There are three
California Historical Landmarks in Stovepipe Wells. California Historical Landmark number 826, Old Stovepipe Wells, founded on August 7, 1968, reads: :
NO. 826 OLD STOVEPIPE WELLS - This waterhole, the only one in the sand dune area of Death Valley, was at the junction of the two Indian trails. During the bonanza days of Rhyolite and Skidoo, it was the only known water source on the cross-valley road. When sand obscured the spot, a length of stovepipe was inserted as a marker. California Historical Landmark number 848,
Eichbaum Toll Road, founded on May 19, 1971, reads: :''NO. 848 EICHBAUM TOLL ROAD - In 1926, H. W. Eichbaum obtained a franchise for a toll road from Darwin Falls to Stovepipe Wells, the first maintained road into Death Valley from the west. It changed the area's economic base from mining to tourism and brought about the creation of Death Valley National Monument seven years later'' California Historical Landmark number 441,
Burned Wagons Point, founded on October 24, 1949, reads: :''NO. 441 BURNED WAGONS POINT - Near this monument, the Jayhawker group of Death Valley '49ers, gold seekers from the Middle West who entered Death Valley in 1849 seeking a short route to the mines of central California, burned their wagons, dried the meat of some oxen and, with surviving animals, struggled westward on foot.'' ---- ==Gallery==