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  1. December 29, 1962 [4] Designated CHISL. July 5, 1960 [2] Jack London State Historic Park, also known as Jack London Home and Ranch, is a California State Historic Park near Glen Ellen, California, United States, situated on the eastern slope of Sonoma Mountain. It includes the ruins of a house burned a few months before Jack London and family ...

    • October 15, 1966
    • 743
  2. Oct 28, 2021 · Address. 2400 London Ranch Rd, Glen Ellen, CA 95442, USA. Phone +1 707-938-5216. Web Visit website. Literary history and bucolic splendor collide in Northern California's Jack London State Historic Park. The slice of Sonoma County paradise in Glen Ellen was the home and farm of Jack London, the first author to earn $1 million from his trade ...

    • Carrie Bell
    • (707) 938-5216
    • 2400 London Ranch Rd, Glen Ellen, CA 95442, USA
  3. We respectfully acknowledge that Jack London State Historic Park is within the ancestral territory of the Coast Miwok, represented today by the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria. We recognize that their stewardship of, and sacred connections to, these lands continues today and in perpetuity. 2024 Spring Appeal. Show your support today!

  4. Apr 7, 1991 · Getting there: Jack London State Historic Park is at 2400 London Ranch Road in the town of Glen Ellen, which lies on Highway 12 connecting Santa Rosa and Sonoma.

  5. Sep 26, 2012 · A shrine for lovers of both open space and literature, Jack London State Historic Park includes 26 miles of hiking trails as well as the cottage where London did much of his writing. There's also a museum devoted to London lore and the haunting ruins of Wolf House, London's dream home, which was gutted by fire before he ever moved in and remained unfinished when he died in 1916.

  6. Jun 26, 2022 · Explore the former home and ranch of influential American novelist, Jack London, at this sprawling, 1,400-acre park on the eastern slope of Sonoma Mountain in Northern California.

  7. And many maintain his very life entered a downward spiral when his long sought and beloved dream — Wolf House — was consumed in flames in 1913, just two weeks prior to its completion. Jack London died in 1916; he was only 40-years-old. Wolf House was (and is) a 26-room, 15,000-square-foot, let’s be honest, mansion with nine fireplaces.

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