Palm Springs Condo History

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Palm Springs Condo History


Palm Springs is one of nine cities that make up the Coachella Valley.  It is a great place to look into if you are thinking about getting a condoPalm Springs condos are great for you and your family because there are so many assets, and Palm Springs is filled with a great history.  This history makes the desert resort what it is today, which makes it worth it to get Palm Springs condos.  Original hot springs, illustrated during William Blake's Southern Pacific Railroad survey expedition. 

The Cahuilla name for the area was "Se-Khi". The current name for the area, Palm Springs, was likewise preceded by the name Palm City which appeared on the town's first official survey map. References to "springs" and "hot water" in historical place-names revolve around the hot spring waters located beneath Indian Canyon Way at Tahquitz Canyon Way, which are pumped and redirected to spa facilities at the same location. The hot spring has played an important role throughout the history of the tribe and the City. According to Cahuilla mythology, the hot spring is a place of power and healing where nukatem dwell and a source from which shamans obtained their power. 

Jack Summers, a stagecoach driver, arrived at Agua Caliente in about 1863 to replace William McCoy as stage coach station keeper. They individuals constitute the town's first white residents. McCallum would not arrive until the 1880s, ostensibly to find a healthful climate for his tubercular son, but instead used his status as a federal Indian Agent to launch a career as land developer and promoter, having recognized the potential of Palm Springs as a health resort and for its agricultural potential.

He joined with other promoters and with them took possession of some of the most desirable lands in the area, especially those with a water supply. Although it was the duty of Indian Agents to inform Indians of their rights and to act as their advocate, McCallum instead withheld legal information from the Cahuilla which stated that "bona fide" settlers had a right to claim homesteads existing prior to the taking of lands for the Southern Pacific Railroad.4 This law required such claims to be filed by a given time. Unaware of this requirement, no Cahuilla claims were filed, resulting in a devastating loss of traditional Indian land and property. By May 1876, the Southern Pacific Railroad had constructed a train station at Seven Palms at a distance of seven miles from Agua Caliente.

Many Cahuilla had been active in the railroad's construction, replacing Chinese laborers who had died in the desert heat. The presence of the train, like the stagecoach line that preceded it, opened up Agua Caliente to the world. At about this same time, the Palm Springs Hotel and a rustic bathhouse were established in the vicinity of the Section 14 hot spring. Palm Springs is a small city with the legacy, amenities, and history of a large, cosmopolitan city. Palm Springs lies at the foot of one of Southern California's most majestic mountain peaks, 10,834-foot-tall Mount San Jacinto, whose eastern flank abuts downtown. 

The Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians is composed of two lineages of Cahuilla Indians whose traditional territories encompass modern day Palm Springs. The Agua Caliente Indian Reservation was established by the United States Government in 1876 and 1877. The reservation occupies 32,000 acres, of which 6,700 acres lie within the city limits. Palm Springs is a large area with tons of area to live and enjoy the sun. 


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