Zzyzx, California

This article is about the town. For the film, see Zzyzx (film).
"Zzyzx Road" redirects here. For the film, see Zyzzyx Road.
Zzyzx, California
unincorporated community

Freeway exit sign to Zzyzx Road off Interstate 15
Zzyzx, California

Location of Zzyzx in California

Coordinates: 35°8′35″N 116°6′15″W / 35.14306°N 116.10417°W / 35.14306; -116.10417Coordinates: 35°8′35″N 116°6′15″W / 35.14306°N 116.10417°W / 35.14306; -116.10417
Country United States
State California
County San Bernardino
Time zone Pacific (UTC-8)
  Summer (DST) PDT (UTC-7)
ZIP code 92309
Area codes 442/760
GNIS feature ID 1662336

Zzyzx (/ˈzzks/ ZY-zəks), formerly Camp Soda and Soda Springs, is an unincorporated community in San Bernardino County, California, United States, within the boundaries of Mojave National Preserve. It is the former site of the Zzyzx Mineral Springs and Health Spa[1] and now the site of the Desert Studies Center. The site is also the location of Lake Tuendae, originally part of the spa, and now a refuge habitat of the endangered Mohave tui chub.

Zzyzx Road is a 4.5-mile-long (7.2 km), part paved and part dirt, rural collector road in the Mojave Desert. It runs from Interstate 15 generally south to the Zzyzx settlement.

The settlement is in area codes 442 and 760 and ZIP code 92309. The nearest town is Baker, California, 7 miles (11 km) north on I-15. Las Vegas, Nevada, is the nearest major city, about 100 miles (160 km) northeast.

History

Soda Springs, a natural spring, has long seen human activity. The area was a prehistoric quarry site, and projectile points and rock art can be found in the area. The Mojave Road ran past the spring which was guarded by the Hancock Redoubt in 1860, during the Bitter Spring Expedition and by Camp Soda Springs, garrisoned by the U. S. Army from 1867 to 1870. Later Soda Springs was the name of the station of the Tonopah and Tidewater Railroad that passed there. Remnants of a wagon road stop and railroad artifacts are readily seen. Evaporative salt mining and mill sites can be found here as well.

Tonopah and Tidewater Railroad railbed crossing Soda Lake at Zzyzx

The made-up name Zzyzx was given to the area in 1944 by Curtis Howe Springer, claiming it to be the last word in the English language. He established the Zzyzx Mineral Springs and Health Spa in 1944 at the spot, which was federal land, after filing mining claims for 12,000 acres (49 km2) surrounding the springs. He used the springs to bottle his water and provide drinks for travelers through the hot desert. Springer also imported animals from around the country to attract more families to visit his ranch. He used Zzyzx until 1974, when the land was reclaimed by the government.

Since 1976, the Bureau of Land Management has allowed California State University to manage the land in and around Zzyzx. A consortium of CSU campuses use it as their Desert Studies Center.

Lexicography

The name appeared as "Zzyzx Springs" in Dmitri Borgmann's 1967 book Beyond Language. In 1977 Borgman noted his source as being "an old, undated map of San Bernardino County published by the Automobile Club of Southern California" and repeated his description of the settlement as being "a hydrologic feature and privately owned spa in San Bernardino County, California, about 8.5 miles south of Baker, on the western edge of Soda Dry Lake, off the abandoned right-of-way of the old Tonopah and Tidewater Railroad."[2] After Borgmann's book, the 1973 Hammond Ambassador World Atlas began to show the place, labeling it as "Zzyzx" without the "Springs"; the 1976 Rand-McNally Commercial Atlas and Marketing Guide followed suit.[2]

Zzyzx as a settlement, and Zzyzx Spring as a water feature, were approved as a place name by the United States Board on Geographic Names on June 14, 1984.[3] As is the case with the road, Zzyzx, California, is the USBGN's lexicographically greatest (alphabetically last, at least in Latin alphabetical order) place name.[4] It has frequently been noted on lists of unusual place names.[5]

In popular culture

Desert Studies Center at Zzyzx Springs

See also

References

  1. Bishop, Greg; Oesterle, Joe; Marinacci, Mike and Moran, Mark (2006). "A Utopia Spelled Z, Z, Y, Z, X". Weird California. Sterling Publishing Company. p. 54. ISBN 978-1-4027-3384-0.
  2. 1 2 Borgmann, Dmitri A. (February 1977). "At the Outer Limits". Word Ways (Morristown, New Jersey: A. Ross Eckler) 10 (2): 120. Retrieved 2015-12-12.
  3. Eckler, A. Ross (February 1996). "Zzyzx". Word Ways (Morristown, New Jersey: A. Ross Eckler) 29 (1): 2224. ISSN 0043-7980. Retrieved 2015-12-12. Text also in "Zzyzx" at the Wayback Machine (archived February 21, 2001)
  4. Search for "Zzz" and "Zzy" at http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnispublic/.Retrieved2015-12-12.
  5. Parker, Quentin (2010). Welcome to Horneytown, North Carolina, Population: 15: An insider's guide to 201 of the world's weirdest and wildest places. Adams Media. pp. xii.

External links

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