Yermo, California Yermo is positioned in California Yermo - Yermo Yermo is a town in the Mojave Desert in San Bernardino County, California.
Today, Yermo is governed by an propel five-member board of administrators comprising the Community Services District authorized by the County of San Bernardino.
Yermo's ZIP Code is 92398, and the improve is in telephone region codes 442 and 760.
Yermo hosts the 1,859-acre (7.5 km2) storage and industrialized annex of the Marine Corps Logistics Base Barstow.
When the Interstate 15 highway opened in 1968, Yermo was immediately bypassed by traffic traveling to and from Las Vegas, Nevada.
As a result, 90 percent of its small-town businesses were required to close. During its heyday, Yermo had 27 gas stations with mechanics, seven bars, two grocery stores, a hardware store, a pizza shop, four real estate offices, three motels, a thrift store, a several restaurants, roadside camping sites and two parks. In 2009, it had one grocery/general store, one bar, one thrift store, three restaurants, four gas stations, one park, and one motel three miles south of town. The fast-food restaurant chain Del Taco was established in Yermo in 1964; the initial structure remains active as a small-town fast food restaurant, The Burger Den.
Yermo has a California agriculture inspection station for traffic heading south on Interstate 15.
Caltrans has begun assembly on a new port of entry on Interstate 15 just south of the Nevada border, between Yates Well Road and Nipton Road, a joint venture of Caltrans, the California Department of Food and Agriculture, the California Department of General Services and the California Highway Patrol.
In the mid-20th century, the Yermo chamber of commerce styled the town the "Gateway to the Calicos", referring to the Calico Mountains and the historic Calico Ghost Town positioned 3 miles north of town.
At the time, Yermo and Barstow were campaigning to establish a state park at Calico, which was an active silver quarrying town from the early 1880s until the turn of the 20th century.
In 1952, entrepreneur Walter Knott, whose uncle John King was once Calico's sheriff, and who worked at the town as a carpenter in 1915, purchased Calico and restored it.
He later deeded it to the San Bernardino County, which operates the site as a historical county park and a prominent tourist attraction of the U.S.
The Silver Valley Unified School District (SVUSD) is the education authority in the Yermo area.
It operates K-12 schools in the communities of Yermo, Daggett and Newberry Springs, and at the U.S.
In 2009 Yermo had three active churches, one Baptist and two non-denominational/fundamentalist.
According to the Koppen Climate Classification system, Yermo has a semi-arid climate, abbreviated "BSk" on climate maps. "Urge Calico State Park" (PDF).
Retrieved 15 October 2014.Steeples, Douglas W., "Treasure from the Painted Desert: A History of Calico, California, 1882-1907", 1999 Climate Summary for Yermo, California Municipalities and communities of San Bernardino County, California, United States
Categories: Populated places in the Mojave Desert - Mining communities in California - Unincorporated communities in San Bernardino County, California - Unincorporated communities in California
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