European settlement of Baja California began in 1697 with the
founding of a Jesuit mission in Loreto. Until their expulsion
in 1768 the Jesuits extended a chain of missions over the
southern two-thirds of the peninsula to Santa Maria, their last
one, founded in 1766. Their Franciscan successors, with far
greater governmental support, given for geopolitical reasons,
founded a mission at San Fernando Velicatá and pushed on
overland to San Diego whence the California mission system was
extended. Baja California thus served as a strategic corridor
to the frontier province up which personnel, livestock, plant
propagating materials, tools, and church furniture were carried.
It was regarded as a more secure route than the one by sea
against strong northwest winds and a south-setting current.
Briefly, from 1775 to 1781, another overland route from Sonora
was used, but that was cut by the successful Yuma Indian
revolt.
In 1773 Baja California was transferred to the Dominican order
which missionized the gentile Indians of the Frontier between
San Fernando Velicatá and San Diego and tended the
declining older Jesuit establishments through the end of Spanish
colonial times and into the period of Mexican independence.
Records are less abundant in the first half of the
19th century than in earlier mission times,
but until after the middle of the latter century there is no
report of wheeled vehicles or roads for them anywhere in the
peninsula.
Note 1
Transport was exclusively along mule trails, a network of which
came to connect widely spaced missions and other oasis
settlements and ranches. Less affected by accidental topography
than roads, these trails run fairly directly between points of
interest. In rugged, subsequently abandoned regions, as around
Mission Santa Maria, they can still be followed.
A backwash from the California gold rush brought a wave of
prospectors into Baja California, and by 1870 a number of
successful gold, silver, and copper mining properties had been
located as well as a myriad of unsuccessful ones. For a time
even high grade copper ores were hauled as much as 50 kilometers
to coastal landings on muleback, as from Mina de San Fernando
near San Fernando Velicatá, to the coast at San
Carlos.
Note 2
The need for heavy equipment such as boilers and stamp mills,
however, was an inducement to construct wagon roads to coastal
points, and once they had been established other mines would tie
into them. By 1910 the peninsula had a broken net of mine
roads, especially in the Northern Territory.
Note 3
The development of irrigated agriculture in the Mexicali Valley,
the accession of the powerfully independent and locally
interested Governor Esteban Cantú (1915-20), and the
advent of Prohibition in the United States combined to
accelerate economic development in the northern part of Baja
California. Cantú constructed engineered roads across
difficult terrain from Mexicali to Tijuana and from Tijuana to
Ensenada. Trucks and cars were available duty-free from across
the border. Ranchers and farmers in the valleys and uplands
north of San Quintin found or constructed tracks that were
passable, at least in dry weather, in a widespread net.
In 1920 the geologist, Carl H. Beal, made an extensive
reconnaissance of the peninsula for Marland Oil Company of
Mexico seeking promising sites for petroleum drilling. The
results of his work were not published until 1946,
Note 4
with a map which includes his amazingly extensive itinerary,
most of it followed by pack train. In January, 1922, apparently
at the request of the U.S. military district in San Diego, still
interested in Baja California as a hangover from World War I, he
prepared a 27-page single-spaced typescript entitled "Baja
California-Route Studies."
Note 5
In it he identifies all the sections a wheeled vehicle might
traverse, noting some wagon roads that an automobile should not
attempt. He concludes that an automobile might be able to
travel from Tijuana to the onyx mine at El Marmol, though
evidently wagons were used to transport the onyx at that time.
The road from Tijuana to Mexicali was established, and from it a
number of passable tracks connected many of the ranches and
mines on the relatively level plateau of the Sierra Juarez. The
track south from Mexicali to San Felipe was passable at some
times but carried so little traffic that someone stuck in the
sand might die of thirst.
Farther south some disconnected roads from mine to coastal
embarcation were noted. The most extensive set had been built by
the El Boleo copper mine radiating out of Santa Rosalia. Only
the one connecting that town with Mulegé, however, was
passable, others having been washed out and not repaired.
Finally, two passable roads led south from La Paz to Todos
Santos on the Pacific Coast and to San José del Cabo at
the tip of the peninsula. For both roads and trails he is
meticulous in noting where water can always be or only sometimes
be obtained, commenting further on its quality. The uncertainty,
even danger, involved in traversing the peninusla is implicit.
General and ex-President Abelardo Rodriguez, who became governor
of the Northern Territory in 1923, constructed the first paved
road, from Tijuana to Ensenada. Even earlier road construction
began in the Southern Territory of Baja California with a road
pushed to Magdalena Bay in 1921 and others southward to Todos
Santos and San José del Cabo. With its widely scattered
intensively cultivated oases, the Southern Territory's road
building followed the classic pattern. If the terrain obstacles
were not too severe, roads would be built to tie together the
settlements, following the topographically easiest course, but
accepting detours if minor settlements could be brought into the
system. Though his economic resources were far smaller, the
governor of the Southern Territory was able to tie
Comondú to Mulegé in 1927, connecting with the
system of the Boleo copper Company which had independently laid
roads south from Santa Rosalia to Mulegé and westward
over the divide to San Ignacio.
The Automobile Club of Southern California and Governor
Rodriguez, cooperating almost like sovereign powers, undertook
to drive wheeled vehicles south from San Quintin to connect with
the road system of the southern Territory. In late 1926 an Auto
Club group make it to Rosario,
Note 6
and in 1927 a combined expedition of the Mexican military,
including the Governor, and the Auto Club drove to San Ignacio,
then over the Boleo Company's roads to Santa Rosalia and
Mulegé. Mining roads were followed where they existed,
routing the track back and forth across the
peninsula.
Note 7
In 1928 the Auto Club installed its distinctive signs as far as
Mulegé, noting mileages obtained in the previous
years.
Note 8
Random roadside vandalism, intensified
by Mexican nationalism that resents the foreign signs, has
obliterated or removed all the signs where the road is still
followed. A few survive in spots infrequently visited.
For trucks or well equipped field vehicles the road was
negotiable from Tijuana to Cabo San Lucas, but few tourists
attempted it until after World War II. Onyx was hauled north
from El Marmol and Cerro Blanco,
Note 9
and in the
decade of the 1940's shark liver buyers sought all coves where
fishermen might put in. In the late 1940's out of season
tomatoes were trucked from the Cape Region to the U.S. border;
on a weekly schedule during the 1940's a 1932 Cadillac limousine
carried mail and an amazing number of passengers from Tijuana to
Santa Rosalia; some used passenger cars were driven from the
duty free border zone for sale in La Paz, and modest but growing
numbers of adventurous American tourists pushed southward, many
to write books about their experiences.
Note 10
In 1943 Ulises Irigoyen published in Mexico City a massive
two-volume work on Baja California.
Note 11
While it discussed the geography and history of the region in
not too accurate detail, as its title suggests the book was
primarily a strong appeal to the Mexican national government to
build a paved highway the length of the peninsula. Such an
enterprise would lead to economic development and strengthen the
region's ties to Mexico. The effects of the work were slow in
emerging, but when in 1972 the national government did build the
highway the expenditures were justified on the same grounds.
During World War II the road had been paved south from Ensenada
to Santo Tomas. In 1947 and 1948 a major project undertook to
extend the paving to San Quintin. Grading was accomplished that
far, but funds for asphalt pavement were exhausted at San Telmo,
some 75 kilometers short. For twenty years the graded surface,
becoming ever more washboarded and rutted, carried heavy truck
traffic from the irrigation developments at Colonia Guerrero and
San Quintin.
In 1956 a remarkable individual road-making achievement was
carried out. Arturo Gross, a part time miner, prospector, and
mine promoter, and long a resident of the Laguna Chapala and
Calamajué district was offered 10,000 pesos ($800) by the
State government if he could drive his truck up the East Coast
from Calamajué to San Felipe. Carrying a pick, shovel,
and some blasting material he did it. Within weeks tourists
followed with four-wheel-drive vehicles. The northern part of
the road has been improved, and now there are tourist fishing
camps on the formerly completely uninhabited coast.
Curiously, it was the Southern Territory, with far smaller
economic resources than the Northern State, that sustained the
impetus of road building and improvement, both north and south
of La Paz. Soon after 1950 a road was pushed south-westward from
Loreto, until then accessible by road only from the north, to
join the main peninsular road at Santo Domingo. This road made
Mission San Xavier, the outstanding example of Jesuit mission
architecture, accessible to tourists. A road was graded
northward from La Paz to Villa Insurgentes by 1954, and paving
proceeded steadily to the point by 1961. For the next few years,
repairing washouts caused by severe storms seems to have
occupied the road-building resources of the Territory, but in
1968 a major program paved the road south to San José del
Cabo. At the same time a project was instituted to complete a
paved road north from Villa Insurgentes to San Ignacio, the most
northerly oasis in the Southern Territory. A completely new
alignment was chosen, crossing the uplands in an
east-northeasterly direction to reach the Gulf Coast south of
Loreto. Grading preceded paving, often by a year or more, but
work progressed steadily and reached San Ignacio in 1972.
Note 12
Extending the northern part of the paved road south from San
Telmo did not begin until 1968 and in two years progressed only
20 kilometers, and in a year and a half more, to early 1972,
made only a like distance, though surveying and grading for a
modern road had begun beyond San Quintin. Suddenly the
operation was accelerated; federal money became available, and
two major contracts were let to grade and pave the entire 600
kilometer intervening stretch to San Ignacio, working from each
end. Hundreds of trucks and graders and thousands of laborers
were employed. Various stages of construction, from bulldozing a
brecha to final hardening of roadside gutters in cuts,
were carried on simultaneously over one-hundred kilometer
stretches to hasten essential completion of the highway by the
end of 1973.
The heavy investment in the new highway is being justified by
its attraction of vastly increased numbers of American tourists
and the employment that will be created in providing them with
services. The American visitors prior to the paving of the
highway have been of two classes, the drivers who traveled
slowly, enjoying the scenery and the nearly empty country,
camping out and spending relatively little money; another group
flew to luxury resort hotels, particularly for fishing. The
Mexican government's planning assumes that with a paved highway
the additional drivers will seek and pay for luxury hotel
accommodations and several rather luxurious hotel-restaurants
have been established at formerly unpopulated sites as well as
new hotels at established resorts such as Cabo San Lucas and Loreto.
The "Baja 1000 Rough Road Race" has attracted annually a further
set of tourists, concerned to tear up the countryside rather
than look at it. The hope that the paved highway would end this
desecration of the landscape was vain. In 1973 the race was run
cross country on a newly staked out track. It has been continued
with completely new lineation but the course has been shortened
to 500 kilometers.
Though it is only two lanes wide, less than ten meters in the
least traveled middle of the route, the new highway was designed
and built by modern engineers given free rein. Curves are broad
and gentle, grades are moderate, and visibility is generally
good. Since water for construction was always scarce and
sometimes had to be hauled scores of miles, an ingenious, water
sparing roadbed construction scheme was devised. Crushed gravel,
sand, and cement were mixed dry, spread and graded into place,
sprinkled with water and then rolled. The resulting surface is
smooth and hard though how it will hold up will be determined in
years ahead. The final surface is oiled and covered with fine
gravel.
Except where the highway is actually cut into a hillside, it
runs on top of an artificial ridge more than a meter high and
only slightly wider than the roadbed. To build this ridge, earth
was scraped from as much as a hundred yards on both sides,
destroying the vegetation, much of it unusual endemic plants,
and leaving a scar that will remain for decades if not for
centuries. Protection against washouts rather than maintaining
the wildly beautiful desert environment clearly had precedence
in the engineer's plans.
There are almost no places that a car can be stopped safely, and
getting off the ridge on which the road rests is difficult and
even dangerous. Clearly the Baja California Highway will funnel
tourists directly to the resort centers. Pausing to examine the
extraordinary flora and the attractive desert terrain, the
features that attracted the driving tourist of the past, is
discouraged and often made impossible. One could drive to La Paz
without being conscious of more than a long dull highway
interrupted by a few settlements.
The alignment of overland transport routes in Baja California
has changed in one rather consistent pattern from earliest
historic times. The earliest mule trails and probably their
Indian trail predecessors went rather directly from water
source to water source. These streams and tanks were settlement
sites, and in general are concentrated in the rugged uplands of
the center and eastern edge of the peninsula. The mines which
gave rise to the first wagon roads tended also to be in the
rougher country, but they sought the shortest and easiest
route to the coast, either Pacific or Gulf. The pattern of
swinging back and forth across the peninsula that marks the
original road for wheeled vehicles derives from two tendencies,
the effort to utilize the mining roads whenever feasible and
seeking lower and leveler land. Water sources and settlements
were still connected if possible, but a number of oases that had
held missions -- San Borja, Santa Gertrudis, Guadalupe, and San
Xavier -- either long did without any road connection or were
tied to the main road by long, poorly maintained side tracks.
The new highway continues this trend. The biggest shifts in
alignment involve staying far out on the flats of the Vizcaino
desert almost to the latitude of San Ignacio before heading east
to that point, thus by-passing the former mining and trading
centers of Calmalli and El Arco, and following the Gulf coast
well south of Loreto before crossing the drainage divide into
the Magdalena Plains. The mission oases of La Purisima,
Comondú, and San Xavier are by-passed.
In its most recently completed sector, from Rosario to San
Ignacio, the highway has been consistently displaced one to
three kilometers west of the old road except west and north of
San Ignacio where there is a completely new alignment. All the
tiny settlements along the old road that eked out a precarious
existence serving tourists have been by-passed as have some
larger ones. In some instances, their residents have been able
to move to a new site on the highway, but this requires more
capital than many possess. Further the new alignment, in
contrast to the old, is not focused on hitting the infrequent
spots where water can be obtained.
Finally, the long term residents who have depended on tourists
geared their services to the minimal requirements of the
rough-road camper. The tourist whom the new highway is designed
to attract will be served by new entrepreneurs from Mexico City
who will provide, at high prices, what might be found in an
American resort. Profits are going to the investors and managers
imported from the mainland. Mexico's problems of underemployment
and her need to develop lucrative economic activities cannot be
ignored. One can only hope that the benefits gained by the
crassest touristic development of the wild lands and shores of
Baja California will be worth it.
Notes
-
It is possible that a wagon road ran over the 25 miles between
the silver mines of Santa Ana and La Paz. The mines were opened
in 1748 and worked sporadically for several decades. No mention
of such a road has been discovered, however. Zephyrin
Englehardt, Missions and Missionaries in
California, Volume 1, Lower California,
Santa Barbara, 1929. The drawings of Fr. Ignacio Tirsch,
presumably describing Baja California in 1767, the time of the
Jesuit expulsion, offer two views of San José del Cabo,
Plates VIII and IX, and several other scenes in the Cape area.
San José is shown as a busy port, but the paths in and
out of town are only for riding animals, and many of them, but
no wheeled vehicles appear in his several scenes. The
Drawings of Ignacio Tirsch: a Jesuit Missionary in Baja
California. Narrative by Doyce B. Bunis, Jr.
Translation by Elsbeth Schulz-Bischof, Dawson's Book Shop, Los
Angeles, 1972.
Return to citation
-
Homer Aschmann, "Recuperación de la vegatación
desertica," Calafia, Vol. 3, No. 3 (Oct. 1976), pp. 52-57.
Return to citation
-
Jorge Engerrand and Trinidad Paredes, "Informe relativo a la
parte occidental de la región Norte de la Baja
California" in "Memoria de la Comisión del Instituto
Geológico de México que exploró la
región Norte de la Baja California." Parergones del
Instituto Geológico de México, Vol. 4,
1913, pp. 277-306.
Return to citation
-
Carl H. Beal, Reconnaissance of the Geology and Oil
Possibilities of Baja California, Mexico, Geological
Society of America, Memoir 31, 1948.
Return to citation
-
A copy of the typescript, evidently the original, is in my
possession.
Return to citation
-
"Report of the trip made by C. B. Salisbury and J. E. McLean of
the Automobile Club of Southern California from Los
Angeles into Lower California for the Purpose of Ascertaining
Road Conditions as well as Outing and Hunting Possibilities, and
to Take the Necessary Notes and Data with which to Compile a
General Map, Particularly of the West Coast Portion." (1926)
Automobile Club of Southern California, Los Angeles.
Return to citation
-
Personal communication from G. P. Parmalee, Automobile Club of
Southern California, retired.
Return to citation
-
Manuscript of lecture given by G. P. Parmalee, June 1967,
entitled "History of Road Signing in California."
Return to citation
-
Personal communication from Paul Jacot of San Diego, California
who trucked onyx for his father's mine in the 1940s.
Return to citation
-
Reference must be made to the Baja California
Guidebook by Peter Gerhard and Howard E. Gulick, Arthur
H. Clark Co., Glendale, Calif. four editions beginning in 1956.
With its accurate discussions of road conditions and mileages to
the tenth of a mile, becoming lost -- even on side roads in
uninhabited areas -- was no longer an unavoidable risk.
Return to citation
-
Ulises Irigoyen, Carretera Transpeninsular de la Baja
California. Editorial America, Mexico, 1943, 2 vols.
Return to citation
-
The dates are from my own observations and personal
communications from Howard E. Gulick of Glendale, California.
Return to citation
Although he was born in San Francisco, Homer Aschmann took
his early schooling in Los Angeles. He later attended Los
Angeles Junior College and eventually earned his A.B. and M.A.
degrees at U.C.L.A., the latter in 1942. Following four years
in the U.S. Air Force, Dr. Aschmann resumed his studies,
taught at San Diego State for two years, and eventually earned a
Ph.D. at University of California, Berkeley, in 1954. Since
that time he has been a professor of geography at the University
of California, Riverside. He has also taught summer classes at
a number of universities and has done extended geographic
fieldwork in Baja California, Columbia, several Atlantic
islands, and in Chile. He has been involved in numerous
professional associations and in 1972 received the Award for
Meritorious Achievement in Geography from the Association of
American Geographers. He has many writings to his credit in the
geographic field.