Barstow Harvey House Explained

Style:Amtrak
Barstow, CA
Other Name:Barstow Harvey House
Harvey House Rail Depot
Address:685 North 1st Avenue
Barstow, California[1]
Coordinates:34.9047°N -117.0247°W
Mapframe:yes
Country:United States
Owned:City of Barstow/BNSF
Line:BNSF Southern Transcon
Platform:1 side platform
(others out of service)
Tracks:Only 1 passing siding and 1 through track remaining
Connections: Amtrak Thruway: 10
Parking:Yes
Opened:February 22, 1911
Accessible:Yes
Other Services Header:Former services
Other Services Collapsible:yes
Nrhp:
Embed:yes
Harvey House Railroad Depot
Architect:Francis W. Wilson
Architecture:Santa Fe
Added:April 3, 1975
Area:1.1acres
Refnum:75000458
Designated Other1:California
Designated Other1 Date:1976
Designated Other1 Number:892

The Barstow Harvey House, also known as Harvey House Railroad Depot and Barstow station, is a historic building in Barstow, California. Originally built in 1911 as Casa del Desierto, a Harvey House hotel and Santa Fe Railroad depot, it currently serves as an Amtrak station and government building housing city offices, the Barstow Chamber of Commerce and Visitor Center, and two museums.

History and architecture

The Casa del Desierto station and hotel was built in 1911 by the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway to replace an earlier one built in 1885 that burned in 1908.

The building is a synthesis of Spanish Renaissance and Classical Revival architecture styles, with a Moorish feeling as well. The concrete frame is faced with red tapestry brick and beige artificial stone. Majestic arcades and colonnades line the facade, providing shade from the desert sun. Red clay barrel tiles are used to cover the roof. Towers at the building's corners, and those of the central projecting bay facing the tracks, are capped with pointed roofs or painted domes.

Francis W. Wilson is the architect credited by the Historic American Buildings Survey of the National Park Service.[2] Amtrak's Great American Stations site says that "according to contemporary accounts, the Casa del Desierto ... was designed by Francis W. Wilson of Santa Barbara, Calif." Earlier Wilson had designed the Fray Marcos hotel in Williams, Arizona, and El Garces in Needles for the Santa Fe and Fred Harvey.[3]

The historic structure is the finest remaining depot-hotel in California, an elegant presence in the Mojave Desert beside the intermittent Mojave River. In the 1950s, the Barstow Harvey House was listed in the Green Book guide of business establishments that were friendly to African-American motorists.[4]

The Santa Fe closed the station in 1973. Casa del Desierto was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1975, and designated as a California Historical Landmark in 1976. It became derelict until bought by the City of Barstow, and rebuilt following heavy damage in a 1992 earthquake.

The City of Barstow bought the station in 1990. After restoration and more than $8 million in repairs to earthquake damage, several city offices moved into the building. The Barstow Area Chamber of Commerce & Visitor Center also operates out of the former Harvey House. Other public institutions located here are the Western America Railroad Museum on the east side and the Route 66 "Mother Road" Museum on the north side.

, Amtrak plans to modify the platform for accessibility by 2026.[5]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Barstow, CA (BAR). amtrak.com. Amtrak. 11 Jan 2014.
  2. Web site: Survey . Historic American Buildings . Casa Del Desierto, 685 North First Avenue, Barstow, San Bernardino County, CA . July 19, 2019 . www.loc.gov.
  3. Web site: Barstow, CA (BAR) . July 19, 2019.
  4. Book: Taylor, Candacy . Overground Railroad: The Green Book and the Roots of Black Travel in America . 2020 . Abrams . 978-1419738173 . New York.
  5. Web site: Amtrak Fact Sheet Fiscal Year 2023 State of California . 7 . Amtrak . March 2024.