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Goffs

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8-766: Goffs may refer to: Places [ edit ] Goffs, California , settlement in at southeast edge of Mojave National Preserve Goffs, West Virginia , an unincorporated community Goffs, Nova Scotia , rural community in Canada Other [ edit ] Goffs School ; comprehensive secondary school and sixth form college in Cheshunt, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom See also [ edit ] Goff (disambiguation) Goffs Oak , village in Hertfordshire, United Kingdom Goff's Caye , island of Belize Topics referred to by

16-536: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Goffs, California Goffs , an unincorporated community in San Bernardino County, California , is a nearly empty one-time railroad town at the route's high point in the Mojave Desert . Goffs was a stop on famous U.S. Route 66 until 1931 when a more direct road opened between Needles and Essex. Goffs

24-770: Is featured in the opening scene of the 1984 cult classic Repo Man . Goffs is located at the foothills of the northern terminus of the Piute Mountains ; the location is also the southern terminus of the Lanfair Valley , which drains south from the east region of the Mojave National Preserve . The drainage is the Sacramento Wash , which turns due east to meet the Piute Wash , just west of the Colorado River . Goffs

32-507: Is on the foothill bajadas that drain northward into Sacramento Wash. Fenner, California Fenner is an unincorporated community in San Bernardino County , California , United States. Fenner is located along Interstate 40 32 miles (51 km) west of Needles . Fenner was named for either Arthur Fenner or his son James , both governors of Rhode Island. From 1942 to 1944 site of US Army training Camp Clipper . This San Bernardino County, California –related article

40-445: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Goffs . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Goffs&oldid=930723356 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

48-504: The town. During World War II , the town was the home of Camp Goffs , a large US army depot and training center. Goffs is accessible off Interstate 40 at U.S. Highway 95 north. A left turn onto Goffs Road, the pre-1931 alignment of US 66, becomes a desolate forty-mile (64 km) stretch that served as home to several towns that have mostly vanished, including Bannock, Ibis, and the aforementioned Homer. Continuing west on Goffs Road brings motorists back to I-40 at Fenner . Goffs Road

56-617: Was also home to workers of the nearby Santa Fe Railroad , with Homer east, Fenner south, and Blackburn and Purdy north. Goffs is also known as the "Desert Tortoise Capital of the World." Goffs was known as Blake between 1893 and 1902. It was named for Isaac Blake, the builder of the Nevada Southern Railway (later the California Eastern Railway 1895–1923) that commenced here. An early 20th Century general store

64-491: Was the town's largest building until it was destroyed by a fire on June 8, 2021. A historic schoolhouse, built in 1914 and almost totally deteriorated by the early 1980s, has since been renovated to its original plans by the Mojave Desert Heritage and Cultural Association (MDHCA). The schoolhouse and grounds now house a museum primarily specializing in the area's mining history. Remnants of Goffs's mining days still dot

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