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CALIFORNIA
LEGENDS
Cajon
Pass & San Bernardino – Gateway
to Southern
California |
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Greetings From
San
Bernardino vintage
postcard.
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Cajon Pass,
which separates the San Gabriel Mountains from the
San Bernardino Mountains, was
once the only gateway through the mountains negotiable by wagon trains.
It was here that the Mojave Trail, the Santa Fe Trail, the Mormon Trail,
and the Spanish Trail converged. Along this old path traveled
history’s Indians, trappers, explorers and scouts on their way to what
would become the
San Bernardino Valley. The
first paved highway was built over the pass in 1916 and was upgraded
several times until the highway was replaced by I-15 in 1969.
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Historic
Route 66
through Cajon Pass in 1931,
vintage
postcard.
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At
the top of the pass at the Oak Hill exit is the historic Cajon Summit
Inn, a
Route 66
landmark serving customers since 1952 and one of the few
survivors along
this stretch of highway.
As
you travel down the pass, keep your eyes open for “ghosts” of the old
road, including a vintage “Eat” sign peeking from the roadside
foliage, crumbling cabins, and pieces of the original pavement.
Soon, you enter the historic
San
Bernardino
Valley.
Spanish missionaries
were the first to settle in the area in the early 1800’s, building an
outpost for other missionaries who traveled the
California
territory preaching to the Indians. The two tribes that inhabited the
valley for as many as 4000 years before the Spanish arrived were the
Serranos and the Cahullia
Indians.
The
first mission was established on May 20, 1810 and was named “San
Bernardino”
after the patron saint of the day on the Catholic Calendar. The
missionaries also taught the Indians how to plant and irrigate crops
and the valley began to flourish. Another mission - the
Asistencia, was built in 1830 but was looted by attacking Indians in
1834 and passed into private hands. This property has been
restored and can still be seen today on Barton Road in the suburbs of
Redlands.
The mission era came to
an end in 1834 when
California’s Governor Figeroa ordered them closed. Soon, the
abandoned mission became an important post on the trading route known
as the Spanish Trail, where people such as Kit Carson and Jebediah
Strong made frequent stops. Spanish landowners built
haciendas and ranchos in the area as it began to grow. However,
the desert Indians began to steal the herds of cattle and many of the
ranchers gave up and moved out of the area. The cattle rustling
continued until nearly 500 Mormons arrived in the valley in 1851.
Purchasing the 40,000-acre
San
Bernardino
Rancho to settle on, they built a stockade and named it Fort
San
Bernardino to
protect themselves from the Indian raids. However, because they
weren’t raising cattle or horses, the desert Indians left them alone
and soon families began to move beyond the stockade.
By the time the City of
San Bernardino was officially
incorporated in 1854, the community had a population of approximately
1,200.
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In 1860, gold was discovered in Holcomb Valley by a man
named William F. Holcomb who filed five gold claims. Soon, men began
to pour into the mountains surrounding
San Bernardino in search of their
fortunes. In no time at all there were more thousands of miners
climbing the area in search of the precious metal. The mining settlement
of
Belleville, in Holcomb Valley became the largest city in Southern
California
and almost took the county seat away from
San Bernardino. Holcomb
Valley was the largest gold find in Southern
California and to this day, it is said that the
main gold “vein” has yet to be discovered. Today, the one time
prosperous city of
Belleville is a
ghost town.
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A lonely cabin in
Belleville,
California,
photo by
Daniel Ter-Nedden, courtesy
Ghost Town Gallery
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In 1885, the Santa Fe Railroad completed its line through
the Cajon Pass to
San Bernardino, with its first
depot located in a boxcar. Soon, the Union Pacific and the Southern
Railroad had also converged on the city, making the town an important
trade center. With the ease of the railroads, more people settled in
the town and by 1900, it was called home to more than 6,000 residents.
By the early 1900’s farmers had found the rich fertile ground of the
valley to be ideal for planting oranges and soon groves of the tropical
fruit spread across the landscape from the mountains to the coastal
plains.
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1907 photograph of Arrowhead Hot Springs in
the San
Bernardino Valley, courtesy Library of Congress.

Book Your San Bernadino
Lodging
HERE!
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Route
66 Signs For All Eight States - Collect all the shields of the
eight states along the
Mother Road.
These metal signs are silk screened on solid metal and have hemmed
edges.
Ready for hanging from
pre-drilled holes in the corners. Put it up in your bar, dorm
room, game room, kitchen, garage, patio or anywhere you'd like! Makes
a GREAT gift for your family and friends! Measures approximately 11"x11"
Collect all eight states!!
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