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Encyclopedia > Daggett, California

Daggett is a town located in San Bernardino County, California. The town is located on Interstate 40 10 miles East of Barstow. The town has a population of about 1,200. Official website: http://www. ... Interstate 40 (abbreviated I-40) is a major west-east interstate highway in the United States. ... Barstow is a city located in San Bernardino County, California. ...

Contents


History

The town was originally founded in the 1860s just before the discovery of silver mines nearby to the city. In 1882, the Southern Pacific Railroad from Mojave to Daggett was being completed and it was thought that a good name for the city would be Calico Junction. But this name would be too confusing since it was right next to Calico, CA -- where the silver was just recently discovered. It was decided to name the city after, then Lieutenant Governor of California, John Daggett, during the Spring of 1883. Calico, California is a ghost town located in the Mojave Desert region of Southern California. ... This a List of Lieutenant Governors of the State of California, 1850-present. ... John Daggett served as Lieutenant Governor of California, 1882-1886. ... 1883 (MDCCCLXXXIII) was a common year starting on Monday (see link for calendar). ...


Not only did Silver define Daggett's history, but Borax was also important to the city's economy. This borax was being mined, around the turn of the century, out of the Calico Hills nearby. This operation required many more laborers to come to the city to help. Borax is a somewhat generic name used to describe a number of closely related minerals or chemical compounds: anhydrous borax (Na2B4O7) borax pentahydrate (Na2B4O7 Â· 5H2O) borax decahydrate (Na2B4O7 Â· 10H2O) The borax term is most usually used to describe borax decahydrate. ...


Airport

Daggett is the location of Barstow-Daggett Airport. The facility is a general aviation airport serving the Barstow area. It is also the regional weather information center.


Statistics

As of 2003, 200 people lived in Daggett, though nearly 1500 live in the surrounding area.


The town's altitude is approximately 2000 feet.


Solar Power Generation

Daggett was home to a unique solar power plant named Solar I (after an upgrade, it became Solar II. The plant uses mirror-like "heliostats" to aim sunlight at a collecting sphere, through which oil flows. The large quantity of sunlight reflecting on the sphere superheats the oil, which is then used to create steam for power generation.


During calibration of the power plant's thousands of heliostats, a ball of glowing light can be seen in the nearby area. This ball is caused by the heliostats reflecting sunlight onto a specific point in 3d space. As the intensity of the light increases, it tends to reflect off dust in the desert air. This phenomenon is sometimes seen by passerbys on the nearby interstates 40 and 15.


External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Rollin M. Daggett Biography | Dictionary of Literary Biography (1796 words)
As a young miner in the California gold rush, Rollin M. Daggett settled in San Francisco and in 1852 was cofounder of the Golden Era, a literary journal that for half a century was a powerful force on the West Coast.
Born in 1831 in Defiance, Ohio, Rollin Mallory Daggett was orphaned at age eleven and was reared by a sister.
Daggett and his fellow editor Charles C. Goodwin were outraged, and on 14 July 1878 the Territorial Enterprise devoted its entire front page to a documented exposé of the backgrounds, business affairs, sex habits, and disreputable characters of Leslie and his wife.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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