RuthVille was dedicated by an old desert rat
with a love for all things aluminum.
CHAPTER ONE
IT STARTS WITH Ruth
every good desert story starts with someone who refused to leave
Ruth Maguire showed up in the Mojave in 1957 with a
Spartan trailer, a toolbox, a case of tequila, and what her
family later described as "an unreasonable tolerance for heat."
She was 34. She'd just left a perfectly good accounting job in
Bakersfield. Nobody understood why.
She bought five acres of nothing from a rancher who
thought she was out of her mind. He wasn't wrong. But Ruth had
a theory: the desert didn't need to be survived. It needed to
be lived in. On her terms. With good tequila and better sunsets.
Within a year she'd dragged a second trailer onto the lot. Then
a third. Friends would visit from Bakersfield and she'd put them
up in whichever trailer wasn't currently being rewired. Word got
around. "Go see Ruth," people said. "She's got a place out by
Death Valley. You won't believe it."
"Go see Ruth. She's got a place out by Death Valley. YOU WON'T BELIEVE IT."
CHAPTER TWO
THE COURT takes shape
she never called it a business. she called it "the situation."
By 1963 Ruth had seven trailers on the property. She hadn't planned
it. She just kept finding them. A Spartan Imperial Mansion at an
estate sale in Tonopah. A Boles Aero abandoned behind a gas station
in Shoshone. She'd haggle, hitch, and haul them back to the lot,
then spend months bringing them back to life.
She built the tiki bar in 1965 out of railroad ties salvaged from
the old Tonopah and Tidewater line and palm fronds she drove eight
hours round trip to pick up in Palm Springs. When someone asked her
why she needed a tiki bar in the middle of the Mojave, she said:
"Because I don't have one yet."
The fire pit came next. Then the string lights. Then the reputation.
Musicians passing through Vegas on their way to LA started stopping
over. Artists. Drifters. Scientists from the test site who couldn't
talk about their work and didn't want to. Ruth never asked. She just
pointed them to a trailer and told them where the tequila was.
ON THE RECORD
"Ruth didn't run a trailer court. Ruth ran a world. You showed up
and the desert was hot and the tequila was cold and somehow every
problem you brought with you just evaporated into the sky. I went
for one night in 1971. I stayed for a week. I've been coming back
every year since."
— FORMER MEMBER, NAME WITHHELD BY REQUEST
CHAPTER THREE
THE quiet YEARS
the desert is patient. it waited.
Ruth ran the court until 1989. She was 66. Her knees were shot, her
hearing was going, and she'd developed what she called "a philosophical
disagreement with gravity." She locked the trailers, drove to
Bakersfield, and told her niece: "Don't let anyone pave it." Then
she pointed the '40 Ford south. Ruth lived out her days by the beach in
Tijuana — sand between her toes, cold beer in hand, handmade corn
tortillas and the world's best fish tacos, not a single aluminum wall
in sight. She'd earned it.
For the next thirty-some years, the lot sat quiet. The trailers baked
in the sun. Creosote grew through the fire pit. The tiki bar's palm
fronds turned to dust. Desert kangaroo rats moved into the Spartan Imperial
and redecorated aggressively. The Mojave did what the Mojave does.
It waited.
The desert is patient. It WAITED.
CHAPTER FOUR
SOMEBODY found it
you don't find ruthville. ruthville finds you.
Ruth had a car service on standby in four cities. She knew the maître d' at places that don't take reservations. Her bag cost more than most people's first car and her dogs — a Cane Corso named Broccoli and a pug named Beef — had flown private.
She was not looking for a trailer park.
She was somewhere she had no business being, on an unmarked road in the Mojave at the wrong hour of the day, when the light hit the aluminum a certain way and she stopped the car.
Then she saw the sign.
She stood there in the desert in shoes that had no business being in the desert, dust settling on things that did not belong in dust, Broccoli surveying the creosote like he owned it, Beef having opinions about the heat, and she thought: of course.
The name was hers. The trailers were hers. The whole absurd situation was hers. She just had to drive far enough into the middle of nowhere for Ruthville to find her.
THE DAY RUTHVILLE FOUND RUTH
THE TIMELINE
HOW WE got here
1957
Ruth Maguire arrives in the Mojave with a Spartan, a toolbox,
and an unreasonable tolerance for heat. Buys 5 acres.
1963
Seven trailers on the lot. Ruth still insists this isn't a business.
1965
The tiki bar goes up. Built from railroad ties and Palm Springs palm
fronds. BYOB from day one.
1971
Peak Ruth era. Musicians, artists, and unnamed government scientists
passing through regularly. No questions asked.
1989
Ruth locks the trailers. Tells her niece in Bakersfield:
"Don't let anyone pave it." Drives south to Tijuana. Never comes back.
1989–2019
The quiet years. The desert waits. The kangaroo rats redecorate.
2020
Ruthville finds Ruth. Restoration begins. Ruth's niece approves.
NOW
Four trailers. One tiki bar. One fire pit.
Two and a half acres of desert calm. RuthVille is open.
Ruth would have liked that.
The desert didn't need to be survived. It needed to be LIVED IN.
ONE MORE THING
ABOUT THE name
People ask if Ruth was real. We don't answer that question.
What we will say is that the Mojave has a long history of
people showing up with nothing but a plan and a high tolerance
for solitude, and building something that makes no sense to
anyone except the people who find it. Ruth is all of them.
RuthVille is for all of them.
Whether she existed or not, the tequila is real, the trailers are
real, and the sunsets are absolutely, undeniably, unreasonably real.
What you'll read here is history the way the Mojave keeps it. Some of it happened. All of it is true.
THE TIKI BAR AT DUSK