Almanac note · History and culture
Monte Sereno chose quiet hills over a town center
Monte Sereno is mostly residential by design, with a story that includes orchards, annexation worries, John Steinbeck, and the Billy Jones Wildcat Railroad.
Monte Sereno is unusual because it did not grow around a busy downtown or old crossroads. The city started as a rural agricultural area in the early 1900s, with ranch houses, orchards, dairies, livestock, summer homes, and a few large estates along the lower Santa Cruz Mountains.
That early pattern still matters. Monte Sereno never developed a commercial core, and the city remains mostly residential. When nearby cities were growing, residents chose incorporation in 1957 as a way to avoid annexation and keep local control over the area’s quieter way of life. Thomas B. Inglis, the city’s first mayor, helped lead that effort and served from 1957 to 1967.
The small size hides some interesting cultural history. John Steinbeck lived in Monte Sereno from 1936 to 1938, in a home on Greenwood Drive. During that time, he wrote “The Grapes of Wrath” and finished a draft of “Of Mice and Men.” The city also notes that Charlie Chaplin and Burgess Meredith visited him there.
Then there is Billy Jones. Jones was a railroad engineer who settled in Monte Sereno and built a miniature steam railway in his yard, known as the Wildcat Railroad. Walt Disney visited it. After Jones died, local residents formed a nonprofit to move and preserve the railroad at Oak Meadow and Vasona parks, where families still know the Billy Jones Wildcat Railroad name.
Monte Sereno’s story is not loud, and that is the point. The place chose quiet residential hills, but it still carries a literary chapter, a backyard railroad chapter, and a cityhood story built around keeping its own shape.
Where to see it
Saratoga-Los Gatos Road, Monte Sereno City Hall, Greenwood Drive area, and nearby Oak Meadow and Vasona parks in Los Gatos.
Official sources
Official source trail
Reviewed July 2, 2026
California Porch explains the path. The official source is still the place to confirm the current rule, fee, form, map, deadline, or office decision.
Use the official page before you spend money, file paperwork, rely on a deadline, or change a property.
Connected places
Where it fits on the map
Open a place page for the county layer, nearby places, and other California entries tied to that local page.
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