Please Note:
This profile was automatically generated using 24 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 24 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
Employment History
View...Board Membership and Affiliations
View...View all 24 references Web References
-
1. acra-crm.org
acra-crm.org/farwest.html - [Cached]Published on: 12/27/2007 Last Visited: 12/27/2007
Susan Clark
725 Monroe Street Santa Rosa, CA 95404 3929 Phone: 707 577 8393 Fax: 707 570 2428 -
2. acra-crm.org
acra-crm.org/presconsult.html - [Cached]Published on: 12/27/2007 Last Visited: 12/27/2007
Susan Clark
725 Monroe Street Santa Rosa, CA 95404 3929 Phone: 707 577 8393 Fax: 707 570 2428 -
3. The Sea Ranch Association Soundings - Winter, 2003
www.tsra.org/archives/Archive1 - [Cached]Published on: 3/19/2007 Last Visited: 6/13/2008
"I don't think County Parks is going to give up that easily in terms of abandoning this trail," said Susan Clark, whose property is threatened by the encroachment.
...
PRE-SEA RANCH: Susan Clark
Picture The Sea Ranch at the turn of the last century: "After 60 years of intensive ranching and several decades of logging, the property was overgrazed - there wasn't a green stick that stuck up out of the ground anywhere.Hedgerows hadn't been planted yet and the wind whipped fiercely through the Ranch.The little farmhouse that stood on the hill above Knipp-Stengel Barn had a tenant because Knipp and Stengel had sold the Ranch in 1903."So Susan Clark, Sea Ranch's architectural historian, described the Ranch at a Forum about the history of The Sea Ranch on September 6.An environmental consultant and design consultant to architects, Clark is chair of the Sonoma County Landmarks Commission on which she has served for the past eight years.Her Master's thesis was on the history of the Del Mar Ranch from 1845 to 1965.
...
The last Del Mar Ranch owner, the late Ed Ohlson, told Clark that Podzakoff was buried on the ranch, his grave marked by a circle of stones.
...
With some effort, Clark was able to locate and photograph the stones.
...
Clark said there was some controversy over the name and suspected that the Indian word "Gualala," meaning "water-coming-down place," got adapted into the language of the various settlers.
...
Clark responded, "Frick died in 1937, and the property he sold to the Russians for $250,000 plus two additional mortgages just sat around until 1941.
...
Clark responded, "There were a series of Mrs. Fricks."
...
The gates go back to the Frick ranch and they indicated the numbers of the fields, added Clark.

