Diminishing Return
by Kandy Hurley
Title
Diminishing Return
Artist
Kandy Hurley
Medium
Photograph - Prints
Description
Diminishing Return
On the bluffs above the Pacific Ocean in Mendocino County California sits this abandoned farm site. The farmyard has a number of old outbuildings and this is one of my favorites.
The old Kent Ranch in Little River California
In the mid 1800's the small coastal town was then called Beall's Harbor named for three brothers who were amongst the first to settle the area. In 1857 they sold the property to William Henry Kent who moved to California from Maine to try his luck at gold mining and eventually farming. William and his wife Charlotte are credited with planting the first Eucalyptus trees on the coast the stand continues to this day running along the side of Highway1 just to the north of Little River.
The Kents along with their two sons and their families had a prosperous dairy farm.
The property stayed in the hands of the Kent family until 1941 when they sold their Little River Ranch to Hollywood movies starts Alan Curtis & IIona Massey they used the home as a retreat. Within three years it was sold to Virgil &Elvira Chiado not long after it was again sold to Sidney & Clora Spring a local Mendocino farming couple. The Springs ran a self sufficient homestead for three decades in 1996 a large portion of the ranch west of Highway 1 was sold to Bob Raymond who eventually sold it to California State Parks. In later years Sid and his former wife Clora sold the rest of the ocean side of the ranch to the California Coastal Conservancy.
Today the property east of Highway 1 is being repaired and restored. And the Spring family continue to farm 40 acres of this land.
Most of this historical information was compiled from an article written by Margi Gomez titled
The Old Kent Ranch
Little River Farming Tradition, Past and Present
Featured in: "Our World Gallery"
Featured in: "AAA Images"
Featured in: "Images That Excite You"
Featured in: "Forgotten by Time"
Uploaded
April 9th, 2017
Statistics
Viewed 1,193 Times - Last Visitor from New York, NY on 03/21/2024 at 3:35 AM
Embed
Share
Sales Sheet
Comments (15)
John M Bailey
Congratulations on your feature in the Fine Art America Group "Images That Excite You!"
Lee Craig
For some reason even though the buildings are abandoned...it doesn't feel desolate. Maybe it's your eye for composition? Well done!
Kandy Hurley replied:
Thanks Lee Theres something about this place that does have a feeling of still be in use. Its now part of the California Coastal Conservancy.