The range runs south of San Jose and is about 7 miles long. The New Almaden hills and greater Santa Cruz Mountains span south. Notable peaks include Coyote Peak and Bernal Hill.
Notable bodies of water include Santa Teresa Creek, which runs west down through the southern portion of the hills. It soon joins Arroyo Calero, which originates from Calero Reservoir in New Almaden.[2] Arroyo Calero then joins Alamitos Creek, which flows through Almaden Lake at the western end of the Santa Teresa Hills, exiting eventually to the Guadalupe River and then to the San Francisco Bay at Alviso. Santa Teresa Spring emerges at the base of the north side of the hills.[3]
Like in the nearby historic New Almaden mines, mining occurred in the Santa Teresa Hills since the early 20th century, though with much lower consistency and production. Limestone was quarried since 1915 for use in fertilizer and sugar refining, and chert was quarried for local road metal.[6] Sandstone was quarried from 1866 to 1906 and was used in the construction of Stanford University and several public buildings in San Francisco and San Jose. Rocks quarried here were also decoratively desirable.
Past mines include the Bernal Mine, which has been inactive since 1918, and the Santa Teresa Mine, both of which were quicksilver mines.[6] Like New Almaden, the Santa Teresa Hills contain “hilos,” or small tension fractures in silicate-carbonate rock containing veins of dolomite, quartz, and cinnabar, though in much lower quantity.
Cultural History
Ancestors of today's Muwekma Ohlone Tribe were among the first people to live in the Santa Teresa Hills area, with one major settlement at Santa Teresa Spring about 3000 years ago.[7][8] The spring was a reliable freshwater source and a sacred site to the Muwekma Ohlone, who believe that the spring had healing properties.
Rancho Santa Teresa
In 1826, José Joaquín Bernal, a former soldier in the Mexican Army, settled near Santa Teresa Spring with his family and established Rancho Santa Teresa. The Santa Teresa Hills were part of the San Jose Pueblo Tract II, between Rancho Santa Teresa to the north and Alamitos Creek at the southern base.[9] Rancho Santa Teresa started off as a 9,647 acre land grant by the Mexican government in 1834. Due to the California Land Act of 1851, the rancho was reduced to only 400 acres by the 1870s. Bernal's descendants continued to run the ranch, which produced cattle, fruit and hay. The Bernal Mine, Bernal Marl Fertilizer Company, and Santa Teresa Spring Water Company were also started by Bernal's descendants. The ranch eventually became Bernal-Gulnac-Joice Ranch, and was operated into the 1980s.
By the 1990s, a large portion of the Santa Teresa Hills were purchased by Santa Clara County as part of Santa Teresa County Park, which now covers about 1,673 acres. Today, a ranch house and other historic buildings remain at the base of the hills as part of the park. The IBM Almaden Research Center, which opened in 1986, is located just west of the park.[10]