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The SpringFarm › topic 15

History of Sonoma County Communes

topic 15 · 12 responses
~sprin5 Fri, Mar 16, 2001 (12:20) seed
This is peripheral to the confernce subject, but it's so cool it deserved a topic.
~sprin5 Fri, Mar 16, 2001 (12:21) #1
~sprin5 Fri, Mar 16, 2001 (12:22) #2
Message 3/4 From Steve Bjerklie Mar 16, 01 06:30:35 AM -0700 Return-Path: X-Sender: stevebj@mail.well.com (Unverified) Date: Fri, 16 Mar 2001 06:30:35 -0700 To: terry@well.com Subject: 1996 story on history of communes in Sonoma County, Part I X-UIDL: f37165aa397ff5c09be9eeeff78110bc Terry, Following is the story I reported and wrote for the then-named Sonoma County Independent. This version is a bit longer and more complete than what appeared it print; it's very long in any case, so I'm sending it to you in two parts. Please don't hesitate to make comments or ask me questions about the material. Best regards, /Steve ___________ Sowing the Seeds of Eden: Utopias, Communes, and the Search for a Better Way in Sonoma County by Steve Bjerklie The best in man can flourish only when he loses himself in the community. --Albert Einstein Dave Henson is so enthusiastic about what he does and how he lives, he... zings. He reminds me of a G-string plucked in an open tuning: everything around him resonates in the harmonic. There's a bit of irony in this, because when I first pulled in to the Occidental Art & Ecology Center and saw Henson heaving pine branches into the back of a pickup I thought he was hired help. Earlier I'd talked to Dave on the phone--polite, friendly--but didn't expect to meet someone who's so, well, vibrant. Henson's one of those people who seems to spend most of his waking hours outside of himself. At various points in our conversation he drums a table, dives his hands into dark, sun-warmed loam just to feel its goodness, and waves broadly at the sky and at trees as if grand-marshaling a parade. "The primary dynamic of the universe," he tells me, "is the relationship between individuality and community." He speaks in rushes of words; my notes from the conversation are scribbled blurts: "social strug is bout being alive"; "so few able pull off"; "strong base, empower spot--"; "hallmarks of dem'cracy"; "don't want to isolate ourselves." He punctuates every sentence with what I've come to call "the '60's tick"--a slight, sharp jag of the head to toss hair out of the eyes. Henson's spilling words about "process, the really hard work of a community" like water over a dam when a happy, stunning woman named Kenda, who trails behind her a streamer of soft brown hair from out of the back of a baseball cap, comes up to the weather-worn picnic table where Dave and I are talking and opens her hands. A small yellow-and-black striped beetle meanders toward her thumb. "Listen," she says softly. She's right: you can actually hear the bug, a tiny low buzz. "Isn't that something?" she marvels, and we agree. The bug inspires Henson, who's wearing a faded orange t-shirt ("cotton but not organic, unfortunately") with no advertising on it, not even for a rock band, and dusty khakis with leather work gloves waving from a back pocket, to swerve in a new direction. "The natural world is our model. No one part dominates the system. Every time something new is introduced, the system adapts to it, or around it. The model, of course, has its limits. Nature takes no prisoners. We assume the need to operate collectively." He tosses back his straight, coppery, Tom Petty hair. Henson's face and arms are teak-tan from being outdoors most of the time. "It's a great place for everybody to explode and actualize themselves." The thought reminds me of something I'd heard earlier the same morning from Michael Black, the Sebastopol architect: "Our society has a need for real community. We need to stress the importance of openness and telling the truth," he tells me in the living room of the pleasant, quiet home he shares with his wife Alexandra. "We're trying to form in our community a real extended family, a collection of diverse people with diverse needs and backgrounds who can share and teach each other. The Balinese have a phrase for it, suka duka. `Laugh together, cry together.'" The outside table at which Henson and I sit, talk, and drink chilled water freshened with mint leaves, is parked at roughly the epicenter of the Occidental Art and Ecology Center, Henson's home and job. The Center is one of the newest efforts in Sonoma County to create a new kind of human community, one in balance with the environment, spiritual disciplines, individuality, freedom, and the concept of extended family--Utopia, in a word. If Henson is a kind of utopian free-jazz improviser, Michael Black is his classically trained counterpart. Black and a group of friends are in the process of procuring permits for another kind of Utopia, what they call "cohousing," in Sebastopol on Robinson Road. What Henson seems slightly aware of and Black only a bit more so is that local history is abundant with serious attempts to create Utopia in Sonoma County, dating back to the 1870s. Utopianism and the search for a better way to live cut a swath through Sonoma County history as wide and well-traveled as Highway 101. Why Sonoma? Fertile and affordable (until recently, anyway) land, a steady influx of immigrants from all over the world, and easy access to one of the world's most tolerant and intellectual cities, San Francisco. The same reasons, in fact, that upstate New York has also been home to a host of utopian experiments, from the Oneida community to the Shakers. The two regions have accommodated more utopias than any other regions of the U.S. Sonoma County's legacy includes free love, communism, faith healing, financial scams, accusations of medical malpractice, media frenzies--and that's just the 19th century. The 20th added a samurai warrior, organic gardening, sweat lodges, drugs, invasions by bulldozers, and--a special 1990s touch--murder. But violence of any kind except for chewing on mint leaves seems far away from the Art & Ecology Center, which occupies the old Farallones Institute's 80-acre site on Coleman Valley Road. Founded in the summer of 1994, the Center sponsors a broad range of workshops and seminars, including "Permaculture Design Course," "Theory and Practice of Ecopsychology," "3-Day Seed Saving Course," and "Rethinking Corporations/Rethinking Democracy," among many other offerings. Arts courses include printmaking and, with Bill Wheeler, plein-air landscape painting. On Wednesdays, "Community Volunteer Day," visitors are invited to work in the Center's two two-acre flower-and-vegetable gardens, which are like Persian cities, forested with spires of foxglove. The Center also hosts outside groups for seminars and retreats. A recent visiting organization was a joint U.S.-Mexico association working toward improved border and immigration policy. The Center's land and buildings are "owned" in equal shares by eight partners, of which Henson is one. Six of the partners, along with four other people, live on the property in a residential "intentional community," the '90s way to say "commune" (the community is also a legal California general partnership). Decisions in Center management are made by "process," which Henson describes as "a way to structure accountability, a way to establish consensus about what needs to be done tomorrow, and a way to be very pragmatic but also empowering." Process occurs in meetings in the Center's central lodge led by a facilitator. Facilitating responsibilities rotate among the partners. Partners buy their way in and, if they should want out of the community for any reason, are bought out if they leave. I'm reminded of something about Icaria-Speranza, but Henson doesn't seem to know the old 19th-century community. He graduated in 1983 from UC Santa Barbara with a degree in sociology, and later went to law school at New College in San Francisco. In between he spent time with rebels in El Salvador, worked at the Earth Island Institute, and lived at the Highlander Center in Tennessee, the venerable wellspring of 20th-century American social movements. "Highlander's a good model of community," Henson says as we walk toward one of the Art & Ecology Center amazing gardens. "It has transcended the human drama that has passed through there." Michael Black came to contemplate Utopia as embodied by cohousing through involvement in social movements as well. A successful architect in Palm Springs in the '60s--his first home was featured in Time--Black got involved with the local Cahuilla tribe of Native Americans through a HUD program, as the destitute Cahuillas struggled to rebuild themselves in the wake of the holocaust of Manifest Destiny. "I was pretty successful with them because I became an advocate, not an adversary," the elegant, snow-haired Black says. "I even received the blessing of the tribe. They put me on the board of directors for their Malki Museum." But what caught Black's attention was the strong sense of community holding together the Cahuillas in the face of enormous difficulties. He was reminded of the safety he felt in the extended Jewish family he grew up in in Los Angeles. "I had a strong desire for community in my own life," he says. In 1974 Black saw a story in the Riverside Enterprise about a social experiment in Denmark called cohousing. "That story changed my life. That's when I was alerted this was doable." He went to Denmark to observe the experiment up close. He came back to the U.S. determined to write a book about cohousing but was beaten to the publisher by Kathryn McCamant and Charles Durrett, who wrote Cohousing: A Contemporary Approach to Housing Ourselves. No matter. Black, McCamant and Durrett toured northern California together, lecturing on cohousing. "Cohousing is a humanistic and pragmatic way of approaching living," Black comments. "The heart of it is in the building of community." In a cohousing development, certain shared common indoor and outdoor spaces promote group activities and exchanges. Residences are private, but meals, for instance, might be shared, and so might daycare for children. An important factor is diversity in the incomes and interests of residents; that way, according to Black, everyone teaches everyone. "The depth to which a community bonds varies greatly," says Black, who designed a cohousing development in Chico, Calif., before undertaking the Sebastopol project. "Chico"--with 25 units occupied--"has not yet bonded as it should have. But our group in Sebastopol meets frequently, even though completion of the project is still a ways off. We're bonding now." Other cohousing developments in the U.S. have been built or are underway in Davis, Emeryville, and Sacramento, Calif.; Seattle; Boulder, Colo.; Salt Lake city; and in the states of Washington, Oregon, Massachusetts, New Mexico, Vermont, Illinois, North Carolina, Florida and upstate New York. A second cohousing project in Sonoma County is planned to be included as part of the 350-home Courtside Village development in Santa Rosa, but snags in the cost of sewer installations have slowed down the Courtside cohousers for the time being. Black expects to move in to the Sebastopol cohousing development (which is presently nameless, though "Jewel Hill" was used earlier) in 1998, when he's 60. Back in '74 he hoped to raise his children in a cohousing environment. Now it looks as if it'll be the grandchildren. Presently, the Sebastopol project has nine financially committed partners and six in process, and they come from all walks of life: event planner, therapist, computer programmer, artist, farmer, nurse, teacher, etc. In comments to the press Black has been careful not to evoke bad memories. "We're not hippies," he told the Press-Democrat earlier this year. "We're not without jobs. Most of us hold pretty responsible positions within the community." The articulate Black, who also designed Sebastopol's downtown plan, is equally careful when he uses the U-word. "Utopianism, idealism--it's all a matter of perspective," he tells me. "What some people call utopian others might find horrible." He's referring to the partial sacrifice of individuality that successful cohousing requires, but his words jog something in the back of my mind. Ironically, later in our conversation Black himself brings up the old community of Preston. I mention Altruria, Icaria and Fountain Grove, and finally Morning Star and Wheeler Ranch. "Oh, Morning Star!" Black's graceful eyebrows suddenly jut up into accent marks. "You must talk to Alexandra! She was one of the first settlers there! She and Lou Gottlieb and Ramon Sender. What a time." He turns toward another room in the house where Alexandra maintains an office, then looks back at me. "Back then, you know, she was called Rain. Rain Jacopetti." I'm more than a little surprised to learn that "Rain" is actually Alexandra's given name, the one she grew up with in southeastern Idaho. No man is an Iland, intire of it selfe; every man is a peece of the Continent, a part of the maine... --John Donne Sir Thomas More, prior to becoming Henry VIII's lord chancellor, wrote Utopia as the world exploded. When Utopia appeared in 1516, Michelangelo had just completed his frescoes on the Sistine Chapel's ceiling. Machiavelli wrote The Prince in 1513. In 1517, the same year coffee was first introduced in Europe, Martin Luther nailed his 95 theses to the dark wooden door of the castle church in Saxony to begin the Reformation. Velasquez discovered Cuba in 1511. In 1519 Cortez arrived in Mexico. And we think the '60s are something. Though More's book, written in Latin, wasn't the first description of an ideal human society--the earliest recorded journey in search of an earthly paradise was made by Gilgamesh in 2000 B.C.--the title coined the word's definition as we know it (in the original greek, Utopia means both "good place" and "no place"). From More to the present day, literally thousands of attempts have been made all over the globe to create Utopia on Earth. The success rate seems to be fairly low. Martin Buber, the Jewish philsopher, wrote as he watched a new Israel form out of Palestine's sands, "The primary aspiration of all history is a genuine community of human beings." Robert Hine, a professor emeritus of history at both UC Riverside and Irvine and a specialist in utopian attempts in California, tells me that Utopia is a simple concept but a hard-won paradise. "Utopia, as I've seen it tried, is a kind of equal-parcelling in balance: shared work, shared goals, and shared religion or spirituality. The difficulty is when someone doesn't quite pull his or her own weight, or when the community becomes overwhelmed by outside forces and factors, or when one person simply gains too much power." Utopianism first came to Sonoma County in 1875 in the person of mystic spiritualist Thomas Lake Harris and in the body of his Brotherhood of the New Life. Harris, a mesmerizing speaker with piercing eyes and de rigeur 19th century John Muir-style beard, was a human smorgasbord of spirituality: prior to arriving in Santa Rosa he had sampled Calvinism, Universalism, Swedenborgism, and plain old Spiritualism. He dabbled in poetry. He claimed to know Longfellow and Poe. William James called him "America's best-known mystic." In 1857 Harris had a series of revelations in which the message and teachings of Respirationism were revealed to him. The basic idea was that "supernatural breathing" enabled Man to commune directly with God--who, by the way, is both Male and Female, according to Harris. After building a band of followers in the British Isles and the eastern U.S., Harris established communities in Wassaic and Brocton, N.Y., before buying (for $21,000!) 700 acres on the sunny east hillside just north of Santa Rosa. Shortly afterward he doubled the size of his property, which he called "Fountain Grove," and then bought still more land. By 1884, the Brotherhood's colony numbered about 30, and, according to Hine's excellent history, California's Utopian Colonies, had 1,700 acres planted in cabernet, pinot noir and zinfandel. In 1886 Fountain Grove made 70,000 gallons of wine. The Brotherhood colonists probably needed all of it. In addition to giving supernatural breathing lessons, Harris taught a complex sexual theology in which every human soul is paired with a spiritual counterpart (he also believed--and this is the truth--that little fairies lived in the breasts of women). The ultimate human experience is to consummate sexually with your counterpart, which shoots you right out there on to the celestial plane. But the problem is, you don't know in whose body your counter-spirit lodges until you, well, consummate. In all likelihood, taught Harris, your marriage partner was not your spiritual counterpart. Go forth and find, he sermonized. Pour the wine! colonists must've enthusiastically responded. In actual practice, Fountain Grove harbored a lot less free-loving than neighbors thought. Most people on the outside were influenced by what they read about the community, not what they actually experienced. In 1891 Harris invited Miss Alzire Chevaillier, a Christian Scientist, Nationalist, and "professional agitator," according to Hine, and Miss Chevaillier's mother to Fountain Grove to have a look-see, and--rather unfortunately, it turned out--Harris allowed as how he thought the beautiful and feisty Alzire might, indeed, be the spiritual counterpart he had been searching his whole life for. Well, he wanted to find out for sure, anyway. She was rather less than interested. And then she went to the newspapers. Her series of stories about Fountain Grove in the San Francisco Chronicle, which began a widespread media feeding frenzy on the colony, proved to be the beginning of the end. By 1892 the charismatic Thomas Lake Harris left Fountain Grove (with a new wife), never to return. He died in 1906 at the age of 83. Once Harris was gone, the Brotherhood took over Fountain Grove, and eventually the entire property came to be held by the last surviving Brotherhood member, a Japanese samurai named Kanawe Nagasawa. The highly educated Nagasawa--diplomat, architect and builder (it was he who built the round barn that still stands on the old Fountain Grove property) and skilled winemaker--continued to manage the Fountain Grove Winery until his death in 1934. He produced, in good years, cabernets to rival Inglenook's famed bottlings in the Napa Valley. Back when the brothers and sisters of the Brotherhood of the New Life pressed those 70,000 gallons of wine, another utopian experiment was getting underway on a fertile, 885-acre tract just south of Cloverdale. This was Icaria-Speranza, founded by French-speaking Icarians, who came to be called such not because they arrived from a distant planet but because they modeled their communistic community after Etienne Cabet's influential 1840 book, Voyage en Icarie. "The book was basically a description for enlightened socialism," says Dale Ross, a descendant of Icarians and an active member of the active National Icarian Heritage Society. "High value was placed on families, the arts, and so on. " He adds: "Icarians were communists in the sense that they shared all the wealth and didn't believe in private property." The book was written after France had become disillusioned with the false promises of the Revolution in 1789 and the subsequent Age of Napoleon. It was another time of wild upheaval: In the same decade, Karl Marx's Communist Manifesto and Charles Darwin's The Origin of Species were published. Voyage en Icarie inspired a generation in France; Icarians not only set out for America to build communes, they emigrated to Spain as well, establishing a successful community near Barcelona. In America the Icarians struggled until they discovered a bonanza: the ghost town left behind by the Mormons at Nauvoo, Ill. Brigham Young had set out for the Utah Territory in 1846; in 1848 the Icarians moved in to a perfectly empty but intact village (ironically, one of the first tasks undertaken by the French Icarians was the planting of vineyards on land the teetotaling Mormons had previously planted in corn). Yet disenchantment among the Icarians eventually led to the exile from Nauvoo of Cabet himself, who had joined the French emigrants. More splits occurred until finally, in 1881, Armand Dehay and Jules Leroux scouted the Sonoma County property and bought it for $15,000. The commune's original name, Speranza, came from L'Esperance, an Icarian newsletter; by 1884 it was known as Icaria-Speranza. Vineyards were planted, and fruit orchards, a prune orchard, and vegetable gardens. But mundane financial difficulties of the capitalist variety found their way into the communist society. Hopes that the sale of land in Iowa would allow Icaria-Speranza to pay off the debt on the Sonoma County land were dashed when the Iowa property had to be sold for cents on the dollar because of the abundant Midwestern farmland still open at the time to homesteading. An experiment in breeding Norman and Percheron horses proved disastrous. Plus, bringing in newcomers was difficult. To be considered for living at Icaria-Speranza, one had to be fluent in French and conversant in Etienne Cabet's theories. Not many takers. And once in, if you wanted out all you had to do was say so. Exiters were paid in cash on the spot for their share of the community. Some takers. By 1887 Icaria-Speranza was no longer a functional community, its property divided among the colonists. The community lives on, however, in the name Icaria Creek and in several Dehay, Leroux and other Icaria-Speranza descendants who still live in Sonoma County. The heritage society meets in Cloverdale quadrennially. Whether the Altrurians, yet another band of utopia-seekers in Sonoma County, had heard of the Icarians or the failure of Icaria-Speranze is not known. They established the community of Altruria about eight miles up Mark West Creek east of present-day 101, and were also inspired by a book, A Traveler from Altruria by William Dean Howells. The novel tells a story of a man, a Mr. Homos, who visits a chi-chi New England summer resort hotel and thrills the guests with stories of his utopian homeland. Not only does Mr. Homos spellbind his listeners, he does radical things like help the baggageman, the bootblack and waitresses with their chores. In October 1894 a young Unitarian-Christian Socialist minister, Rev. Edward Biron Payne, led a group of 18 adults and eight children up Mark West Creek to the 185 idyllic acres the group had already purchased. Payne was a social activist who grew up in Connecticut and Illinois. In 1875 the 30-year-old Payne, after graduating from Oberlin, arrived in Berkeley, Calif., to take over the Congregational ministerial position at the University of California, which had been open only seven years. He had worked with the poor in Chicago's slums, with textile laborers in New England, and had risen quickly in the Unitarian hierarchy. His brand of Christian Socialism focused on saving society rather than the individual, and was popular in the Bay Area of the 1890s. In certain ways, Payne's theology was not so different from Social Gospel theology as the latter is described in Walter Rauschenbusch's Christianity and the Social Crisis, a hugely important book published at the turn of the century. (Martin Luther King cited it specifically as an important influence on his work.) Anyway, the Altrurians formed around Payne out of meetings he attended and addressed in San Francisco and Berkeley. The down payment on the Mark West land came from the $50 each Altrurian contributed as a membership/entrance fee. Shortly after arriving in Sonoma County, the colonists had orchards and gardens in the ground. Some of the produce was sold at an Altrurian store in San Francisco. Perhaps it was this taste of small financial success that led the colony to begin construction of a hotel in Altruria, which then proved to be the fledgling community's undoing. Plans for the structure grew ever more grandiose--a third story would be added, and a library, office, dining hall. The project sucked up huge amounts of money, most of which had to be borrowed. Throughout early 1895 the hotel's uncompleted shell daily reminded every Altrurian of their unattained dream. By June of that year, a short nine months from their optimistic beginning, the Altrurians and Altruria were history. Except in one small way. The manager of the San Francisco produce store was an energetic, agreeable and pragmatic young man named Job Harriman. Years later, after almost winning the mayor's election in Los Angeles, the social activist founded in 1912 Llano del Rio, a labor-socialist utopia located in Antelope Valley that lasted well into the 1920s; Newllano in Louisiana, an eastern outpost, lasted into the 1930s. As Altruria may have been California's shortest-lived utopian experiment, Llano del Rio was, by certain measures, the longest. And finally, Preston. Prof. Hine doesn't count it as an actual utopia, for the community northeast of Cloverdale was for the most part a colony of invalids gathered around the charismatic presence of Madame Emily Preston, a faith healer and dispenser of patent medicines who could give Elizabeth Clare Prophet a run for her money. Madame falls in the category of "Quirky Christian." While some of her beliefs were fairly straightforward--"All can go to heaven if their hearts are right," reads part of her creed that was written on the walls of Preston's own church--others were a bit, well..."We believe in inspiration and that it lets us read out of the book of life that is printed in the air everywhere," states another part of the same creed. Her church was called "The Church of Heaven on Probation." Varene Anderson, who studied Madame's teachings as part of her Sonoma State master's dissertation, told me Madame's sermons, of which Varene has copies, "are pretty boring." On the other hand, some of Madame's followers believed she had an x-ray eye that could see through the human body. No one really knew where she came from. Col. Hartwell Preston, who seems to have earned his rank in the Confederate Army, was her third husband. She had children by other men that she barely spoke of--the husbands or the children. The key and most functional ingredient in her patent-medicines, which contained a veritable goulash of herbs and spices, was alcohol. People died under her care and still new patients arrived. The Col. and Madame bought 1,500 acres on Oak Mountain in 1873, and somehow convinced the railroad to build a spur to their property, which they named Preston. (The present-day Preston Winery has no connection to Madame, her history, or her medicines). They built themselves an impressive Victorian mansion. Eventually, Preston had its own school, hospital, cemetery, and a number of residential cottages. Madame also maintained an apartment in San Francisco for patients who couldn't make the trek to Cloverdale. Local medical doctors were infuriated by Madame's "healings." But an attempt to have her prosecuted for selling medicine without a license failed, though the advice of Sonoma County physicians to their patients not to use Madame's concoctions surely must've had a financial impact. What finally did her in, more or less, was passage of the Pure Food and Drug Act in 1906, which stopped her (and thousands of other purveyors of patent-medicines) from commercially selling homemade drugs. Madame died, still quite wealthy, in 1909. The property has suffered its share of calamities since, including a disastrous wild-fire in 1988 which burned the once-elegant Preston mansion to the ground. The Church of Heaven on Probation still stands, however, as does a graceful, adjacent clock tower which still works--and still tolls. >>And therefore never send to know for whom... for it tolls for thee.<<<
~sprin5 Fri, Mar 16, 2001 (12:25) #3
Nothing's for certain It could always go wrong Come in when it's raining Go on out when it's gone We could have us a high time living the good life Well, I know --Robert Hunter, "High Time" On assignment for Harper's Magazine, Sara Davidson walked into a bar in Occidental one night and asked for directions to Wheeler Ranch. "Heads turned," she wrote later. "People froze, drinks in hand. A woman with an expressionless, milky face said, `Honey, there isn't any sign. You just go up the road six miles and there's a gate on the left. Then you have to drive a ways to git to it. From where I live you can see their shacks and what have you. But you can't see anything from the road.'" That was in 1970. In 1996, Bill Wheeler strolls into the saloon at the Union Hotel in Occidental to meet me for a beer, and if he's not exactly the star of the room he's certainly everyone's best old friend. The beers are quickly poured from the tap. Bill's lawyer and the lawyer's family unexpectedly show up--there are hugs, laughs, jokes, and invitations from Bill to come out for the annual May Day party at the ranch. "You mean like we used to, dancing naked around the Maypole?" the lawyer, who fills out a lawyerly dark blue suit with a chest grown by success, asks. "Nah, Bill, I can't...I mean, can you see me doing that now?" Hearty laughs refill the saloon. The first thing Wheeler says to me is, "I'm not a teacher, I'm not a leader, I wasn't anyone's guru." He drapes himself across a chair at my table like a bearskin rug; he's dressed in thick, hard-working clothes torn in the legs. He looks like a cedar. "It was all an accident of history." From 1967 until 1973, Wheeler Ranch west of Occidental (five miles, not six, on Coleman Valley Road) was Sonoma County's second great experiment in open-land communalism. Bill Wheeler simply opened his 320-acre property up to anyone who wanted live there. The population eventually reached 400, including cows and horses. Besides dozens of flower children from San Francisco and elsewhere, the community hosted a few runaways, ex-cons, and soldiers AWOL from Vietnam. Residents lived in tents, shacks, and lean-to's angled out like parasails from redwood stumps. There were absolutely no rules. Whatever happened at Wheeler happened because an individual or a couple or a group on the ranch was in the mood for it to happen. Neighbors and authorities, fed by media alarms about the whole countercultural movement, worried that mostly what was happening was a lot of sex and drugs. "It was a social experiment that couldn't last," Wheeler, who insists he's but a humble landscape artist, explains. "I knew from the beginning it couldn't last. But it was the closest thing that came to the forming of a tribe, to people relating on a new tribal level." He sips his beer. With a Moses-like forehead, a nose like a battleship prow and dense, foliant eyes, Bill is what used to be called "ruggedly handsome," in the way Mt. Whitney or Mt. McKinley are ruggedly handsome. "The problem was, we assaulted the traditional sense of private property." The accident part of the history is that Wheeler opened his ranch after county sheriff's deputies driving bulldozers invaded his friend Lou Gottlieb's Morning Star Ranch. Morning Star refugees were the first communal Wheeler Ranch residents. Gottlieb, a member and musical director of the early '60s folk-pop group The Limeliters, had bought the 32-acre property on Graton Road in 1962 (the year Bill Wheeler graduated from Yale with an art degree) originally as a get-away and retreat. In 1966, along with some friends including Ramon Sender and Ben (now Roland) and Rain Jacopetti, he opened the land to all comers. In part II of an amazing six-part series titled "The Happiness People" published in early summer, 1967, in the Press-Democrat, Gottlieb explained his philosophy for Morning Star: "The people here are the first wave of an ocean of technologically unemployables. The cybernation is in its early snowball stages." (Really, he used the word "cybernation" in 1967. Prescient.) Showing P-D reporter Dick Torkelson around the ranch, Gottlieb said, "This is Utopia, folks. You never thought you'd see it. If you find a better way, then I'll do it your way." He added: "This is an experiment in lowest-cost housing. The 16-inch stud makes life duller than it has to be. We call it Shanti-town--get it?" (The article also provides some wonderful, only-in-the-'60s quotes. At one point Gottlieb asked Torkelson if he'd ever tripped, and when Torkelson said no the old Limeliter advised, "Not to try one of the psychedelics is comparable to not reading Freud or not learning mathematics.") It couldn't last, of course. Less than three weeks after the "Happiness People" series ran, the P-D reported, "Morning Star's Gottlieb Arrested on Health Charge." The ranch's story unfolds in headlines: 7/9/67: "Planners Ponder Way to Restrict Hippies" 8/14/67: "Gunfire Erupts at Hippie Ranch" 9/8/67: "Is Gottlieb's Hippie `Heaven' Fading?" 9/11/67: "Hippie Colony Protest Meeting Saturday" 9/12/67: "Gottlieb Doesn't Fight County `Outhouse' Charge" ("Maintaining his cool throughout the 20-minute Municipal Court proceedings, the 43-year-old former Limeliter said he decided to change his plea `because I think it's below the dignity of the court to try a case' involving an outhouse, [though] Mr. Gottlieb's description of a bathroom facility was much more colorful.") 9/14/67: "New Injunction Aimed at Gottlieb's Ranch" 9/15/67: "Dejected Gottlieb Gets Order to Close" 9/24/67: "`Filth' of Morning Star Described by Neighbors" And then, on Oct. 8, 1967: "Gottlieb Arrests Hippies for Trespass." The article states, "The era of Morning Star-1967 came to a strange end here yesterday when Lou Gottlieb wearily arrested 15 of his `brothers and sisters' for trespassing. Faced with a $500-a-day price tag for allowing his friends to stay on the ranch...Gottlieb called his action a `rude practicality.'" Actually, it got stranger still. In 1969, after returning from a sojourn to India, Gottlieb deeded Morning Star Ranch to God. But a judge held that the Divine, not being "a natural or artificial person," couldn't hold title. 7/10/69: "Gottlieb Offers His Piano To Settle Fines." Then, after collecting evidence that Gottlieb still ran Morning Star as an open-land community, the county moved in with bulldozers to raze "Shanti-town." "One naked [Morning Star] member followed the machines reading from the Old Testament while others played sadly on flutes and guitars," writes Robert Hine, the historian, in the epilogue to his book Community on the American Frontier: Separate But Not Alone. "The situation at Morning Star was really sweet at first," remembers Alexandra (Rain). "My then-husband Roland and my son Leif [now called Hobart] and I took up residence on a tiny sun porch that looked out over the garden. But a lot of people who eventually came to Morning Star were just sloughing off the rules of society, including some of the practical rules." Alexandra, who says she "very quickly became house-mother" to Morning Star residents shortly after arriving in 1966, grew tired of cleaning up after everyone else's messes. After a trip to visit her family in Idaho, she, Ben and Leif left Morning Star and moved down to Berkeley. The part of Morning Star that she remembers with fondness is "the strong sense of a gathering of the tribes. It felt like we were fated to be together in that time and place. My disillusionment came with some of the newcomers. Some of these people had real problems and they needed to deconstruct themselves, but we had no tools for that other than LSD." After the bulldozer blitz, the concept of Morning Star Ranch in effect moved to Wheeler Ranch, which was ten times larger in terms of acreage. Gottlieb's vision of a non-authoritarian, non-governed Utopia took root in Wheeler's gently undulating hills and forested canyons. For a while the ranch was called Ahimsa, meaning "harmlessness." Bill Wheeler took his measure as a person and as the center of a sporadic, organic community of anarchy-prone people from the land, which he has described as "spacious and lyrical." "We are separate from the land now; we have to get back to it in the manner of the Native Americans," Bill tells me in the saloon. A best-selling book, Living on the Earth, as much an icon of the '60s as the first Whole Earth Catalog, was written by Alicia Bay Laurel when she lived at Wheeler's. Indeed, Wheeler Ranch, after Sara Davidson's article "Open Land: Getting Back to the Communal Garden" appeared in the June 1970 issue of Harper's, became in the popular imagination the very definition of "hippie commune." But the bulldozers followed to Wheeler's, too. In 1973 Bill Wheeler suffered the same invasion his friend Lou Gottlieb had witnessed at Morning Star Ranch four years earlier. When I ask him at the Union Hotel what he most feels about those days, Bill quickly responds. "Nostalgia. Extreme nostalgia." He takes another sip of beer. "I remember music all the time, flutes in the forest and guitars. You'd walk along the road and all you'd hear was beautiful music. It was a blast." On May Day this year, in an open meadow on Wheeler's property, I hear the old call. The meadow's thrumming with bees, birds, bells, drums and a saxophone. A huge Maypole's hung with pink and blue streamers and tied with rags torn from what look like a lot of favorite bedspreads. A couple dozen people chat and carry paper plates sagging with dark mounds of beans and blue corn chips. They sip wine and hibiscus tea. Except for the abundant tie-dye t-shirts, the super-prolific hair on both men and women, the live music, and the sweat lodge built and supervised by Kingfisher, a Cheyenne Indian, this could be a reunion in Minnesota of my mother's side of the family. I listen to parents talk about colleges for their kids, and to kids complaining about their parents. A beautiful girl in scarves and beads jangles by. Dogs bounce through the grass. Birds jump from fruit tree to fruit tree. It's a spectacular day, blue as sapphire and green as a pippin. "There are no rules!" someone shouts. A map of the world that does not include Utopia is not worth even glancing at, for it leaves out the one country at which humanity is always landing. --Oscar Wilde "The social movements of the '90s have learned a lot from the '60s and '70s," says Dave Henson. "This is an interesting time for intentional communities, an interesting moment right now. People are expressing a direct interest in what's going on." He waves toward a bee that hovers around a spire of foxglove loaded with blooms. "Community movements of the past had to deal with hard survival," comments Michael Black, "with farming without machinery, and with sometimes-hostile people around. We're talking now about survival of the spirit, or soul. The communities before were limited spiritually or by a single charismatic leader. Cohousingt is independent of these ingredients because the leadership's always changing. "I believe community is in our genetic code," he continues. "I think it's extraordinarily important in our own lives to make changes we want to see in the country, to materialize our ideals. Cohousing is just a small part of the big picture, but hopefully we'll have an affect." Hope. Hopeful. Hopefully. One wonders how many times over the past 125 years those words have been spoken and thought in Sonoma County. Every utopian attempt begins in the shining realm of hope. Still, the record of utopian survival is pretty spotty. Of all the utopias described in this article, only the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center is actually up and running. The old professor Dr. Robert Hine, who has made the study of utopias his life's work, becomes defensive when I ask him why utopias always seem to fail. "I never like to measure the colonies in terms of success or failure," he responds. "Many people who have moved away from utopian colonies say the years they spent there were the best years of their lives, the happiest and most fulfilling. Can you call that failure?" I ask him why he specializes in a corner of history that comprises, essentially, social curiosities. "Oh, it's simple. Any child of the Depression, like I am, has to say, `There must be a better way to organize society.' In this country we are not taught about the good of the whole over the good of the individual." He grows quiet on the phone. His studies have made him knowledgeable about virtually every recorded attempt to create utopia in California, and about a lot of others throughout the world. He can recite the strange history of Fountain Grove as if it were a favorite bedtime story; he knows and respects Lou Gottlieb and Bill Wheeler. Finally he says, "People who built utopian communities are experimenting with an idea that may still come." When? Probably not until the schism Michael Black describes--"What some people call utopian, others might find horrible"--disappears. For now, the only thing disappearing are traces of Sonoma County's old utopias. Nothing whatsoever remains of Altruria. Icaria-Speranza exists only in a brass California historical marker and in the name of a creek; noisy Highway 101 bisects the old commune. Only Lou Gottlieb himself lives on Morning Star Ranch. Bill Wheeler throws his May Day party every year, but that's it. And Fountain Grove lives on only in the name of a parkway, housing developments, a motel, and executive and medical buildings--the asphalt, AEK, and dark-glass uglies that Santa Rosa's "planners" would have us believe comprise New Utopia. These are deserving of the Fountain Grove name? Not on your life. (It's an indication of modern society's superfluous and often phony efficiency that "Fountain Grove" in these new developments is often spelled "Fountaingrove.") But what Michael Black's words really remind me of was something that happened up at the site of Preston last September. Preston's pretty much gone, too, except for the church, clock tower, and scraps of outbuildings. A handsome 26-year-old kid named Ted Van Dorn, who had grown up around Madame's old spa, took a late-summer hike in the hills one hot afternoon. He found someone else's new utopia. Or may have; no one knows for sure. All anyone knows is that whatever secret, or treasure, or utopia Ted Van Dorn stumbled across that day in the hills where people once sought healing--most likely a marijuana field, say authorities--was worth killing him for. The murder remains unsolved. Sidebars... Sonoma County Utopias Following is a list of notable utopian experiments in Sonoma County over the past 123 years. Some readers might find the '60s category a bit sparse. Certainly more communes than Morning Star Ranch and Wheeler Ranch existed in Sonoma County during those years, but only MSR and Wheeler received significant attention. 19th Century Fountain Grove 1875-1892. Founded by Thomas Lake Harris and his Brotherhood of the New Life. Fountain Grove eventually encompassed thousands of acres just north of Santa Rosa, many of which were planted with excellent vineyards. Harris was a mesmerizing speaker and spiritualist. Earlier he founded colonies in upstate New York. His bizarre ideas about sex, however, eventually got him in trouble in the press, and after he left Fountain Grove in 1892 the colony ceased to function as a "utopia." Kanawe Nagasawa, a Harris follower and Japanese samurai who designed and built the round barn that still stands just off Bicentennial Road, eventually came to own the Fountain Grove property and became a notable California (and no doubt first Asian-American) winemaker until his death in 1934. Icaria-Speranza 1881-1887. Founded by French immigrant followers of Etienne Cabet, who described a socially enlightened, communistic utopia in his 1840 novel Voyage en Icarie. The Icaria-Speranza commune was located just south of Cloverdale on 885 fertile acres. Vineyards, fruit orchards and gardens were planted. But financial problems and difficulties in attracting new commune members doomed the experiment. Altruria October 1894-June 1895. Founded by Unitarian Rev. Edward Biron Payne and a band of 26 followers who took their inspiration from Christian Socialist theology and William Dean Howells's novel, A Traveler from Altruria. The community made a down payment on 185 beautiful acres approximately eight miles up Mark West Road east of present-day Highway 101. Only months after Altruria's founding, an ill-advised scheme to build a hotel on the property created extreme financial hardship, soon causing Altruria to collapse. However, Altruria's ideals indirectly lived on in Job Harriman's southern California utopian experiment, Llano del Rio. Preston 1875-1909. Not "utopia" in the strict academic sociological sense, Preston, located on Oak Mountain north of Cloverdale, was a community gathered around faith healer Madame Emily Preston, who supposedly could see through people with her "x-ray eye." She also dispensed numerous patent-medicines, most of which were based on high alcohol content. Local attempts by doctors to have her shut for illegally selling medicine failed. She was stopped, however, by passage of the Pure Food and Drug Act. Preston broke up after her death in 1909. The '60s Morning Star Ranch 1966-1969. Founded by former Limeliter and hippie spokesman Lou Gottlieb, who invited all comers to join him on his 32-acre property on Graton Road. Sonoma County authorities soon cracked down on Gottlieb for various health-code violations, and sheriff's deputies finally bulldozed Morning Star's tents, tipis, shacks and cabins in October 1969. Wheeler Ranch 1967-1973. Artist Bill Wheeler opened his 320-acre ranch on Coleman Valley Road to anyone and everyone after authorities began hassling residents at Morning Star Ranch. After MSR's bulldozing, Wheeler Ranch continued to operate as the quintessential "hippie commune" until the bulldozers finally came in 1973. The Ranch was featured in Harper's in June 1970, and Living on the Earth, a best-seller in the early '70s, was written by Alicia Bay Laurel when she lived on Wheeler. The Present Occidental Arts and Ecology Center. The Center occupies the 80-acre site on Coleman Valley Road of the old Farallones Institute. The Center itself has an educational focus; eight partners, five of whom work for the Center, live on the property in an "intentional community"--the '90s phrase for "commune." Decisions in the community are made through a formal "process" of discussion and compromise. Meals are common, residences private. Cohousing Two efforts are in the planning/permit stages, one in Sebastopol (est. completion: early 1998) and one in the Courtside Village development in Santa Rosa. Architect Michael Black, who is directing the Sebastopol effort, describes cohousing, a Danish idea, as "a humanistic and pragmatic way of approaching living." The emphasis is on community--on creating a bond between people of diverse backgrounds, ethnicity, educations, professions, ages, and religions. Books The following books and publications provide more information about Sonoma County's utopian experiments. Some may be out of print or difficult to find. Books available from the Sonoma County Library are noted with a parenthetical (SCL). General Dictionary of American Communal and Utopian History by Robert Fogarty 1980 Comprehensive. New World Utopias by Paul Kagan 1975 Comprehensive. Seven American Utopias by Dolores Hayden 1981 Cogent analysis of American utopianism. 19th Century Historical California's Utopian Colonies by Robert V. Hine 1983, revised (originally published 1953; second printing 1966) Fountain Grove, Icaria-Speranza, Altruria. The Preface briefly discusses Morning Star Ranch and Wheeler Ranch. (SCL) Wild Oats in Eden by Harvey J. Hansen and Jeanne Thurlow Miller; Foreward by Gaye Lebaron 1962; second printing 1976 Chapter "Eden of the West" describes Fountain Grove, Icaria-Speranza, Altruria and Preston. (SCL) A Photographic History of Icaria-Speranza Dale W. Ross, ed. Published by the National Icarian Heritage Society Les Icarian (in English) by Robert V. Sutton 1994 General study of Icarianism in America, including Icaria-Speranza commune. Shadows on the Land: Sonoma County's 19th Century Utopian Colonies by Varene Anderson 1992 Well-researched and written Master's thesis available at Sonoma State Univ. Library details histories of Fountain Grove, Icaria-Speranza, Altruria, and Preston. Go Tell It On the Mountain: An Account of Madame Emily Preston with Prefatorial Notes on the Preston Papers by Janice Payne 1986 Master's thesis; Full description/explanation of Madame Preston's theology and the Preston community available in Sonoma State Univ. Library. The '60s Communes in the Counterculture: Origins, Theories, Styles of Life by Keith Melville 1972 General. The Communal Experience: Anarchist and Mystical Counter Cultures in America by Laurence Veysey 1973 General. Communes USA: A Personal Tour by Robert Fairfield 1971 Excellent chapters on Morning Star Ranch and Wheeler Ranch (SCL; the Annex in Santa Rosa has photocopied chapters on Morning Star Ranch and Wheeler Ranch in their clip files) Community on the American Frontier: Separate But Not Alone by Robert V. Hine 1985 Epilogue describes destruction by authorities of Morning Star Ranch and Wheeler Ranch. (SCL) Loose Change by Sara Davidson 1977 Chapter 21 contains distillation of Davidson's Harper's June 1970 article about Wheeler Ranch, "Open Land: Getting Back to the Communal Garden." Better, though, to find the full article on microfiche at SCL. (SCL) Present Cohousing: A Contemporary Approach to Housing Ourselves by Kathryn McCamant and Charles Durrett 1988 How cohousing works.
~sprin5 Fri, Mar 16, 2001 (12:27) #4
I had to scribble my first response because it was part two and I wanted to have these two pieces in order. Comments, I have some later.
~sprin5 Tue, Mar 20, 2001 (12:07) #5
Each May 1st Wheeler's has a Maypole festival, which is a combo party and nostalgia gathering of the tribes. Bill says folks are welcome "if they can find it".
~sprin5 Tue, Mar 20, 2001 (22:23) #6
Directions: about 5mils west on Coleman Valley Roac, Occidental. Wheler's is the driveway on the left BEFORE Oceansong. There is no more sign or any other indication these days..You will probably see other cars parked,and you will have to walk abot a mile down the hill.Keep in touch with me if you like. (I dont know if all the class would want to come) but like you I have an interest in community and these folks have some great stories!!
~terry Fri, May 4, 2001 (00:47) #7
I just went to Oceansong for the big Earthday celebration and here are the pictures: http://www.wholetech.com/oceansong
~terry Wed, May 23, 2001 (11:48) #8
A link I got from Ramon Sender Baryon: Meanwhile, those of you interested in commune history might want to check out the recently created 150+ photo site: http://www.imaginationwebsites.com/wheelersranch.html
~terry Wed, May 23, 2001 (11:48) #9
... Barayon ... http://www.imaginationwebsites.com/wheelersranch.html
~terry Sat, May 26, 2001 (14:44) #10
~terry Sun, May 27, 2001 (10:24) #11
I've updated the Oceansong pictures of the Earth Day Celebration near Occiidental, CA: http://www.wholetech.com/oceansong
~terry Wed, Jun 13, 2001 (20:03) #12
This year's lineup; Hog Farm Labor Day PigNic at the Black Oak Ranch, Laytonville, Mendocino County, CA on Saturday and Sunday, September 1 and 2. This year's line-up: Friday night campground stage: STEVIE B DYSFUNCTION FRIEDA'S CIRCUS THE STOKEMEN Saturday FEEDBACK GREGG'S EGGS PETE SEARS AND THE DAWN PATROL ERIC BIBB NEW ORLEANS KLEZMER ALL STARS KARL DENSON'S TINY UNIVERSE STEVE KIMOCK BAND GALACTIC Saturday late night in the campground: THE VENUSIANS Sunday DIANE PATTERSON LED KA'APANA & CYRIL PAHINUI CASPER LOMAYESVA - HOPILAND REGGAE TUBESTEAK JONES LOST AT LAST YONDER MOUNTAIN STRING BAND THOMAS MAPFUMO & THE BLACKS UNLIMITED STEVE KIMOCK BAND MC: Wavy Gravy.
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