1 Juanita Burton Hinman, “The Trail Back,” handwritten manuscript, September, 1979 (scanned copy courtesy of Deborah Melendy Norman).
2 Unless otherwise cited, information for this article is compiled from unpublished family accounts by Timothy Babalis, Pinnacles National Park. These include: Edith Bacon Schmidt, “The History of Bear Valley and Residents,” typed manuscript of lecture given before the San Benito County Historical Society in Bear Valley, August 28, 1963 (Clippings File, San Benito County Historical Society, Hollister, CA); Deborah Melendy Norman, “The Shells, Quigleys, and Bacons: From Calhoun County, Illinois, to California,” unpublished manuscript, August, 2005; Hinman, “The Trail Back.”
3 Richard White,
This Republic for Which It Stands: The United States During Reconstruction and the Gilded Age, 1865-1896 (New York: Oxford University Press, 2017), 146-48.
4 For more on the politics of land ownership in early California, see Tamara Venit Shelton,
A Squatter’s Republic: Land and the Politics of Monopoly in California, 1850-1900 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2013).
5 Timothy Babalis,
The Heart of the Gabilans: An Administrative History of Pinnacles National Monument, National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior (2009), 4, 8.
6 Ben Bacon Ranch Historic District, Pinnacles National Monument, National Park Service, Cultural Landscapes Inventory (2009), 34-5.
7 Hinman, “The Trail Back.”