Cedar Springs: Difference between revisions

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Cedar Springs Pass was one of the first passes on the Applegate-Lassen trail after the trail departed Lassen Meadows.
 
Cedar Springs does not appear on modern maps, see Antelope Springs for details.
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A teamster named Bellew was [[Black_Rock_Tom#November_1865|killed near Cedar Springs in 1865]].
A teamster named Bellew was [[Black_Rock_Tom#November_1865|killed near Cedar Springs in 1865]].
Cedar Springs does not appear on modern maps, see [[Antelope Springs]] for details.


=References=
=References=

Revision as of 20:17, 26 December 2022

Cedar Springs Pass was one of the first passes on the Applegate-Lassen Trail after the trail departed Lassen Meadows.

Davis writes:

"The overland travel through the county in the early days followed the course of the Humboldt River to a point known as "Lassen Meadows," from the residence there of a man named Lassen, who afterward moved to California and from whom the Lassen County of that State is named. This place was on the river, about four miles west of Humboldt House. Here the overland route divided, the main travel going across the river to the West, out through the Cedar Springs Pass to the Black Rock Desert, through Susanville and the Beckwith Pass in the Sierras, to the gold fields of California."[1]

A teamster named Bellew was killed near Cedar Springs in 1865.

Cedar Springs does not appear on modern maps, see Antelope Springs for details.

References

  1. "The History of Nevada," Sam P. Davis, p. 889, 1913.