Skip to main content

Randsburg-Redrock Road


Randsburg-Redrock Road is located in the Mojave Desert of eastern Kern County in Fremont Valley.  The corridor mostly originated in 1873 as part of the Searles Brothers stage road between Mojave and their Borax plant in Searles Valley.  The remaining balance of the road east of Garlock was plotted after the opening of the Yellow Aster Mine and creation of Randsburg in 1896.  Randsburg-Redrock Road begins at US Route 395 near the community of Randsburg and terminates 20.5 miles to the west at California State Route 14.  




Part 1; the history of Randsburg-Redrock Road

What is now modern day Randsburg-Redrock Road was partially a segment of the western Searles Brothers stage road.  Said roadway connected from the Searles Borax Plant at Searles Valley west to Mojave beginning in 1873.  The road utilized a passage through Fremont Valley wedged between the Rand Mountains and El Paso Mountains.  The western Searles Brothers stage road can be seen on the 1882 Bancroft's map of California


In April 1895 Gold was discovered at the Yellow Aster Mine near Rand Mountain south of the Searles Brothers stage road.  In December 1895 the Rand Mining District was established which led to the formation of Rand Camp.  Rand Camp was located north of the Yellow Aster Mine and was quickly renamed as "Randsburg."  

A spur east of the Searles Brothers stage road would be constructed soon after the establishment of Randsburg.  Garlock was plotted near the junction of the Searles Brothers stage road and the Randsburg Road.  Eugene Garlock had set up a small community centered around a stamp mill built in 1896 to service ore from the Yellow Aster Mine.  

For a brief time Garlock would compete with Randsburg in terms of being an important hub servicing the Rand Mining District.  Garlock would lose much of the importance it had when the Kramer-Randsburg Railroad was completed by the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway circa 1898.  The Randsburg Railroad was constructed from Kramer Junction north to the community of Johannesburg which was located a short distance east of Randsburg.  

Modern Randsburg-Redrock Road can be seen on the 1915 United States Geological Survey map of Searles Lake.  The roadway can be seen originating at future US Route 395 just east of Randsburg.  The blue pin indicates where the roadway picked up Garlock Road and continued west on the former Searles Brothers stage road towards what is now California State Route 14 (former US Route 6) near Redrock State Park. 




Part 2; a drive on Randsburg-Redrock Road 

Pictured below is the western terminus of Garlock Road at Randsburg-Redrock Road.  Traffic can turn sharply left to go eastward towards Randsburg and US Route 395.  Westbound traffic makes a soft transition from Garlock Road onto Randsburg-Redrock Road towards California State Route 14. 


From Garlock Road the course of westbound Randsburg-Redrock Road takes 12.1 miles to reach California State Route 14.  The corridor often has dramatic views of storms in the southern Sierra Nevada range.  The corridor intersects Neuralia Road just prior to terminating at California State Route 14.  













Comments

Popular posts from this blog

2018 Mojave Road Trip Part 2; The deadly desert highway (California State Route 127 and Nevada State Route 373)

After leaving Barstow via Old Highway 58 my next destination was in Death Valley.  To access Death Valley from rural San Bernardino County required a trek on north on Interstate 15 to California State Route 127 which becomes Nevada State Route 373 at the state line. Along I-15 I encountered the road sign oddity that is Zzyzx Road about eight miles south of Baker.   Zzyzx Road is a four mile road that used to go to the Zzyzx Mineral Springs and Health Spa.   The spa was founded in the 1940s and the owner made up the name "Zzyzx" to claim it was the last word in the English Language.  The spa has been shut down since the 1970s and is now part of a Desert Studies Center for California State University. The southern terminus of CA 127 in Baker is located at I-15 exit 246.  CA 127 is a 91 mile north/south highway which runs to the Nevada State Line in Inyo County.  CA 127 is called Death Valley Road from I-15 northward.  South of CA 127 ...

Finding the Pre-Emption Road of New York State

  The Pre-Emption Road (or rather a series of roads named Pre-Emption Road) follows a survey line called the Pre-Emption Line, drawn in the early days of the United States. The story begins with Massachusetts and New York having competing land claims to modern day Western New York State that have their roots in colonial charters granted by the British. After the Revolutionary War ended, this land became the frontier of the nation and its settlement became a priority for the new American government. During this era, there were a lot of competing land claims that needed to be settled. It was no different with the land claims between New York State and Massachusetts. On November 30, 1786, Massachusetts and New York sent representatives to Hartford, Connecticut to resolve their competing land claims. In less than three weeks, the representatives had reached a compromise. Massachusetts would receive pre-emption rights, meaning the right to sell the land after the Indian title ...

What's In a Name?: When the Roads Really Do Tell a Story

  Our tagline on the Gribblenation blog is "because every road tells a story". Some roads tell different stories than others. Along our travels, we may see historic markers that tell us a little story about the roads we travel or the places we pass by. Some historic markers are more general, as to telling us who lived where or what old trail traversed between two towns. During my travels across New York State and other states or provinces, I pass by many historic markers, some with interesting or amusing references to roads. I wanted to highlight a few of the markers I've seen along my travels around the Empire State and help tell their stories. Those stories may be as specific as explaining the tales of a tree that was used to help measure a distance of eight miles from Bath to Avoca in Steuben County, as referenced on the Eight Mile Tree historical marker above. They may also help point the way along historical roads first used centuries ago, or may help tell a local l...