Mountain pass in California
Hecker Pass is a low mountain pass across the Santa Cruz Mountains of central California , connecting Watsonville on the Pacific coast to Gilroy and the Santa Clara Valley .[ 2] It is traversed by Hecker Pass Road, the western part of California State Route 152 , which continues east from Gilroy across Pacheco Pass and into the Central Valley . Mt. Madonna County Park lies to the north of the pass.[ 3] The pass's elevation is 1,339 feet (408 m).[ 4]
Santa Clara County supervisor Henry Hecker, a nephew of Friedrich Hecker , became the namesake of the pass on May 27, 1928, at the opening of the "Yosemite -to-the-Sea Highway" over it.[ 5] [ 6] In the 1930s, flooding on creeks near the highway caused the collapse of a bridge and the closing of the pass.[ 7] In 1941, a landslide closed the pass,[ 8] and in 1947 and 1959, the pass was again closed because of landslides caused by earthquakes .[ 9]
The Hecker Strawberry, a strawberry variety introduced in 1979 in Davis, California , is named after the pass.[ 10]
See also
References
^ Hilton, Tom (30 April 2011). "Panoche Road 06" . Retrieved 2012-09-09 .
^ Taggart, Lisa (May 1, 2004), "The winding road west: parks and wineries line Hecker Pass Highway near Gilroy" , Sunset .
^ Rusmore, Jean; Spangle, Frances; Crowder, Betsy (2001), South Bay Trails: Outdoor Adventures in & Around Santa Clara Valley : From the Diablo Range to the Pacific Ocean (3rd ed.), Wilderness Press, p. 257 , ISBN 9780899976044 .
^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Hecker Pass .
^ Gudde, Erwin Gustav (1949), California Place Names: A Geographical Dictionary , University of California Press, p. 137 .
^ Shueh, Sam (2008), South Santa Clara County , Images of America: a history of American life in images and texts, Arcadia Publishing, p. 65, ISBN 9780738558455 .
^ Salewske, Claudia (2003), Gilroy , Images of America, p. 143, ISBN 9781439614174 .
^ "Large slide on Hecker Pass Road" , San Jose News , April 10, 1941 .
^ Youd, T. Leslie ; Hoose, Seena N. (1978), Historic Ground Failures in Northern California triggered by earthquakes , Geological Survey professional papers, vol. 993, U.S. Government Printing Office, p. 88 .
^ Gordon, Don (1997), Growing Fruit in the Upper Midwest (3rd ed.), University of Minnesota Press, p. 178, ISBN 978-1452901060 .