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Parade ground at Fort Tejon, California, June 2006. The restored
barracks are at left and the commanding officer's quarters are at
the center, to the right of and behind which are stabilized but
unrestored officers' quarters. Split rail fences outline the
foundations of buildings that have not been rebuilt.
Fort Tejon, California, is a former United States
Army outpost which was intermittently active from June 24,
1854, until September 11, 1864. It is located in the Grapevine Canyon (La Cañada
de las Uvas) area of Tejon Pass along Interstate 5, the main route through the
mountains separating California's Central Valley from Los Angeles. The fort's
location protected the San Joaquin Valley from the south
and east. Its mission was to suppress stock rustling and protect
settlers from attacks by Native American
tribes, including the Paiute
and Mojave, and to monitor the less aggressive
Emigdiano living nearby. The Emigdiano, who were closely related to
the Chumash of the Santa Barbara area, had
several villages near Fort Tejon and were generally cooperative
with the European settlers and the Army.
History
At the urging of Edward Fitzgerald Beale,
Superintendent of Indian Affairs in California, Fort Tejon was
established by the U.S. Army in 1854. Fort Tejon was the
headquarters of the First U.S.
Dragoons until those regular army troops were transferred to
the East in July 1861 upon the outbreak of the American
Civil War. The fort was re-occupied by California volunteer
troops in 1863. Those units included Companies D, E and G of the
2nd California Volunteer Cavalry from July 6 to August 17, 1863 and
Company B of the 2nd California Volunteer Infantry, which remained
there until Fort Tejon was abandoned for good on September 11,
1864.[1]
The fort lay along the Stockton Los Angeles Stage Road and was
from 1858 a stagecoach
station on the Butterfield Overland Mail
following the same route as far as Visalia. From 1858, Fort Tejon was the western
terminus of the experimental US Army Camel Corps, which utilized the imported animals
in an effort to carry supplies across arid regions in the Southwest.
The great earthquake of 1857 that became known as the Fort Tejon earthquake was in fact centered
nowhere near Fort Tejon. The fort became associated with the
earthquake simply because the area near the epicenter was sparsely populated and the most
reliable report of the shaking was issued from the fort, nearly
93 miles (149.7 km) distant.
Fort Tejon is now Fort Tejon State Historic
Park, and is listed on the National Register of
Historic Places. Its original historic buildings have been
documented by the Historic American
Buildings Survey. Several buildings have been restored, and two
are partially open to visitors. The restored barracks contain
display cases of uniforms and a recreated troopers' quarters. The
commanding officer's quarters have several restored and furnished
rooms. Officers' quarters nearby are only stabilized in a state of
arrested
decay, with walls buttressed by masonry and lumber and tied
together with reinforcing rods. A quartermaster building has recently been
erected and houses materials used in Dragoon life and Civil War reenactments.
Several unrestored buildings are denoted by split rail fences along
the outlines of their foundations. A park office with Dragoon life
exhibits and restrooms is at the east end of the parade ground near
the parking lot by Interstate 5.
Fort Tejon is the site of frequent Civil War reenactments presented
by the Fort Tejon Historical Association.[2]
1857
Fort Tejon earthquake
The Fort Tejon earthquake occurred at about
8:20 AM (Pacific time) on January 9, 1857. It ruptured the San Andreas
Fault for a length of about 350 kilometers (225 miles), between
Parkfield and San Bernardino. Displacement
along the fault was as much as 9 meters (30 feet) in the Carrizo Plain but
less along the Palmdale section of the fault, closest to
Los Angeles. The amount of fault slip gives this earthquake a moment magnitude of 7.9,
comparable to that of the 1906 San Francisco
earthquake. Based on the (uncertain) distribution of foreshocks
for this earthquake, it is assumed that the beginning of the fault
rupture (the epicenter) was in the area between Parkfield and Cholame, about 60 miles northwest.
Nevertheless, it is usually called the "Fort Tejon" earthquake
because this was the location of the greatest damage, most of the
area being unpopulated at the time.
See also
References
- ^
http://www.civilwararchive.com/Unreghst/uncacav.htm#2ndcav
accessed 11-11-08
- ^
Fort Tejon State Historic Park pamphlet, State of California,
Department of Parks & Recreation, Sacramento, California,
1991.
East end of the restored barracks building. The unrestored
kitchen/mess hall is outlined by split rail fence to the left.
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Barracks interior showing soldiers' quarters.
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The day room in the barracks.
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Uniform items on display in the day room.
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One of the several uniform displays in the barracks.
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Model of Dragoon in the barracks.
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View of the barracks from the front porch of the commanding
officer's quarters. The split rail fence at the near end of the
barracks denotes the foundation outline of another barracks yet to
be restored.
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The quartermaster building.
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The interior of the quartermaster building showing materials
used during Dragoon and Civil War reenactments staged at Fort
Tejon.
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The restored commanding officer's quarters.
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A furnished room inside the commanding officer's quarters.
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The dining room inside the commanding officer's quarters.
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Bedroom for the children and servant on the second floor of the
commanding officer's quarters.
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Wolf rug in the adults' bedroom on the second floor of the
commanding officer's quarters.
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The roof of the commanding officer's quarters receiving new
shingles, showing the detail of roof construction.
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Officers' quarters. This building has been stabilized but not
restored, and is not open to the public. The interiors may be
viewed through the wire fencing.
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Detail showing the interior wall bracing needed to stabilize the
structure of the officers' quarters.
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Coordinates: 34°52′26″N 118°53′39″W / 34.874000°N
118.89430°W / 34.874000;
-118.89430