Landmark #652 | Kern County | Visited: December 31, 2011 | Plaque? YES! 🙂 |
What is it? | This plaque shows where the 20-mule teams arrived to sell their Death Valley borax! |
What makes it historical? | THE GUIDE SAYS: Just west of this point was the Southern Pacific terminus for the 20-mule-team borax wagons that operated between Death Valley and Mojave from 1884 to 1889. The route ran from the Harmony Borax Mining Company works, later acquired by the Pacific Coast Borax Company, to the railroad loading dock in Mojave over 165 miles of mountain and desert trail. A round trip required 20 days. The ore wagons, which hauled a payload of 24 tons, were designed by J. W. S. Perry, Borax Company superintendent in Death Valley, and built in Mojave at a cost of $900 each. New borax discoveries near Barstow ended the Mojave shipments in 1889.
OTHER TIDBITS: That pretty well sums it up! |
How can I Help the Helpers? | HERE’S HOW:
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Where is this place? | LISTED DIRECTIONS: 16246 Sierra Hwy (Hwy 14) Mojave, CA 93501 ANNOTATIONS: From Los Angeles: ~95mi (153km) — 1.6hrs |
When should I go? | Whenever the mood strikes you! |