Lerdo Landing
Lerdo Landing, now a ghost town, in Baja California was originally located in Sonora, Mexico from 1872 to 1896. Later changes to the course of the Colorado river and political boundaries left the site located in Baja California.
Lerdo Landing was a steamboat landing for the settlement of Colonia Lerdo that was established on the east side of the Colorado River. It was originally served by steamboats of George Alonzo Johnson's Colorado Steam Navigation Company until the Southern Pacific Railroad reached Yuma, Arizona, in 1877 and bought out the steamboat company. The railroad company shut down its steamboat operations at Port Isabel, Sonora and ceased traffic on the river below Yuma. The promoters of Colonia Lerdo attempted to establish its own steamboat service, buying and operating the seagoing side-wheel steamship General Zaragosa and for the river the small propeller-driven steam launch the General Rosales. After the failure of that effort, wagons from Yuma and small sailing craft supplied transportation to the settlement until it was abandoned in the 1896.[1] : 34, 60, 76, 80, 86, 167
References
- Former populated places in Mexicali Municipality, Baja California
- Geography of Sonora
- Geography of Baja California
- Mexicali Municipality
- History of Mexico
- Independent Mexico
- Porfiriato
- Populated places established in 1872
- Lower Colorado River Valley
- Colorado River
- Sonora geography stubs
- Baja California geography stubs