Rosamond,
California
USA
Local History
- Willow Springs
BEFORE the coming of
the railroad, a traveler headed north through the Antelope Valley would likely
pass through the small settlement of Willow Springs about 8 miles west of
Rosamond. The following AV Press article details a bit of its early
history:
(AV Press April 8,
2010)ROSAMOND
- In 1862, a
year after they married in Los Angeles, 23-year-old Nelson Ward and his
14-year-old wife, Adelia, settled next to a brush-covered butte beside one of
the western Mojave Desert's few good sources of water: Willow
Springs.
Surrounded by willow
bushes that gave them their name, the springs had provided water for Native
Americans for centuries. The springs began serving more travelers after a 1850s
gold rush on the Kern River, near what is now Lake Isabella, and the arrival in
the Owens Valley in the early 1860s of cattlemen supplying newly opened mines
along the California-Nevada border.
The Wards - he had
emigrated to California from Ohio as a teenager with his father in 1855, she
came to California from Boston - built an adobe structure that was called a
boardinghouse and kept a number of horse or mule teams, according to "Antelope
Valley Pioneers," published in 1984 by the Kern Antelope Historical
Society.
'The Wards were gracious
hosts," Alan Hensher wrote in "Ghost Towns of the Mojave Desert," published in
1991. "But their station remained cramped. Guests usually slept in the bar -
and the pace remained hectic - customers had to gobble down their predawn
breakfasts in such haste that the stop was dubbed the 'Hotel de Rush,'" he
added.
In the late 1860s, even
more travelers, miners and mule teams began stopping at Willow Springs with the
discovery of silver at Cerro Gordo, in the Inyo Mountains above Owens Valley.
Los Angeles was the Cerro Gordo mines' main supply point, and the silver hauled
there would stimulate the tiny town's economy.
Willow Springs became one
of the stops for mule-drawn freight wagons belonging to the Cerro Gordo
Freighting Company, operated by Los Angeles freighter Remi Nadeau in partnership
with Cerro Gordo mine owners Victor Beaudry and Mortimer
Belshaw.
"Eventually 80 teams of
three wagons, each pulled by 16 mules, hauled bars of silver bullion from the
smelter at the shore of Owens Lake to the port at San Pedro. Each round trip
took eight to nine weeks," according to Bureau of Land Management geologist
Larry M. Vredenburgh, who writes about the history of mining in the Mojave
Desert. "Between Cerro Gordo and Los Angeles a dozen stations were established
at regular intervals, a day's haul which varied from 13 to 20 miles.'
Some stations were
operated by Nadeau's company, and some were independents, like Willow Springs.
There were two stations in Soledad Canyon, then one at Barrel Springs just south
of present-day Palmdale, then another at a place called Cow Holes, then Willow
Springs. North of Mojave was a station called Forks of the Road near the
present-day Randsburg Cutoff from Highway 14 where southbound travelers could
veer off toward Tehachapi.
Besides Nadeau's mule
teams, stagecoaches and individuals traveling between the Owens Valley and Los
Angeles also used Willow Springs.
"The brush and adobe
stations provid(ed) rough meals," wrote Neill Wilson in 'Silver Stampede’,
published in 1937. As for beds, "Take your pick o' the sagebrush stranger. Our
rooms are never full.'"
An 1874 traveler reported:
"At the springs, hay is sold at 2 1/2 cents and grain at 3 1/2 cents per
pound."
Nelson Ward died in 1873,
leaving his 25-year-old widow with five children and the Willow Springs station.
Two years later, the station lost the Cerro Gordo freight business, when Nadeau
shifted his mule-team route to join the new railroad line that had inched its
way east over the Tehachapi Mountains and was due to reach the Antelope Valley
and Los Angeles the next year.
When Nadeau shifted his
freight route, Adelia Ward moved out of Willow Springs and opened a hotel in
Greenwich, a short-lived settlement on the new railroad line west of present day
Tehachapi.
In 1878, she remarried and
began running a hotel at Tehachapi Summit, now known just as Tehachapi. She died
in 1881.
Meanwhile, the Willow
Springs station was taken over by a couple named Riley, who in November 1875 had
the bad fortune to be robbed by surviving members of Tiburcio Vasquez's
gang.
"After having tied up the
only men there, Mr. Riley, the station keeper and George Decker, a teamster,
they proceeded to go through the station, helping themselves to whatever they
fancied, and a foolish traveler approaching was relieved of $70," the Los
Angeles Star reported.
"They ended up by
appropriating Decker's team and starting for the mountains. They offered no
personal violence beyond tying up the men," the newspaper added. "Riley's wife
was not molested."
The following August, the
railroad tracks reached Mojave. A month later, in September 1876, the tracks to
Los Angeles were completed through Soledad Canyon, making long-distance
stagecoach travel across the Valley obsolete. The Wards' adobe building was a
ruin by the mid-1880s.
In 1900, Los Angeles
clayware factory owner Ezra Hamilton, who four years earlier had found gold on a
nearby butte and opened what became the Tropico mine, bought Willow Springs and
the surrounding 160 acres. He built new stone buildings and turned the property
into a resort, with swimming pool and dance hall. The stone buildings still
exist (photo above), but the original adobe stage station is
gone.
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