Blythe Intake | |
Location: | 20730 Temescal Canyon Rd, Corona, California |
Coordinates: | 33.8163°N -117.5086°W |
Built: | 1858 |
Designation1: | California |
Designation1 Number: | 188 |
Designation1 Date: | June 20, 1935 |
The Temescal Butterfield stage station is the site where the Butterfield Overland Mail stagecoach stopped to deliver mail and get fresh horses in what is now Riverside County, California. The Temescal Butterfield stage station was designated a California Historic Landmark (No.188) on June 20, 1935. The site of the Temescal Butterfield stage station is currently near the City of Corona along Temescal Canyon Road. The first stagecoach with mail and passengers departed Tipton, Missouri on September 15, 1858. The stagecoach stopped at the Temescal Butterfield stage station and arrived at the Butterfield Overland Mail Company Los Angeles Building on October 7, 1858. The Butterfield Overland Mail Company closed in 1861.[1]
The Temescal Butterfield stage station was built 50NaN0 north of the Temescal Hot Springs, 10miles north of Rancho La Laguna station and 20miles south of the Chino Rancho station. The Temescal Butterfield stage station was "at the foot of the Temescal hills, a splendid place to camp, wood and water plenty, and protected from the winds."[2] Temescal had its own post office from February 12, 1861, to November 12, 1861.[3] Around this location, the settlement of Temescal grew over the next few decades. By 1860, Greenwade's Place at Temescal, 3miles north of the stage station, was a polling place for southwestern San Bernardino County. Voting irregularities there that year resulted in a court case between the candidates for a California State Assembly seat. The trial was so contentious it included the shooting of Bethel Coopwood, one of the opposing lawyers by the other in court, before the results could be determined.
Marker on the site, 20730 Temescal Canyon Road, Corona, reads:[4]