The Ryan Ranch, also known as the Lost Horse Ranch was developed around 1895 by Thomas and Jep Ryan. Today some adobe walls still stand, stabilized by the park service. The story of the ranch, or more specifically the Lost Horse Mine, is pretty convoluted and involves a lot of the sort of deceit that comes with territorial disputes and gold. Seems to have brought nothing but bad luck. Here are a couple of accounts from local historians Lucile Weight and Melanie Spoo. Check it out on your next trip to Joshua Tree.
CATTLE AND GOLD
The 1879 lone star brand of William McHaney is that of the earliest known Caucasian resident of Twentynine Palms Oasis. He had come from Missouri in a covered wagon with his parents at age 18. For 60 years or more, Bill McHaney was best known as a prospector and miner and is especially associated with the Desert Queen Mine and Music Valley. The McHaneys who first settled in the Santa Ana Canyon area were cattle people, and Bill was a cowboy at an early age. It was while looking for pasture that ore the Desert Queen Mine) was discovered in what is now near the center of Joshua Tree National Monument. Thereafter, Bill's interest turned from cattle to gold.
Discovery of the Lost Horse gold claim resulted from a search for pasture. After John Lang filed on the Lost Horse, McHaney said he had seen the ore earlier, but failed to make his claim. Both claims were located, registered, and had mines developed in the 1890s.
Lang, like McHaney, was another cowboy who rode into Monument country and spent most of the rest of his life there. His father, George W. Lang, was an old Arizona cattleman who drove cattle into California for sale. On one of the drives, in 1891, he found much of the Colorado Desert had flooded, and pasture had: sprung up along New River. That was the year that the former dry lake beyond Orocopia Mountains became the Salton Sea. Upon this discovery, Lang went back and brought 9,000 head of cattle across the desert. Among buyers in the San Bernardino area was John R. Metcalf whose English father had come from Australia in Gold Rush days. Freighting and supplying frontier posts had led him into lumber and cattle. His son John, born .in 1863, eventually went into the cattle business and extended his ranching to White water in San Gorgonio Pass for winter pasture.
The actual date of John Lang's cattle activity in the region is uncertain. He reportedly first came into the area in the spring of 1893, possibly from Coachella Valley up Berdoo or some other canyon, through the Pinon or Little San Bernardino ranges, while looking for a stray horse. It was then that Lang gained possession of the claim that resulted in the famous Lost Horse Mine, northwest of Pleasant Valley.
John Lang's father, George, was a partner of J. D. (Jep) and Matt Ryan long before they came to California, and young Johnny had ridden with them on cattle drives over the Oregon Trail. Jap Ryan bought Johnny's interest in the mine in January 1894. Most of Jep's prior experience had been with cattle in Montana and Arizona. (Here, the bar was broken from the "R" of Jep Ryan's brand) .
Johnny's development of the Lost Horse, and its sale to Ryan, resulted in nothing for him. According to one account, Johnny's problems started when he married a Tombstone dancehall girl. Her interest in mines lasted long enough to get the money paid to him for the Lost Horse, then she left, divorcing Johnny. He went back to herding cattle for his father, working for the Ryans intermittently. During the mid 1920s, he lived in a cabin near the Lost Horse Mine. He left there for the last time on January 10, 1926, some thought for Twentynine Palms, hut apparently he had headed for Coachella Valley instead. His body was found by Bill Keys three months later along the road Keys had developed, not far from Keys (formerly Salton) View.
-Lucile Weight, 1975.
http://www.klaxo.net/hofc/other/brands.htm
Lost Horse Mine | ||
|
This post is so informative.
Posted by: Evelyn | 07/02/2017 at 04:48 AM