The Cultural Landscape of
San Pedro Valley
About This Project
Shell Mounds to Cul-de-Sacs:
the Cultural Landscape of San Pedro Valley, Pacifica, CA
John Culp San Francisco, CA, November, 2002
A research report submitted to the faculty of San Francisco State University in partial fulfillment
of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Geography
Even ordinary elements of the American cultural landscape have unique histories that
have helped create their present form. San Pedro Valley, a suburban landscape since the 1950's,
has evolved from a number of distinct different landscapes, a few small relics of which can still
be found if one takes the time to search them out. This paper traces the development of the
cultural landscape of San Pedro Valley from the valley's occupation by native Americans up to
the present. The evolution of the landscape is divided into several phases: the Ohlone
Landscape, the Mission Period Landscape, the Rancho Landscape, the Truck Farming
Landscape, the Early Suburban Landscape, the Modern Suburban Landscape, and Today. Using
archival research coupled with interviews and field research, the history of the valley is
examined in an attempt to re-create images of how the landscape appeared during each of these
phases. Cultural landscapes are complex entities and this paper demonstrates that even
seemingly ordinary places have complex and interesting histories that have helped shape their
present form.