Historic Landmarks in the
Anza-Borrego Desert
304
VALLECITO STAGE STATION
472
BOX CANYON
634
EL VADO
635 LOS PUERTECITOS
639
PALM SPRING
647
PUERTA / BUTTERFIELD OVERLAND MAIL ROUTE
673
SAN GREGORIO
750
PEG LEG SMITH MONUMENT
785
SANTA CATARINA
793
SAN FELIPE VALLEY AND STAGE STATION
NUMBER 304
VALLECITO STAGE STATION
The name Vallecito, which
means "Little Valley," dates from Spanish times. The salt grass
cienega made the valley the goal of travelers to California from
Sonora in the early years of California, as it held the first good
water in any quantity to be found on the west side of the Colorado
Desert. During the Gold Rush period immigrants in large numbers
stopped to refresh themselves and their animals after what was
called "The journey of Death" across the
Imperial Valley. The road
through this valley was the
great southern immigrant trail, the only
wagon road into Southern California. In the early 1850's
James R. Lassator built the house, of sod cut from the cienega, to serve as a stopping
place for parties passing through. The roots can be seen in the
walls. This structure is not an adobe. Vallecito was an important
stop for Army detachments leaving and entering California, from the
time
General Kearny's Army of the West stopped here on the road to
defeat at San Pasqual. The house became a station on the San
Antonio-San Diego Mail Route (The "Jackass Mail") in 1857, and in
1858 it was made one of the stops of the famous
Butterfield Overland
Mail. It is one of the chief landmarks remaining from the great
stage line between Missouri and San Francisco. The present building
is a reconstruction. It is nineteen miles south of Scissors Crossing
which is twelve miles east of Julian on Highway 79.
Location: Vallecito Stage Station County Park, on County Rd
S2 (P.M. 34.7), 3.7 mi NW of Agua Caliente Springs
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NUMBER 472 BOX CANYON
A little over eight miles south of Highway 78 at Scissors Crossing,
the Vallecito road passes along the west side of
Box Canyon, a
narrow defile about a mile long. Through the bottom of the wash went
the California-Sonora Trail of the Mexican Era, the route of General
Kearny and the Mormon Battalion, the Great Southern Immigrant Trail
of the Gold Rush and after, and the Butterfield Overland Mail road.
On their long march from Council Bluffs to San Diego, the Mormon
Battalion hacked out, with axes, a way for their wagons through the
chasm in the rocks, which, until then, had been a foot too narrow.
Box Canyon became, thereby, the first wagon road into Southern
California, and prairie schooners with their shuddering white tops
creaked through it like ships through a canal. There were only
inches to spare, even for Butterfield's Concord stage coaches.
Completion of more direct wagon roads east from San Diego and Los
Angeles caused the old trail to the Colorado to be gradually
deserted in the latter years of the Nineteenth Century.
Location: On County Road S2 (P.M. 25.7), 8.6 mi S of State
Hwy 78, Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
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NUMBER 634 EL VADO
In 1774 Captain Juan Bautista de Anza opened the overland trail from Sonora
to California which bears his name. It was badly needed to keep Californian
settlements supplied, and in contact with Mexico, in case of a war with a
maritime power. On his second expedition over the route he brought the first
white women to California among the settlers in his party, who were sent out
to found San Francisco. On this journey Captain de Anza stopped from
December 20 to 22, 1775, at
El Vado, in the mouth of Coyote Canyon,
7.1 miles north of Christmas Circle in Borrego Springs. El Vado means
"The Ford."
Location: 6 mi NW of Borrego Springs on Borrego Springs Rd (dirt),
Anza -Borrego Desert State Park, ask at Visitor Center
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NUMBER 635
LOS PUERTECITOS
Captain Juan Bautista de Anza's second expedition marched through this
little pass December 19, 1775 on its way to strengthen Spanish colonization
in California. Many of the 240 members of the party were recruited from
Mexico to be the first residents of San Francisco. They had camped the
preceding night somewhere in the wide flats just east of this monument.
Location: On State Hwy 78 (P.M. 93.8), 1.6 mi E of Ocotillo Wells
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NUMBER 639 PALM SPRING
Here Mexican pioneers coming to California between 1862 and 1866 rested
among the palms; here, too, came mountain men, the Army of the West, the
Mormon Battalion, a boundary commission, '49ers, a railway survey team, the
Butterfield Overland Mail stages, and the California Legion. This was the
site of the Butterfield stage station built in 1858 by Warren F. Hall.
Location: On Vallecito Creek Rd, 1.6 mi E of County Rd S2 (P.M.
43.1), 6.3 mi SE of Agua Caliente Springs, Anza-Borrego Desert State Park

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NUMBER 647 PUERTA / BUTTERFIELD OVERLAND MAIL ROUTE
This pass, Puerta, between the desert and the cooler valleys to the north,
was used by the Mormon Battalion, Kearny's Army of the West, the
Butterfield
Overland Mail stages, and emigrants who eventually settled the West. The
eroded scar on the left was the route of the Butterfield stages, 1858-1861.
The road on the right served as a county road until recent years.
Location: Blair Valley, 0.5 mi E of County Rd S2 (P.M. 23.0), 5.8 mi
S of State Hwy 78, Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
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NUMBER 673 SAN GREGORIO
Somewhere in this narrow valley, perhaps on this very spot, the Anza
Expeditions of 1774 and 1775 made their camps. Water for the 240 people and
over 800 head of stock on the 1775 march was obtained from a series of
wells, deeper than the height of a man, dug into the sandy bottom of the
wash.
Location: Borrego Sink, 3 mi SE of Palm Canyon Dr and Peg Leg Rd,
Anza-Borrego Desert State Park; ask at Visitor Center
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NUMBER 750 PEG LEG SMITH MONUMENT
Thomas L. Smith, better known as 'Peg Leg,' 1801-1866, was a mountain man,
prospector, and spinner of tall tales. Legends regarding his lost gold mine
have grown through the years, and countless people have searched the desert
for its fabulous wealth. The mine could be within a few miles of this
monument. more info
Location: Henderson Canyon Rd, 1,000 ft N of Pegleg Rd, Anza-Borrego
Desert State Park
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NUMBER 785
SANTA CATARINA
This spring was named by Captain Juan Bautista de Anza when his overland
exploration party camped here on March 14, 1774, on the journey that opened
the Anza Trail from Sonora into Alta California. Anza's colonizing
expedition of 1775, consisting of 240 persons and over 800 head of
livestock, camped here the night of December 23.
Location: Santa Catarina Springs, 10 mi NW of Borrego Springs
(4-wheel drive dirt rd), Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, ask at Visitor
Center
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NUMBER 793 SAN FELIPE
VALLEY AND STAGE STATION
Here the southern trail of explorers, trappers, soldiers, and emigrants
crossed ancient trade routes of Kamia, Cahuilla, Diegueno, and Luiseņo
Indians. On the flat southwest across the creek, Warren F. Hall built and
operated the San Felipe home station of the Butterfield Mail, which operated
from 1858 to 1861. Later the station was used by Banning Stages and by the
military during the Civil War.
Location: On County Hwy S2 (P.M. 15.9), 0.9 mi NW of intersection of
State Hwy 78, near Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
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source: California Historical Landmarks in San
Diego County visit:
http://ceres.ca.gov/geo_area/counties/San_Diego/landmarks.html |