Whether you come for our recreational activities from golf to scuba-diving, our arts and cultural events from the Carmel Bach Festival to the lively Festa Santa Rosalia, or our matchless range of art galleries, fine restaurants and wineries, Monterey County has it all.

Monterey County is a study in contrasts. From its dramatic coastline to its fertile farmland, from its stunning beaches to its sun-kissed valleys, from its Victorian houses to its vibrant wharf, Monterey offers the visitor a wealth of experiences. Artists and writers have painted, photographed and written about its breathtaking cliffs and agriculturally rich valleys - valleys that supply fresh vegetable and salad greens to the entire nation. Monterey abounds with a variety of fascinating sea and land creatures as well.

The people of Monterey County have a diverse and lively past. Long before Europeans arrived, native peoples of the Esselen, Ohlone and Salinan tribes flourished here. Ancestors of the Esselen Indians are believed to be the first inhabitants. Later, tribes from the east joined with the Esselen Indians to become the Ohlone; they relied on the abundance of the sea and thrived. Further south, the Salinan Indians lived.

Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo was the first European to discover Monterey Bay. While high seas prevented him from landing, he nonetheless claimed the land for Spain in 1542. Sebastian Vizcaino was the first European to set foot on the Peninsula. He called it "Monterey" after Count de Monte Rey, a viceroy of New Spain. He named the valley for his patron saint, Our Lady of Carmel. Though Vizcaino urged the Spanish to colonize the area, it took half a century before they proceeded to populate Alta (upper) California.

Father Junipero Serra, a Franciscan priest, whose role in California history is both fascinating and controversial, proclaimed the area the military and ecclesiastical capital of Alta California. General Gaspar de Portola immediately began to build the first of four California presidios while Father Serra selected a site near the mouth of the Carmel River to construct the second of California's 21 missions.

The missions were the center of early Californian life, until 1822 when Mexico declared its independence from Spain. Monterey became the capital of Alta California and huge ranchos were established. Commodore John Drake Sloat of the US Navy took Monterey in 1846 without a fight, and Monterey became the center of California politics. On October 13, 1849, Monterey became California's first capital.

In the next decade, it was whaling that brought people to Monterey. Processing plants at Moss Landing and in Monterey rendered the whales to produce oil. Immigrants began to arrive from Asia and the sea gave up its wealth to the burgeoning fishing industry. Just as the sea had provided for the native people, so it did for those seeking hard but steady work. Though the whaling industry disappeared, the sardine industry arose in its place. All kinds of people came to work here. Many were rough and tough characters, like the ones immortalized by John Steinbeck in Cannery Row and Sweet Thursday, but the sea could not sustain the industry. The sardines disappeared. By the 1950s, Cannery Row was a ghost town of empty warehouses and canneries.

The Monterey Peninsula also called to people who sought respite from the hectic of life of the cities. In 1875, Pacific Grove was settled as a religious retreat, and by the mid-1880s, 17,000 visitors a year were enjoying the beauty and serenity of the Peninsula, often staying at the elegant Hotel Del Monte. The Del Monte Golf Course opened in 1897 and by 1908 guests could enjoy a 17-mile tour through the Del Monte Forest and along the coast. That dirt road became 17-Mile Drive.

The 1930s saw an influx of Midwestern farm refugees seeking sanctuary from the ravages of drought. Their farms devastated by dust storms, the migrants clung to the hope that California's mild climate, longer growing seasons, and diversity of crops would give them an opportunity to start over. Dreams turned to despair when the migrants found that California was suffering hard times as well. Conflicts arose between the refugees and earlier immigrants who had already settled in Monterey County. Still, those migrants made a significant contribution to the area; they helped to create what is now known as the "Salad Bowl of the Nation." To an already diverse mix of Mexicans, Filipinos, Chinese, Japanese, Portugese, Italians and Europeans, these mainly predominantly Anglo-Americans added their culture. The story of their struggles inspired John Steinbeck to pen one of the classics of American literature, The Grapes of Wrath.
 
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