as well as photograph­y, publicatio­ns, and memorabili­a. Ken and Mike Corbett happily share death-defying tales of their climbs high up in Yosemite’s famous cliffs since the 1970s, as well as unbelievab­le stories of traversing 46 miles to a 1976 plane crash stuffed with weed or “Crash Bud” in Lower Merced Pass Lake, later known as Dope Lake.

Just outside of town is California’s official collection of gemstones and minerals, which dates from 1880. The impressive California State Mining and Mineral Museum showcases gold, silver, platinum, minerals that glow in the dark, outer space rocks, and the “Fricot Nugget,” a rare 13.8-pound piece of crystallin­e gold found in the American river in 1864. Fantasize about the Wild West through their original mining artifacts, historical documents, and displays helping visitors understand the history of panning for gold and the process of extracting it. Admire over 13,000 gems found in California and all over the world. The initial collection donated by the California State Geological Society was once housed in the Ferry Building in San Francisco.

Fuel up before hiking, grab sandwiches to-go at June Bug Café or breakfast at the Pony Expresso coffeehous­e. For posthike bliss, consider Little Shop of Ramen for a comfort bowl of toasted rye noodles freshly made served three ways in a triple stock soup broth. Pair with sake from Hollister, CA or local wine like Icons of Yosemite in the adjacent bar Local Grape, both in Mariposa’s oldest building. Surprising­ly, Yosemite Mariposa has their own wines and vineyards nearby in the Sierra Foothills.

Other restaurant­s to consider in town are 1850 Restaurant & Brewery, Pizza Factory, Charles Street Dinner House, and Costa Livos for olive oil tasting.

To read this article in its entirety visit Parks & Points, a website dedicated to sharing writing about parks and public lands, at www. parksandpo­ints.com.

 ?? ?? The Smithsonia­n has praised Mariposa Museum & History Center as one of the best small museums West of the Mississipp­pi.
The Smithsonia­n has praised Mariposa Museum & History Center as one of the best small museums West of the Mississipp­pi.
 ?? ?? The Local Grape is an oenophile’s dream. Sierra wines of all types are available for tasting.
The Local Grape is an oenophile’s dream. Sierra wines of all types are available for tasting.
 ?? ?? Mariposa is an authentic Western town complete with 100-year-old buildings and charming shops and restaurant­s.
Mariposa is an authentic Western town complete with 100-year-old buildings and charming shops and restaurant­s.

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