| October
1974: Construction begins on townhouses along the
11th fairway of the course.
April
1975: Construction of Clementia Dam's 1,000-foot
span is on schedule and slated for completion later this
year. An estimated 200,000 cubic yards of material will
be required to complete the 33-foot-high structure.
June
1975: County officials approve a 100-foot strip of open
space along the Cosumnes through Rancho Murieta. Environmentalists
had fought for up to 400 feet. Says a supervisor who voted
against the narrower strip: "This is a complete and
total sell-out. You're selling the Cosumnes River for 40
pieces of silver."
October
1975: A barbecue buffet for property owners and guests marks
the opening of Rancho Murieta's new $155,000 tennis facility
-- six lighted courts.
June
1976: The Country Store opens, with a general store,
gas pumps and a post office substation. A publicity photo
shows two women on horses being handed their bags of groceries.
At about the same time, mail-delivery service begins
to the community's homes. Deliveries are handled by the
community's security force.
August
1976: The community's ultramodern $900,000 water-treatment
plant is dedicated and turned over to the El Dorado
Irrigation District.
September
1976: The first Concours d'Elegance brings more than 175
classic automobiles and 3,000 people to the driving
range.
April
1977: Dedication ceremonies are held for the community's
second golf course, to be built on gold-dredged land
on the south side of the Cosumnes. It will be named the
River Golf Course -- not the Michigan Bar Golf Course, as
once planned -- and it's expected to be open for play late
next year.
June
1977: There were more home sites and homes sold in
the first three months of this year than were sold in the
last 2 1/2 years since the development opened, the developers
report. The community's project manager, Ray D. Henderson,
attributes the increase to an influx of builders, contractors
and home buyers from the Bay Area.
October
1977: The first Murieta Music Festival takes place
over a weekend, with a mix of music and dance performances.
About 10,000 people attend.
March
1978: County officials express frustration over negotiations
with Rancho Murieta developers on the issue of public
access to the Cosumnes River, according to The Bee.
One disagreement is said to be over control of the old Highway
16 bridge, which the county acquired from the state. The
developers want to use the bridge to get golfers across
the river. The county wants to retain at least a public
right of way.
March
1978: The community's developers announce that first-run
movies -- shown in their entirety and without interruptions
-- are being offered on Channel 4. They say Murieta is "the
first planned development in Northern California to offer
its homeowners complimentary premier movies, special sporting
events and musical performances via satellite." The
arrangement is by contract with a company called Home Box
Office. The company's signals originate in New York, are
sent to a satellite 23,000 miles in space, and then sent
down to a receiver on this end.
September
1978: The Country Club Lodge and Executive Conference
Center opens, offering 76 guest rooms and a lodge on
five acres at Alameda Drive and Murieta Parkway. Some of
the units face the course's 18th fairway. Companies like
AT&T, IBM, Del Monte, Xerox and Standard Oil of California
schedule conferences in the opening months of operation.
October 1978: More than 17,000 people attend the second
Murieta Music Festival, which takes place over a weekend.
Performances are offered on three stages -- on the driving
range, the 18th fairway and the Country Club Terrace. The
headline act is Grammy winner Mason Williams.
December
1978: The County Board of Supervisors approves an agreement
with Rancho Murieta's developers in which the subdivision
will turn over some land for public use in exchange for
possession of the old Highway 16 bridge. The Bee reports
public access to river areas around Jackson Road has been
debated for years and the debate included the bridge. The
developers want the bridge for private use and to join the
subdivision across the river. The agreement gives the bridge
to the developers, but they will be required to build a
cantilevered projection for a public walkway.
December
1978: Baseball Hall of Famer Willie Mays is among
the winners in a lottery to buy property and build a home
in Rancho Murieta's Unit 2. He picks a lot next to the golf
course, and, under terms of the lottery, must begin construction
within 18 months. Several days later, development officials
say they have discovered Mays failed to do some necessary
paperwork and has been disqualified from the lottery.
February
1979: All 351 lots in Unit 2 have sold, officials
say, at prices ranging from $16,500 to $55,000.
April
1979: With Unit 2 adding more than 300 members, the Country
Club announces plans to expand the 19th Hole lounge
and to build a 2,000-square-foot Parasol Room. The
plans call for the outdoor patio to be enclosed in glass.
The old highway bridge across the Cosumnes will be refurbished,
painted and lighted by summer to handle traffic to the new
course, which is nearing completion across the river.
May
1979: Nine holes of the South Course are opened for
a news-media preview. It's expected the full 18 holes will
open in the fall.
July
1979: Sacramento County's supervisors end months of squabbling
by voting to accept a deed from Rancho Murieta's developers
for 136 acres of land along the Cosumnes River. The
land is intended to be a park. The developers offered the
land in exchange for certain rights, including ownership
of the old Highway 16 bridge. The bridge, which has been
black, is being born again a distinct shade of yellow.
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