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Daggett: Life in a Mojave Frontier Town (Creating the North American Landscape)
 
 
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Daggett: Life in a Mojave Frontier Town (Creating the North American Landscape) [Hardcover]

Professor Dix Van Dyke (Author), Professor Peter Wild (Editor)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

Creating the North American Landscape September 5, 1997

When twenty-two-year-old Dix Van Dyke arrived in Daggett, California, in 1901, the town was a wild and raucous frontier settlement, with barrooms and brothels, silver mines and land swindles, cattle drives, and shootouts at the Bucket of Blood saloon. Dix, a ranch-boy with no formal education but whose father and uncle were writers, became the town's unofficial historian.

Edited and introduced by award-winning poet and nature writer Peter Wild, this is Dix Van Dyke's account of how the twentieth century arrived in a California frontier town. Located a hundred miles outside Los Angeles and just east of Barstow in the Mojave Desert, Daggett attracted a rich assortment of settlers lured by the wealth of nearby silver mines or the promise of cheap farmland conjured up by dubious irrigation schemes. With wit, humor, and a writer's eye for the telling detail, Dix describes the delicate beauty of the desert and the human hopes that often ended in folly there.

Among the citizenry: • Mother Preston, a madam of sumptuous proportions and valorous spirit, capable of locking the head of an unruly client in the crook of an immense arm and pummeling his face with her windmilling fist.

• Death Valley Scotty, who claimed to have a fabulously rich gold mine at a secret location north of Daggett. Only decades later was it discovered that Scotty's wealth came from an eccentric Chicago millionaire.

• Bill Frakes, who tried unsuccessfully to breed "coyote-killing sheep," and who prowled the wild riverbottoms tracking real and imagined malefactors.

Dix also reveals the Van Dyke ranch as an unlikely crossroads for intellectuals, some of them famous. Conservationist JohnMuir's visits included one memorable argument with Dix's Uncle John. Muir admirers may be surprised at the tangle of family relationships begun when daughter Helen married Daggett resident Buel Funk -- a story never told in print before.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

The town of Daggett, Calif., was pretty unremarkable for a 19th-century frontier town. It had its mining booms, saloon brawls, famous and infamous characters, yet under the pen of its self-proclaimed local historian Van Dyke, the town's history, inhabitants, unpredictable wind and floods, all come to vibrant life. In 1901, Van Dyke and his father, Theodore, came to Daggett set on farming, but found the desert conditions too harsh for any crop. Ironically, Theodore Van Dyke was something of an authority on agriculture and wrote several books on the subject, yet he couldn't coax an ear of corn from the uncooperative soil. Father and son, "planted, coddled, and cared for various kinds of vegetables. The plants came up all right, but they seemed appalled by their surroundings." They finally managed to scratch out a living, battling floods, wind and dryness. Wild has done an admirable job of editing Van Dyke's manuscripts and newspaper columns into a book that is accessible, if rather old-fashioned in tone and slightly disjointed. Told in the third person, the account is filled with subtle humor and irony. The characters who inhabit Daggett range from ordinary townspeople to such notable people as John Muir or the outlandish Death Valley Scotty. Mary Beal, a botanist studying desert plants, becomes an integral character in the lives of the Van Dykes. Today, visitors can still find the town of Daggett, but it isn't much of a tourist attraction, and if not for Van Dyke's chronicles of its past, it would most likely be forgotten.

Copyright 1997 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Van Dyke's account of turn-of-the-century Daggett, California, in the Mojave Desert region first appeared as a series of columns in the local newspaper in the early 1950s. The author paints a vivid, insightful portrait of the West. His father was a writer and a businessman who helped orchestrate the piping of water to San Diego; his uncle John wrote The Desert (1901), an early and still well-known study of the region. Van Dyke's colorful character depictions and frequent defiance or willful ignorance of the country's natural limitations would not be out of place in descriptions of the West today. Essential for collections concerned with California and its desert regions and likely to be of interest to both lay and scholarly readers concerned with the subject.?Charles V. Cowling, Drake Memorial Lib., SUNY at Brockport
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 232 pages
  • Publisher: The Johns Hopkins University Press (September 5, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0801856256
  • ISBN-13: 978-0801856259
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 6.3 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #420,715 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Insider point of view on an Old California town., July 31, 2004
This review is from: Daggett: Life in a Mojave Frontier Town (Creating the North American Landscape) (Hardcover)
As a California historian, columnist for the OLD CALIFORNIA GAZETTE and author of SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA MISCELLANY, I found this book to have a wonderful insider's point of view on Daggett's history and culture. This is the kind of book that readers--who have an interest in local and regional history--will find interesting and infomative for it recounts the events and personallities in Daggett as written in the local newspaper by an "Old-timer" resident, hence an insider's knowledege is shared and if not for this book... who would ever know?
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
THE ARRIVAL . It was a shabby, dreary-appearing little village of three or four dozen houses, sprawled out on both sides of the railway tracks. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
borax company, borax mine, freight team, grading land, range horses, great canal
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Van Dyke, Los Angeles, Death Valley, Peter Wild, Mojave River, Old Bob, Old Mike, Camp Cady, Soda Lake, San Bernardino, John Muir, Alan Golden, Southern California, Bill Frakes, Billy Smithson, Calico Mountains, Frank Parish, Fred Johnson, Mary Beal, Ord Mountain, Santa Fe Railway, Silver Valley, Casa Del Desierto, Civil War, Elephant Mountain
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