Big Sur Village, California


Big Sur is an unincorporated community village in Big Sur, Monterey County, California. It is located along a long stretch of Big Sur Coast Highway in the Big Sur Valley south of Carmel, California. The village contains the largest collection of shops and visitor services along the entire segment of California State Route 1 between Malpaso Creek near Carmel Highlands in the north and San Carpóforo Creek near San Simeon in the south. The population is about 1,463. The collection of small roadside businesses and homes is often confused with the larger region, also known as Big Sur. On March 6, 1915, United States Post Office granted the English-speaking resident's request to change the name of their post office from Arbolado to Big Sur. CalTrans also refers to the village as Big Sur.

Services

Services along about of the highway include a post office, the Big Sur Bakery, the Big Sur Lodge with 62 rooms, cafe, a bar and grill, a gallery, a pub and restaurant, yoga studio, artists studios, the Big Sur Grange Hall, a few apartments, one of three gas stations along the coast, and a visitor center with tourist information at Big Sur Station, the western terminus of the Pine Ridge Trail. The privately owned Big Sur Campground and Cabins, Riverside Campground, Fernwood Resort, and Ripplewood Resort are nearby. The Village is located in a Redwood forest bordered to the south by Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park, Los Padres National Forest on the east and west, and to the north by Andrew Molera State Park. The Captain Cooper Elementary School and the Big Sur Charter School are nearby. The Big Sur River passes through the Village. Pfeiffer Beach is to the west at the end of Sycamore Canyon.

Transportation

Until about 1924, a dirt road that was often impassible in winter connected residents with Carmel and Monterey to the north. The road extended past the village area another south near Castro Canyon, ending near the present-day location of Deetjen's Big Sur Inn. The 30-mile trip from Carmel could take three days by wagon or stagecoach. The state began constructing a paved two-lane road in 1924. When completed on June 17, 1937, it was initially named the Roosevelt Highway. The road may be closed by CalTrans due to severe inclement weather. The area around the village is the only location along the coast where the highway runs inland.
Public transportation is available to and from Monterey on Monterey–Salinas Transit. The summer schedule operates from Memorial Day to Labor Day three times a day, while the winter schedule only offers bus service on weekends. Service can be interrupted by high winds and severe weather. There is a single shuttle van that operates during the summer on Thursday through Sunday from the Big Sur Station to Pfeiffer Beach.

Etymology

The name "Big Sur" has its origins in the area's early Spanish history. While the Portolá expedition was exploring Alta California, they arrived at San Carpóforo Canyon near present-day San Simeon on September 13, 1769. Unable to penetrate the difficult terrain along the coast, they detoured inland through the San Antonio and Salinas Valleys before arriving at Monterey Bay, where they founded Monterey and named it the provincial capital.
The Spanish referred to the vast and relatively unexplored coastal region to the south of Monterey as el país grande del sur, meaning "the big country of the south". This was often shortened to el sur grande. The two major rivers draining this portion of the coast were named El Rio Grande del Sur and El Rio Chiquito del Sur.
The first recorded use of the name "el Sud" was on a map of the Rancho El Sur land grant given by Governor José Figueroa to Juan Bautista Alvarado on July 30, 1834.

Post office

A post office bearing the name "Sur" was established on October 30, 1889. The English-speaking homesteaders in the northern portion of the coast petitioned the United States Post Office in Washington D.C. to change the name of their post office from Arbolado
to Big Sur, and the rubber stamp using that name was returned on March 6, 1915, cementing the name in place. The ZIP Code is 93920. The community is inside area code 831.

History

The region was historically occupied by the Esselen people prior to the arrival of European immigrants. The Esselen lived in the area between Point Sur south to Big Creek. Archaeological evidence shows that the Esselen lived in Big Sur as early as 3500 BC, leading a nomadic, hunter-gatherer existence. Beginning in about 1771, the Native Americans were forcibly relocated and conscripted as laborers at the Carmel Mission, where their way of life were lost to them, and their population was decimated by disease, starvation, overwork, and torture.
The first known European settler in Big Sur was George Davis, who in 1853 claimed a tract of land along the Big Sur River. He built a cabin near the present day site of the beginning of the Mount Manuel Trail. In 1868, Native Americans Manual and Florence Innocenti bought Davis' cabin and land for $50. In the winter of 1869, Michael and Barbara Laquet Pfeiffer were on their way to the south coast of Big Sur when they were forced to stop for the season in the Sycamore Canyon area near present-day Big Sur Village. They liked the area so much they decided against moving south again the following spring. They brought four children with them: Charles, John, Mary Ellen, and Julia. They later had four more: William, Frank, Flora, and Adelaide. After the Homestead Act of 1862 was passed by Congress, he filed for patents on his land in 1883 and 1889. The family supported themselves by ranching and beekeeping. The Pfeiffer home became well known among travelers along the coast, and when the number of guests grew, in 1908 the Pfeiffer Ranch Resort became the first formal lodging along the coast when they began charging guests. The location is now the site of the Big Sur Lodge.
The Pfeiffer's son John Martin Pfeiffer and his wife Zulema Florence Swetnam build a cabin near the north bank of the Big Sur River in 1884. Another of the oldest establishments along the coast is the Big Sur River Inn and Restaurant founded in 1932.
In August, 1972, the Molera Fire burned the hills above Big Sur. During the following winter, portions of the village were struck by a mudflow. The slopes above the village rise abruptly to more than. Slopes angle from 25 to 90 degrees. Four tributaries of the Big Sur River caused a mudflow on November 18, 1972 that destroyed several buildings surrounded the Post Office and some other nearby buildings in several feet of mud.

Government

At the county level, Big Sur Village is represented on the Monterey County Board of Supervisors by Mary Adams. In the California State Legislature, Big Sur Village is in, and in. In the United States House of Representatives, the Village is in