Thanks to the miracle of the internet a person can make a virtual time machine and see into the past. Well at least on a map. The USGS has a site that one can download historical maps from various years. These maps are extremely detailed and include roads, trails and building footprints to name a few features. So what did Guerneville look like 40 years ago you ask? Astonishingly similar to today's representation by comparing the same area side by side in the attached file.
This area is over one and a half square miles of terrain south of Guerneville. This 'should' enclose the murder site of James Willett, if the news articles were remotely accurate. Virtually every feature on the 1971 map is identical to the modern version today. One can see the same road network, structures and infrastructure which 'should' limit errors and extra assumptions.
The articles variously called the gravesite an 'old road' and 'trail' about half a mile south of town. The only road which could meet such a description is Mays Canyon Road which is outlined in blue on the 1971 chart. Circled in red is the location of Parker's Resort which is on the northwest corner of a square mile section outlined in red to give a sense of distance and scale.
The magenta lines represent un-improved roads which could be characterized as 'old roads' perhaps. The black squares represent structures which could be storage sheds, garages or occupied dwellings. This is a resort area and the Willetts and 'friends' were there in the beginning of the off season when the overall population was likely at a low, along with the prices for accommodations.
The only other thing I could imagine being described as an old road or trail could be the easement cut for the power lines which is marked in yellow. These are the sort of things that easily pass through our visual filters since they are so commonplace, even in the middle of wilderness areas. This is pure guessing on my part and has been associated with zero reports or articles.
Adding to the possibilities is the road Panamint and Beef Patty researched which appears to lie between the power line and the second unpaved road on Mays Canyon Rd. Considering the number of structures associated with the other roads would make them less likely, but the actions of Monfort have rarely aligned with intelligence or thought.
The bright yellow 'pipe gate' has a BLM and Forest Service look to it along with the oddly placed 'Jersey barriers' indicate this is the hand of your government hard at work where Patty took her photo. The fact that trails and water tanks are mapped religiously by the USGS and this road being missed is quite the find and a reflection of the attention to detail which Panamint and company have given this subject. I for one am impressed and believe the area identified on the blog is an extremely good fit to the description. At least I can't find many other options.
Contributed by Farflung
5 comments:
Farf, you rock. Seriously. You add a level of understanding you can't get in books and newspaper clippings.
And I miss Ken, too. Hope you are doing well!
When did Nevada not have speed limits? I remember when Montana tried that for a year, but never herd any other states that did it.
I know thats not the point of ya post, but was just curious.Thanks for the other info!
Off topic yet germaine: http://www.cnn.com/2012/04/23/us/ohio-manson-grandson/index.html
Read the end of the article. Matthew Roberts is NOT related to Charles Manson's grandson, so it's unlikely he's related to Charles, either.
He sure had me going.
Now he's claiming that the other dude isn't really related to Charles. What a soap opera!
Guernville is right next to the super-exclusive rich men's club called Bohemian Grove, where for about two weeks in mid-July every year they all gather to hobnob.
https://www.cia.gov/library/abbottabad-compound/FC/FC8AEB056C2C32F10AFC327BA91F4A45_The_Bohemian_Grove_and_Other_Retreats.rtf.pdf
The Bohemian Grove and Other Retreats by G. William Domhoff c.1974 pg36of126
Jumping the River
Alert readers may have noticed that one pleasure is mmising for these hundreds of men in search of a good time. The pleasure is female companionship. For a certain minority of Bohemians... such companionship is a necessity of life they cannot be without. Since women are strictly forbidden to enter the Grove, there is only one thing to do--jump the river.
Now, eager Bohemians do not literally jump or swim across the river. That is only an expression which some Bohemians use for going to one of two nearby towns to find an attractive prostitute at a bar which caters to the Bohemian Grove trade.
There are two little towns near the Grove. One, Monte Rio, is about a mile from the Grove entrance... The other, Guerneville.. is a mile or two from Monte Rio; it has seven or eight bars. In the not too distant past there were several bars in both towns which were frequented by Bohemians who had jumped the river. ... In recent years much of the extracurricular activity centered around the Gas House Tavern in Guerneville, where the owner was partial to the Grove to the point of putting Grove scenes on his walls...
Jumping the river suddenly became a risky sport in 1971. A new sheriff, making good on a clean-government campaign promise, began to crack down on prostitutes. ... The sheriff and his investigators claim to have observed about twenty women turning, on the average, three tricks a night.
... also indicted were a married couple from San Francisco, who were charged with supplying the prostitutes at a reported fee of $100 to $150 per person.
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