The two largest incorporated cities in
the Antelope Valley are Palmdale and
Lancaster. Other incorporated cities
include California City, Ridgecrest and
Tehachapi. The remaining communities are
considered unincorporated communities
governed by their respective counties,
either Los Angeles or Kern.
Greater
Antelope Valley Region
Square Miles: 2,200
Population: 437,942
2005-2010 Projected: 477,263 (+8.98%)
Population Forecast: 780,504 by 2020
Lancaster
Elevation: 2,450 ft.
Square Miles: 94.2
Population: 133,703
(118,718 in 2000 Census)
Meetings: Lancaster City Council, 44933
Fern Ave., second and fourth Tuesdays, 7
p.m. Lancaster Redevelopment Agency,
second and fourth Tuesdays, 6 p.m.
Planning Commission, third Monday, 7
p.m. Antelope Valley Chambers of
Commerce (Lancaster and Rosamond),
monthly business luncheons, 11:30 a.m.
Information: 661/723-6000
Lancaster is a bustling community with a
growing number of industries, affordable
housing, employment, schools,
recreational opportunities and excellent
smog-free weather 300 days or more a
year. It is the ninth-largest city in
Los Angeles County and the third-fastest
growing. Los Angeles is a short
one-and-a-half hour drive on Highway 14.
Bakersfield, San Bernardino, and coastal
communities are easy commutes, too.
In
1876, the Southern Pacific railroad made
Lancaster one of its stops. That
milestone sparked growth in the Antelope
Valley. Most of the early settlers in
Lancaster were farmers who established
homesteads in outlying areas. Their main
shopping was done in Old Lancaster,
which today is located on East Lancaster
Boulevard near Cedar Avenue. There, you
will see the historic Western Hotel
(first built in the 1800s) and a number
of original buildings dating back to the
1930s. Among those are old county
buildings and a post office.
Thanks
to the Lancaster Old Town Site Board
(LOTS), “The Boulevard,” as it is fondly
called by old-timers, has been renewed
and well maintained. Trees and antique
light standards line both sides of the
street, which give the area a special
ambience.
The
city encourages citizens to get involved
with the formation of its new Downtown
Lancaster Specific Plan, which will
revitalize the downtown the district.
Up-to-date information about progress
and citizen-involvement opportunities
can be obtained by calling 661/723-6132
or visiting
www.celebratedowntown.org.
The
heart of the city is home to the
758-seat Lancaster Performing Arts
Center and Los Angeles County’s largest
regional library, which services nearly
100,000 cardholders. Downtown Lancaster
has become the major financial center of
the Antelope Valley, the site of a new
$25 million sheriff’s station and a
state-of-the-art fire station.
Lancaster’s population totals 133,703,
according to the California Department
of Finance. The city’s long list of
move-in incentives for new businesses
and available commercial land for
expansion make it an attractive place
for Los Angeles-area entrepreneurs to
grow their businesses.
Lancaster also is home to Clear Channel
Stadium (formerly The Hangar), the
city’s 6,850-seat municipal baseball
stadium and home to the Arizona
Diamondback-affiliated Lancaster
JetHawks baseball team. The stadium
opened in 1996. When not attracting
sellout crowds for baseball, the
facility hosts a variety of special
events such as concerts, fireworks
festivities, car shows and amateur
athletics.
One of
the major attractions in Lancaster is
the annual Antelope Valley Fair, which
has relocated to new quarters on 135
acres north of Avenue H and west of the
Antelope Valley Freeway. Groundbreaking
was held in 1999. New facilities include
two exhibit halls, a Watch & Wager
building, an RV park with restrooms and
showers, a grandstand with 7,000 seats,
a show arena and other assorted
structures.
Palmdale
Elevation: 2,655 ft.
Square Miles: 105
Population: 136,734
(116,670 in 2000 Census)
Meetings: Palmdale City Council, 38300
Sierra Hwy., Suite B, second Wednesday
of month, 6 p.m. Planning Commission,
first and third Thursdays, 7 p.m.
Palmdale Chamber of Commerce hosts
monthly (third Wednesday) business
luncheons at 11:30 a.m.
Information: 661/267-5100.
The
Palmdale economy is booming,
experiencing solid growth that is
reflected in rising housing values and
increased city revenue. Inflation still
registers in low single digits. The city
continues to be one of the
fastest-growing cities in the nation. To
give this growth some perspective, from
April 1, 1990 to April 1, 2000, Palmdale
mushroomed by 76.4 percent, according to
the 2000 U.S. Census. Employment is up,
crime statistics are down, and home
sales are brisk. Indeed, like Lancaster
and other neighboring communities, home
values have risen dramatically as well,
fueled in large part by the area’s
family-friendly environment,
affordability and record-low interest
rates.
Covering an area of more than 100 square
miles, Palmdale now has more than
143,000 residents, according to city
sources. It was the first community
within the Antelope Valley to
incorporate as a city, doing so on Aug.
24, 1962. The city has consistently
ranked in the top-10 fastest-growing
cities in the nation over the last 20
years. It is the sixth largest city in
Los Angeles County.
At the heart of the city is the Palmdale
Cultural Center at Palmdale Boulevard
and Sierra Highway. Styled in a Spanish
motif, the Cultural Center has undergone
a major renovation. Adjacent to the
Cultural Center is the Palmdale City
Library.
Poncitlan Square, a beautiful park
fashioned after a similar one in
Palmdale’s sister city, Poncitlan,
Mexico, was built in 1998. A new
development service building and a
Palmdale Courthouse were completed in
2000 and 2001, respectively. The
renovated 22-year-old Larry Chimbole
Cultural Center is located in the Civic
Center area and is bounded by Sierra
Highway and Palmdale Boulevard. The
21,800-square-foot building features an
upstairs auditorium that can accommodate
350 people in theater seating or 250 for
dinner, and three meeting rooms for 40
to 50 people. These new facilities are a
part of the city’s downtown
revitalization plan. The city also
opened a brand-new sheriff’s station in
July 2006.
Palmdale is home to some of the world’s
top aerospace companies, as well as a
continually growing number of high-tech
manufacturers. Top aerospace companies
such as Lockheed Martin, Boeing and
Northrop Grumman continue to have a
strong presence at Air Force Plant 42 in
Palmdale. Although space shuttle
modification has been transferred to
Florida, there’s a lot of important work
going on here. Work continues on such
programs as the F-35 Joint Strike
Fighter, the unmanned Global Hawk
reconnaissance aircraft, the B-2 stealth
bomber, the X-45A unmanned combat air
vehicle and the unmanned X-37 space
plane.
Palmdale Regional Airport, which is
owned and operated by Los Angeles World
Airports (LAWA) under a joint-use
agreement with the U.S. Air Force, is
located on a 61-acre site on the
property of Air Force Plant 42. The
terminal at 41000 North St. East first
opened on June 29, 1971. Since then,
LAWA has acquired an additional 17,750
acres of adjacent property for the
airport’s eventual development into a
large commercial airport. The airport is
poised to accommodate increased future
air travel if and when Los Angeles
International Airport (LAX) reaches
capacity.
With
more than 2,000 companies making
Palmdale home, the city embraces an
entrepreneurial spirit. Palmdale offers
a wealth of leased space, spec buildings
and land available for construction.
Land costs in Palmdale are very
attractive, often half that found in
other areas of California.
Moreover, a number of key incentives can
help reduce the cost of doing business
in Palmdale. The city is part of the
Antelope Valley Enterprise Zone and
hosts its own Foreign-Trade Zone.
Hiring, training and investment
incentives are also available to
qualified firms.
Health
care has taken some major steps forward
in Palmdale, which is one of the largest
U.S. cities without a hospital. That
unfortunate status is expected to change
soon. Construction of the Palmdale
Regional Medical Center began in 2005
and is expected to be completed in 2007.
The 250,000-square-foot facility is
being built by Universal Health Services
(UHS) on 37 acres near Tierra Subida and
Palmdale Boulevard. The new hospital
will feature OB/GYN services,
cardiac-catheterization labs,
pediatrics, general medical care and a
35-bed emergency room, the latter of
which will be the largest ER in the area
and double the number of ER beds
throughout the valley. The hospital will
open with 171 beds, to be composed of 32
intensive care beds; 108 medical
surgical, telemetry and pediatric beds;
25 obstetrics beds, and six neonatal
intensive care beds. UHS plans to
eventually add 32 more intensive care
and 36 medical surgical beds, giving the
hospital a total of 239 beds.
Filling
the health-care gap until the new
hospital opens is an urgent-care clinic
that opened in mid-2002 as part of the
South Valley Medical Center, which was
built by Antelope Valley Hospital. And,
in March 2003, Kaiser Permanente opened
a new medical office building in
Palmdale.
New
recreational facilities are a big part
of the city’s vision for the future.
March 25, 2004, marked the beginning of
construction of the “Vision for the
Future” park projects. The $42 million
project – funded in part by a $31.4
million bond assessment passed by
Palmdale residents – paid for a new
recreation center, swimming pool and
water park on the east side of Palmdale
and a new recreation center, swimming
pool, amphitheater and softball complex
on the west side. The city’s DryTown
Water Park & Mining Co. opened at
Palmdale Oasis Park in 2006. It features
a six-acre Old West mining town-themed
aquatic park with a 925-foot lazy river;
a 35-foot tower with three water slides
and a splash pool; 6,000-square-foot
children’s water playground; a food and
beverage snack bar with patio area; a
merchandise store; covered picnic area;
large grassy area for group outings, and
a community room. The budget for
Palmdale Oasis Park, which includes
DryTown Water Park, was $27.6 million.
In addition to the new water park, this
site also includes the Palmdale Oasis
Park Recreation Center, a 4.5-acre
landscaped area designed for community
events and a 12-acre flood retention
basin that will be landscaped to
accommodate soccer and football.
And, a
competition-size pool opened at Marie
Kerr Park in 2006. The city oversaw a
40-acre expansion of Marie Kerr Park at
30th Street West and Rancho Vista
Boulevard (Avenue P). In 2005 the park
received a stunning outdoor amphitheater
that is the site of summer concerts,
movies and other events.
The
city also has undertaken a traffic
signal-installation program and other
transportation projects. The city also
has committed more than $10 million to
improve some of its busiest surface
streets. The city completed its Avenue S
Corridor Improvement Project in June
2006.
Another major project is the $14 million
Palmdale Transportation Center, which
opened in 2005. The facility near Sierra
Highway and 6th Street East just south
of Technology Drive will be the
transportation hub of the Antelope
Valley. Site improvements include a
Spanish-style station terminal, plaza
area, Metrolink station platform,
parking lot and 45-foot clock tower. The
center features a Metrolink commuter
rail station, bus service, van-pool and
park-n-ride services with future
provisions for high-speed rail and
airport service. Bicycle and pedestrian
paths plus landscaping complement the
new center.
Also
in the works is a remodel of the
Antelope Valley Mall, and the opening of
a new 16-screen cinema complex at the
Antelope Valley Mall.
Surrounding Communities
Acton
Elevation: 2,700 ft.
Square Miles: 77
Population: 9,175
Meetings: The Acton Town Council meets
on the first and third Mondays (7:30
p.m.) at the Acton Community Club, 3742
Nickels St. The Acton Chamber of
Commerce, located at 32039 N. Crown
Valley Road, meets regularly at various
locations. Information: 661/269-5785.
Acton
was founded in 1887 by gold miners
working in the nearby Red Rover Mine.
The unincorporated community was named
after Acton, Mass. by one of the miners.
Henry Gage, who served as California
governor from 1899 to 1903, owned the
Red Rover Mine and unsuccessfully tried
to relocate the state capitol to Acton.
Today, Red Rover Mine Road, a familiar
exit off Highway 14, is the only vestige
of those “golden days” of yesterday.
Acton
is known as “The Gateway to the Antelope
Valley.” There is an element of the Old
West apparent when you drive through
this rural community. Gold, copper and
titanium ore were mined near Acton in
the 1800s. In those early days, a large
copper deposit was mined at the Mount
Emma Mine near Parker Mountain.
The
rugged Sierra Pelona Mountains to the
north and the San Gabriel Mountains to
the south ring the Acton area. Located
seven miles south of Palmdale, Acton is
commonly referred to by locals as the
Beverly Hills of the Antelope Valley, in
large part because many of its homes are
expensive mansion and ranch-style
properties on large lots. On the valley
floor, horse corrals sandwiched between
custom and semi-custom homes create a
remarkable equestrian panorama.
Acton
has its own Metrolink train station,
which is themed in an Old West style and
frequently used in movies, TV shows and
commercials. Riders on the Metrolink
trains can often spot large wild animals
grazing in the fields of the Shambala
Preserve, operated by actress Tippi
Hedren.
On
Third Street in downtown Acton there is
a western-style saloon called The 49er,
which was built in 1889. The saloon,
which is still open, has had a cafe
added to it.
Agua Dulce Elevation: 2,400 to 4,000 ft.
Square Miles: 25
Population: 4,000-plus
If you
like movie sets, stuntmen, horses and
rugged, rocky landscapes, Agua Dulce is
for you. The Agua Dulce area, about 25
miles southwest of Palmdale and 44 miles
north of Los Angeles, is a favorite
filming location for commercials and
movies because of its reddish, towering
rock formations and canyons. Moviemakers
love the authentic-looking backgrounds
that the monolithic Vasquez Rocks create
for westerns and science fiction films.
Vasquez Rocks is the community’s most
recognizable landmark.
The
hillsides of Agua Dulce are dotted with
million-dollar mansions where Los
Angeles commuters, stuntmen and
Hollywood executives live side-by-side.
Residents there appreciate the country
style, picturesque environment and easy
commute to jobs in the city.
Agua
Dulce, which means “sweet water” in
Spanish, was first inhabited by the
Tataviam Indians. The Vasquez Rocks
formations were a favorite shelter for
the tribe.
Between 1857 and 1875, Vasquez Rocks
served as a hiding place for the famous
horse thief and bank robber, Tiburcio
Vasquez. The California State
Legislature put a $15,000 bounty on the
infamous bandit’s head, and he was
finally captured on May 13, 1874, and
hanged on March 19, 1875. The area’s
high school now bears his name.
In the
1880s, farmers created the “Soledad
Township,” which was Agua Dulce’s
original name. Today, street names such
as Wagon Wheel Road, Yucca Hills, Zorro
Way, Coyote Trail and Durango Lane
remind us of the rich Old West heritage
of the area.
If you
are a pilot, you will appreciate the
190-acre Agua Dulce Airpark. The
fraternity of flyers is very organized
and has many activities for private
pilots.
Meetings: Boron Chamber of Commerce,
second and fourth Monday.
Boron
is a small community, and people here
like it that way. U.S. Borax, one of
Boron’s two major employers, operates
California’s largest mine here and is
one of the state’s oldest companies. The
Air Force is the second largest employer
and provides jobs for most of the
working people in Boron. It has been
like that for 30 or 40 years.
While
there is not a lot of growth in Boron,
there is a concern for preserving the
history of the area. In the center of
town, on Twenty Mule Team Road, you will
find the Twenty Mule Team Museum and the
Vernon P. Saxon Jr. Memorial Aerospace
Museum. Each contains historical items,
such as mining displays, railroad
memorabilia and jet fighters from former
wars.
California
City Elevation: 2,437 ft.
Square Miles: 203.6
Population: 11,504
(8,385 in 2000 Census)
Meetings: California City’s City Council
meets on the first and third Tuesday of
the month. City Hall is located at 21000
Hacienda Blvd.
Information: 760/373-8661
As one
of the fastest-growing regions in
Southern California, California City has
been undergoing significant change. It
has an evolving and diverse business
base. Recent developments include
Ellison Plaza, which addresses the
city’s need for shopping, entertainment,
dining and lodging. Microtel Inns &
Suites, a 103-unit hotel, opened in
2006. Developed by homebuilder Michael
Ellison, the commercial center is
designed to help California City attract
retailers, the most important of which
is a major grocery store. Ellison builds
homes ranging in size from 1,525 to
6,250 square feet, with prices starting
in the low $200,000s.
Other
developments include a $50 million
Hyundai Kia Motor Co. test track and
facility, which opened in 2004 and
created new jobs for the area. The
facility is expected to eventually
employ about 100 people. The car company
chose California City primarily because
of its dry, warm and sunny desert
climate, which is ideal for
stress-testing new cars and improving
automotive design.
A
new high school and elementary school
are under construction, more than $30
million in new construction and
home-building permits have been issued,
and a new gated golf course community
was in development.
The
city also is home to the California City
Correctional Center, a 2,305-bed prison
that employs 551 people; a McDonald’s
restaurant, and a Rite Aid store. A
40-acre industrial park near the
California City Municipal Airport is in
the works.
More
people are moving into California City
because they have discovered what
residents here have enjoyed for a long
time. Home and land prices are very
affordable. Not only that, you can add
excellent weather, clean air, good
schools and safe streets. While this
charming little community of about
11,000 is relatively new, it has all the
enhancements of larger towns – including
incorporation. There is easy shopping, a
wonderful Central Park and a
professionally designed PGA 18-hole and
par-3 golf course.
Developer N.K. “Nat” Mendelsohn had a
dream of building a large master-planned
leisure community in the area as early
as 1956. He envisioned converting M&R
Ranch, a 208-square-mile stretch of land
northeast of Mojave, into a residential
area that would house up to 1 million
people by the turn of the century.
Mendelsohn’s planned community was
premature, but he created a lot of hope
and enduring loyalty in California
City’s residents. Like Mendelsohn, many
of them still think their town is a
“sleeper.”
California City also is a favorite
destination for off-road enthusiasts.
From Cal City dirt bikers and ATVers fan
out across the expansive desert and ride
into the Red Rock area and old mining
towns such as Randsburg, population 77.
Lake Los
Angeles Elevation: 2,664 ft.
Square Miles: 282
Population: Approximately 13,000
(11,523 in 2000 Census)
Meetings: Lake Los Angeles Rural Town
Council, monthly at Vista San Gabriel
Elementary School, third Wednesday, 7
p.m.
Lake
Los Angeles is located about 10 miles
east of Lancaster off Avenue J. The town
is surrounded by rolling hills and
large, rocky buttes. Mother Nature has
sprinkled a generous helping of Joshua
trees into the mix to make the landscape
even more interesting.
The
name Lake Los Angeles may be misleading.
“Los Angeles Buttes” would be a more
descriptive name for this community of
12,800 people.
Before
the 1960s, Lake Los Angeles did not
exist. The only people who lived in the
area were a few ranch families. Then, in
1967, a group of developers bought a
4,000-acre parcel of land there. They
subdivided it into 4,465 lots and
created a man-made lake to help spur
home sales.
People
all over the world bought the lots, but
by 1971 only 14 houses had been built.
After that, home building fizzled in
Lake L.A. until the early 1980s. The
town came alive again because many
people were back working in the
aerospace industry. However, Lake L.A.’s
period of prosperity was short-lived. A
few years later, the economy softened
and development slowed.
The
water supply for the lake was shut off
in 1981 and the lake dried up. People
tried to restore the water, but failed.
Eventually, the lake was converted into
a community park.
As in
other parts of the Antelope Valley, the
area is undergoing growth. Movie
producers have found Lake Los Angeles a
wonderful spot for location shooting.
One of the favorite places for filming
is Club Ed on 150th Street East, just
south of Avenue K. Another location is a
fairly new “Four Aces” set on Avenue Q
and 145th Street East.
The
Antelope Valley Indian Museum is the
biggest attraction for tourists in Lake
Los Angeles. In addition, Saddleback
Butte State Park and the Alpine Butte
Wildlife Preserve attract outdoor
enthusiasts.
Lake
Elizabeth/Lake Hughes Elevation: 3,200 ft.
Square Miles: 139
Population: Approximately 3,000
Meetings: The Lakes Town Council,
monthly, first Saturday, 8:30 a.m., in
the Lake Hughes Community Center.
Picture this: Green rolling hills,
picturesque farmhouses and barns,
winding fences and two beautiful blue
lakes. Only two miles apart, the lakes
cover about 235 acres of water and are a
favorite haven for swimmers, fishermen
and picnickers.
The
3,000 or so residents who live here call
their home “The Lakes” because it’s
easier than saying Lake Elizabeth and
Lake Hughes. A true delight for those
who love a pastoral setting, “The Lakes”
is just 20 miles west of Palmdale.
In the late 1800s, resident farmers grew
hay and grapes in “The Lakes” area. By
the 1920s, resort development had begun.
The first housing development came in
1922. In the years that followed, the
area evolved slowly to what it is today.
You
cannot fish or swim in half of Elizabeth
Lake because it is privately owned. The
other half is owned by the U.S. Forest
Service, and the public is invited. You
cannot water ski on the lake, but
powerboats are permitted, provided
engines are no more powerful than 10
h.p.
To
access Lake Hughes, you have to enter
through a resort there. The resort
offers developed campsites, with all of
the necessary conveniences, including
hot showers.
Leona
Valley Elevation: 2,900 ft.
Population: Approximately 2,200
Leona Valley, a small, unincorporated
community of about 2,200 people, is one
of the Antelope Valley’s best-kept
secrets. Located 12 miles southwest of
Palmdale, the desert landscape changes
to green farmland. Instead of Joshua
trees, you will find rolling hills,
cherry orchards and horse barns. It is
known primarily for its agriculture,
which is highlighted during the annual
Leona Valley Cherry Festival.
This
valley is a long narrow valley separated
from the Antelope Valley by Ritter
Ridge, along the San Andreas Fault. The
valley is about a mile wide and 25 miles
long. Around Leona Valley, large
homesteads were sold and sub-divided by
developers. What you see now are large,
custom houses with lots of acreage.
Littlerock Elevation: 3,000 ft.
Square Miles: 1.5
Population: 1,402 (2000 Census CDP area)
Meetings: Littlerock Town Council,
monthly, second Thursday, 7 p.m., Alpine
Grange Hall, 87th Street East and Avenue
T-8.
As you
drive through Littlerock on Highway 138,
fruit stands are everywhere. There are
great fresh-off-the-tree bargains. If
you are a do-it-yourselfer, you can pick
your own at the U-Pick orchards. Either
way, people return every year to buy
fruit or pick it. At last count, there
were more than 700 acres of deciduous
fruit trees in this Rockwell-esque
community.
If you
are an antique enthusiast, Littlerock
should whet your appetite. There are
numerous little antique shops lining the
main street. “Oldies but Goodies” can be
bought in Littlerock – well below prices
in other areas.
In
1870, Littlerock was a scheduled stop
for the Butterfield Stage Coach Line.
Nowadays, it has an estimated population
of 12,003, which has tripled since 1991
when only 4,000 residents lived here.
People
who want acreage and horses love
Littlerock because large lots are
inexpensive and zoning allows animals.
There
are not a lot of sidewalks because
residents like the rural influence. It
is better for riding horses through
town.
Littlerock’s Everett Martin Park,
located at 92nd Street East and Avenue
U, features a summer swimming pool,
basketball court, playground areas, and
picnic tables and barbecues.
Mojave Elevation: 2,787 ft.
Square Miles: 75
Population: 3,751 (3,836 in 2000 Census)
Meetings: Mojave Town Council, monthly,
third Wednesday, 7 p.m., in the Mojave
Veterans Building. Mojave Chamber of
Commerce, monthly, fourth Thursday 7:30
a.m.
At the
junction of Highways 14 and 58, in East
Kern County, Mojave is a welcome oasis
for tired travelers, truckers and
commuters. Fast-food restaurants and
service stations line both sides of the
highway. It is located at the northwest
corner of the Mojave Desert.
Mojave
is home of the Mojave Spaceport,
America’s first inland spaceport and
location of the first private space
flight. The spaceport drew international
attention when SpaceShipOne took off
from here on June 21, 2004. SpaceShipOne
was the first privately funded, built
and operated manned craft to reach
space. It was built by Burt Rutan’s
Scaled Composites, which was awarded the
$10 million Ansari X Prize after the
craft repeated the feat twice within a
two-week window in October 2004. After
winning the prize, Rutan remarked that
the isolation of Mojave fosters such
invention. “Innovation is what we do
here because there’s not much else to do
in Mojave,” he said. Rutan, also known
as the designer and builder of the
famous Voyager aircraft that flew around
the world non-stop with his brother Dick
at the controls, exemplifies the strong
aerospace spirit that thrives here.
Mojave
has experienced other aviation
milestones, as well. As home to Edwards
Air Force Base, it was the site of the
first supersonic flight and the first
landing of the space shuttle. As
motorists who drive through Mojave can
attest, the Mojave Airport also serves
as a vast storage yard for hundreds of
commercial airliners, which are flown
and parked here because of its
aviation-friendly climate.
With a
population of just under 4,000, Mojave
is small but probably the most important
transportation center in the High
Desert. According to Caltrans estimates,
more than 30,000 vehicles pass through
the main intersection of Highways 58 and
14 every day. That total will increase
to 61,600 vehicles by the year 2020 –
just during weekdays.
Since
1876, Mojave has continued to be an
important hub of transportation
activity. In its early days, it was a
freight stop for 20-mule team freight
wagons hauling borax from Death Valley
to the railroad. Then, Mojave
experienced a sudden boom period.
Gold
was discovered in 1876 and continued to
support the town’s economy, in a
boom-to-bust fashion, until the
beginning of World War II. At that time,
gold prices fell, and mining operations
closed.
Luckily, the Marines built an auxiliary
pilot training base in Mojave during the
war years, which bolstered the dwindling
economy. In addition, the Army’s bombing
range nearby and Muroc Army Air Field,
18 miles east of town, brought in more
money. In 1958, the Marine base was
turned over to Kern County. Then, in
1972, the base became the East Kern
Airport District and grew into a large
aviation/aerospace industrial complex.
With that growth came a name change. The
Mojave Airport District, as it is called
today, employs people from all parts of
the Antelope Valley.
As you
drive out of Mojave on your way to
Bakersfield, you will see rows and rows
of wind-machine propellers flashing
rhythmically in the sun. They represent
another large industry for Mojave – wind
power. While this relatively new
enterprise does not share the rich
history of mining and transportation in
the area, it does bring employment and
income to its residents.
Pearblossom Elevation: 2,570 ft.
Square Miles: 40
Population: 2,435
Always
make sure you have a full tank of gas
before driving out into the desert.
Pearblossom is a last-chance fill-up
spot if you are traveling between
Palmdale and San Bernardino on Highway
138. If you want a snack, you can get
that, too, in this delightfully small
“wide place in the road.”
If you
drive fast through Pearblossom, you will
have to be alert, or you may miss a
large part of the town. Pearblossom is
located 15 miles southeast of Palmdale
on Pearblossom Highway. Its boundaries
cover a 40-square-mile area, from 106th
Street East to 155th Street East, then
north to Avenue S and south to Fort
Tejon.
About
2,400 people live in Pearblossom.
Founded in 1928, Pearblossom was
originally called Mertel. It was a place
where people came to retire. That
changed when people started moving in
from Los Angeles.
There
are about 20 to 25 businesses in
Pearblossom and just one elementary
school. The hot spot in town is the Town
& Country Market, where residents shop
and meet friends. Indeed, there is a
unique friendliness inside the store
that passes through to the rest of the
town.
Quartz
Hill Elevation: 2,405 ft.
Square Miles 4.5
Population: Approximately 25,000
Meetings: Quartz Hill Town Council,
monthly, third Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. Quartz
Hill Chamber of Commerce hosts monthly
luncheons at 11:30 a.m.
Quartz
Hill is exactly that – a hill filled
with quartz. This community of about
25,000 people takes its name from a
small hill at 45th Street and Avenue M
that contains a large amount of silicone
dioxide, or quartz. Primarily a
residential area, Quartz Hill covers an
estimated 4.5 square miles.
Residents pride themselves in the rustic
qualities of the town, where zoning
ordinances still allow horses. In
addition to the equestrian properties,
there are large developments of custom
and semi-custom homes that have
beautiful views from half-acre and
full-acre hillside lots.
Fishing
in the California Aqueduct nearby and
horseback riding on the many horse
trails offer leisure-time activities for
residents.
Quartz
Hill was once a top almond-producing
area for the United States. In the
1950s, there were more than 2,000 acres
of almond orchards there. Home
developments were added over the years,
and the orchards gradually disappeared.
The 50-year-old Almond Blossom Festival
and Parade, held annually in the spring,
is all that is left of the almond era.
Rosamond Elevation: 2,415 ft.
Population: Approximately 16,000 (14,349
in 2000 Census)
Rosamond, located 15 miles west of
Edwards Air Force Base and 20 miles
north of Palmdale, is an unincorporated
community in southeastern Kern County.
With an estimated population of nearly
16,000 people, Rosamond is one of the
fastest-growing communities in the
Antelope Valley. Home prices are lower
in Rosamond than they are in Palmdale
and Lancaster, and the commute to Los
Angeles is not that much farther.
Although Rosamond demonstrates a robust
growth profile, the community offers a
slower pace than Lancaster or Palmdale
and is a wonderful place to raise
children. The downtown area remains
small because new shopping centers have
been built in the outlying areas close
to housing developments.
Rosamond was originally established in
1877 as a community owned by Sothern
Pacific Railroad. It was named
‘Rosamond’ after the daughter of one of
the railroad company’s officials. Two
historical influences may be seen in
Rosamond – gold mining and the air base.
Gold, which was discovered in Rosamond
in 1894, accounted for the majority of
Rosamond’s early economic growth. The
old Tropico Gold Mine, originally called
the Lida Mine and still standing on a
Rosamond hillside, employed many of the
town’s residents. Meanwhile, Muroc Army
Air Corps Base, as it was called in the
‘40s and early ‘50s, provided additional
income for the community. Renamed
Edwards Air Force Base in 1956, the
installation has become Rosamond’s
largest employer and an economic
mainstay for the entire Antelope Valley.
Many of Rosamond’s residents commute to
points south.
Two
of Rosamond’s main attractions – Willow
Springs International Raceway and the
Exotic Feline Breeding Compound – bring
lots of visitors each year. Another
outstanding feature is Rosamond Sky
Park, an upscale housing development
that offers pilots an opportunity to
park their airplanes in backyard
hangars. The park has runway access to
Rosamond Airport.
Sun
Village
Elevation: 3,000 ft.
Population: Approximately 8,200
Originally, Sun Village was an all-black
development that was started after World
War II by a white woman known only as
Mrs. Marble. Her company was called the
Sun Village Land Corp. This
predominantly ethnic community is
located near 90th Street East and
Palmdale Boulevard.
Although Sun Village has its own chamber
of commerce now, it continues to battle
for its identity as a full-fledged town.
There are only two visible markers
showing the community’s boundaries – two
signs put up by county supervisor’s
office in 1993. On paper, the
community’s boundaries have been defined
by the Los Angeles County Water District
and the Los Angeles County Assessor’s
Office.
In the
1950s, Frank Zappa’s first band, “The
Blackouts,” played in the Sun Village
area.
A
colorful woman activist named Daisy
Gibson was responsible for much of Sun
Village’s early progress. With a small
group of spirited individuals, she
fought for many of the things most
people took for granted: paved roads,
fire hydrants and water. Part of
Gibson’s early campaigns was waged as a
talk-show hostess on Palmdale’s radio
station, KUTY.
On
June 16, 1965, Jackie Robinson Park was
dedicated after its baseball
hall-of-fame namesake. With the help of
L.A. County, a softball field was built,
including tetherball courts and a sand
play area. A large multipurpose center
was also built.
Worshiping in the
Antelope Valley
Church attendance is strong in the
Antelope Valley. Hundreds of different
faiths are represented, among them
Apostolic, Baha’i, Baptist, Bible,
Christian, Christian Science, Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints,
Disciples of Christ, Evangelical,
Islam’s, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Jewish,
Islamic, Lutheran, Methodist,
Pentecostal, Presbyterian, Roman
Catholic, Religious Science, Science of
the Mind, Seventh Day Adventist,
Unitarian/ Universalist and The
Vineyard.