Disambiguation:
This web page is about the bestselling
novel, The Winning of Barbara Worth, by Harold Bell Wright. It is not about the
early movie star, Barbara Worth, or about
Barbara Worth Oakley,
the famous equestrian -- though both were probably named after the heroine of
Wright's novel. Barbara Worth, the actress, was born as Verna Louise Dooley
in1906, five years before Wright's book topped the best seller lists. By the
time she appeared in her first movie, a western, in 1923, she had assumed the
stage name, Barbara Worth. Barbara Worth Oakford's father was a famous
California mule driver. When his daughter was born in 1913, two years after
Wright introduced Barbara Worth, the young woman of the western deserts, Mr.
Oakford named his daugher Barbara Worth. Coincidence? Probably not.
Background
When Harold Bell Wright left the pastoral ministry in
late 1907 he
established a farm near El Centro, in the Imperial Valley, the southeast
corner of the state of California. Here Wright wrote The Winning of
Barbara Worth, the best selling book of his career. It was also Harold
Bell Wright's only historical novel, telling in great detail the story of the "reclamation"
of the lower California desert.
What is now Imperial County, California, was once the
eastern part -- the "barren
desert" part--of San Diego county. Much of Imperial County lies below sea
level and below the mighty Colorado River, which divides Imperial
County from Arizona. In 1901 pioneers cut an opening in the west bank of
the Colorado River and began building canals through the sandy soil to carry water to the
desert. In 1905 the main canal gate washed out and the entire Colorado
river was diverted from the Gulf of Mexico to the dead-end basin of the Imperial
Valley, now known as the Salton Sea. Many books have been written about the heroic efforts to turn that
river back to its natural course. If the two-year effort had failed, as it
very nearly did, the entire basin would
today be under salty water. Harold Bell Wright arrived in the area very
shortly after the river was restored to its original course and the valley was saved. Click here to
see pictures and read an outline of
the actual historical events upon which the book was based.
Though The Winning of Barbara Worth
is fiction, Wright's record of details of life in then-San Diego County, is
hard to match elsewhere. A good example is his description, in the first two
chapters, of travel from San Diego to Yuma--one of the most spectacular and
difficult routes in the United States at that time. The climax of the story
features another detailed description of the two men who contended for
Barbara's hand racing on horseback over the same route to San Diego and
back. Since the fictional Barbara Worth was probably about 20 years of age
when the Colorado broke it banks in 1905, that description should be of the
trip in the middle 1880's. But, of course, Wright described the route as he
experienced it from about 1907 to 1911 when the book was published.
Actually, the route changed little during the 30 years before the book was
published--though the road changed from a horse trail to a wagon road during
that time--so the differences are minor.
Wright says the route from San
Felipe (San Diego) to Rubio City (Yuma) was "200 and more hard and lonely
miles." There was only one route that could get a wagon from San Diego to
Yuma in 200 miles, the route through Jacumba. The alternative route to the
north, through Warner's Hot Springs, was 80 miles longer, and does not fit
Wright's descriptions. But we are not left to guess, because Wright uses the
correct names for places on the Jacumba route: Mountain Springs and Devil's
Canyon. I have not found a record of how long it took stage coaches to
travel to Yuma, but the time to Tucson (424 miles) was five days, meaning
they averaged 85 miles per day. Jefferson Worth's fictional trip took much
longer because it was made in a heavily-loaded wagon, pulled by four mules.
Ironically, though Wright described the Jacumba route, and used actual names
found along the Jacumba route, he says it was called the "San Felipe Trail,"
which would translate to San Diego Trail, which was the name of the other,
northern route.
DAY ONE: Left San Diego at sunrise. Water barrels empty for
climb over mountains. Looking ahead at No Man's Mountain (probably
Laguna Mountain), Went up a canyon with a stream below. They camped at a
spring at the head of the canyon. At that time the only wagon route to Jacumba was through Campo, 52 miles from San Diego. The route through Alpine
and Pine Valley was developed shortly after the book was published. One
source says, "Campo was an important settlement, because it was there that
the stage coaches and the ten-mule freight wagons stopped to rest their
animals after the long climb up the mountain slopes from the west."
DAY TWO: "Gained the pass a little before noon." That pass
was at that time called Jacumba Pass. It is about 4000 feet high. They went
through Jacumba Valley and started down the other side.

Photo: Starting down the road east of Jacumba Pass, 1918.
The town of Jacumba
was not built until 1919, long after Wright's book was published. Apparently
Jefferson Worth's wagon did not follow the route of Highway 80 or the new
Interstate 8, to get from Jacumba to Mountain Springs. Reporting on the road
in 1911 one source says,
"For several years road crews
had been hacking out a new highway down the mountains from Jacumba. The old
wagon road, which had been used by autos for a decade, left Jacumba Valley
and went northeast and then almost directly south to reach Mountain Springs,
dropping about a thousand feet in three miles."
Mountain Springs is still
there, though there is no reason to stop anymore. Today the east-bound
traffic goes down the awesome In-Ko-Pah gorge, and the west-bound traffic
comes up the Devil's Canyon--really two divisions of the same steep gorge.
The 1911 description of the old wagon trail continues from Mountain Spring:
"...then it followed the bed
of Devil's Canyon, a virtual tunnel between towering red rock hills and
dropping another thousand feet to the upper desert floor. Any auto caught in
this narrow gap in a desert cloudburst could be picked up by rushing water
and battered to pieces against the walls."
Jefferson Worth's crew filled
their barrels at Mountain Spring and ate lunch there, then continued to Wolf
Wells (Coyote Wells) on the desert floor, where they camped.
DAY THREE: Traveled across
entire Imperial Valley to the start of the sand dunes, about 20 miles from
the Colorado River and Yuma. They were caught in sandstorm (hasn't changed)
and took shelter for night.
DAY FOUR: Remained in shelter
all day.
DAY FIVE: Found baby Barbara
Worth, left sand hills, traveled all day and all night. Three miles after
leaving dunes came to Dry River. This may be area known today as Gordon's
Wells, but here things begin to get weird, as Wright's story begins to take
precedence over accuracy.
DAY SIX: Traveled all day. It
is only about ten miles from the dunes to the Colorado River, so they should
have been there for an early lunch. But they traveled all afternoon and
camped another night.
DAY SEVEN: Got to Yuma, where
Jefferson Worth lived and worked, just after noon.
Click
here to read Wright's description of the flood from The Winning of
Barbara Worth. (But don't pay any attention to the nonsense in the
introduction on that
site about the Salton Sea proving that a fresh water lake can become salty very
quickly. The Salton Sea did not begin as a fresh water lake in the 20th
century. Salt that had accumulated from countless Colorado River floods--over very
long periods of time--was already in the center of the Imperial Valley
waiting to be dissolved again by the water from the Colorado River. It was an
"Instant Brine--just add water" situation. And to nitpick
further, the Salton Sea is not in the Mojave Desert, which begins north of Palm
Springs and extends hundreds of miles north. It is in the Colorado Desert,
which is about one mile lower in elevation and extents east into southwestern
Arizona.)
Click here to read in-depth information about The Winning of Barbara Worth,
including early advertising, printing, sales and critical acclaim.
Collecting
All American first editions are by the
Book Supply Company and look exactly like the illustrations above. The
first edition was also available in leather. Hodder and Stoughton
published a British first edition. The book was reprinted many times by A.
L. Burt, Grosset and Dunlop, Thorndike, Appleton, Buccaneer (?).
Most of the early reprints carry no indication that they are not first editions.
More recently, four distinct gift editions have been published by The
Holtville Tribune, The Harold Bell Wright Society, Holtville Printing and
Graphics, and the Imperial County Historical
Society.
This book sold far more copies than any other title he wrote,
and is therefore the most common title found on bookshelves today. Judging
from the collectibles available today it seems that The Book Supply Company also
did more to promote this book than any other. It was at the release of
this book that they circulated the 12-card postcard set, other postcards showing
Harold Bell Wright and his ranch, the bookmark, the "Only Picture Ever Taken of the Author
and His Family," a brochure about Harold Bell Wright, and a flood of advertisements in many journals. The
book came with an attractive dust jacket which is rather hard to find today,
though not rare. It could also be bought with a special suede leather
removable cover which after a few years badly stained the cloth cover and inside pages. Some
copies came in a special Christmas box, others with a Christmas band around the
book. (First printing: 175,000; second one month later: 325,000; total by
1947: 1,635,000.)
Notes for owners of "Books and
Collectibles"
P. Holtville Tribune, 1987
Q. Holtville Printing and Graphics, 1991
("Limited Edition 1991 Holtville Printing and Graphics" stamped on
cover. Due to errors by both the typesetter and the binder, the title page
and spine mistakenly attribute this edition to the Holtville Tribune.
V. Imperial County Historical Society
Commemorative Edition, 1998.
W. Harold Bell Wright Society Edition, 1998
Review of Book by Dr.
Joyce Kinkead Copyright 1979 by Joyce
Kinkead. Used by Permission.
Wright's early novels extol the superiority of country people over urban people. When he turns to the great open spaces of the West, he
transfers this idea to the rugged individualists and to the West as Mecca.
Showing a continued interest in humanity, Wright presents conflicts
between East and West, country and city, and experience and education.
The characters represent these conflicts as the urban, educated man is
pitted against the natural, rural man. Either
the latter wins, or the urban male is converted to the nature of the West.
The novels which focus on these conflicts and a transcendental view of
nature include the following: The
Winning of Barbara Worth, When a Man's a Man, A Son of His Father,
The Mine with the Iron Door, Long Ago Told, and The Man Who
Went Away. These novels
demonstrate Wright's southwestern expertise, for when he moved to Southern
California and, later, Arizona for his health, he became aware of the culture,
geography, and industry of that region. His
expertise is easily recognizable in the later books.
One of Wright's most successful novels about the Southwest, The
Winning of Barbara Worth (1911), was immediately accepted by the reading
public, probably because of Wright's unique publishing campaign and because of
the novel's subject matter and setting. Continue
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