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Carlsbad’s
original inhabitants were the Luiseño people, who are in
the Shoshonean linguistic group. One of their rancherias (villages)
was Palamai, which was located near present downtown Carlsbad.
Today, the Luiseño live on one of several Indian Reservations
inland near Palomar Mountain.
Much of greater Carlsbad was part of Rancho Agua Hedionda (which
means Stinking Water). This 13,311-acre ranch was granted to Don
Juan María
Marrón in 1842. Some of the original ranch houses are now
incorporated in modern buildings.
Carlsbad started as a whistle stop on the new California Southern
Railroad. In the 1880s, John Frazier, a former ship's captain,
dug a fresh-water well that came to be used for thirsty locomotives.
The stop became known as Frazier's Station. Frazier dug another
well that produced mineral water. The water was analyzed and found
equal in mineral content to one of Europe's most popular health
spas, Karlsbad, Bohemia (now
Karlovy Vary, Czech Republic). Later, Carlsbad was renamed Carl
for a time because of confusion with Carlsbad, New Mexico, on
train schedules and because of hysteria during World War I. Popular
demand restored the former name.
Carlsbad
Historic Points of Interest
Carlsbad is an old village dating from the 1880s. The Carlsbad
Historical Society
produced a self-guiding walking tour map available at the Visitor's
Center in the
Old Santa Fe Train Depot.
• Frazier's Mineral
Well, site of the original well dug in the 1880s. The
discovery of mineral water led to a small bottling works and the
100-room
Mineral Springs Hotel. The well is in front of Alt Karlsbad Hanse
House, a
three-story, half-timbered turreted home. A memorabilia museum
and art
gallery are in the basement. 2802 Carlsbad Boulevard
• Old Santa Fe Depot.
The depot was built in 1907 (replacing the first built in 1887)
by the Arizona Eastern Railway, and also served as a telegraph
office, a Post Office, a Wells Fargo Express Office and a general
store. It served in later years as a shipping point for local
fruit, vegetables and flowers. Closed in 1960, it is now the home
of the Visitor's Information Center. 400 Carlsbad Village Dr.
on the National Register of Historic Places
• Twin Inns,
built in 1887. This is the former mansion of Gerhard Schutte,
a co-founder of Carlsbad. Built in the Queen Anne architectural
style, this distinctive building is now Ocean House Restaurant.
2978 Carlsbad Blvd.
• Magee House,
built in 1887. Home of Samuel Church Smith. On Carlsbad Boulevard
(old Highway 101) and Beech Avenue, it is operated by the Carlsbad
Historical Society.
•Carrillo Ranch (Rancho
de Los Quiotes), in La Costa, is an historic ranch that
has become an extraordinary, passive community park. Operated
by the Friends of Carrillo Ranch, Inc. On the National Register
of Historic Places
• St. Michael's Episcopal
Church, built in 1896, is a small red chapel on the northwest
corner of Christianson Way and Carlsbad Boulevard.
• Heritage Hall (St.
Patrick's Church), built in 1926, served as Carlsbad's
first City Hall when Carlsbad was incorporated in 1952. It is
located on the corner of Cypress and Garfield Streets next to
Magee Park, off of Carlsbad Boulevard.
• Magee Park.
Once an old home and barn, Magee Park — on Beech Avenue
between Carlsbad Boulevard and Garfield Street — the park
is named for Florence Shipley Magee who willed it to the city.
Carlsbad History-Based Organizations
Carlsbad is served by two history-based organizations:
• Carlsbad Historical
Society
• Friends of Carrillo Ranch,
Inc.
Both of these groups are very well known, active and effective.
The Society conducts school tours of Magee Park each year in May.
The Friends has an extensive outreach program throughout the school
year for California history students in the fourth grade,
an educational service offered free of charge in the Carlsbad,
Encinitas, Oceanside, San Marcos and Vista School Districts.
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