SouthwestBlend.com presents the Gilman Historic Rand and Wagon Museum, bringing history to life, located in Banning, California. 

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Gilman Ranch

Gilman Historic Ranch and Wagon Museum
Bringing History to Life - Your Gateway to the Western Frontier!

Surrounded by cottonwoods and watered by three natural springs, the present Gilman Ranch site has attracted people throughout time. The superb location of this canyon, with an exceptional food and water supply, offered a prime habitation site for the Cahuilla Indians in this area. Later, under the Spanish government, this site was originally part of the San Gorgonio Rancho, the farthest outlying cattle ranch of Mission San Gabriel. The Rancho was later claimed by - but never granted - to three Anglo settlers, Isaac Williams, Powell Weaver, and Wallace Woodruff.

The first permanent landmark in the Banning area was an adobe house constructed in 1854, on the present Gilman Ranch site by Jose Pope, Mayordomo (ranch foreman) for Isaac Hills. Pope raised cattle for a time, and then sold his land to sheep rancher G. S. Chapin in 1862. A year later, Chapin sold his property to stageman and local entrepreneur Newton Noble. Noble lived in the adobe, converted it into a stage stop and opened the first post office in the San Gorgonio Pass in 1868.

Noble's property lay along the Bradshaw Trail, a heavily traveled route from Los Angeles to Arizona during the 1860s and 1870s. The trail was originally part of the network of Indian trails that William D. Bradshaw, miner and freight driver, learned from the Cahuilla and Maricopa Indians. The Bradshaw Trail became an important communication route for federal troops as they expanded control over Arizona and New Mexico. During the last years of the Civil War, the trail was the only way in and out of Southern California by stage. With the advent of the railroad, staging ceased in the 1880s, but the Bradshaw Trail remained a freight route. A remnant of the trail can still be seen on the Gilman Ranch.

Originally from New Hampshire, James Marshall Gilman moved west during the early 1860s, operating a mercantile business in The Dalles, Oregon. In 1869, Gilman came to Southern California, looking to buy a cattle ranch. While staying in San Bernardino, he heard about the 160 acres for sale in the San Gorgonio Pass. Gilman met with Noble and purchased the land and about 200 head of horses and cattle, and continued to operate the stage stop. In 1871, Gilman married Martha Benoist Smith, the daughter of the first pioneer settler in the pass, Dr. Isaac Smith. They lived in the adobe until 1879, when they began construction of the ranch house, later building on a two-story Eastlake style addition, which was lost in a fire in 1977. The Gilmans raised seven children. At its peak, the Gilman Ranch consisted of 500 acres, During the 1880s, the Gilmans gradually shifted from cattle raising to dry farming barley, wheat, and oats. He eventually emphasized fruit production, for which the ranch is best known, growing crops such as raisin grapes, figs, prunes, apricots, peaches, almonds, and olives.

Although the Gilman Ranch was a successful ranching and agricultural enterprise, it is best known in connection with the last great western manhunt of Willie Boy, a Paiute Indian who wished to marry Carlotta against her father's wishes. The young woman and her family were camped at the Gilman Ranch and working on the fruit harvest when Willie Boy killed her father and escaped with Carlotta. Although marriage by capture was an old Paiute custom, Willie Boy's actions outraged the Anglo community. A presidential visit to the Riverside area stoked the press into a frenzy, leading the public to believe that there was a danger to then President Taft. The manhunt received national press coverage. Willie Boy avoided the posse for three weeks before he died by his own hand.

Gilman RanchToday the Gilman Historic Ranch and Wagon Museum preserves, celebrates, and interprets the history of California from the Cahuilla Indians to the exploration and settlement of Southern California and the San Gorgonio Pass, including the homestead ranch of James Marshall Gilman.

Gilman Historic Ranch & Museum is a Riverside County Regional Park and Open-Space District.

Address:
16th & Wilson Streets, Banning, CA 92220.
Tel:
(951) 922-9200.

Web: www.riversidecountyparks.org

Indian artifacts, Gilman Ranch  Wagon at Gilman Ranch  Stagecoach at Gilfman Ranch

GILMAN HISTORIC RANCH & WAGON MUSEUM EVENTS
 

For more information about Banning, CA, please click here.

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