Skip to main content

Moss Landing Road (Early California State Route 1)


Moss Landing Road is located in Monterey County in the namesake community of Moss Landing.  The corridor was part of the original Coast Road between Monterey-Watsonville and was added to the State Highway system in 1933.  Moss Landing Road would briefly carry California State Route 1 beginning in August 1934.  The alignment was short lived as the modern bypass was completed the in October 1934.  




Part 1; the history of Moss Landing Road

Moss Landing was settled in 1866 as a wharf at the confluence of the Old Salinas River, Elkhorn Slough and Moro Cojo Slough.  The community's name is a reference to found Captain Charles Moss.  Moss Landing supplied early the California Gold Rush communities with sugar beets, lumber and potatoes.  The community was located on the Coast Road between Monterey-Watsonville.  The Southern Pacific Railroad Coast Line would reach Moss Landing by 1871.    

Moss Landing (displayed as Moss Log) can be seen along the Coast Road between Monterey and Watsonville on the 1882 Bancroft's map of California.  The Coast Road originally passed through the community via what is now Moss Landing Road and over a ferry at Elkhorn Slough.  


Elkhorn Road was the more popular highway across Elkhorn Slough until 1884.  During Spring of said year the Moss Landing ferry crossing of Elkhorn Slough was replaced by a tolled bridge.  This undated photo from the early 20th century is of the Moss Landing bridge is from the Vierra family collection (courtesy Elkhorn Slough Foundation). 


The Coast Road can be seen passing through Moss Landing on the 1912 United States Geological Survey map of Capitola.  


State Highway service in Moss Landing began in 1933 when Legislative Route Number 56 was extended north from Carmel to Fernbridge.  The initial State Highway routing through the community was via Moss Landing Road.  The entirety of Legislative Route Number 56 was be announced as California State Route 1 in the August 1934 California Highways & Public Works.  



California State Route 1 along Moss Landing Road was short lived.  The highway was announced as having been realigned in the October 1934 California Highways & Public Works.  The bypass of Moss Landing was part of a 11.3-mile project corridor from Castroville north to Watsonville. 




Part 2; a drive on Moss Landing Road

Moss Landing Road acts as a western frontage of modern California State Route 1.  The corridor can be used in conjunction with Potrero Road to reach Salinas River State Beach.  



Northbound Moss Landing Road passes Moss Landing Cemetary.  Said cemetery was established in 1869 shortly after the founding of Moss Landing.  



Moss Landing Road enters the downtown area and intersects Sandholdt Road.  







Moss Landing Road crosses at-grade over Moro Cojo Slough and terminates at California State Route 1 within view of the Moss Landing Power Plant.  One of the few Sea Otter Crossing signs can be seen at Moro Cojo Slough.  The natural gas power plant was commissioned by Pacific Gass & Electric in 1950.  Interest in the facility was sold off to Duke Energy in 1998.  





Comments

Popular posts from this blog

What's In a Name?: When the Roads Really Do Tell a Story

  Our tagline on the Gribblenation blog is "because every road tells a story". Some roads tell different stories than others. Along our travels, we may see historic markers that tell us a little story about the roads we travel or the places we pass by. Some historic markers are more general, as to telling us who lived where or what old trail traversed between two towns. During my travels across New York State and other states or provinces, I pass by many historic markers, some with interesting or amusing references to roads. I wanted to highlight a few of the markers I've seen along my travels around the Empire State and help tell their stories. Those stories may be as specific as explaining the tales of a tree that was used to help measure a distance of eight miles from Bath to Avoca in Steuben County, as referenced on the Eight Mile Tree historical marker above. They may also help point the way along historical roads first used centuries ago, or may help tell a local l...

May 2023 Ontario Trip (Part 3 of 3)

  Over the years, I have made plenty of trips to Ontario, crisscrossing the southern, central and eastern parts of the province. Living in Upstate New York, it's pretty easy to visit our neighbor to the north, or is that our neighbor to the west? Ottawa is one of my favorite cities to visit anywhere in the world, plus I've discovered the charm of Kingston, the waterfalls of Hamilton (which is on the same Niagara Escarpment that brings us Niagara Falls), the sheer beauty of the Bruce Peninsula, and more. But I hadn't explored much of Cottage Country. So I decided to change that, and what better time to go than over Memorial Day weekend, when the daylight is long and I have an extra day to explore. On the third and final day of my trip, I started in Huntsville and made my way through Muskoka District and Haliburton County, passing by many lakes along the way. I stopped in towns such as Dorset, Haliburton and Bancroft before making a beeline down to Belleville and then over th...

2018 Mojave Road Trip Part 2; The deadly desert highway (California State Route 127 and Nevada State Route 373)

After leaving Barstow via Old Highway 58 my next destination was in Death Valley.  To access Death Valley from rural San Bernardino County required a trek on north on Interstate 15 to California State Route 127 which becomes Nevada State Route 373 at the state line. Along I-15 I encountered the road sign oddity that is Zzyzx Road about eight miles south of Baker.   Zzyzx Road is a four mile road that used to go to the Zzyzx Mineral Springs and Health Spa.   The spa was founded in the 1940s and the owner made up the name "Zzyzx" to claim it was the last word in the English Language.  The spa has been shut down since the 1970s and is now part of a Desert Studies Center for California State University. The southern terminus of CA 127 in Baker is located at I-15 exit 246.  CA 127 is a 91 mile north/south highway which runs to the Nevada State Line in Inyo County.  CA 127 is called Death Valley Road from I-15 northward.  South of CA 127 ...