The Health Seekers of Southern California

The Health Seekers of Southern California

1870–1900

by John E. Baur

In looking at those who sought the curative powers of the Southern California climate, John E. Baur investigates this migration’s effect on the settlement and development of Southern California, focusing on boosterism, resort advertising, medicine and pseudomedicine, and sanitariums.

The nineteenth-century notion that Southern California's sunny climate could cure tuberculosis, asthma, rheumatism, and a host of other diseases triggered a rush of health seekers to the region. By the end of the century, these settlers from the East had inflated land values, caused building booms, inaugurated new types of businesses, and founded such towns as Pasadena, Riverside, and Palm Springs. Baur investigates this migration's effect on the settlement and development of Southern California, focusing on boosterism, resort advertising, medicine and pseudomedicine, and sanitariums. When his study of the region's health-resort industry was originally published in 1959, he was hailed as the Herodotus of the health movement of Southern California.

About the Author: John E. Baur was a professor of history at California State University, Northridge.

  • 248 pages
  • 6"w x 9"h
  • softcover; ISBN 978-0-87328-225-3; $20.00

Selected books from the Huntington Library Press are now distributed by Angel City Press.

(Currently, Angel City Press has no available stock of this product.)