Tejon Pass

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tejon Pass
Sign at the top of the pass

Sign at the top of the pass

Compass direction North south
Pass height 1275  m
county Kern County , California ( USA ) Los Angeles County , California ( USA )
Watershed San Joaquin River Santa Clara River
Valley locations Bakersfield Santa Clarita
expansion I-5.svg Interstate 5
Mountains Tehachapi Mountains
Map (California)
Tejon Pass (California)
Tejon Pass
Coordinates 34 ° 52 '26 "  N , 118 ° 53' 39"  W Coordinates: 34 ° 52 '26 "  N , 118 ° 53' 39"  W.
x

The Tejon Pass [ teɪˈhoʊn ], which rises a maximum of 1,275 meters above sea level , is a mountain pass at the southwest end of the Tehachapi Mountains in southern California . The pass connects Los Angeles with the northern part of California and is located about 80 kilometers northwest of this city.

Fort Tejon , which was built in 1854 and was supposed to protect settlers from Indian attacks, used to be located on the pass . Today a highway, Interstate 5 , follows this old pass route. The pass is also the namesake for a severe earthquake that occurred on January 9, 1857 along the San Andreas Fault. It is known as the Fort Tejon earthquake in 1857 . However, the epicenter of the quake was not at Tejon Pass, but near the present-day town of Parkfield . In the then sparsely populated California, however, the only reliable reports came from Fort Tejon.

The Tejon Pass connects the plains in northern California with Los Angeles

See also

North side, around 1920