Barstow
Barstow, city, San Bernardino county, south-central California, U.S. Located in the Mojave Desert, the city lies at a junction of pioneer trails. It was founded in 1880 during a silver-mining rush and was first called Fishpond and then Waterman Junction. It was renamed in 1886 to honor William Barstow Strong, then president of the Santa Fe Railway. Mining declined, but Barstow endured as a railroad town (diesel repair shops) and tourist spot. Its growth was stimulated in the 1940s by the establishment nearby of a large U.S. Marine Corps supply depot and the Fort Irwin armor and desert training center. In 1958 the Goldstone Tracking Station (now called the Gladstone Deep Space Communications Complex), used to communicate with spacecraft and satellites, was established in the locality. Barstow Community College was founded in 1960.
Two major highways meet at Barstow, and the city is an important road transportation center. Irrigated agriculture and the mining of agate, jasper, copper, and salt supplement the economy. The Mojave River Valley Museum in Barstow has displays devoted to the archaeology, minerals, and Indian lore of the area. Other notable area attractions include Mojave National Preserve; Rainbow Basin National Natural Landmark; Calico Ghost Town (located in nearby Yermo), a restored silver-mining town; and Calico Early Man Site, an extensive archaeological excavation (the only Western Hemisphere dig by Louis Leakey) that includes thousands of prehistoric tools dating from some 200,000 years ago. Inc. 1947. Pop. (2000) 21,119; (2010) 22,639.