Border marker 255 - San Ysidro, CA
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T-Team!
N 32° 32.671 W 117° 01.809
11S E 497169 N 3600793
Here near the pedestrian bridge you will find the center part of the original Boundary Monument #255
Waymark Code: WM1861T
Location: California, United States
Date Posted: 06/06/2023
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member wayfrog
Views: 0

"As part of the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, in return for $15 million Mexico ceded 1.2 million square miles of territory to the United States, A joint US and Mexican Boundary Commission would demarcate a new border, which they did after a 2-year surveying expedition. 52 boundary markers were placed starting from the Pacific and heading Eastward. In 1892 following minor disputes all along the border, a second surveying expedition took place starting from El Paso and heading westward. 258 monuments were added by the time the Barlow-Blanco Commission ended in 1894 (a final 14 were later added for 272 monuments total). While many of the monuments became tourist attractions when they opened, recent political and security issues have resulted in the construction of walls few meters behind the US-Mexico border (allowing the US to move unilaterally on border fencing), cutting off access to the monuments from the rest of the United States.

Marker 255 was place in the middle of the little town of Tia Juana, which straddled the border. However in 1891 a flood destroyed most of the town, which subsequently moved to its current position only on the Mexican side. The monument was also washed away by the flooding, prompting the Barlow-Blanco Commission to erect a new monument on a nearby hill.

In 1911, insurrectionists of the IWW surrendered to Captain Alfred Wilcox at the US Border marker following the loss of Tijuana.
This fragment, the center portion of the original marker 255 that was lost in the 1891 flood, as rediscovered in 1979 and placed"
Source: (visit link)

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Monumentation Type: Stone post

Monumentation Type (if other): Border Marker

Monument Category: National boundary marker

Accessible to general public: yes

Historical significance:
See long description


County: San Ysidro

Monument Category (if other): Not listed

Explain Non-Public access: Not listed

Monument Website: Not listed

USGS Quad: Not listed

NGS PID: Not listed

Other Coordinates: Not Listed

Other Coordinates details: Not listed

Approximate date of monument: Not listed

Visit Instructions:
1. A closeup photo of the monument is required.
______
2. A 'distant' photo including the monument in the view is highly recommended. Include the compass direction you faced when you took the picture.
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