Writer
Jack London lived in Glen Ellen from 1909 to his death in 1916, where he devoted much of his time to development of his
Beauty Ranch and the building of his mansion,
Wolf House. Many of his novels and stories, notably
The Iron Heel and
The Valley of the Moon mention Glen Ellen and Sonoma County. ("
The Valley of the Moon" is a translation of
Sonoma Valley's name given by the
Pomo and
Coast Miwok peoples.) The site of his ranch is now
Jack London State Historic Park, which contains the ruins of Wolf House, several ranch buildings, the grave of Jack and Charmian London, and a museum housed in Charmian London's "House of Happy Walls". The
Sonoma Developmental Center is located just outside Glen Ellen near the Jack London ranch. Its predecessor, the California Home for the Care and Training of Feeble Minded Children, was the setting for Jack London's story "Told in the Drooling Ward." Glen Ellen is located in the
Wine Country and is part of the
Sonoma Mountain AVA. Like all the communities in
Sonoma Valley, Glen Ellen is home to many vineyards and wineries including B.R. Cohn Winery, Benziger Family Winery, Mayo Family Winery, and Valley of the Moon Winery.
Quarryhill Botanic Garden, located near Glen Ellen, is a research botanical garden housing with one of the largest collections of temperate Asian plants in North America. Quarryhill's collection includes rare species such as
Acer pentaphyllum,
Cornus capitata,
Holboellia coriacea,
Illicium simonsii, and
Rosa chinensis var. spontanea, all native to Sichuan, China, as well as extensive collections of various wild Asian dogwoods, lilies, magnolias, maples, oaks, roses, and rhododendrons. Quarryhill is open to the public. Dunbar Elementary School was the second oldest school in California, until it closed in 2023. ==Government==