Where Jack and Charmian London never came to live in: the burnt-out Wolf House (Fire: August 1913, photo 110 years later: October 2023) |
House of Happy Walls Museum |
Books by the Brain Merchant |
On my first visit to the park, I started out along short wooded trails and the service road that connect the House of Happy Walls Museum with the Grave Site Knoll and the burnt-out Wolf House. The museum, a field-stone home named the House of Happy Walls, was built by Charmian London after her husband's death in 1916. Originally designed as both, her place to live and a memorial to Jack London, the building today features Jack's adventures around the San Francisco Bay Region and around the globe. Jack London saw himself as a “brain merchant,” embellished by his kaleidoscopic personality. His “insatiable drive to see, to live, to do”—the words in which a museum panel describes Jack's explorative way of life—resulted into the publication of over 50 books.
Trail downhill from the museum |
A 0.3-mile-long path leads downhill from the museum to a service road. Turning left onto this road, it just takes a few minutes to get to the point where the road bends south. On the left side, a short spur trail makes a half-circle up onto the knoll to the site of two graves: the grave of Jack and Charmian London and the grave of David and Lillie Greenlaw, the children of pioneer settlers.
Earle Labor writes that Charmian London was faithful in honoring Jack's wish to be buried on the knoll near the graves of the two Greenlaw children [1].
Jack London's Grave: a fenced-in large rock from the Wolf House site |
In a State Park edition of Jack's non-fiction The Cruise of the Snark [2], I found the following detail about the grave site: “On November 26, 1916, in a silent ceremony, Charmian London placed her husband's ashes on the chosen knoll under a large rock from the Wolf House. After she passed away in 1955, Charmian's ashes were laid under the same rock, next to Jack.”
David and Lillie Greenlaw graves, enclosed in a small square of ancient fence |
According to a state park panel, Jack London was inspired by the graves of David and Lillie Greenlaw, the children of pioneer settlers, and requested that his ashes might someday lie next to little David and Lillie.
Returning to the service road, it only takes a few minutes to continue the downhill stroll to the site of the Wolf House. Jack London was known under the nickname “The Wolf”, making a reference to wolves and dogs that he turns into “his readers best friends” in so many of his stories. When the architect Albert Farr started in 1911 the design of Jack's dream home, people would call it the the Wolf House.
Unfortunately (or luckily, considering a potential death by fire), Jack and Charmian never moved in. A panel at the site of the Wolf House ruins reports why: “A month before the Londons were to move in—August 22, 1913—a fire probably caused by spontaneous combustion destroyed the home.” This comes as a surprise, since Jack and Albert—influenced by the Great 1906 San Francisco Earthquake—developed a robust construction plan based on a rustic, fireproof design with local volcanic rock and unpeeled redwood mounted on a concrete foundation that could hold a 40-story building.
Wolf House Ruins |
The panel also describes the future home, which the Londons lost: “The four-story, 15,000-square-foot house commanded a view of of the Sonoma Valley. Its 26 rooms and 9 fireplaces cost about $50,000, and included such modern conveniences as hot water, heating, electric lighting, and refrigerating and vacuum cleaning plants.”
Wolf House with most walls and chimneys still standing |
Getting there
Driving north on Arnold Drive in Glen Ellen, turn left on London Ranch Road. Follow this road to its end, which is the Entrance Kiosk of the Jack London State Historic Park. Once you are inside, turn left for parking at the Museum Lot.
References and more to read
[1] See page 383 in Earle Labor's biography: Jack Lonodon - An American Life. First paperback edition published in 2014 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux, New York.
[2] See page 332 in the following Jack London State Historic Park Museum Edition: Jack London. The Cruise of the Snark. SeaWolf Press, Orinda, CA 94562, 2017 (originally published in 1911 by The Macmillan Company).
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