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During the Californian Gold Rush many miners and pioneers poured into the Sierras and Nevada. Many of the pioneers emigrated to various boom towns in search of gold and silver. The trek through the sierras was treacherous the pioneers faced the elements, disease and more then often death. In 1849 the Henness Pass was the only mountain pass that existed at the time prior to that it was a travel trade route the Native Americans used.  Patrick Henness was accredited for developing the route as an alternative to Donner Lakes Pass. As most of you are aware in the 1840's the Donner Party did not manage to make it through the pass due to early severe winter weather and therefore ended up resorting to cannibalism either that or starve to death. Emigrants were fearful of becoming stranded in the pass therefore they were looking towards the alternative route which Patrick Henness developed one in 1849-1850. Which really was a much safer alternative sure it snowed back in here greatly but 10' was far easier to traverse then 70' of white powder!

Freight Haulers also used the route particularly for the Comstock Silver Mines in Virginia City Nevada.  Freight was often loaded onto a steamboat from San Francisco which traveled up the Sacramento River to Marysville. The supplies then would be loaded onto wagons then dispersed to many small mining camps found in the high sierras. I heard from 1860 till about 1868 the Henness Pass was often very busy therefore during the day the freight wagons utilized it while at night stagecoaches. You have to understand before the US had paved roads much of the American West were rocky dirt roads in the wilderness with very few places that were safe enough to rest your head for the night. That is why Hostelries were built along the Henness Pass or rather stage coach stops sometimes with a hotel and even restaurant like the one David Gould Webber operated on Webber Lake.

The Henness Pass was surveyed in 1855 by a D.B. Scott when the California Legislature had taken great interest in passing acts to construct wagon routes through the Sierra Nevada Range. Sadly a better route known as U.S. Route 50 was chosen instead which ran through El Dorado County through towns like Placerville, Folsom and believe it or not Sacramento. Although the Henness Pass was greatly used it did not become the major highway many thought it would become. In 1868 when the first Transcontinental Railroad was complete along with the Donner Lake Railroad Tunnels. The Henness Pass became to lose its popularity and so did the stage stops along it including the Webber Lake Resort which also served as a stage stop. The road even today mainly a mix of pavement and dirt is the only cross between the Yuba Pass State Route 49 to the north and Donner Summit to the south's Interstate 80. Back in the day once the railroad had arrived freight shipped via wagon along a road like the Henness Pass became obsolete considering it was much more efficient to ship anything via railroad.
 

Some of you may be wondering what all this has to do with Webber Lake because perhaps when you came to our site this is all you thought you would see. But the lake is as historic as the beauty of the land that surrounds it. You see David G. Webber moved to Sierra County in 1852 in Downieville and then later on his Ranch near Loyalton where he rasied livestock such as sheep, goats, cattle and horses. That very same year he set his eyes on what is known today as the beautiful Webber Lake overshadowed by Lola Peak just adjacent from Lake Independence and two very gorgeous meadows. Nestled between Perazzo Meadows and the Sierra Crest are the headwaters of the Little Truck River. Between Lacey Meadows and the lake your looking at about 3,000 pristine acres of forested uplands, meadows and riparian habitat along the Little Truckee River and Lacey Creek which drains into the lake.  Its so beautiful here maybe one of the high sierras best kept secrets at least in my opinion it is and Webber knew this!

Dr Webber seemed like a jack of all trades being a drug clerk, laborer, student, horse breeder, medical doctor, philanthropist, school superintendent, rancher, resort owner, gold miner, building contractor, stock broker and a fisherman. He was born in 1809 and from the Livingston County area of NY and became a young doctor at the age of 24 perhaps the Doogie Howser of his time. His parents were Scottish and Irish and at a young age David Webber was a laborer. It was not uncommon in those times for boys to be laborers even as young teens. Later on he was a physicians pharmacist to a Dr. Woodworth of Springfield PA and this led to his interest in becoming a doctor himself where he studied medicine at the time. With David finishing school he was able to buy Dr Woodworth's Pharmacy where he remained its pharmacist for 12 years. Webber went on to marry his wife Margaret Bradish of Cramerville, PA and in 1835 they were living in Erie Pa where our team has done many investigations at when we first opened PGS. I know that when Webber was 21 years of age he supported many orphans however David also had a son of his own his name was James W. Webber. They adopted a daughter as well sadly however Margaret Webber died in 1841.  

Dr. D. G. Webber was a good man he had to have cared for over 50 orphans or homeless children he came across in his journeys. Generally none of the children ever lived with him but he did send them to boarding school covering all cost. Nearly all the children he adopted went on to be prosperous as one became a well known Ohio Lawyer, two doctors, some ranchers and others businessmen. When Webbers wife passed away he sold his business adopting two more orphans living for sometime up in Canada where he adopted a Canadian boy whom he sent to Europe for two years to study medicine. The Canadian boy after school saved the life of an infant daughter of an indigent family then ended up adopting her also. Dr Webbers time however in Canada was shortlived he ended up moving to Chicago where he bought half of the interest in a steam powered flour mill and spent around that very same time being a contractor on the Illinois Canal.

When the gold rush came about Dr Webber left for California leaving his son James I believe with his grandfather George Bradish. Sadly James came to Sacramento where he died in 1856. Life expectancy was very short during the 1800's sadly it seemed Dr. Webber was losing everyone he loved. After his sons death he went on to adopt another orphans while living in Downieville where he tried a hand at gold mining. A year later he bought the Oak Ranch near Monte Cristo in 1851 but a year later sold it investing his money in a local sawmill. Webbers life had gotten really interesting the next few years of life as he superintended the first wagon road to Downieville, county courthouse, jail, jailors house and bridge across the Yuba River. He was a contractor and did the work much cheaper then other tradesman in the area. The construction materials, frames for the jail and iron doors had to be brought in via wagon on the Galloway Road. The road was in bad shape with drop offs and ruggedness however it was the good Dr who improved it so that freight could be brought into Downieville. The Jail itself was completed in 1854 it had five cells. The courthouse was finished also in that same year of 1854 and Dr Webber moved on to be the Sierra County School Superintendent for a couple of years. Unfortunately the courthouse burned down in 1947 so sadly ill never have an opportunity to see one of Webbers Marvels that stood in Downieville for so many decades.

On a side note while all this was transpiring Dr. Webber had other interest outside of Downieville California. He learned about a lake in the area at the time it was called Truckee Lake which also was the headwater for the Little Truckee River but also a rare red silver fir as Webber took an interest in lumbering as well. He had a guide take him there at the time it was almost necessary as when some pioneers went off into the sierras they were never seen again. The local natives had some stories they use to tell the pioneers about a giant hairy creature and believe me it lived along the Truckee Rivers more then often seen in Olympic Valley by the miners. Dr Webber did post notices at the lake to file a claim here which at the time the guide scammed him by taking the notices down then charging the Dr Eighty dollars for giving them up a fee that was rather high considering the originally the guide was only charging Webber $10. The guide made claims to the lake therefore Webber ended up paying more then he should for the claim. Eventually however Dr. Webber did obtain possession of the lake and meadows surrounding it. He stocked the lake with two species of trout one of them in the lake above the waterfalls. In 1854 he called it Webber Lake and mainly used it as a stock range. This was one of the first private resorts in the sierras sure it might be small but back in the day this was paradise for the pioneers who braved this unknown wilderness.

He left the area for sometime after being a prominent citizen in Downieville and purchasing the lake to Scott Valley near Marysville where he breeded wild horses. Dr Webber was not to keen on the valley/city life because a short time after that in 1859 he moved Loyalton on the NE side of the Sierra Valley just south of Sierraville California. He ended up buying a cattle ranch where he raised top notch horses to be used on the Henness Pass for driving and stage use. He opened up a pharmacy once again began to practice medicine and was known for the famous "Webber Pills" which was his own medicine he made and prescribed to his patients.  When 1860 rolled around he returned to Webber Lake where he built a hotel and resort along the Henness Pass Road. One of the earliest examples today of a private lake based recreational area in the Sierras. The hotel was also used as a stage stop so that pioneers could water down their horses at the lake, enjoy a hot meal and rest their heads for the evening. Sure it was just a stopover but it is technically today the only remaining one which ties into the original wagon road that you can drive on today.

Webber did not live at the stage stop which would have had an inn keepers house or living quarters but he did love the beauty that surrounded the place. For example the meadows in the spring are loaded with wildflowers sadly my first exploration here everything was brown due to severe drought. But many years ago when the meadows were wetter flowers thrived here throughout the entire summer. Surrounded also by mountains Lacey Creek and the Little Truckee Rivers waterfalls were places that pioneers explored while staying at the hotel. Webber mapped horse trails, built bridle paths through the woods and was one of the first in the sierras to capitalize on tourism on a high sierra lake. Dr Webber also added a sanatorium for his tubercular patients and a solarium for their sun baths. At the time this was one of the cheapest resorts to stay at sometimes people stayed here for free because they could not afford service yet Webber along with his staff let it slide. More or less this was a happy place you could be traveling along the Henness Pass road and have a chance to hang up the boots for awhile enjoy some nice fishing.

 Even today this lake is said to boast some of the best fishing in the region however its closed till 2017 as the Nature Conservancy and Truckee Donner Land Trust are developing the area around the lake. Their will be hiking trails, boardwalks throughout Lacey Meadows and even an area for campers. Upon David Webbers death the Webber Hotel remained in the Johnson family for over sixty years before it was sold and served as a private fishing camp for decades. In 2017 ill have an opportunity to camp, fish, explore the hotel and entire lake shore. For now the Land Trust and Conservancy employees live on with in the warmer months with their families renovating this beautiful location. During my first hike out here I could see the hotel on the north side of the lake while hiking in Lacey Meadows. Their was kids playing, families camping, contractors working on site and it was bustling. But it is currently private therefore nobody  has access to the stage stop, hotel or lake shore accept for those developing the trails and lakefront along with their families.

Dr Webber did not live year around at the hotel but during the summers he came up here while in the winter he spent it on his ranch. During his time in Sierra Valley he met a botanist John Gill Lemmon who had Webber collect plants for him. If you were to visit Sierraville nearby their is a road called Lemmon Valley which is the back way to Kyburz Flat. Lemmon had named two plants to honor Dr Webber astragalus webberi and ivesia webberi. As a matter in fact John Gill Lemmon made a few trips to collect plants surrounding Webber Lake. He was a regular whom visited the hotel while hiking around on foot, via horse or wagon in the summer. In the winter months he did allot of reading sometimes sorting the plants he harvested while their was 8' of snow out the hotels window.

Dr Webber was a in my opinion a hero this is a story of the wild west that needs to be told and if it were not for websites like ours very few would ever have known about the great things this man had done. This is a man who adopted many orphans and took in the homeless. He cared allot for his patients but also left his historical mark in Downieville which today is a rather pretty little town. He died when he was 77 years of age in June of 1882 outliving most of his family, wives, son and generally most pioneers. People knew Dr Webber as one of the more active pioneers to have lived in the sierras as a matter in fact he lived 33 years in Sierra County. I am also sure he had ties to Sierra City California as the old Gold Highway use to intersect with the Henness Pass Trail. I believe Dr. Webber was also involved with The Order Of Odd Follows a fraternal organization similar to the Masons as his funeral was at the Summit Lodge Of Odd Fellows. Upon his death he had requested that his body be buried beside his nephew Dr. Joseph Webber Jr. who died in Loyalton at the age of 33 in 1881 a year prior to David Webbers death and today their graves are side by side. I posted pictures of each of the gravesites below for historical purposes in case someone wishes to visited the gravesites in Loyalton Cemetery.

After Webbers Death in 1884 a man by the name of James O' Neal was convicted for the murder of John Woodward a dairyman at Webber Lake. The murder weapon was never found but supposedly James O' Neil was a disgruntled 21 year old employee. John Woodward at the time was maintaining and caring for the hotel at the time. While the two were arguing over wages somehow it turned to violence however O'Neil claimed it was an accident however the judge and jury were not buying it therefore he was hung in the gallows in 1885 in Downieville. Its kind of ironic because the jail and courthouse that Dr Webber built was also the place that led to O'Neils demise. While hangings took place throughout the sierras in many of the small boom towns the only one that took place in Downieville was the hanging of O'Neil. Today if you visit Downieville the gallows stand tall as a county historic landmark.  Doug Garton a caretaker of the hotel in the 1990's discovered an old handgun in the well on the property of Webber Lake still in its holster. More then likely this was the murder weapon but nobody knows for sure however it can be seen at the Downieville Museum. The Sierra Count Sheriff Lee Adams seems to think that this is. I do believe that it is possible that John Woodwards ghosts or the energy from the murder may still exist at this lakeside hotel haunting its shores from his life being cut short!

In the 1900's the hotel was kept within the family till about 2012 I can imagine the cost of keeping up the hotel was very high and everything had to be renovated considering its age. A John W. Hinckley visited the lake in 1956 who was a minister, historical, founder of the John Muir Society and an author. During that time he was here he had mentioned that contractors were renovating the sanatorium, hotel and solarium which all were standing. He also mentioned that their were many campers that were sighted at the lake and he mentioned the areas beauty in his books. Such as the mountains historic buildings and secluded lake. Not much has change the area once again is being renovated till 2017 therefore the campers that are found here this past year are those who are working to preserve and conserve this 3000 acre marvel!

Dr. D. G. Webber was a fascinating man he even was a member of a rescue party in 1865 who set out into the Sierra Valley to Henness Pass Road to help rescue a group of 14 men who were caught with their nine horses through Webber Ravine in 1865. Dr. Webbers resort was a favorite place in the 1800's the Nevada State Journal stated that th is was one of the most favorite resorts in the sierras and mentions the great fishing thanks to the Dr fully stocking it every year with trout. Their is a plaque found at the lake and hotel I did not read it but did research to find out what it said. This is from the Reno Gazette Journal in 1891:
WEBBER LAKE HOTEL This famous resort will be open to the public from and after June 5, 1891. Stages will connect at Truckee with the morning East bound train, from the West on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. Parties from Reno and vicinity intending to go by stage from Truckee will have to go up the night before and remain over night, or telegraph to hold stage awaiting their arrival. A wooden plaque marker with the following words was placed on Webber Lake Hotel on Sept. 10, 1961, by Wm. M. Stewart Chapter of E CLAMPUS VITUS. The Webber Lake Hotel and stage stop is the last of the 30 Hostelries standing along the old Henness Pass Road. So as a viewer you can kind of see how everything connects to the lake, wagon road and one of the first resorts to ever stand in the high sierras. With that being said this is more then just a lake or scenic meadow with mountains. It is a place with allot of wild western early history of the first white Europeans whom came to the high sierras to make lives for themselves in the Sierra Nevada's during the gold rush.

A Henry Johnson at the turn of the century did purchase Lacey Meadows which resides on the south side of the lake. The meadows are a few miles in length surrounded by large peaks, open range with allot of wild flowers and even a beautiful creek that meanders through it. Henry Johnson was a sheepherder who had a ranch up in Roseville but in the summers herded the sheep to the meadows surrounding Webber Lake. Joseph Perazzo kind of a friend of Johnson's sold him this meadow as on the NE side of the Lake is the lush Perazzo Meadows. He trusted his friend that the land was fertile good for sheep grazing much like Kyburz Flat and the Sardine Valley area.  Cliff Johnson the son of Henry ended up acquiring Webber Lake for over 60 years but also he took over his fathers ranch in Roseville. Every summer the Johnson's came to Lacey Meadows to watch over their sheep and enjoy the great outdoors. It was used as a private camping and fishing camp with his wife Barbara for many summers. I am not sure how well the family kept up the hotel but more then likely they probably had a small cabin site near where their sheep grazed. I am sure that the kids and grand kids spent many summers chasing butterflies and exploring kind of like what I did when I took my family here. It is just that type of place very magical, scenic, creeks, waterfalls, flowers, butterflies and many isolated scenic wonders surrounding the meadows around the lake.

Webber Lake is full of mystery, history and beauty this additon on our site only tells half of the story but much more is to come. As a matter in fact we look forward to the area reopening in 2017 so we have a chance to explore and see so much more. Access here is very limited accept for the meadows and viewing the lake from afar. Also for those who are really into history and boom towns of the wild west well their is an old wagon road that passes by Webber Lake. If you follow the road along Lacey Meadows it veers off over the same peaks that overshadow the area and down to a place known as Meadow Lake aka Excelsior founded in 1860 by Henry Hartley who arrived here to trap and by 1863 was mining quartz ledges. By 1865 till 1868 the town boomed having a ferry, hurdy gurdy houses, stories, hundreds of buildings, dance all, massive plaza, mills, cemetery, mines and even a dam. When the residents in Meadow Lake wanted to get a way they could make a therapeutic trip to the Webber Hotel & Resort. The town during its hey day had about 5000 residents including Mark Twains older brother Orion Clemens who surely would have probably stopped at the Webber Stage Stop as he traversed the Henness Pass Route. We did a rather intensive investigation of the towns cemetery

The entire area is riddled with amazing historical figures but also early wild western sierra history and in my opinion is a jewel not allot of folks know about. Dr Webber played a major role in the region in its development which drew many people in the area. If the stage stop did not exist boom towns like Meadow Lake may have never existed. But what the stage stops provided was an opportunity for pioneers to spend sometime in the area to seek out cattle and sheep grazing areas, gold and plot town sites such as Meadow Lake. Many pioneers traversed the Henness Pass which had many other wagon trails and trading routes that branched off of it. On my journeys in the region I have seen ghost towns, lumber camps, hidden mining camps, graveyards, stage stops, historic sites and pristine beauty which surrounds many of the lakes in this region. I also have captured a UFO on our first excursion to Webber Lake and just a couple weeks later we found some really amazing Bigfoot tracks just a few miles away at a place called French Lake which is just a couple miles from the Meadow Lake Townsite. I fell in love with this area its kind of for me a home away from a home just as it was for the first pioneers who came here seeking its beauty! Sure we are a paranormal site but we also support the conservation and preservation of Webber Lake. We hope that schools across the American West can learn about the rich history that surrounds Webber Lake along with its relevance and if they are not taught it they should be even if its through our website. You can visit the Donner Truckee Land Trust if you wish to know more about the preservation project transpiring at Webber Lake and want to thank the Sierra County Historical Society for providing us with all the enriched history which we integrated into our works.

Copyright By
Lord Rick aka AngelOfThyNight
PGS Founder
Investigator, Producer, Talk Show Host and Author

 



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