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Almanac note · History and culture

Palmdale's name story starts with Joshua trees, not palms

Palmdale's early Palmenthal story connects the Antelope Valley to settlers, rail routes, Joshua trees, and a name that stuck in a surprising way.

PalmdaleAntelope Valleylocal history

Palmdale has a name story that fits the Antelope Valley pretty well. Before the modern city grew around aerospace, commuter routes, and desert neighborhoods, two small communities helped shape the area: Harold, near the railroad and Fort Tejon Road, and Palmenthal, a settlement started by families moving west in 1886.

The Palmenthal part is the one people tend to remember. About fifty to sixty Swiss and German families, many coming from Nebraska and Illinois, had heard that palm trees would mean they were close to the Pacific Ocean. When they reached the Antelope Valley, they saw Joshua trees and took them for palms. The landscape did not lead them to the beach, but it did give their new settlement a name.

That little mistake says a lot about early Palmdale. The valley could look wide open and promising, but it was also dry, windy, and different from what many newcomers expected. Water, distance, weather, and transportation all mattered. So did hope. People were trying to make a town in a place that did not always make it easy.

The name changed shape over time, but the root is still there. Palmdale is not a city of natural palms in the way the name might suggest. It is a high-desert city whose name carries a pioneer-era misunderstanding, a bit of optimism, and a very local kind of desert humor.

Where to see it

Palmdale City Library local-history materials and the Antelope Valley around Palmdale.

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Reviewed July 2, 2026

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