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Almanac note · History and culture

Fletcher Cove began with a bold cut through the bluff

Solana Beach's Fletcher Cove story ties beach access, a 1920s land deal, La Colonia, and the town's older coastal roots together.

Solana BeachFletcher CoveSan Diego County

Solana Beach has older layers, including Kumeyaay and earlier coastal life, and one of its best-known modern stories is about getting people down to the sand. In 1922, Ed Fletcher bought 201 acres from George H. Jones. The coast was beautiful, but the bluffs made beach access difficult.

Fletcher’s answer was bold and very California: use water pressure to cut a notch through the bluff. The work took one man about three months. When the beach opened on July 4, 1924, the celebration included horse races on the sand.

That story gives Fletcher Cove a little extra meaning. The cove is a beach entrance with a practical backstory, and a reminder that coastal towns often had to solve hard access questions before they could become the places people picture today.

Solana Beach also includes La Colonia de Eden Gardens, the city’s oldest neighborhood. Keeping that nearby history in mind makes the cove story feel less like a single developer tale and more like part of a fuller community history.

Where to see it

Fletcher Cove and La Colonia de Eden Gardens in Solana Beach.

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Reviewed July 2, 2026

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