Looking back on the legendary Big Sur restaurant’s 75 years

Depending on where you sit, on deck or inside at the edge of the world, it can feel like the bow of a boat. Located on the coast of Big Sur, overlooking a breathtaking expanse of the Pacific Ocean, Nepenthe, a restaurant established by Bill and Lolly Fassett in 1949, is a “Valhalla,” characterized in mythology as a place of near-perpetual food, drink, pleasure.

The property was previously owned by Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth, who had married in 1943 and fell in love with the view while their driver, a Mr. Joseph Cotton, was ferrying them from San Francisco to Los Angeles. Four years later, as part of their divorce settlement, the property had gone to “Rita Hayworth Welles,” the name recorded on the deed.

In 1947, the actress sold the 12-acre parcel to the Fassetts, who were looking for a place to live where they could support a family of five children. They paid $14,000 for the property, a lot of money for most folks in 1947.

At the time, the only structure on the property was a log cabin build in 1920s by the Trails Club, who would ride over the Santa Lucias to the south coast. Sam Trotter, a “Paul Bunyon” homebuilder and pioneer of Big Sur, built the cabin as their base of operations. It was Trotter’s sons, Frank and Walker, who eventually built Nepenthe Restaurant 1949 and, later, the Phoenix Shop.

As the Fassett family prepared to celebrate the 75th anniversary of Nepenthe, General Manager Kirk Gafill, a family owner and member of the third generation of Fassetts to take the helm, took some time to talk about the history of this legendary place. Here’s how it all began.

Jane Gallatin married Frank Hubbard Powers, a San Francisco attorney who, with real estate developer James Franklin Devendorf, founded the Carmel Development Company in 1902, through which they established Carmel. The Powers’ daughter, Grace Madeleine, had two daughters, Madeleine (Lolly) and Elizabeth, who were raised in Carmel.

“Prior to marrying my grandfather, Bill Fassett, my grandmother, Lolly, lived for a time on the isle of Capri, where she was very influenced by Old World values and aesthetics,” Gafill said. “My grandfather had gone to Cornell Restaurant & Hotel Management School in New York, yet he and Lolly met in San Francisco in the ‘30s, during the Depression.”

Ultimately, living on the Peninsula, faced with economic challenges and five children to raise, Fassett was looking for entrepreneurial opportunities. He got into publishing with the magazine, “What’s Doing in Carmel,” he worked for SFB Morse at Hotel del Monte, and tried a number of other things, said Fassett, without much success.

“In the search for a place to live where they might be able to support their family,” said Gafill, “it was, perhaps, an odd choice for them to go away from developed areas and down into Big Sur. But my grandmother had visited what became the Nepenthe property as a child and had some notion of it as an adult.”

The qualities of this property are, he says, pretty exceptional, starting with the astonishing south-coast view from an elevation that provides a really remarkable foreground before ever looking out to the horizon. On the coast, where the ocean so big, so expansive, it’s hard to put the view into perspective.

“In most Big Sur properties,” said Gafill, “you’re either looking straight out toward the ocean, or your view is blocked by the nearest ridge. Even if you have a coastal perspective, at 808 feet of elevation, you’re looking south to a 60-mile view. It’s a magical visual that really allows one to appreciate so much of the majesty and remarkable environmental qualities of the Big Sur Coast. Jaws drop for what Mother Nature has provided us.”

Besides, with a southern exposure, temperatures are ambient, and the geography of the coast shelters the property from typical northwesterly winds. This was, says Gafill, a kind of Shangri-la.

Creating a culture

Bill Fassett was working for the Madonna Brothers, doing highway construction to keep his family afloat, when he came up with the idea to build a food-service operation on his property. His first idea was to put a hamburger shack down on the highway level.

“My grandfather met with the County,” said Gafill, “and the County Planner said, ‘Why would you build something on the highway, when you have such beautiful, coastal property? Put it on the hill.’ In 1947, this was well before the Coastal Commission and Big Sur Land Trust that created standards and guidelines for Big Sur.”

Nepenthe restaurant chef Tod Williamson carries a shovel while doing a perimeter check of the property for spillover fires as the Basin Complex Fire burns on the other side of Highway One in Big Sur, Calif. on Thursday July 3, 2008. A small group of locals have decided to stay with their properties and try to defend them as others were told to evacuate. Photo David Royal, Monterey County Herald
Nepenthe restaurant chef Tod Williamson carries a shovel while doing a perimeter check of the property for spillover fires as the Basin Complex Fire burns on the other side of Highway One in Big Sur, Calif. on Thursday July 3, 2008. A small group of locals have decided to stay with their properties and try to defend them as others were told to evacuate. Photo David Royal, Monterey County Herald 

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