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At the top of the road they built 6 saw mills in 1854. The timber was brought down the San Bernardino Mountains to help build the City of San Bernardino, California and Southern California. Timber was sometimes called "Mormon Banknotes". The marker is in Waterman Canyon on California State Route 18, 0.5 miles West of Crestline, California [12]
San Bernardino: Mormon Trail Monument: 577: Mormon Trail Monument: W Cajon Canyon, State Hwy 138: San Bernardino: National Old Trail Monument: 781: National Old Trail Monument: On shoulder of NW corner of Colorado River Bridge, North K St.
According to the United States Census Bureau, Crestline has a total area of 14.0 square miles (36 km 2). 13.8 square miles (36 km 2) of it is land and 0.1 square miles (0.26 km 2) of it (1.00%) is water. Crestline is located within the San Bernardino National Forest; Lake Gregory is located in the center of Crestline.
On October 19, 1920 local hiking clubs gathered in the Log Cabin atop the Abercrombie & Fitch sporting goods store in New York City.The meeting was proposed by Meade C. Dobson of the Boy Scouts of America and organized by Major William A. Welch, general manager of the Palisades Interstate Park Commission to plan a system of hiking trails to make Harriman-Bear Mountain State Park more ...
The remaining road past Silverwood Lake is mountainous, narrow, and twisting, and not a prime mountain route to the San Bernardino Mountain resorts. The entire segment from Interstate 15 to the eastern terminus of State Route 138 at Mount Anderson Junction is known as the El Cajon-Skyline Forest Highway.
It is the only California state highway with an unpaved segment, which is a one-lane jeep trail on the northwestern face of the San Bernardino Mountains directly east of Summit Valley and northwest of Blue Jay. Since March 2011, this one-lane unpaved segment of SR 173 has been closed. [2] Through traffic should use SR 138 and SR 18.
An uncontrolled wildfire in San Bernardino County doubled in size overnight, exploding to nearly 17,500 acres Sunday morning from 7,122 acres.
Devore Heights, or Devore, is a residential rural neighborhood of the city of San Bernardino, California. It is located just north of the junction of Interstate 15 and Interstate 215, about 12 miles northwest of downtown San Bernardino. It is also the last town to pass through before taking the Cajon Pass to reach Hesperia, California.