Searsville, California


Searsville was a former town that was located in present-day Searsville Lake, Woodside, San Mateo County, California. At Northwest Corner Sandhill Road and Portola Road is a plaque and this location is a California Historical Landmark in San Mateo County, since 1950.

History

Charles Brown, a former whaler from San Francisco purchased a portion of the Rancho Cañada de Raymundo Mexican-era land grant of John Coppinger and settled there with his wife. The newly acquired property was named the Mountain Home Ranch and previously had an adobe house built in 1839 and a sawmill. In 1852 John Smith joined Charles Brown at the Searsville site, and the next year August Eikerenkotter arrived and started a store and hotel. By 1854 John Howell Sears moved to the site, for whom the town was named based on his postal contract.
Because of the Gold Rush, there was a strong demand for lumber in order to quickly build local towns. Searsville was a lumberjack settlement of a hundred or more people and the heart of a robust logging industry. This bustling town had the Eikerenkotter's Hotel, William Lloyd's blacksmith shop, post office, a school, saloons including Cutter’s Saloon, dwellings and a store called the Searsville Exchange. When the sawmills ran out of timber, the town died down. Because of the topography of Searsville being located in a floodplain, the town would have never survived long.

Closure of the town

In 1887 the land, including the town, was sold to Spring Valley Water Works and they created the Searsville Dam, completed in 1892. There are conflicting stories on if the existing Searsville buildings were all removed before the water filled the dam or not, or if the towns residents were vacated. The water in the dam had an issue with silt and was not drinkable, and starting in 1922 the lake was used as a local swimming hole.
For decades local families would swim and boat on the lake, but, in 1975, Stanford University closed the lake to the public when making it part of the Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve.
There are rumors of the "ghosts of Searsville” from the vanished town, living in the bottom of Searsville Lake.