(One gets tired of saying "incredible." Yet, sometimes one has to simply repeat: "Incredible." If you don't want to read this blog entry, at least look at the photos at the end of it, at the almost perfectly preserved 100-year old miner's cabin high on a mountain in Joshua Tree National Park.)
Who were they, the people who lived here?
Lost to history. Lost
to anyone’s memories.
At one point, each man was some mother’s bundle of joy, fed
at her breast. Probably there was a
proud papa, although in that era papas always had to worry about another mouth
to feed. A burden? A treasure?
Both?
And as young/middle-aged/older men, here they were, in the
Mojave Desert in the area now known as Joshua Tree National Park, trying to
strike it rich or maybe just trying to eke out a living digging mines, and
living in this cabin, which we found on one of our hikes.
These men, all now lost to history, spent many years in this
cabin, day after day, night after night, while working on mines close by. Who in the heck were they?
Were there women here too in this rugged terrain? Was it a family that lived here? It’s doubtful because we have not read of
women at any of the mines. Likely as not
there were, but probably not as anyone’s wife.
It was a hard time for women then too.
They all meant something to someone once. And now there is no record of who they were,
or what they did here. Does anyone even
say something like “I think my great great grandpa worked on a mine in the
Mojave Desert……”
But their home is preserved, high on a remote mountain in
this National Park. It is almost the
same as they left it, probably 100 years ago.
They had dreams, wishes, hopes, and fears, as we all do, yet who were
they?
This home, built into rock walls in a very clever manner, provided
separate eating areas and sleeping areas.
The use of available materials is evident everywhere, attesting probably
to the fact that the mine or mines where they worked were not too
profitable. But maybe they were. There is no record of how successful the
mines were where they dug.
And to get to this rustic cabin requires a hike of some meaningful
magnitude. It would be classified as one
of moderate to moderate/difficult.
When people die, one of the saddest aspects is that so much
dies with them. So many memories, so
many experiences, so much knowledge. All
of the men who lived in this small shack are dead now, dead for many many
years. And we know nothing of
them—nothing about their lives, their loves, their fears, their dreams, their
families.
We love Joshua Tree National Park. The park has several areas like this that are
not advertised. Park employees are
forbidden to tell where they are, for fear that people will desecrate the
sites, as has been done in some of the areas that are easily accessible.
We asked a Ranger where one structure was that we had read
about, and he explained that it would be a criminal offense for him to tell
us. He was nice, and acknowledged that
we were not looters or vandals, but that was the policy.
We understand that fear, and that policy. Yet, we would like to visit many of these old
structures and ruins, and remember that all of the people who lived and worked
in those areas were people, like us, trying to make meaning out of their lives,
trying to find something like all of us do.
It is an interesting dilemma in a way—whether to keep
structures and sites a “secret” from the public to protect them. It makes 100% sense, and yet there is also
something about it that doesn’t. The
mining structures and homes have a limited life span anyway—rock slides, rot,
and rust have already destroyed many places.
In 50 years will some of those structures be gone anyway, even if people
do visit them? My guess is that any
structures or sites that require hard hiking are not likely to be looted
anyway, as most people who do this kind of thing have a respect for our natural
areas. But maybe I’m wrong about this
too. I’m sure the Park Service has data
that I don’t.
There are also Native American sites in this park of which
the public is unaware. It makes more
sense to me to keep those sites a secret until they can be adequately studied
and ways of viewing them can be created that preserve them. The Park Service would need a lot more
funding for that, but our government would rather give farm subsidies to tobacco
growers than adequately preserve our natural treasures for our
grandchildren.
So, we will continue to explore, and see if we can find
other historical areas. We are being
intentionally vague about the location of this incredible home. We don’t want people to go there and destroy
it, and anyone who really wants to find it will. Just get your hiking legs in shape, and go
where no man has gone before, for perhaps 100 years.
Vicky at the "entrance."
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