Palm Spring, San Diego County, California Explained

Palm Spring
Location:Borrego Springs, California
Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
Coordinates:32.919°N -116.218°W
Built:December 20-22, 1775.
Designation1:California
Designation1 Number:639

Palm Spring is a spring in Mesquite Oasis, a desert oasis amidst a mesquite thicket and a few palms, close to Carrizo Creek, within the Anza-Borrego Desert State Park in San Diego County, California.

Palm Spring, first used by the local Native Americans and those traveling to and from the Colorado River, was subsequently used by Spanish and later Mexican traders and American fur trappers and soldiers. It was a popular camping spot on the Southern Emigrant Trail during the California Gold Rush. It became a water stop for the San Antonio-San Diego Mail Line in 1857 and Palm Spring Station became a relay stage station for the Butterfield Overland Mail from 1858 to 1861. It remained a watering place for later travelers to Arizona and for the stage lines that ran to Yuma, Arizona from 1867 to 1877.[1]

The site is a California Historical Landmark. A historical marker was placed here by California State Park Commission working with the Fremont-Kearny Historicans of Old San Diego in 1958. [2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/22491/files/carrizo_creek_historical_and_archaeological_investigations_june_2007.pdf An Isolated Frontier Outpost, Historical and Archaeological Investigations of the Carrizo Creek Stage Station
  2. Web site: Palm Spring Historical Marker. www.hmdb.org.