Approximately ten thousand years ago there was a lake in the lowest elevation of Scotts Valley. Archeological excavations of site
CA-SCR-177 (Scotts Valley Site) in 1983 and 1987 support dates for
human settlement of this area as between 9,000 and 12,000 years before present (
YBP). The lake drained during the Mid-Holocene warming period (4,000-5,000 YBP) forming what is now known as
Carbonera Creek. When the lake drained, the people moved downslope following the lake water's transformation as in became the creek. Around 2000 BC,
Ohlone people occupied areas along the remaining creeks, spring and seep areas, along with permanent and seasonal drainages, and on flat ridges and terraces. Permanent villages were usually placed on elevations above seasonal flood levels. Surrounding areas were used for hunting and seed,
acorn, and grass gathering. Therefore, areas along
watercourses are considered likely locations for prehistoric cultural resources. Several watercourses, including portions of
Carbonera Creek,
Bean Creek, and MacKenzie Creek, are within the city. in Scotts Valley Scotts Valley was named after Hiram Daniel Scott, who purchased
Rancho San Agustin, including the valley, in 1850 from Joseph Ladd Majors. Before Majors, the property was owned by José Bolcoff. Bolcoff was the
original settler and first European to claim title and live in what was to be Scotts Valley. He was born Osip Volkov around 1794 in
Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky,
Siberia. Working as a fur trader around 1815, Bolcoff jumped ship on the Monterey Bay shoreline, quickly assimilated into the Spanish culture, and was well received by the Spanish authorities. Volkov had his
Russian Orthodox baptism validated in Mission Soledad in 1817, and was given the Spanish name José Antonio Bolcoff. Bolcoff lived with and traveled with
Alta California's governor
Pablo Vicente de Solá, acting as an interpreter. Becoming a Mexican citizen in 1833, Bolcoff moved his family to his land grant building, an adobe casa historians speculate was located near present-day Kings Village Shopping Center. Bolcoff relinquished his interest in the Rancho San Augustin, selling and accepting $400 from Joseph Ladd Majors, also known as Don Juan José Mechacas. July 7, 1846, marked the
shift of power in the region from Mexico to the United States. Hiram Scott built the
Greek revival style Scott House in 1853. Situated behind City Hall, it is a
Santa Cruz County Historical Trust Landmark and is on the
National Register of Historic Places. The house originally stood on Scotts Valley Drive, near where a
Bank of America branch is now located. From the 1840s, money-making activity in Scotts Valley centered on several industries: lumber, grain, the milling of grain, and most importantly the tanning of hides and working of leather. When the peat ran out, sand and gravel were quarried and sold. The area was the site of Santa's Village, a Christmas-themed amusement park which opened on May 30, 1957, on a site which was formerly Lawridge Farm, part of the former Rancho San Augustin. "Residents" of the park included Santa, Mrs. Santa, and elves and gnomes who operated the rides and sold tickets. There was a petting zoo, a bobsled ride, a whirling Christmas tree ride, and a train ride, as well as a Fairy Tale Land. The park was sold in 1966 but continued to be operated under lease by the Santa's Village Corporation. When that corporation went bankrupt in 1977. the owner considered launching a
Knott's Berry Farm type of complex but was denied a permit by the city of Scotts Valley, and the park closed for good in 1979. Scotts Valley's most famous resident was film director
Alfred Hitchcock, who lived in a mountaintop estate above the Vine Hill area from 1940 to 1972.
Florence Owens Thompson, depicted in
Dorothea Lange's
Migrant Mother photograph, died in Scotts Valley in 1983.
Netflix was founded in Scotts Valley by
Reed Hastings and
Marc Randolph in 1997. In December 2024, Scotts Valley was impacted by an EF1 tornado. Five people were injured. ==Economy==