Old Games On Yosemite

OS X Yosemite (/ j oʊ ˈ s ɛ m ɪ t i / yoh-SEM-it-ee; version 10.10) is the eleventh major release of macOS, Apple Inc.' S desktop and server operating system for Macintosh computers. OS X Yosemite was announced and released to developers on June 2, 2014, at WWDC 2014 and released to public beta testers on July 24, 2014. Built in 1876, the Wawona Hotel continues today as one of the oldest mountain resort hotels in California. Through the years the hotel has served tourists as a stage stop on the way to Yosemite Valley. The Hotel has also provided a convenient place from which to visit the Mariposa Grove of Big Trees. The old Hotel is one of only a few hotels.

So you’re exploring the history-rich, geologically-grand corners of Yosemite Mariposa and something comes into brilliant focus. It could be the glowing face of Half Dome as the setting sun hits perfectly or the massive rough-hewn stone blocks of the old Mariposa jail. Maybe it’s the historic Gold Rush facade of the Hotel Jeffrey in Coulterville or the odd sight of a golf course inside a National Park. From the remote high country to the sun-baked shores of Lake McClure, there’s a landmark for everyone in Yosemite Mariposa, and no matter what you discover the response is universal: hey, what’s that?

Hey, What’s That? Rules

The rules are simple. You get Milestone Points for spotting a specific Yosemite Mariposa landmark. The farther off the beaten path, the more points.

Monumental Magnifier Points. Rack up extra credit points for delving deeper!

Winner. Whoever gets the most points. The game ending is up to you: play for a set period of time (i.e. a single day, or your entire trip); until someone reaches X number of points (i.e. 100 points); or even cooperation mode where everyone combines their points. Hey, even go all-in and complete your entire board for mega-cred! How about a prize for the winners? Summer burgers & ice cream or winter cinnamon rolls & hot chocolate sound nice!

Click here for a printable game card.

Pro Gamer Tips

  • Get out the car and explore!
  • Bring a camera/phone to breathe life into your game board!
  • Know your seasons! Some landmarks are only visible at certain times of the year (think waterfalls) while some roads close in winter (Tioga Road, for example).
  • Use Hey, What’s That? educationally to launch a deeper dive into Gold Country history, including the plight of the native Miwuk. Other subjects covered are geology, architecture and botany just to name a few!

Extra Credit

Buy or make a blank Hey, What’s That? field guide before you go and encourage your kids to draw, label and date what they’ve seen! It’s a great way to wrap up your Yosemite Mariposa game day, and makes for a fridge-worthy memento once you get back home.

Old Games On Yosemite Published on November 12, 2020
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A History Of Wawona...

Stagecoach Stop On The Old Road To Yosemite


A history of Wawona must include theories regarding the origin of the name. Indian belief was that 'Wah-who-nau' is the sound of the great horned owl who guards the sacred Big Trees.



The Origin Of The Name

Old Games On Yosemite

In 1877, this name was thought by Stephen Powers to have originated this way:

“The California big tree is sacred to the Western Mono people, and they call it Wah Who Nau, a word formed in imitation of the hoot of the great horned owl, which is the guardian spirit and diety of the great monarch of the forest. It is productive of bad luck to fell this tree, or to mock or shoot the owl, or even to shoot in his presence. And when a teamster with a wagon-load of lumber made from these trees drives by they will cry out after him with evil luck.”



The Arrival Of The Washburn Brothers


In 1876 the Washburn brothers moved west to the mountains of California from their home in Vermont and built a 140- by 32-foot hotel building that they referred to as the “Long White”. This was the first of the buildings to be built in what we now know as the Wawona Hotel complex.



The Washburn's new hotel met with such success that they decided to expand upon its operation by building a toll road, (the Wawona Road), to Yosemite Valley. Their formation of the Yosemite Stage and Turnpike Company was made official in 1882.


James Hutching's Account Of Old Wawona


In his 1886 book, “In the Heart of Sierras”, famous Yosemite writer and entrepreneur James Hutchings described the flurry of activity that was Wawona in the late 19th century…
“The very instant the bridge is crossed on the way to the hotel, the whole place seems bristling with business, and business energy. Conveyances of all kinds, from a sulky to whole rows of passenger coaches capable of carrying from one to eighteen or twenty persons each at a load, come into sight.
From some the horses are just being taken out, while others are being hitched up. Hay and grain wagons… freight wagons coming and going…horses with or without harness…stables for a hundred animals. Blacksmiths’ shops, carriage and paint shops, laundries and other buildings, look at us from as many different stand-points.”


Hutchings continues…
“The Washburn brothers superintended all of this together, but each had a few specific jobs. Henry ran the stage lines and was the contact man, making frequent business trips and arranging publicity. Edward, the bachelor brother, kept the books and superintended the help, meals and rooms in such a way as to make guests happy, comfortable and eager to come back another time. John S., who greatly resembled General Grant, did the bookings and ran the outside—gardens, ice, water and firewood… they owned the Wawona stage road which was a toll road. By their energy and vision, they helped put Wawona, as well as Yosemite, on the map and in people’s hearts and minds.”


Listen To The Wind


The Hutchings account continues...

One satisfied visitor wrote of the Washburn’s hotel, “Wawona Hotel is pleasantly located. It is an ideal place to rest in. There, inertia creeps into your system. You avoid all unnecessary exercise. You are ever ready to drop into a chair and listen to the wind sighing through the trees and the river singing its’ never ending song . . .”

Over the years, the Washburn’s hotel complex grew from one building to seven, and from holdings of 160 acres to more than 4,000. Visitor arrivals ranged from a few horse-drawn stages a day in the beginning, to many every day, requiring the use of over 700 horses… and then in 1916, the motor stages began to replace the horsedrawn ones.


Arrival Of The Automobile

Old Games On Yosemite National Park



In the first years of auto travel, private cars traveling on the stage route took a terrible beating. Huffman’s Garage in Wawona and Miami Lodge were kept busy. They would often have to repair cars arriving there from Fresno so they could chug on into Yosemite Valley…if they made it back out again, the mechanics often would need to fix them again for the trip back home.
In 1932, Clarence Washburn sold the family holdings to the National Park Service, and an era ended. Tennis courts replaced the garage and other updates were made, but the original “old time” atmosphere is still there today…
The charm of the old buildings, the surrounding sunny meadows and deep forests harken back to the earlier times.


The Historic Wawona Hotel


Built in 1876, the Wawona Hotel continues today as one of the oldest mountain resort hotels in California. Through the years the hotel has served tourists as a stage stop on the way to Yosemite Valley. The Hotel has also provided a convenient place from which to visit the Mariposa Grove of Big Trees.
The old Hotel is one of only a few hotels within the boundaries of Yosemite National Park, and its’ peaceful surroundings make it the perfect destination for those seeking a quieter, more subdued atmosphere than in Yosemite Valley. The hotel is about four miles from Yosemite’s south entrance and is situated conveniently between the Mariposa Grove of Big Trees and the valley itself.
The various stages of the construction of what is now the hotel's seven building complex took place between the years of 1876 and 1918, beginning with the first building known at the time as “Long White”. The original building site was selected by Galen Clark at the edge of what is certainly one of the largest meadows in the area.
Besides the main hotel building itself, the most famous of the seven structures is known as the Pavilion, and served as the studio for famous Yosemite landscape painter Thomas Hill in the summer seasons between 1886 and his death in 1908.


The Hotel 'Makes' The National Register



The Hill Studio is a one-story building located to the northwest of the main hotel building. It is because of this building, that the Hotel site is listed in the National Register for its national significance in the area of art.
The hotel also served as an important stage station with its location adjacent to the important river crossing on the south fork of the Merced River, making it of special regional historical significance in the National Register in the areas of commerce, exploration, settlement and transportation.
And the hotel is of local significance because it was constructed on the homestead of Galen Clark, one of Yosemite's earliest settlers... Clark would later be appointed the first official protector of Yosemite.

Old Games On Yosemite Village


Old Games On Yosemite Valley


Old Games On Yosemite

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