East Mojave Desert Project 2004
Brief History
Mojave Road marker at Goffs, CA
People have come to the desert for five main reasons:
- to get to the other side, to arrive someplace else,
usually a big city, on foot and by pack mule, horseback, camel,
covered wagon, stagecoach, railroad, automobile, bicycle,
motorcycle and aircraft
- to sell stuff to people crossing the desert, including:
gas, oil, tires, food, lodging, maps, and souvenir gems, postcards,
Indian crafts, Route 66 geegaws, porcelain figurines and other
celebrity merchandise (especially of Elvis, Marilyn Monroe, James
Dean and Bettie Boop), and alleged UFO artifacts
- to take away precious minerals: gold, silver, borax,
gems, salts and other valuable chemicals needed or wanted
in our industrial and population centers
- to get away: fleeing other people — as hermits and
religious groups;
fleeing prying eyes — whether mobsters
making a "hit" or military engineers testing secret aircraft;
fleeing legal restrictions on marriage, gambling and prostitution;
fleeing ecosystems that might be damaged — including off-road
vehicle fans, model rocket clubs, armies training for desert warfare
and again military engineers
using salt beds as giant crash-resistant runways
- to enjoy and learn about what makes it unique, engaging
in recreation such as hiking, camping, fishing, and hunting
(especially quail, partridge and — by lottery — bighorn
sheep) and studying the desert's geology, ecology, history and
cultural features
"Forks in the Road"
Junction of US91 & US66 in Barstow in 1958,
from "CALIFORNIA GUIDE SIGNS"
[www.kriske.com/highway/signs/signs2.html]
Imagine a shallow "X," like this:
* * "north fork"
* *
* *
*
* *
* *
* * "south fork"
Near the center is Barstow, CA, near a place that was once called
"Forks in the Road." The upper left is Bakersfield, CA, the upper right
is Las Vegas, NV, the lower left is San Bernardino, CA
and the lower right is Needles, CA. Today the route that goes
lower left to upper right is I-15, the lower right fork is I-40,
and the upper left fork is SR-58.
To add a little variety, you can imagine the Old Spanish Trail, steeper
than I-15 going from Barstow to the northeast, and old Arrowhead Highway, which
later became the route of the old Salt Lake Railroad, following the
upper right fork a little to the south. These are two variations on the
"north fork" The old Mojave Road went almost straight to the east from
Barstow, and is the only one that mostly isn't paved today. Think of this
as the "middle fork." So there are 5 roads
coming out of the center of the "X" to the right. But two main
distinctions predominate: the "north fork" and the "south fork."
This has been the shape of the crossings of the Mojave for a long time.
Both forks were used by Jedediah Smith in his explorations. Both were used by
pack mules and wagon trains crossing the desert. Both became major
rail routes: the Southern Pacific and the Santa Fe. Both became US
highways: US-91 and Route-66. Both were used by the "Okies" fleeing
the dust bowl. And of course both are now interstates.
Factoids
- Half of habitat for federally listed endangered species can be found on public lands in California.
- When the Santa Fe Railroad established the towns along present-day Route 66 between Barstow and Needles, they named them in alphabetical order: Amboy, Bagdad, Chambless, Danby, Essex, Fenner, Goff, Homer, Ibis, Java, Khartoum.
Last update 11:58 AM Fri. 27-Feb-2004 by ABS.
© 2004 Alan B. Scrivener