In the early days of California statehood, there was an
enormous emigration to the Golden State.
But getting to California wasn’t easy.
The northern routes through the Sierra Nevada were closed during the
winter months and it was a long and dangerous voyage by sea around Cape Horn or
over the Isthmus of Panama. That left what
would become known as the Southern Emigrant Trail, a single trail from the Gila
River in the Arizona territory to Southern California. From the Mexican War in 1846 until the
completion of the Transcontinental Railroad in 1869, there was a steady stream
of soldiers, gold-seekers, emigrants, cattle, and stagecoaches along this historic
trail through the desert.
Looking south from the Campbell grade you can still see the old coach road crossing Vallecito Valley. Photo: B. Perry |
Kearny's "Army of the West" came down this hill in San Pasqual on the morning of Dec. 6, 1946. Photo: B. Perry |
The 500-man Mormon Battalion, under the command of Army Lt. Col.
Philip Cooke, was dispatched across the southern trail to reinforce Kearny’s
troops. By the time they reached Carrizo
Creek, they had abandoned all but five of their wagons. At Vallecito, they received news that the war
was over. Upon entering Box Canyon,
they found their wagons would not fit through the tight passage. Having lost their picks and shovels crossing
the Colorado River, the men used hand tools to cut a passage through the rock
so the wagons could pass. The first
wagon was dismantled and carried through.
The second carried over the narrowest spots. The last three rolled through when the trail
was wide enough. The Mormon Battalion’s
wagons were the first to come across the desert to Southern California.
After the discovery of gold at Sutter’s Mill near Sacramento
in 1848, thousands of 49er’s headed for the goldfields to make their fortunes. About a third of them came by way of the
Southern Emigrant Trail. Lorenzo D.
Aldrich was one such gold-seeker. His “A
Journal of the Overland Route to California & the Gold Mines” chronicles
his journey on a daily basis. On Nov. 24th
1849, he wrote about his passage through Box Canyon: “After proceeding over a
sandy track, in the afternoon, having made about four miles, we entered a
ravine, or canyon, in the mountains which was so narrow that it would barely
admit our wagon, - traveling in this manner for a considerable time, the rocks
impending over our heads in many instances for several feet, we emerged about
sundown on the open mountain, in order to ascend which we were obliged, all
hands, to put our shoulders alternately at the wheel, and sometimes it required
our united efforts to start the team when it once became stationary. This is the spot where Col. Cook cut through
the rock to make a way for his teams and repacked his wagons. It is the most hideous road I ever saw. We made today about ten miles.” Lorenzo Aldrich made it to San Diego where he
caught a ship to San Francisco. He died
from an illness he contracted during his return trip via Panama a year later.
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The San Antonio and San Diego Mail Line had two routes from Vallecito to San Diego. (California State Parks) |
The restored Vallecito Stage Station is now a State Park. Photo: B. Perry |
A year later, in 1858, John Butterfield started a mail
service which ran 2,700 miles from St. Louis to San Francisco in 25 days or
less. Coach stations were built at all
the desert watering holes to provide shelter and fresh horses. For most of the route, the Butterfield
Overland Mail Line used the Concord coaches that we know from the movies. But mud wagons were used for the pull through
the desert from Yuma to Warner’s Ranch. The
coming of the Civil War in 1861 ended the Butterfield Line but many of the
stations lived on. It’s still possible
to find evident of a few of the Butterfield Stage Stations. After years of decay, the Vallecito Station
has been restored and is now a State Park.
The station at Oak Grove is still standing although it is in private
hands. The Warner Ranch station is being
restored. The stations at Carrizo Creek, Palm Spring, and San Felipe are long
gone. The Indian Wells station was
washed away in 1903 when the Colorado River was accidently diverted down the
New River into the Salton Sink.
In the 20th century, railroads and highways
provided new routes in and out of Southern California. Agriculture came to the Imperial Valley
transforming the bleak landscape seen by Lorenzo Aldrich. In the 1920’s, a new “Imperial Highway” was
designated along the old trail from Los Angeles to the Imperial Valley although
it wasn’t until 1961 that the entire route was paved.
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The old road cuts above... bypass this dead end! Photos: B. Perry |
Aldrich, Lorenzo D., A Journal of the Overland Route to
California and the Gold Mines.
Dawson’s Book Shop, Loas Angeles, CA. 1950.
Brigandi, Phil. The Southern Emigrant Trail. The Branding Iron, Los Angeles Corral of The
Westerners, Number 256, Fall 2009.
Sweet, Ellen L. and
Lynne Newell. Historic Stage Routes
of San Diego County. Arcadia Publishing, Charleston, SC. 2011.
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