
The town began with the Gold Rush. Harmon Heald, an Ohio businessman, came west and settled on the old Mexican Rancho Sotoyome; in 1857 he platted a town around a Spanish-style central Plaza, and in 1867 Healdsburg was incorporated. The Pomo people had lived in this valley long before — renowned basketweavers whose presence is woven into the region's deeper history. When the railroad arrived in 1871, the farm country of prunes, hops, and orchards began its long turn toward the grape.
Our Healdsburg logo carries California's grizzly bear and lone star over "California Republic · Est. 1850," the year California became the thirty-first state — the shared emblem of every Merlin Classics California place. Printed black-and-white with the worn look of an old crate label or WPA poster, the bear-and-star reads as the Golden State in shorthand: rugged, agricultural, proud. What makes this one Healdsburg is the country behind it — the plaza, the river, and the three valleys.
Why People Visit Healdsburg
Healdsburg pairs walkable small-town charm with world-class wine country. Visitors split their time between the plaza, the river, and the surrounding valleys, drawn by the food, the vineyards, and the refined-yet-down-to-earth Sonoma ambiance. It's a gentle, gracious base for the whole of northern Sonoma County.