The Camp Jones Gulch property was originally part of
Rancho San Gregorio, a stretch of land granted by
Governor Juan Alvarado to Antonio Buelna. A portion of the land grant, which stretched nearly 18,000 acres, was later sold to Henry Wilkins, who, in 1857, sold the property to Jones & Franklin, a small milling operation. One of the company's owners, David Jones, for whom the gulch and camp is named, constructed a saw mill on the site, which stood where the present-day Dining Hall now sits. By the 1930s, Mrs. S. M. Black owned the property, and looked to sell her property to a non-profit organization to create a camp for boys and girls. Richard Perkins, then the General Secretary for the YMCA of San Francisco, negotiated a deal in 1934 to acquire the camp property. In addition to weekend retreats and visits by other youth programs, Camp Jones Gulch has been used for environmental education programs since the mid-20th century. In the summer of 1965, Gus Xerogeanes, a natural sciences teacher for the San Bruno Park School District, organized a weeklong summer field trip for a group of sixth grade students, which expanded to a district-wide program for San Bruno students in the spring of 1966. Initially, only 60 students could attend the program due to space restrictions. In the fall of 1966, more San Mateo County school districts began participating in the program, so a county-managed San Mateo Outdoor Education program was approved in 1968 with 650 pupils. Since then, more than 200,000 students have attended Outdoor Education, and the program celebrated its 50th anniversary on March 9, 2019. Similarly, in 1956, the San Joaquin Outdoor Education began as a pilot program with 49 students from Jefferson School in
Tracy, California. Within three years, the program had expanded to the San Joaquin Outdoor School, the third largest environmental education program in California, serving 1,000 students from 28 districts throughout San Joaquin County. In 1960, the program expanded to provide weeklong trips throughout the entire school year. To accommodate the county's growth, the program expanded to a second nearby site, Redwood Glen, in 1990, although operations ceased at the camp in 2009. In 2018, the program celebrated 60 years at the Jones Gulch site. However, in January 2021, the San Joaquin County Office of Education announced plans to transfer their outdoor education programs to Sky Mountain in Placer County, California, in order to be in closer proximity to local students, ending their usage of Camp Jones Gulch. == Camp Property ==