Escalle, Larkspur, California

[10] The Limerick Inn was a part of the area becoming a resort, with its bocce ball court and gardens; to which customers would travel by railway or buggy.

[3] The area bordered on an ark community that grew at around the same time, Boardwalks #1, #2, and #3;[12] and one 1892 photograph (now in the William Frizzi collection at the Marin History Museum[13]) records members of the ark community fetching water from Escalle's water tank and the wine delivery driver August "Gus" Frizzi (husband of baker Julia Frizzi, whose bakery stood at what is now 499 Magnolia Avenue, and later saloon owner) setting out to make a delivery in a horse and buggy.

[15] Escalle also died that year, causing legal complications to ensue from his relatives in France that effectively left the entire estate in limbo for the next two decades.

[17] The additional signage "Corte Madera Vineyard and Winery" that existed in Escalle's lifetime (after Corte Madera as this was before incorporation into Larkspur) is, however, no longer present, and various additions have been made to the winery that are not visible from the front; as well as a two-car garage added, built into the slope of the hill.

[18] The Limerick Inn was damaged in 1982 by a landslip, and is now mainly a shell albeit one that was stabilized after being threatened by the nearby growth of elm trees in 2003 and redecorated in 2008 for a Centennial celebration.