HIDDEN VALLEY LAKE, Calif. – Visitors to Stone House Museum this Saturday, Oct. 13, will see the china cabinet and buffet donated by Madeline Hartmann, daughter of Frank and Elly Hartmann for whom Hartmann Road and bridge are named.
The couple received the furniture as wedding gifts in 1927.
Docent tours are from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the museum in Hidden Valley Lake on 18174 Hidden Valley Road. Visitors enter via Hartmann Road gate.
Frank Hartmann immigrated to California from Germany in 1902 with his parents, Anton and Helen. Frank was 4 years old.
The family first settled near relatives in Marysville, then moved to San Francisco where Anton set up business as a wagon maker.
After the great 1906 quake and fire they moved to Watsonville and farmed on property that had been owned by John Lawley of Lawley Toll Road.
In 1923, Hartmanns purchased 640 acres south of the trail that became known as Hartmann Road. They subsequently added an adjoining 80 acres between their property and Grange Road. Together, their property constituted all of the land that is now Hidden Valley Lake’s Mountain Meadow neighborhood.
After the deaths of his parents in 1942, Frank Hartmann purchased the Young place, which included the Stone House and about 950 acres. Stone House was a rental property.
The Hartmanns lived in a newly constructed home, which still exists just inside the Mountain Meadow gate of Hidden Valley Lake community.
U.S. Land Corp., a subsidiary of Boise-Cascade, purchased the Hartmann property in 1968. Boise-Cascade elected to dispose of all their real estate holdings in the early 1970s and Hidden Valley Lake was transferred to a homeowners association.
A photo of Madeline Hartmann, at about age 7, is on the fireplace mantle in Stone House. She is pictured with “the day’s kill.”
Hartmann said she was raised by her grandfather, as her parents were too busy with daily chores, and much of young Madeline’s time was spent “tromping the fields” with him.
Venison and other wild game were very important sources of food during the depression years of the 1930s, and many children were taught to hunt to help feed their families. Hartmann is an occasional guest speaker at historical society gatherings.
Docent tours of Stone House Museum are the second Saturday of each month.
The Stone House Historical Society meets the first Tuesday of each month at 10 a.m. in the Activities Center next to Hidden Valley Lake Association offices. All are welcome. Refreshments are served. Dues for membership are $5 per person.
For more information visit www.lakecountystonehouse.com .