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Thursday, November 11, 2010

B-BAR-H Ranch Community Association November 10, 2010, Meeting Highlights

 
 
On Wednesday, November 10, 2010, the B-BAR-H Community Association (Neighborhood Watch) Meeting was held and neighbors discussed the following topics:

•Welcome New Neighbors & Residents. 
We welcomed one new neighbor who lives on Paintbrush Trail. 

•Neighborhood updates.
There are 17 homes available within the B-BAR-H Ranch -- either vacant, for sale, for rent or in foreclosure. 

B-BAR-H Ranch Address change.  We are unincorporated.  We are not a part of Desert Hot Springs.  We are a part of the B-BAR-H Ranch.  This has been a meeting topic since the beginning of our meetings.  The residents at the meeting agreed to use the address for our unicorporated area as follows:

Your Name
House Number/Street Name
B-BAR-H Ranch, CA 92241

Example:
Joe Smith
67580 Paintbrush Trail
B-BAR-H Ranch, CA 92241

This address will be recognized by the USPS and USPS mail will be delivered.  A conversation with the Postmaster confirmed our intention.  Fedex and UPS will not be able to recognize the B-BAR-H Ranch name because there systems use post office zip codes only.  Our mail goes through the Desert Hot Springs post office using 92241 just like Sky Valley, Desert Edge and other unicorporated areas.  Please note, Sky Valley residents and Desert Edge residents made their name changes just like we  are doing.  They are both unincorporated areas using the 92241 zip code.

The B-BAR-H Ranch is unicorporated and does not belong to the city of Desert Hot Springs.  Residents want to remain a part of the B-BAR-H Ranch.  Our Arch names our area, and we are proud to be a part of the B-BAR-H Ranch history.

•Barricades to obstruct traffic update. 
We are in the process of notifying empty lot owners.  Some of the empty lot owners have been notified and agreed to our safety improvement efforts.  Residents want to prevent make-shift roads through empty lots.  Illegal roads through empty lots is very dangerous.  People are using the empty lots for dumping.  We need to prevent this behavior within the B-BAR-H Ranch.  Residents will meet after the holidays to proceed with creating barricades to prevent through traffic in empty lots. 

•Neighborhood incidents update. 
There were two car break-ins at the B-BAR-H Ranch within the past month or two.  Residents believe the barricades on the empty lots will help prevent vandalism.  Some residents heard gun fire.  Sheriff's Dept was notified immediately.  Whenever there's suspicious activity call anonymously  -- Sheriff's Dept 760.836.321. 
 
Sagebrush Trail resident took one Neighborhood Watch sign and will have it installed at the south end of the ranch.   

•Road maintenance.
Special thanks to B-BAR-H Ranch residents Francis, Renee, Walter and Fred who took it upon themselves to clear two intersections of heavy debris/sand/rocks/ etc. to make driving safe at these intersections.  Now, we will rely upon support from the County to help us install permanent road improvements in a proactive approach to preserve the intgrity of the roads in the B-BAR-H Ranch.

Residents were encouraged to attend the January 13, 2011, DHS MAC meeting to discuss further details pertaining to proper permanent road improvements within the B-BAR-H Ranch.  Items on the January DHS MAC Meeting Agenda are:
  • We are seeking Riverside County assistance and cooperation. CSA115 residents want to see a copy of the original law and any/all amendments pertaining to CSA115 public records.
  • The discussion of road maintenance within CSA 115 for "drainage improvements." We need to get the roads within CSA115 properly set up so all the debris, etc. does not accumulate and cause further damage to the roads' surfaces.  Drainage improvements are cost-effective, permanent improvements which will keep the roads' surfaces cleared and proactively maintain the integrity of the surface to minimize deterioration.  Some of the roads' surfaces are already beginning to show deterioration due to the lack of these permanent improvements when the roads were installed.
  • The discussion of "right-of-way perfection" for the turn off at Mountain View Road and 20th Avenue.  This item has been on the table for discussion for a very long time and closure needs to be made to get this task completed.
•CERT (Community Emergency Response Training).
The B-BAR-H Ranch has two residents Certified by Riverside County as CERT members.  CERT = Community Emergency Response Team.  This is a free course offered by Riverside County. It is an excellent course.  Please call 951.955.4700 to register for an upcoming class.  Classes are held at the Roy Wilson Training Center in Thousand Palms.  There's still room in the December 2010 class.

•Elec Co DHS Tax on statements. 

It was brought to our attention some residents are being taxed by the city of Desert Hot Springs for electricity.  Residents were asked to check their electric bill.  This should not be happening. 

•Future plans & ideas. 

The B-BAR-H Ranch Arch topic was discussed.  Residents were informed there's non-profit status being formed by one resident.  If application has been made the B-BAR-H Ranch Community Association has not been notified of any formal actions.  We have discussed this topic in meetings about 3 years ago, but we do not have any current information action has been taken.  Residents have had discussions with the Historical Society to help maintain the Arch.  If there's any work being done regarding the Arch, please contact Webmaster@PaintbrushTrail.com with information to prevent any duplication of efforts.  Our goal is to preserve the Arch.  This is a team/neighborhood effort and something we have been discussing for a very long time.  Your ideas/suggestions/help is appreciated.

Our next meeting is being scheduled for February 9, 2011 at a resident's home. An email with deatails will be sent in 2011.  Our meeting time changed from 6 p.m to 7 p.m. to make it more convenient for more people to attend.  The B-BAR-H Ranch Community Association (Neighborhood Watch) meeting will be held on the second Wednesday every other month.  Please join us to keep up with neighborhood activities.

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Friday, February 20, 2009

The B-BAR-H Ranch near Desert Hot Springs, California 92241

Photos Courtesy of the Desert Hot Springs Historical Society.
To see more photos, Click Here.


On April 7, 1927, Lucienne Hubbard, a mogul in the film business, and Charles Bender, Hubbard’s son-in-law, purchased land from the Southern Pacific Land Company which was the beginning of the B-bar-H Guest Ranch. The size of this soon-to-be popular playground for the celebrities was 240 acres. Charlotte Stocks, Lee Anderson’s daughter, remembers bringing date shoots to the B-bar-H from her family’s date farm. Citrus and other products were marketed under the B-bar-H brand. Cattle and poultry were also raised at the Ranch.

Lucienne Hubbard was a professional writer, war correspondent and contributor to The Reader’s Digest. He spread the knowledge of Desert Hot Springs with its marvelous hot medicinal water far and wide. It was very exclusive, and was only by invitation that one could visit the B-bar-H Ranch. Eventually the temporary structures were replaced with permanent and more modern and deluxe accommodations. The present-day location would be from 18th to 20th Streets and from Bubbling Wells Road to Mountain View in Desert Hot Springs.


In l937 the B-bar-H Guest Ranch was opened to the public. In the April, 1939, issue of “Desert Magazine,” an ad for the ranch carries a Garnet, California address with a notation that it is in the Coachella Valley near Palm Springs. Joe Gottchalk was the desk clerk, bellhop, did the marketing with their station wagon, took money to the bank and ran errands as a teenager in l939-l940. He picked up guests at the train station in Garnet, rode a horse to deliver a telegram to Janet Gaynor at the Singing Trees Ranch near the B-bar-H on 20th street, and took guests gambling at the private membership Dunes Club in Cathedral City (today we would know that location as Date Palm Drive near Highway 111). There were also card games and slot machines at the Ranch.

Over the years, authors such as Les Starks, Cabot Yerxa and John Hunt have written about the B-bar-H and listed the many celebrities who frequented it and Cabot Yerxa’s Trading Post. Cabot tells of their interest in his pet rattlesnakes, lizards, and the items he sold at the Trading Post. Many visitors rode horses to h is place to just sit and visit. Jack Krindler, who originated the Twenty-One Club in New York City, was one of his visitors as well as Sol Lessor, producer of the Tarzan pictures.

Because Lucienne Hubbard was an outdoorsman, an expert rider and horseman, the atmosphere of the ranch was entirely Western in character. The ladies had many attractive Western outfits. In the dining room some folks were dressed like real cowhands; at the next table might be people just in from the city all decked out in swank evening clothes; however, if they stayed at the ranch for any length of time, they changed to Western-style clothes. Cabot writes that no matter how many millions they had or how much space in the newspapers was devoted to their names, they all had fun. Louis Sobol wrote of being initiated into the Order of Pamperers. The code of the Pamperer is never to do today what can be done tomorrow. There was laziness in the air. Charlie Bender was the host and manager of the B-bar-H Ranch, his wife helped organize picnics, campfires and riding parties nearly every day. They visited Seven Palms, Willow Hole, various mountain canyons along with trips to Two Bunch Palms, a beautiful oasis close at hand. Two Bunch Palms was once owned by the B-bar-H Ranch in the late l940’s. They traveled to Cabot’s place on Miracle Hill. Many of the guests at B-bar-H were from the nearby Circle B Ranch owned by Warner Baxter.

As time went on, a swimming pool, tennis court and rodeo arena were added to the property with stretches of grass and gorgeous beds of flowers which delighted the guests. Rodeo competitions were held in the arena, and on Saturday nights there was Western dancing at the recreation hall with live bands from Palm Springs. The accommodations and comforts of this guest ranch became famous and guests came from New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, San Francisco and Hollywood. Often large groups from all walks of life came to stay a weekend, a month, or the season. Bankers, financiers, men prominent in political life and big businessmen rubbed elbows with movie stars, those from the legitimate stage, famous writers and well-known musicians.

In l940, Jay Kasler (grandfather of Richard N. Roger MD of Rancho Mirage) paid $42,000 for the 240-acre B-bar-H Ranch. Mr. Kasler owned the Free Sewing Machine Company (second only to the Singer Company) which was sold to a Japanese company in l960. Mr. Kasler also founded City National Bank. Dr. Roger’s family spent almost every weekend and holidays at the ranch. They came from Los Angeles via old Highway 99, now Varner Road. The cash register from the B-bar-H bar is now located at Cabot’s Pueblo Museum. Dr Roger related that in l949 he took some 78 RPM records from Cabot’s Eagle’s Nest and returned them to Cole Eyraud (past resident/protector of Cabot’s Museum) in l974.

The present-day Covington Park in Morongo Valley was once a part of the B-bar-H holdings. The horses were moved up there for the summer. The 640 acres were purchased in l946 for $10 an acre. In l950 Mr. Kasler closed the Ranch to the public and maintained it for family use. In l959 he donated Covington Park to The Nature Conservancy.

In l978, Leonore “Lee” High purchased the B-bar-H property. It has been divided into ¼-acre individual lots, many of which have sold for more than $90,000. Lee remembers being invited to the B-bar-H Ranch by Ginny Sims and Mary Pickford. Lee was in real estate in Beverly Hills at that time. She also has memories and mementos from the party held there for employees of Lockheed. Many private parties were held at the ranch after it was opened to the public. Lee had purchased it for her daughter who planned to open a school, but this never materialized.

The beautiful old lodge on the Ranch boasts an impressive fireplace and great room for public, office or family use. There are several bedroom units accessible from the patio area, as well as a professional kitchen, dining room with beamed ceiling, bar room, and wine cellar. A VFW Club has used the former recreation hall for meetings; the swimming pool has been filled in.

In 2006, a new private owner acquired the lodge, and various homes have been built on the land, thus creating a new usage and future for those passing under the historic B-bar-H Ranch arch.


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SOURCE: Unknown. Edited by Richard N. Roger, M.D., April, 2007, Word processed by Alta Hester, Secretary, Desert Hot Springs Historical Society.

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