Keys Desert Queen Ranch
Keys Desert Queen Ranch
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File:Desert Queen Ranch - house.jpg | |
Location | Joshua Tree National Park, San Bernardino County, California, USA |
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Nearest city | Twentynine Palms, California |
Coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Built | 1894 |
Architect | McHaney,Bill; Keys,William F. |
Architectural style | No Style Listed |
NRHP Reference # | 75000174 [1] |
Added to NRHP | October 30, 1975 |
The Keys Ranch is the prime example of early settlement in the Joshua Tree National Park area. Bill Keys was the area's leading character, and his ranch is a symbol of the resourcefulness of early settlers. The ranch is an extensive complex of small frame buildings built between 1910 and Keys' death in 1969. Keys pursued both ranching and mining to make a living in the desert.[2]
William F. Keys was born at Palisade, Nebraska in 1879. After working as a ranch hand and smelter worker, he was a deputy sheriff in Mohave County, Arizona. During a time in Death Valley, he befriended Death Valley Scotty, becoming involved in a swindle that resulted in the so-called "Battle of Wingate Pass". He arrived in the Twentynine Palms, California area in 1910. In the area that became Joshua Tree National Park, he became acquainted with local outlaw and cattle rustler Jim McHaney, taking care of him in declining health. Keys eventually took over McHaney's properties after McHaney's death, gradually expanding what became the Desert Queen, its name borrowed from the nearby Desert Queen Mine.[3]
Keys married Francis M. Lawton in 1918, and they had seven children together, three of whom died and were buried at the ranch. During a dispute over the Wall Street Mill, Keys shot and killed Worth Bagley. Keys was convicted of murder and went to San Quentin Prison, where Keys educated himself in the library. Keys was paroled in 1950 and was pardoned in 1956 through the efforts of Erle Stanley Gardner, author of the Perry Mason novels.[3]
Mining equipment at the ranch includes an arrastra and a stamp mill for ore processing. Other buildings include an adobe barn, a schoolhouse, a tack shed, machine shed, cemetery and a variety of houses and cabins.[3]
Park rangers provide guided walking tours of the ranch from October through May. Tours are limited in size and should be booked in advance.
Contents
Gallery
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Desert Queen Ranch - school house 1.jpg
School house
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Desert Queen Ranch - school house 2.jpg
School house
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Keys Ranch guest house.jpg
Guest house
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Desert Queen Ranch - gold mill.jpg
Oxen pulled mill used to crush ore during gold extraction
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Desert Queen Ranch - Closed Area sign.jpg
Closed area no trespassing sign
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Desert Queen Ranch - crane.jpg
Flood control wall and crane used to build it
See also
- Cow Camp, Jim McHaney's outlaw camp
- Wall Street Mill
- Barker Dam
References
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External links
- Keys Ranch Guided Walking Tour - official site at Joshua Tree National Park
- Keys Ranch: Where Time Stood Still - National Park Service historic lesson article
- Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) No. CA-2347, "Desert Queen Ranch, Twentynine Palms vicinity, San Bernardino, CA"
- HABS No. CA-2347-A, "Desert Queen Ranch, Keys Ranch House"
- HABS No. CA-2347-B, "Desert Queen Ranch, Storehouse"
- HABS No. CA-2347-C, "Desert Queen Ranch, Guest House"
- HABS No. CA-2347-D, "Desert Queen Ranch, Schoolhouse"
- HABS No. CA-2347-E, "Desert Queen Ranch, North House"
- HABS No. CA-2347-F, "Desert Queen Ranch, Tack House"
- HABS No. CA-2347-G, "Desert Queen Ranch, South House"
- HABS No. CA-2347-H, "Desert Queen Ranch, Machine Shop"
- Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. CA-111-A, "Desert Queen Ranch, One Stamp Gold Mill"
- HAER No. CA-111-B, "Desert Queen Ranch, Huntington Mill"
- Desert USA article about Keys Desert Queen Ranch
- Digital Desert 360 immersive image of the Desert Queen Ranch
- Pages with broken file links
- Pages with reference errors
- Joshua Tree National Park
- Historic house museums in California
- Museums in San Bernardino County, California
- History of the Mojave Desert region
- History of San Bernardino County, California
- Buildings and structures in San Bernardino County, California
- National Register of Historic Places in San Bernardino County, California
- Ranches on the National Register of Historic Places in California
- Historic American Buildings Survey in California
- Historic American Engineering Record in California
- Historic districts on the National Register of Historic Places in California