From prospectors' haunts in old ghost towns dating back to the Gold
Rush, to the now-almost-deserted roadside towns of Route 66, the history
of Southern California lives on through its abandoned towns and
buildings. Through old settlements and institutions, now left to decay
in the high desert or even in the middle of bustling, glamorous Los
Angeles, readers can get a glimpse into the waves of migration that
shaped the spirit of Southern California.
The story of the state seems to repeat throughout different decades:
California was perceived as the land of unlimited opportunities and
renewed hope for incoming migrants, yet often led to a harsher and more
challenging existence in real life. Nevertheless, the dreamers and
fortune seekers who moved out West, whether for gold, land, spiritual
reasons, health, or to escape the rapidly spiraling East Coast during
the Great Depression, always persisted. As they moved from one location
to the next to seek their fortune, their ambitions, failures, and lives
became encased in the places they left behind. This book is the story of
those people and places, and the enduring forces that created California
as it is today.