Iconic Mountain Home Inn is the Nearest Hotel to Muir Woods, Located on a Mt. Tam Ridgeline, Surrounded by Sweeping Views and Bordering Muir Woods and Mt. Tam State Parks

The iconic Mountain Home Inn is the nearest hotel to Muir Woods, located on a Mt. Tamalpais ridgeline in a spectacular setting of mountain scenery, redwood forests and sweeping views. The beautiful Muir Woods and Mt. Tamalpais parks border their hotel. Hiking trails fan out from the inn.
The hotelās guestrooms face the sunrise, overlooking the woodsy village of Mill Valley, San Francisco Bay and distant mountain peaks. If you make an āabout faceā, you face Muir Woods and the Pacific Ocean. They are ten minutes from Pacific Ocean beaches and 20 minutes from the Golden Gate Bridge. Point Reyes is a half hour drive north on Hwy. 1.
Mountain Home Inn isĀ the nearest hotel to Muir Woods. Our hotel is located on a Mt. Tamalpais ridgeline in a spectacular setting of mountain scenery, redwood forests and sweeping views. The beautiful Muir Woods and Mt. Tamalpais parks border our hotel. Hiking trails fan out from us.
The hotelās guestrooms face the sunrise, overlooking the woodsy village of Mill Valley, San Francisco Bay and distant mountain peaks. If you make an āabout faceā, you face Muir Woods and the Pacific Ocean. We are ten minutes from Pacific Ocean beaches and 20 minutes from the Golden Gate Bridge. Point Reyes is a half hour drive north on Hwy. 1.
Long before the asphalt of the Panoramic Highway moved motorists over the mountain, a winding railroad known asĀ the crookedest in the worldĀ climbed nearly 300 turns from Mill Valley to the summit and returned passengers through a rudimentary and heart-stopping railway system poweredĀ only by gravity. At one of the train stops, atop a ridgeline over Muir Woods, Claus and Martha built their home and refreshment bar for hikers making their way to the top and back, a place to rest their bones and take in the view with some hot soup and lemonade. The Meyers sold housemade candy at Christmastime and soon added a dining room on the mountain ledge. By the late 1920s, the crooked railway was abandoned as the mountain road was paved for automobilesĀ ā a change that would prove tragic for Claus.
Learning to handle the new technology of a motor car in 1930 was no easy feat, and it was even harder on the side of a 2,500-foot mountain. That summer, Clause and Martha were reportedly giving their new ModelĀ T a spin when Clause reversed over the steep bank, sending the car and the couple plunging down the mountainside. The couple somehow survived the horror, but ClauseĀ died three weeks later of a stroke, having never recovered from the crash. Martha died not long after.
In the years after Claus and Martha Meyers passed in the 1930s, the inn changed hands numerous times in the following years, largely maintaining its German theme. In the ā60s, notable guests included Goldie Hawn and the Grateful Dead.
The property fell into the hands of a German American war hero later played on screen by Christian Bale. Dieter Dengler was a German-born U.S. Navy bomber pilot who was shot down over Laos, captured and imprisoned in the notorious Pathet Lao prison camp during the Vietnam War. After six months of torture, Dengler somehow escaped, becoming the only American to ever do so and survive the prison. After 23 days on the run in the jungle on the shores of the Mekong River, hallucinating through near starvation, Dengler was rescued by a U.S. Air Force plane. His story was adapted into Werner Herzogās 2006 epic āRescue Dawn.ā
Once back on American soil, Dengler bought the old Mountain Home Inn to live in peace, away from the world.
Around the same time, another Vietnam vet and former military rescue pilot, Edward Cunningham, was living in Marin. Cunningham had spent time on an Air Force base in England, and while there, he fell in love with old British pubs. After failed endeavors importing British race cars and opening an art gallery in Sausalito, Cunningham was looking for something new.
āHe was broke and living off peanut butter,ā his wife, Susan Cunningham, tells SFGATE. (FULL STORY HERE)
It was around then Edward Cunningham noticed the construction of a very un-California restaurant and hotel at the base of Mount Tam ā the Pelican Inn at Muir Beach. The pub was built beam by beam from materials shipped over from England and Scotland, and it still has the bona fide look of a Tudor watering hole today, despite being built in 1979. Cunningham befriended the Pelicanās creator, Charles Felix, as he continued searching for his own old place to run.
One day, while jogging out on the Panoramic Highway, Cunningham saw the old Mountain Home Inn, closed and in a bad state. Dengler had not been able to keep the historic restaurant open. āHe had put up a āfor saleā sign,ā Susan says. āAnd my husband walked over and just bought it on the spot.ā
The Cunninghams spent years making the inn what it is today. Due to the success of the Mountain Home Inn, Susan and Edward went on to eventually run the Pelican Inn.
Edward Cunningham died in 2022. Susan still owns the inn and lives down the hill in Mill Valley. She looks back on their time opening the Mountain Home 40 ago with fondness. āWe had some struggles, but it was our baby,ā she says. āIt has a special place in our hearts.ā
The Mountain Home InnĀ is open 365 days a year, at 810 Panoramic Highway in Mill Valley.