Palm Desert Desert Community Riverside County California.
1946 Tomson City Planning Map for Palm Desert, California
Sold by Geographicus Rare Antique Maps, Brooklyn, NY, U.S.A.
Association Member:
AbeBooks Seller since November 21, 2024
Sold by Geographicus Rare Antique Maps, Brooklyn, NY, U.S.A.
Association Member:
AbeBooks Seller since November 21, 2024
Good. Light wear and toning along original folds. Toning and chips around edge. Area of infill at central fold intersection. Two areas of infill along edges.Several tears professionally repaired. Size 16 x 20.75 Inches. The original 1946 planning map of Palm Desert, California, by city founder Tommy Tomson. Palm Desert is one of California's most successful post-war planned communities - here laid out and planned when it existed only as a dream. A Closer Look This urban planning map presents Palm Desert, near the intersection of two highways, the Palm Springs-Indio Highway (CA-111) and the Palms to Pines Highway (CA-74, now officially designed as a Scenic Byway). Although Palm Desert materialized, its ultimate construction did not perfectly match this plan. For example, the layout and names of roads at bottom, south of Grapevine St., and at top, north of the Palm Springs-Indio Highway, differ significantly (a note at left indicates that changes were expected). Palm Desert's boundaries were also later extended far to the north (now consisting of multiple country clubs) and somewhat further to the south. But the town as constructed did largely reflect the contours seen here, including the distinctive shopping corridor of 'El Paseo' running parallel to CA-111 and the core of the community being the club seen here, soon afterward named the 'Shadow Mountain Club' (membership in the club came with the purchase of a plot of land). Aside from the club, which added a golf course to the tennis courts seen here, most of the planned town consists of plots for housing in addition to a church, school, park, and stables, along with unplotted lands, including in the hills and mountains west of the town. El Paseo became a purely commercial corridor rather than mixed residential and commercial, as envisioned. The Palm Desert Corporation limited home sizes and styles to maintain the 'look' of the community, with plots and homes immediately east of the club and near Highway 111 designed to be smaller than those to the immediate west of the club. Tomson named and laid out the streets, with a preference for curvy streets (which he considered more interesting), as well as the landscaping along them. The goal was to combine the 'romance' of life in California's desert with modern conveniences, evidenced, for example, by the close proximity of bridle paths with parking lots. 'Wasteland to Wonderland' This portion of the Coachella Valley was historically inhabited by the Cahuilla people, many of whom became farmers on date farms established in the 1920s. During World War II (1939 - 1945), the future site of Palm Desert was used as a maintenance camp and training ground for U.S. Army tanks. A sustained town emerged in the postwar period when the Henderson brothers and their brother-in-law Tommy Tomson purchased the land from the government and developed it as a planned community, attracting investors among the business and entertainment elite of Los Angeles. Among California's postwar planned desert communities, Palm Desert is one of the more successful, no doubt aided by its magnificent scenery and warm winters (like other towns in the Coachella Valley, Palm Desert's population varies considerably by season). Though growth was relatively slow at first (just shy of 1,300 residents in 1960), it picked up, reaching over 6,000 residents by 1970, over 23,000 by 1990, and over 50,000 today. Publication History and Census This map was drawn by land planning consultant Tommy Tomson for the Palm Desert Corporation in December 1946, with the added note at left dated May 1947. We are unaware of any other examples.
Seller Inventory # PalmDesert-tomson-1946
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