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Opened
as a trade route between Santa Fe and Los Angeles, the
Spanish Trail became a major link connecting New Mexico
and southern California from 1829 to 1848. It was used
chiefly by New Mexican traders, who found a ready market
for woolen goods--serapes, rugs, blankets, bedspreads,
yardage--in the California settlements. Pack trains with
as many as a hundred traders left Santa Fe in annual caravans.
The textiles were exchanged in California for horses and
mules, which were then marketed in New Mexico. Traders
returning to Santa Fe often drove as many as a thousand
or more animals, some of them, perhaps, having been stolen
from the herds of the California missions and ranchos.
As
they passed through Paiute country in Utah and Nevada,
some traders victimized the Indians by taking slaves to
add to their stock of trade goods. Women and children
were in demand as slaves both in California and New Mexico.
Occasional
travelers followed the trail to California, among them
American trappers, entrepreneurs, and government agents,
as well as settlers from New Mexico. Mounted Indians were
commonly seen along the eastern sections of the trail.
The
Spanish Trail consisted of a 1,120-mile northward-looping
course traversing six states--New Mexico, Colorado, Utah,
Arizona, Nevada, and California. Hostile Indian tribes--Apaches,
Navajos, and Mojaves--prevented the opening of a direct
route between Santa Fe and Los Angeles. To circumvent
the great canyons of the Colorado River system, the trail
was pushed northward to the open country at Green River,
Utah.
The
word "Spanish" is something of a misnomer since the trail
was in use only during the time when the region traversed
was part of Mexico. The term comes down to us in the writings
of American explorers who, as they traveled along sections
of the trail, concluded that it had been opened by Spain.
Thus it appears in their diaries and maps as the "Spanish
Trail." John C. Frémont was one of those who used
the name. After 1848, when sovereignty of the region passed
to the United States, American travelers in some numbers
described the "Old" Spanish Trail, and their writings
provide clues for anyone seeking its location.
The
trail was simply that--a trail; it was not used by wheeled
vehicles until 1848 when the Mormons developed the western
section for wagon travel between Salt Lake City and southern
California. It was the first extensively used route to
cross the region now within the boundaries of Utah. The
Utah sector, the longest of any within the trail states,
was 460 miles. Recently completed field research has revealed
the actual location of the trail throughout its course
from Santa Fe to Los Angeles.
The
Spanish Trail literally began northwest of Santa Fe at
Abiquiu, the last European settlement during the trail
days; between New Mexico and the frontier outpost of Cucamonga
in California was a distance of about a thousand miles.
In Colorado, the trail passed through or near Ignacio,
Durango, Dolores, and Dove Creek. It crossed into Utah
near the tiny settlement of Ucolo, about fifteen miles
east of Monticello.
In
order to head the great canyons of the Colorado and Green
rivers, the Spanish Trail held to a northwest course as
far as the present town of Green River. From Green River,
the trail crossed the northern part of the San Rafael
Swell, missing its rugged interior. From here, the trail
carried early travelers on an easy course along the wide,
well-watered floor of Castle Valley, and then crossed
the Wasatch Plateau to continue through the Great Basin,
via Sevier River Valley, the Markagunt Plateau, the Parowan
Valley, and the Escalante Desert. On the southern edge
of the Escalante Desert, the trail passed up Holt Canyon
to Mountain Meadows, a favorite resting place, known in
the trail days as "Las Vegas de Santa Clara." Leaving
the meadows, the trail turned down the tributaries of
Magotsu Creek and Moody Wash to the main Santa Clara River,
through the homeland of the Southern Paiute Indians.
At
a point where the Santa Clara River makes a bend to the
east, the Spanish Trail left the river and climbed over
the Beaver Dam Mountains, following a course practically
identical with that of old U.S. Highway 91. On the west
side of the Beaver Dam Mountains, on Utah Hill, the trail
entered a forest of Joshua trees marking the eastern limits
of the Mohave Desert. The Spanish Trail then left Utah,
cut across the northwest corner of Arizona, and traversed
southern Nevada, following the Virgin River for some distance.
The good springs at Las Vegas stopped every caravan. The
trail then crossed the Mohave Desert to southern California.
Threading Cajon Pass, caravans reached San Gabriel and,
finally, Los Angeles, at the end of the trail.
C.
Gregory Crampton
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