25 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.
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Santa Cruz, CA
· Local history
Santa Cruz, California, owes its name to the Spanish. "Santa Cruz" translates to "Holy Cross," a name bestowed upon the area when Mission Santa Cruz was established in 1791. The name itself speaks to the original…
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Mission Santa Cruz
· 0.3 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Imagine a place where the clash of cultures shaped California as we know it. That's Mission Santa Cruz. Founded in 1791 by Father Fermín Lasuén, this wasn't just a church; it was a whole community. But the original…
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Hotel Metropole (Santa Cruz, California)
· 0.4 mi · Scraped Hmdb
This unassuming spot was once home to the grand Hotel Metropole, a stark reminder of the power of nature. Built in 1908, the Hotel Metropole offered rooms for rent and housed businesses like a millinery and a grocery…
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Santa Cruz Looff Carousel and Roller Coaster
· 1.1 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Get ready for a blast from the past! The Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk is home to not one, but *two* National Historic Landmarks: the Looff Carousel and the Giant Dipper roller coaster. These aren't just rides; they're…
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Giant Dipper (Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk)
· 1.1 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Get ready for a scream! This isn't just any roller coaster; it's the Giant Dipper, a Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk icon since 1924. Built in just 47 days after replacing the Thompson's Scenic Railway, this wooden marvel…
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Mystery Spot
· 1.8 mi · Things to Do
A gravitational anomaly where balls roll uphill and people stand at weird angles. Or is it an optical illusion?
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Mystery Spot
· 3.4 mi
Up a winding road at 465 Mystery Spot Road in the hills above Santa Cruz, California, sits the Mystery Spot, a roughly 150-foot circle where balls seem to roll uphill and people appear to lean impossibly without…
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Rispin Mansion
· 4.1 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Get ready for a spooky story! This is the Rispin Mansion, and it's got a reputation for being haunted. Built in 1921 by Henry Allen Rispin, this four-story, 22-room mansion was intended to be a real estate showroom for…
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Venetian Court
· 4.3 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Imagine escaping to a sun-kissed European village without ever leaving California. That's the allure of Venetian Court.Construction on these Mediterranean Revival apartments began in 1924. The design incorporates…
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Hiram D. Scott House
· 5.2 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Ever wonder how Scotts Valley got its name? It all started with this house. Hiram Daniel Scott bought Rancho San Agustin, which included this whole valley, in 1850 from Joseph Ladd Majors. Scott then built this house,…
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Scotts Valley, CA
· 5.9 mi · Local history
Imagine panning for gold in a creek, the year is 1850. This is what drew the first real wave of settlers to Scotts Valley: the promise of striking it rich in these rolling hills. But the real gold in Scotts Valley…
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Ben Lomond, CA
· 8.5 mi · Local history
Ben Lomond sits nestled in the San Lorenzo Valley, a place defined by its proximity to both redwood forests and the coast. The town owes its existence to the logging industry that boomed in the late 19th century,…
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San Lorenzo Valley Museum
· 11.0 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Ever wonder how a mountain valley nestled in the redwoods preserves its past? It's thanks to places like the San Lorenzo Valley Museum. Founded in 1976, the San Lorenzo Valley Historical Society created the museum to…
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Watsonville, CA
· 15.8 mi · Local history
A chill wind sweeps across the Pajaro Valley, carrying the scent of damp earth and something faintly sweet — apples. That aroma is the ghost of Watsonville’s boom years, when orchards blanketed the landscape, driving…
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Headquarters Administration Building (Big Basin Redwoods State Park)
· 17.3 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in 1936, this building once served as the heart of Big Basin Redwoods State Park. Constructed from local redwood logs and stone, the Headquarters Administration Building was a…
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Los Gatos, CA
· 17.7 mi
Los Gatos, nestled against the low-slung Santa Cruz Mountains, feels a world away from the frenetic energy of Silicon Valley, even though many residents drive north each day to work in tech. It’s a place of manicured…
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A Cannonball That Floats
· 17.9 mi
Quicksilver is heavy in a way that defies common sense. A jug of it the size of a milk carton would weigh as much as a couple of bowling balls, because mercury is about thirteen and a half times denser than water. That…
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John Steinbeck House (Monte Sereno, California)
· 17.9 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Pull over here for a second. From 1936 to 1938, John Steinbeck, the voice of the working class, lived and wrote right here in the Santa Cruz Mountains. He and his wife, Carol, had this house built in 1936. Can you…
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New Almaden: Named for the Greatest Mine in Spain
· 18.0 mi
New Almaden, the historic district south of San Jose, borrows its name from Almaden in Spain, the world's greatest mercury mine. In 1845 a Mexican cavalry officer, Andres Castillero, recognized that the red rock local…
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The Real Mad Hatter
· 18.0 mi
The Mad Hatter is usually written off as a nonsense character, but the phrase mad as a hatter grew out of real workshops and a real metal, the same quicksilver mined here. For centuries, hatmakers turned animal fur into…
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Quicksilver: The Only Metal That's Liquid
· 18.1 mi
The metal pulled from these hills has a property that sets it apart from every other metal on Earth: mercury is the only one that stays liquid at ordinary room temperature. Pour it out and it does not sit in a lump. It…
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The Red Rock That Painted History
· 18.1 mi
Before anyone here wanted the mercury, people wanted the rock it hides in. Cinnabar, the ore mercury comes from, is a brilliant scarlet, and that's no accident of New Almaden alone. Ground into fine powder, cinnabar…
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Frank Norris Cabin
· 18.1 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Imagine escaping the city to write among towering redwoods – that's exactly what novelist Frank Norris did here. Norris, famous for his gritty novels like *McTeague* and *The Octopus*, briefly owned this cabin, known as…
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New Almaden
· 18.4 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Get ready to learn about California's secret ingredient to the Gold Rush: mercury! This area, New Almaden, was home to the state's oldest and most productive mercury mine. Before the Spanish or Americans arrived, the…
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Mountain Winery
· 19.9 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Imagine grand parties echoing through these hills – that's the legacy of Paul Masson and his Mountain Winery. Masson, a French immigrant, arrived in California during the Gold Rush era and recognized the potential for…