Death Valley Junction | |||||||||||||||||||||
Other Name: | Amargosa | ||||||||||||||||||||
Settlement Type: | Unincorporated community | ||||||||||||||||||||
Pushpin Map: | California | ||||||||||||||||||||
Pushpin Label Position: | bottom | ||||||||||||||||||||
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location in California | ||||||||||||||||||||
Pushpin Image: | California Locator Map with US.PNG | ||||||||||||||||||||
Subdivision Type: | Country | ||||||||||||||||||||
Subdivision Type1: | State | ||||||||||||||||||||
Subdivision Name1: | California | ||||||||||||||||||||
Subdivision Type2: | County | ||||||||||||||||||||
Subdivision Name2: | Inyo County | ||||||||||||||||||||
Coordinates: | 36.3022°N -116.4136°W | ||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation M: | 622 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation Ft: | 2041 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Blank Name: | FIPS code | ||||||||||||||||||||
Blank Info: | 06-18212 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Blank1 Name: | GNIS feature ID | ||||||||||||||||||||
Footnotes: |
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Death Valley Junction, more commonly known as Amargosa (Spanish for "Bitter"), is a tiny Mojave Desert unincorporated community in Inyo County, California, at the intersection of SR 190 and SR 127, in the Amargosa Valley and just east of Death Valley National Park. The zip code is 92328, the elevation is 20410NaN0, and the population is fewer than four people.
Death Valley Junction is home to the Amargosa Opera House and Hotel, where resident Marta Becket staged dance and mime shows from the late 1960s until her last show in February 2012.[1] Becket died in 2017.[2] The hotel is still operating next to the opera house, but beyond these maintained areas, the town is in a state of disrepair. There is no gas station, and only one restaurant, the Amargosa Cafe. The town is owned by the non-profit Amargosa Opera House Inc.[3] which runs the Opera House, Hotel, and cafe
The community's location, 27miles east-southeast of Furnace Creek, on the east side of Death Valley is south of Nevada's Amargosa Valley and near Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge. East/South East, 27 miles, is Pahrump, Nevada. South on SR127 is the town of Shoshone, California. The closest straight-line distance to the Nevada state line is roughly five miles northeast.
Government documents show an effort by the Timbisha Shoshone tribal government to acquire about 7200acres in the area during 1999 to 2000. This includes areas for residences and the official federal sanction to use some government lands for traditional ceremonies. In 2017 the tribe constructed a cannabis grow facility on the land.
The town was created in 1907 when the Tonopah and Tidewater Railroad was constructed through the Amargosa Valley and a spur from their main line was built to the Lila C. borax mine in the hills to the west.[4] The town was originally owned by Robert Tubb, who operated a saloon, store, and brothel.[5] The town first appears on the 1910 Furnace Creek Quandrangle USGS topographic map.
In 1914, the Death Valley Railroad started operating between Ryan, California and Death Valley Junction. It carried borax until 1928, when operations ceased. From 1923 to 1925 the Pacific Coast Borax Company constructed buildings in the town, hiring architect Alexander Hamilton McCulloch to design a Spanish Colonial Revival whistle stop centered at the hotel, theater and office complex building, now known as the Amargosa Opera House and Hotel.
The town began to decline in the mid-20th century. In 1967 dancer and actress Marta Becket visited due to an automobile repair.[6] She became enamored with the theater, and with help from benefactors, she leased, then purchased, the hotel and theater complex.[7]
The Death Valley post office opened in 1908 and transferred to Furnace Creek Ranch in 1961. The Amargosa post office opened in 1962, changed its name to Death Valley Junction in 1968.
In 1980 the town was included in the National Register of Historic Places as the "Death Valley Junction Historic District."
When the Death Valley Railroad was established in 1914, it used 3.19miles of tracks belonging to the Tonopah and Tidewater Railroad east-southeast of Death Valley Junction to Horton.
Local wired telephones were manual telephone service until the 1980s. To reach a phone in Death Valley Junction when the area was under manual service required dialing the operator and asking for "Death Valley Junction, California, Toll Station" (and the one-digit number). Placing an outbound call required lifting the receiver and waiting for an operator. The operator who answered was in Los Angeles (over 150 miles away). Death Valley Junction is now in area codes 442 and 760.
In the state legislature, Death Valley Junction is in,[8] and .[9]
Federally, Death Valley Junction is in .[10]