sonomacounty

Native American Heritage in Sonoma County

location_onSonoma County, CA
Swipe up
Cookies Info
Read about our use of cookies.

Sonoma County

California, United States

November is Native American Heritage Month, but you can celebrate Native American heritage all year long in Sonoma County. Long before we became known as Wine Country, Sonoma County was home to thousands of Native Americans, including those of the Pomo, Miwok, and Wappo tribes. And despite mass displacement, humiliation, illness, and death at the hands of European and American colonists, Native American cultures and presence persist in modern-day Sonoma County.

Visit Website

sonomacounty

Connecting to the Land

location_onTolay Lake Regional Park, Petaluma, CA
Read about our use of cookies.

Tolay Lake Regional Park

4.4 (66 Google reviews)

5869 Cannon Ln
Petaluma, CA

Open daily until 8:00 PMsee hourshide hours

Monday:

7:00 AM – 8:00 PM

Tuesday:

7:00 AM – 8:00 PM

Wednesday:

7:00 AM – 8:00 PM

Thursday:

7:00 AM – 8:00 PM

Friday:

7:00 AM – 8:00 PM

Saturday:

7:00 AM – 8:00 PM

Sunday:

7:00 AM – 8:00 PM

One of the most significant Native American sites in the county is Tolay Lake, which many Northern California tribes believed to have healing powers. Set eight miles south of Petaluma, the lake is now part of 3,402-acre Tolay Lake Regional Park, where more than 11 miles of trails cross extensive grasslands and open ridges with views of San Pablo Bay, the San Francisco skyline, and Bay Area peaks.

Visit Website

sonomacounty

Valley Ford and Petaluma

location_onPetaluma, CA
Read about our use of cookies.

Petaluma

Petaluma, California, United States

Petaluma was part of the sprawling ancestral lands of the Coast Miwok tribe, who collectively called the area Peta Lumaa. Their territory stretched throughout the southern reaches of the county between Petaluma, Valley Ford and the city of Sonoma, and west to the Pacific Ocean and Bodega Bay.

Visit Website

sonomacounty

Garden at the Occidental  Arts & Ecology Center

location_onOccidental Arts & Ecology Center, Occidental, CA
Read about our use of cookies.

Occidental Arts & Ecology Center

4.8 (43 Google reviews)

15290 Coleman Valley Rd
Occidental, CA

see hourshide hours

Monday:

Closed

Tuesday:

Closed

Wednesday:

Closed

Thursday:

Closed

Friday:

Closed

Saturday:

10:00 AM – 5:00 PM

Sunday:

10:00 AM – 5:00 PM

Enroute to Bodega Bay, the hamlet of Occidental is home to the 80-acre Occidental Arts & Ecology Center, which champions the balanced, restorative methods of agriculture employed by the Coast Miwok and other area Native people for centuries.

Visit Website

sonomacounty

Spring Wildflowers at Pepperwood Reserve in Santa Rosa

location_onPepperwood Preserve, Santa Rosa, CA
Read about our use of cookies.

Pepperwood Preserve

4.9 (18 Google reviews)

2130 Pepperwood Preserve Rd
Santa Rosa, CA

see hourshide hours

Monday:

9:00 AM – 5:00 PM

Tuesday:

9:00 AM – 5:00 PM

Wednesday:

9:00 AM – 5:00 PM

Thursday:

9:00 AM – 5:00 PM

Friday:

9:00 AM – 5:00 PM

Saturday:

Closed

Sunday:

Closed

Central Wappo lived at the northern end of the Russian River Valley, around northern Santa Rosa and Healdsburg. Their ancestral homelands included the 3,200-acre Pepperwood Preserve, an ideal place to connect with the natural beauty, wildlife, and serenity of Sonoma County.

Visit Website

sonomacounty

Indigenous Foods and Tools Displayed During the Fort Ross Festival

location_onFort Ross, CA
Read about our use of cookies.

Fort Ross

Fort Ross, California, United States

Kashia Pomo territory encompassed much of the county’s central coast, from roughly the village of Bodega to Stewart’s Point, including Fort Ross—where just nearby, they had an important seasonal settlement of their own, Metini.

Visit Website

sonomacounty

Lake Sonoma

location_onLake Sonoma, CA
Read about our use of cookies.

Lake Sonoma

4.6 (122 Google reviews)

Sonoma County, CA

Southern Pomo territory encompassed almost the entirety of what is now the Highway 101 corridor. From Cotati and Rohnert Park, Southern Pomos lived throughout Santa Rosa, into Healdsburg and Cloverdale in the north, and west to what is now the Lake Sonoma Recreation Area.

Visit Website

sonomacounty

Alexander Valley

location_onAlexander Valley AVA, CA
Read about our use of cookies.

Alexander Valley AVA

5.0 (4 Google reviews)

Sonoma County, CA

In the northern reaches of the county, the Western Wappo lived in what is now Alexander Valley wine country. Their territory stretched from Lytton Springs to the Geyserville area, where two settlements had special significance to the name “Sonoma County”: Tsi’mitu-tso-noma, on the east bank of the Russian River, and near the Geysers, Tekanan-tso-noma.

Visit Website

sonomacounty

Part of the Elsie Allen Pomo Basket Collection at the Jesse Peter Multicultural Museum

location_onSanta Rosa Junior College, Santa Rosa, CA
Read about our use of cookies.

Santa Rosa Junior College

4.4 (197 Google reviews)

1501 Mendocino Ave
Santa Rosa, CA

see hourshide hours

Monday:

6:30 AM – 11:00 PM

Tuesday:

6:30 – 11:30 AM

Wednesday:

6:30 AM – 11:00 PM

Thursday:

6:30 AM – 11:00 PM

Friday:

6:30 AM – 11:00 PM

Saturday:

Closed

Sunday:

Closed

On the Santa Rosa Junior College campus, the SRJC Multicultural Museum is home to more than 5,000 cataloged items, and traditional Native American art makes up the greatest portion of the collection. All of North America’s Indian tribes are represented, and art forms include ceramics, basketry, beadwork, sculpture, textiles, and jewelry.

Visit Website

sonomacounty

The California Indian Museum Cultural Center in Santa Rosa 

location_onCalifornia Indian Museum & Cultural Center, Santa Rosa, CA
Read about our use of cookies.

California Indian Museum & Cultural Center

4.7 (47 Google reviews)

5250 Aero Dr
Santa Rosa, CA

see hourshide hours

Monday:

12:00 – 4:00 PM

Tuesday:

12:00 – 4:00 PM

Wednesday:

12:00 – 4:00 PM

Thursday:

12:00 – 4:00 PM

Friday:

12:00 – 4:00 PM

Saturday:

Closed

Sunday:

Closed

Also in Santa Rosa, the California Indian Museum and Cultural Center (CIMCC) portrays California history and culture from a uniquely Native American perspective. The museum’s varied exhibits represent California’s Indian culture statewide, which includes more than 150 tribes.

Visit Website

sonomacounty

Museum Store at CIMCC in Santa Rosa

location_onCalifornia Indian Museum & Cultural Center, Santa Rosa, CA
Read about our use of cookies.

California Indian Museum & Cultural Center

4.7 (47 Google reviews)

5250 Aero Dr
Santa Rosa, CA

see hourshide hours

Monday:

12:00 – 4:00 PM

Tuesday:

12:00 – 4:00 PM

Wednesday:

12:00 – 4:00 PM

Thursday:

12:00 – 4:00 PM

Friday:

12:00 – 4:00 PM

Saturday:

Closed

Sunday:

Closed

The CIMCC’s museum store is run by participants in the Center’s Native Youth Employment Training program, and features the creations of Native artists working in abalone, basketry, and other native materials. Many of these artists hail from Sonoma County, such as Cloverdale brothers Matthew & Michael Molina of apparel brand Lucid Luck.

Visit Website

sonomacounty

Buffalo Leather and Deer Antler “Diamond of the Desert” Purse from Native Riders

location_onSebastopol, CA
Read about our use of cookies.

Sebastopol

Sebastopol, California, United States

Sebastopol-based craftsman Kerry Mitchell (aka Lone Eagle), whose family heritage is Comanche, adds embellishments like beads, feathers, or coins to his leather works, and also creates exquisite wearable pieces from denim and vintage wool. He sells his work at his funky Sebastopol shop, Native Riders, as well as various works by craftspeople from 26 other tribes.

Visit Website

sonomacounty

Making a Bet on the Future

location_onSonoma County, CA
Read about our use of cookies.

Sonoma County

California, United States

In 1958, the U.S. Congress stripped California’s 41 rancherias—a name for Native-reserved land that dates to Mexico’s political presence in California—of federal status, making them in-eligible for funding and services from the government. After a long struggle, the California rancherias’ federal status was returned to them in 2000 by President Clinton. In 2005, the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria, which includes both Coast Miwok and Southern Pomo, were able to purchase land in Rohnert Park, proposing to build a gaming facility there. After a long process of approval, the Graton Resort & Casino was opened in 2013.

Visit Website

sonomacounty

Graton Hotel & Casino

location_onGraton Resort and Casino, Rohnert Park, CA
Read about our use of cookies.

Graton Resort and Casino

4.0 (15.7K Google reviews)

288 Golf Course Dr W
Rohnert Park, CA

see hourshide hours

Monday:

Open 24 hours

Tuesday:

Open 24 hours

Wednesday:

Open 24 hours

Thursday:

Open 24 hours

Friday:

Open 24 hours

Saturday:

Open 24 hours

Sunday:

Open 24 hours

In addition to 200 guestrooms, a spa, and a pool, Graton Resort & Casino features a wide variety of slots and table games, including Blackjack, Baccarat, and poker. Even if you’re not into gambling, though, stellar restaurant options make this a popular destination for a big night out.

Visit Website

sonomacounty

Valley Deck at River Rock

location_onRiver Rock Casino, Geyserville, CA
Read about our use of cookies.

River Rock Casino

3.9 (2.7K Google reviews)

3250 CA-128
Geyserville, CA

see hourshide hours

Monday:

Open 24 hours

Tuesday:

Open 24 hours

Wednesday:

Open 24 hours

Thursday:

Open 24 hours

Friday:

Open 24 hours

Saturday:

Open 24 hours

Sunday:

Open 24 hours

Since 2002, the Dry Creek Rancheria Band of Pomo Indians has operated its own gaming facility, Geyserville’s River Rock Casino. Featuring roughly 1,000 slot machines, 18 table games, smoke-free gaming, and three eateries, the casino is surrounded by Alexander Valley vineyards. This gorgeous view can be enjoyed at leisure from the casino’s Valley Deck.

Visit Website

sonomacounty

The Enduring Legacy of Fry Bread

location_onSonoma County, CA
Read about our use of cookies.

Sonoma County

California, United States

Quite possibly the most unassuming eatery in Sonoma County, the Fry Bread Shop inhabits a small counter inside a Santa Rosa convenience store, turning dough made from traditional Blue Bird Flour (milled on the Navajo Nation reservation in Colorado) into fry bread tacos, pizzas, and even desserts. Across the western United States, crispy-chewy fry bread is considered a Native American staple. This simple delicacy might never have existed, though, if the U.S. government hadn’t displaced Navajos from their Southwestern lands and marched them 300 miles away to Colorado internment camps. Here, starving Navajos were given government-issued rations of flour, salt, and lard, which they used to create fry bread—and thus survive. Today fry bread is eaten in a spirit of celebration, everywhere from home kitchens to ceremonial events like powwows. Fry Bread owner Derek Muro is a graduate of the California Indian Manpower Consortium (CIMC), which via education and training enables Native Californians to meet their employment goals. The local popularity of his messy, delicious fry bread concoctions are proof of his success—but rather than take our word for it, we suggest you go try it for yourself. (Fry Bread Shop, 521 West 9th Street, Santa Rosa)

Visit Website