Bagdad Cemetery: Upon A Desert Driest
A Guidebook to Highway 66, Alice Lawrence, amboy, Atchison Topeka Santa Fe Railroad, Automobile Club of Southern California, B.M. Cram, Bagdad Auxillary Airfield, Bagdad Cafe, Bagdad Cemetery, barstow, Benjamin E. Chase Mining Co, Bristol, Buillon, Cadiz, Charles W. Belden, Chinese, cholera, Col. H.G. Heffron, Drought, Drought Record, gold, harvey house, Jack D. Rittenshouse, Jim C. Murphy, Joe De Kehoe, Ludlow, Needles, newberry springs, Orange Blossom, Paul Limon, plane crash, Roland, route 66, steam locomotives, The Silence and The Sun, USAAF Beechcraft AT-7, WPA Guide
Angie
Ever been to Rhyolite, Beatty, Amargosa Valley, Silver City, Goldfield, or Tonapah, NV? Explored Death Valley?
Jaylyn
Howdy Angie. Yes, we’ve been to most of the places you mentioned plus lots more but just haven’t got around to writing the articles yet. Meanwhile, you may enjoy reading our piece about Ballarat in Death Valley. We have a search box on the site for anything in particular we covered you may be looking for. Thanks for your question.
William H Hartzler III
Hello,
I just ran across your article on Bagdad, and I must say it is very interesting. To get to the point, my grandparents, William and Willys Hartzler once owned the original Bagdad café/motel, gas station and garage. Grampa was known as “Slim” Hartzler, and he ran the garage whilst Gramma ran the store, café and motel. I’m pretty sure they had the place between 1962 and 1967. I have a picture of myself as an infant, with my dad and Grampa, sitting in the café. That picture was no doubt taken in 1964. I also have another picture of the front of the garage, where I can see Grampa talking to a customer, and I think my aunt Maggie is standing in the doorway talking to my older sister, who looks to be about 4. that would have been in 1966. Unfortunately I was much too young to remember Bagdad, but the memories lived on for years before Grampa and Gramma passed. My uncle Don still tells stories of the happenings there. I just thought I would share and say “thank you” for your article.
Sincerely,
William H Hartzler III
Jaylyn
Hello William! How fascinating. Thanks so much for sharing your memories. We would love to talk with you more about Bagdad. Please call us at 760-987-0331. Thank you! Thanks so much!!
Anonymous
Rest in peace Roland.
Jaylyn
Thank you. I’m sure he appreciates it.
Joe Wenzel
Another place I visited because I wanted to see the REAL Bagdad cafe location. Roland truly was a guardian angel for that place.
I’m assuming he’s the one that kept replacing the Bagdad signs and now ……
Jaylyn
Hi Joe. It is the responsibility of the railroad to replace the signs. Let’s hope the latest ones remain there.
Dempsey Craft
I lived and worked in Bagdad the summer of 1970. My cousins owned it. Buddy and Carol Slusher. It would be great to see pictures and hear stories from that time. I remember a driver for McCullough Chainsaws came through all the time. He was hauling pieces of London Bridge.
Anonymous
Hello. My grandfather and grandmother and my mom lived in Bagdad in 1918. My mother was born there. My grandfather worked for the railroad. I was just stopping by to learn more about Bagdad. I have been researching my family. Thanks for sharing the information
John Stewart 3-22-2022