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THE ANCIENT TRUTH

We may agitate and threaten and declaim,
We may "watch and wait," and afterwards atone;
But the painful age-old fact remains the same:
That our "dignity" rests on our arms alone.
By the Tigris, by the Tibur, by the Nile,
Through the long and weary ages of the past,
'Twas the acts of those who "waited," temporized, procrastinated,
That lit the fires of ruin at the last.
For each blood-red sun that ever sank from sight,
Behind a plundered city's flaming roar,
For each capital laid waste; for each haughty flag abased.
Lies the blame on heedless Peace and not on War.
We may talk of "brotherhood" and of "expense;"
We may blind our eye and put the matter by.
We may live in vapid dreams; in wild Socialistic schemes;
But if our armies fail us-then we die.
The Peace Dove twitters soothingly her song,
The visionary hearks with raptured ears,
Nor heeds the fact-hard proved by ages long-
That Peace Doves build their nests mid naked spears.
Now may we learn the ancient truth once more-
The truth that holds until the world shall cease-
On our battleships and guns; on the nation's soldier sons,
Rests our only hope of long unbroken peace.
While our might is still unquestioned on the sea,
While our force defies invasion of our coast,
So long, no instant longer, may we hold,
The flag and liberty that is our boast.
-Marshal South, "Warrior Poet," April 1914


Who Was Marshal South?

Originally published as a four-part series in the Borrego Sun (November 18, December 2, December 16, and December 30, 2004) and also appearing on the website DesertUSA.com with permission of the author. The series is based on the “Foreword” of Marshal South and the Ghost Mountain Chronicles: An Experiment in Primitive Living, published by Sunbelt Publications, January 2005.

Part I: Finding the Real Marshal South

By Diana Lindsay

For 17 years, from 1930 to 1947, poet, artist, and author Marshal South and his family lived on Ghost Mountain—a remote, waterless mountaintop that is today within California’s Anza-Borrego Desert State Park. Over a period of nine of those years, South chronicled his family’s controversial primitive lifestyle through popular monthly articles written for Desert Magazine.

An acrimonious divorce ended the "experiment in primitive living," so described by Randall Henderson, editor of Desert Magazine. Marshal’s death in 1948 soon after the divorce, the refusal of his wife Tanya to grant an interview over the next 50 years of her life, and the many rumors that have abounded have combined to elicit wide speculation over the years.

Today the South’s home, called by them Yaquitepec (YAKeete-PECK), lies in ruins—crumbling adobe walls, the frame for an arched doorway, a rusted bed frame, and cement and barrel cisterns once used to catch seasonal rainfall. A one-mile trail at the foot of Ghost Mountain in Blair Valley, off Highway S-2, climbs 1,200 feet to the site. The Souths had named the mountain for the "thin, ghostly trails" that led to the obscure ridge where they built their home.

The hike up to the old home is a popular day trip for park visitors. Invariably, it leads to many questions about South and his family—who were they and why did they select Ghost Mountain as a homestead? Interest over the years has led to many articles about the Souths (over 40) and several website postings. What information was available was principally gleaned from Desert Magazine or other articles written by South that appeared in the Saturday Evening Post or Arizona Highways. On occasion there would be an interview with someone who knew them, but the family kept largely silent until Tanya South passed away in 1997, a few months short of her 100th birthday.

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Rider South, the oldest of the three children who grew up on Ghost Mountain, shared some information with a Los Angeles Times freelancer in 2002, but the information was limited. Even the family was not sure of Marshal’s past. Secrecy, changed names and dates, deliberate obfuscation, lost and burned records and letters hid the truth all these years.

But there was just enough information and clues left, that slowly the story of the real Marshal South emerged. It took months of research and a team to find the answers. Kristi Hawthorne, the president of the Oceanside Historical Society, scoured the old pages of the Oceanside Blade for early information. A research team in Adelaide, South Australia, searched documents and newspapers, once it was established that South was born there and not in London, England. Family members who had not been in contact with each other searched through old letters and documents they had. And, finally we had the story.

The man who emerged was much more complex and talented than anyone ever knew. He had been a widely-published writer of poems (over 50), short stories and essays (over 35), and novels (8) in addition to his articles and poems in Desert Magazine (102). His writings were published in South Australia, Great Britain and the United States—in local and syndicated newspapers and magazine in New York, Pennsylvania, California, Arizona, and Texas.

He was also an artist who painted watercolors and oils, made pottery, carved wood and designed iron sculptures. He did silver and leather work, weaving, and he ran his own printing press, creating booklets, greeting cards, and newsletters decorated with colored blocks hand-carved from linoleum.

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Marshal was born Roy Bennett Richards on February 24, 1889, in a seaside suburb of Glenelg, about six miles from the center of Adelaide, South Australia. He was raised on his father’s sheep ranch at Pandurra, about 24 miles west of Port Augusta, a farming community approximately 200 miles north of Adelaide. The landscape and climate around Pandurra was very similar to that around Ghost Mountain. It was also very isolated.

Roy was a very precocious and brilliant young man who was interested in writing from an early age. He attended St. Peter’s College in Adelaide, South Australia’s most prestigious boy’s school. On December 24, 1904, the Port Augusta Dispatch, published a short story that may have been his first published piece—he was 15 years old.

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Over the next several years the Port Augusta Dispatch and The Gadfly—an Adelaide weekly—published several short stories, poems, essays, and political commentary written by Roy Richards. Several were written under a pseudonym.

Roy only attended St. Peter’s College for one year, despite the fact that his father was wealthy and could easily pay the tuition. His father wanted him to help work the many sheep ranches that he owned. Roy did not want to be a rancher; he wanted to be a writer. His mother sympathized with him, and perhaps encouraged by an unhappy marriage, she left her husband and took her two boys to the United States, arriving in 1908.

For the next several years, Roy, his brother Norman, and his mother moved around quite a bit—always fearful that Charles Bennett Richards would follow them to the United States and find them. They finally settled in Oceanside in 1911.

Possibly concerned that "Charlie" Richards could trace them through Roy’s publications in the United States, Roy selected the name Marshal South as his nom de plume. The decision probably came easy to him as he had used several pseudonyms while writing in Adelaide. But why the name Marshal South? There are several possibilities.

Roy was a word wizard and enjoyed playing with words with double meanings. A “marshal” as a deputy or sheriff conjures up the image of a frontier marshal. But marshal also has a second meaning. As a verb, it means ushering or leading in ceremoniously. Perhaps he saw himself as taking the lead as an author of western fiction—one who would one day be recognized for his writing skills.

Roy always had a fascination with the American West, even in Adelaide. The setting of one of his earliest stories had been in Texas.

That western mystique was carried through in an early photo of him taken around 1918 in Arizona and also later for his author photo on the back of Child of Fire, published in 1935. The only thing missing from that photo was a badge. He was pictured with a western hat, leather jacket, and an ammunition belt across his chest.

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South may have been a reference to his fascination with the Southwest, or it could have been a reference to Australia as Terra Australis—southern land—an early name for Australia. He was also from the province of South Australia.

Roy’s pseudonym was just one of the ways that the family chose to hide themselves. The earliest documents they filled out listed England as their land of birth, not Australia, and all documents through the death of each one usually listed England. Marshal even listed London, England, as his birthplace on one of his documents.

Birth dates and years were changed on documents or surveys as well as given names, which made it even more difficult to trace the family back to Australia. Roy changed his middle name from Bennett to Benjamin or B. Richards and dropped Roy when he was living in Oceanside.

His brother Norman changed his middle name Afford—his mother’s maiden name—to Allen and listed New York as his mother’s birthplace on his wedding certificate. Annie Emma Richards, Roy’s mother, listed herself as a widow of “W.C.” Richards rather that “C.B.” Richards, the initials that Charlie always used.

Part II: Marshal South—The Warrior Poet

Marshal South is known for his monthly columns published in Desert Magazine over a nine year period from 1939 to 1948. During much of that period he chronicled his family’s sojourn on Ghost Mountain, a remote mountaintop on the western edge of the Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, approximately 10 miles from Scissors Crossing, the junction of Highways 78 and S-2. Today, only the ruins of his house remain to remind us of his "great experiment."

But before he moved to the desert with his wife Tanya in 1930 to seek a peaceful and more spiritual life, he lived a very different life, espousing military preparedness. He lived in Oceanside, California, with his mother and brother, and he worked as a clerk for a local mercantile called Hansens. His real name was Roy Bennett Richards, but in Oceanside they knew him as B. or Benjamin Richards. When he wasn’t working, he wrote poetry, using the name Marshal South as his nom de plume.

His first known published work in the United States, entitled “Intervention,” appeared in the Los Angeles Tribune on May 7, 1912 (His writings previously were published in local papers in Australia since 1904 when he was 15 years old). The earliest reference to B. Richards writing as Marshal South appeared in the Oceanside Blade on December 27, 1913. The Blade reported that "A poem by B. Richards who writes under the pseudonym of Marshal South, and entitled ‘Lights of Vera Cruz,’ appeared in the magazine section in last Sunday’s Los Angeles Times."

By the spring of 1914, the editor of the Oceanside Blade was making regular comments about South’s poems, which were often reprinted in the Blade after first appearing in the Los Angeles Times. He was dubbed “Oceanside’s poet laureate” and received constant praise for his poetry.

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The Oceanside Blade reported on more than South’s writing ability in 1914. South had decided to take a more active role in promoting his interest in patriotism and the need for defense. His first activity was to call for a display of military arms, which were placed on view in the show windows of the Hansen store where he worked. He then called for the formation of the Oceanside Debating Club. Over 100 people attended the first meeting in December 1914 where South spoke on "National Defense and the fallacy of disarmament." Before the meeting adjourned, a local rifle club was organized.

By the end of 1914, the local newspaper was referring to him more often as Marshal South rather than B. Richards. South’s poetry also became much more militaristic. In January 1915, the Oceanside Blade called him "a warrior poet."

He became impassioned about the idea of defense and began working on the organization of a Defense League. He began by calling for a meeting to complete the organization of the Oceanside Rifle Club, which became affiliated with the National Rifle Association, and enrolled those interested in military drill as members of Company A, Oceanside.

South’s interest in national defense was long standing. He had written about the need for national defense as early as 1906 when he stilled lived in Australia (then he was worried about the growing threat of China and Japan). He viewed the situation in Europe in 1914 in the same light.

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On January 16, 1915, the Oceanside Blade stated that the American Defense League had been formed “for the encouragement of public interest in matters of national defense” and that Marshal South was elected president. By the following month members had uniforms and were drilling on a regular basis. The Blade also began referring to South only by this name and never used the name B. Richards again. The transition to Marshal South was complete. He was also now referred to as "Captain" South.

The Blade continued to lavish praise on South, "the poet-soldier," stating on April 10, 1915, that "Oceanside may some day owe the placing of her name upon the map of the nation in capital letters—for it is in Oceanside that South has succeeded in organizing the ‘American League of Defense,’ destined, perhaps to become an institution with branches in every part of the Union."

In July 1915, South stepped down as president of the Rifle Club and as captain of Company A to devote more time to his duties as president of the American Defense League. That month he met with Theodore Roosevelt to discuss the policies and objectives of the league and received Roosevelt’s full support of the league activities.

Just as he had all of this momentum and support for his league activities, South disengaged himself by overseeing the amalgamation of his defense league with that of the American Defense League of San Diego in December 1915. He accepted a position as the national representative of the San Diego league but did not become actively involved.

During this same time period, South received national attention for his poem "Progress," which was printed in the American Magazine and later copied in the Los Angeles Tribune and the Oceanside Blade. The editor of the Tribune stated that South is "a Californian by adoption," and claimed that "American has found such a singer, that rarest of rare comers—a true poet" in Marshal South. It was also reported in March 1916 that "Progress" had won a gold medal at the annual "elocution contest" at Erasmus Hall in Brooklyn, New York.

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Sometime at the end of summer 1916 South was drafted into the Army. He was sent to Camp Henry J. Jones in Douglas, Arizona, where he served with the Transportation Division of the Army Quartermaster Company (QMC). Unfortunately, his military records were burned in a massive fire in 1973 at the National Personnel Records Center in St. Louis, so the details of his service have been lost.

South served while General John J. Pershing was in pursuit of Pancho Villa from 1916 to 1917. South became fully informed about the activities of the Carranzistas and the Villistas, which provided the background for several of his western novels.

While he served with the QMC, he met Margaret Schweichler who worked as a civilian secretary in the QMC office with South. They courted a year before they married on January 9, 1918.

Part III: Marshal South—The Years Before Yaquitepec

Ghost Mountain was named by Tanya and Marshal South in 1930 when they began their “great experiment” in primitive living, which was later chronicled in the pages of Desert Magazine. No where in the pages of the magazine can a reader find background on the Souths. Their life, as far as the magazine was concerned, began when they commenced building their home, called Yaquitepec, on the waterless ridge of Ghost Mountain in Blair Valley.

Before the magazine, before Ghost Mountain, and before Tanya, there was Margaret, the Army, and Arizona.

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Margaret Frieda Schweichler was 21 years old when she met Marshal while working as a civilian secretary with the Army Quartermaster Company where Marshal worked as a clerk. Two years later they were married on January 9, 1918, in Bisbee, Arizona, when Marshal was 29 years old.

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Margaret was an artist who painted in oils. Marshal called her “Pusstat” because she loved cats. They had a small home in Douglas near Camp Henry J. Jones where Marshal worked. Almost a year after their marriage Marshal Jr. was born on December 5, 1919. Sometime before that date, Marshal was discharged from the Army (the exact date is unknown because his military records were destroyed in a fire in 1973), and in June 1920, Margaret asked Marshal to leave.

Marshal was distraught and spent nights sleeping out in the open desert “sinking into hopeless degradation; sleeping on boxes and out in the desert in an overcoat; chased off by the police,” as he recounted in a letter written in December 1922. He had hoped Margaret would take him back, and he repeatedly tried to return to her only to be rebuffed.

He eventually drifted back to Oceanside, California, where his mother lived and found a job as a carpenter at the Rosicrucian Fellowship in Oceanside. He wrote regularly to Margaret, sending money and gifts, and Margaret wrote back, sometimes including drawings by “Ratzin” (Marshal Jr.). The fact was that Margaret always loved Marshal, but could not live with him. She was ambitious and wanted a good provider. Marshal admitted that he could never be “a successful provider” because “earthly prosperity and comfort” meant “nothing or next to nothing; it is toward the world of ideals and thought and philosophy that my steps lead,” he explained in a letter.

Marshal felt they had inflicted real pain on each other, and he acknowledged that he had “brought trouble and financial disaster, disillusionment, and shattered dreams” to Margaret, but she had “brought the unspeakable torture and agony of useless and rejected love and the tearing separation from the love of my boy.” Marshal sunk into depression and considered suicide.

Then he met Tanya who worked in the healing department of the Rosicrucian Fellowship. He later credited Tanya with saving his life by binding up his “broken heart” and bringing “the rest of peace to a tortured soul.” He told Margaret in a letter to her that where she had opened the door of life to him that Tanya had opened the door which leads beyond life.

Tanya had worked at the Fellowship since 1920 when she had moved to Oceanside from New York City. She was born on November 4, 1897, in Zhmerinka, Podolsk, near Brahilov in the Russian Ukraine near the Romanian border. Her orthodox Jewish family emigrated to the United States in 1906 when Tanya was eight years old. She was educated in the New York City schools and after graduation, she worked as a secretary on Wall Street. Her interest in the occult and spiritual pursuits led her to the Rosicrucian Fellowship.

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Tanya was also a writer and poet who submitted articles and poems to the Rosicrucian Fellowship Magazine, Rays from the Rose Cross, that were published regularly beginning in May 1920. She was a small woman—five feet, three inches tall—with blue eyes and light brown hair (Marshal was five feet, eleven inches tall, weighted under 140 pounds, and had brown eyes and brown hair).

In December 1922 Marshal asked Margaret for a divorce, stating that “it is not fair of you to keep me tied to you and at the same time refuse to be a companion to me….for two years you have pushed me from you and urged me to seek someone else. And I could not do it. I clung to the hope of you. And finally Fate has intervened.”

He told Margaret that if Tanya loved him she “would go with me to the end of the earth.” He said that Tanya had “risen far above money. For she does not want it nor value it. She lives simply and dresses simply. She is not afraid of poverty and it is the higher things of life that she desires—not the material.”

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Before a legal divorce was obtained, Marshal and Tanya married on March 8, 1923, in Santa Ana, California. On the wedding document Marshal claimed it was his first marriage. Marshal and Tanya were later remarried on September 19, 1938, in San Diego. Their honeymoon was spent tent camping on a beach in Oceanside.

After they were married they moved to Los Angeles where Tanya took a job with an oil company and Marshal began working for an “office building concern.” Soon thereafter, Marshal moved back to Oceanside to take care of his ill mother while Tanya continued working in Los Angeles. His mother, Annie Richards, died on August 1, 1924. After her death, he moved back to Los Angeles.

In the following years they both pursued their interest in writing. Marshal was no longer writing poetry, perhaps not to compete with Tanya. He wrote short stories and worked on novels. He had success finding publishers for his short stories, but it was not until 1936 that he was successful in finding a publisher for his novels.

In 1925 or 1926 Marshal and Tanya began taking camping trips to the desert, exploring sites along San Diego County’s unpaved Highway S-2. They stayed often at the Vallecito Stage Station (before it was restored), until Tanya was frightened by an apparition of a white horse she claimed to have seen.

In 1928 the Souths moved back to Oceanside from Los Angeles. Their decision to move to the desert permanently in 1930 probably was driven by many factors. The Depression clearly limited Marshal’s income as a writer and made it difficult to make ends meet. He later explained in an article he wrote for the Saturday Evening Post that they did not want to be slaves to making money. They wanted to pursue more creative and spiritual endeavors. They wanted peace and solitude, and they wanted to experience a total sense of freedom—mentally and physically. He said they “were tired” and “out of step….temperamental misfits and innate barbarians…not equal to the job of coping with modern high-power civilization.”

In all likelihood, South was also influenced by writers who wrote about a return to nature—Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and Hermann Hesse. He also may have been influenced by the German natural-living movements that were spreading to the United States. Interestingly, a similar return to nature experiment was being conducted at the same time in Palm Springs, centering in Tahquitz Canyon, unbeknownst to South.

Against the advice of South’s brother and friends, Tanya and Marshal packed their Model T in February 1930 and drove to the desert, stopping in Blair Valley. To Marshal, it may have seemed like returning to his boyhood home in Australia, similar in landscape and isolation. To Tanya, the city girl, it was an adventure that would allow her to focus on her spiritual interests. It would be difficult and it would call for a certain amount of suffering, which she viewed as necessary for spiritual evolvement.

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By the time that Rider Del Sol South was born on January 22, 1934, they had established a comfortable home on the waterless ridge of Ghost Mountain.

Part IV: The Great Experiment Comes to an End

Visitors to the ruins found on Ghost Mountain in Blair Valley, on the western edge of Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, may find it hard to believe that there was once a comfortable home found there that was originally built beginning in 1930. The builders wanted a home that was isolated yet inspiring that would allow them the freedom to pursue their own interests, totally unfettered by the demands of civilization.

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The adobe home belonged to Marshal and Tanya South, and it was built over several years as they were dependent on water to make the adobe home and cement cisterns. At first they carried the water up the one-mile steep trail, 12 gallons per trip, until the new cisterns were able to catch and store rainwater. All building materials, including bags of heavy cement, and supplies were carried up a trail they also had to construct. At the end of several years they had a very livable home, which they called Yaquitepec (YAKeete-PECK), naming it after the freedom-loving Yaqui Indians of Sonora, Mexico, and “tepec” because it was on a hill.

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The home faced magnetic west to catch the rays or the morning sun. In its final form in the l940s, the interior of the house measured 15 feet by almost 40 feet. It looked larger because the adobe walls were from 1-2 feet thick. There were basically two rooms. The northern room was the front room with the entrance and large windows. The west side of this room was screened and mouse-proof and was used to store food. The central part of the south room had a large adobe stove, a fireplace, a dining table, and two food coolers. A bed area was next to the southern wall.

A circular 12-foot deep storage cellar with an 8-foot diameter was located behind the house. The Souths had begun work on a third room to the north, but only the wall was completed before they left Yaquitepec. The Souths used a large shaded ramada outside as an additional room, and during summer, they slept under the ramada.

They wanted to live as natural as possible, emulating the Native Americans whenever they could. They collected some native foods that supplemented what they purchased. Primarily they harvested mescal or agave each year as well as cactus fruit and chia seeds. They were primarily dependent on whole grains, which they purchased in town and ground in a hand mill. They attempted to grind the whole grains Indian fashion on granitic rock, but learned very quickly that they could not separate the gravel from the ground grain. They also purchased potatoes, beans, and fruit in season. Later when they had children, they purchased condensed milk in cans until they bought two goats that provided milk and cheese. They also had honey from bee hives they kept at the foot of Ghost Mountain. Marshal had a rifle and would hunt for rabbits.

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All of their dishes and storage pots were made from local clay on Ghost Mountain and fired in a kiln near the house. Yucca leaves were used for webbing for chairs and to make sandals and rope. They had a small hand loom to weave cloth and blankets, and they made their own candles and soap.

Everything else they needed was purchased in town from income received from Marshal’s writings. During the 1930s, that was from the sale of short stories and novels.

The dynamics of Marshal’s and Tanya’s relationship on Ghost Mountain changed dramatically when the children were born. Tanya was city bred and never felt comfortable raising children on an isolated mountaintop. She was constantly worried about their safety and their future. Marshal had been raised in the Australian outback. He felt very safe and comfortable living in isolation. With the children came the beginning of many arguments and disagreements about raising children.

Each of the three children was born in Oceanside. Tanya moved there each time during her last month of pregnancy. Rider Del Sol South was born in 1934. He was named for H. Rider Haggard, who wrote King Solomon’s Mines and other novels. Rudyard Del Sol South was born in 1937. He was named for Marshal’s favorite writer, Rudyard Kipling. Victoria Del Sol South was born in 1940. She was named for Queen Victoria and for the Spirit of Victory during the dark days of war torn Europe.

The story of the Souths would have been that of any other desert homestead family except for the fact that they became a family everyone knew because of the monthly columns written for Desert Magazine, beginning in December 1939. South received the one-year contract to write a series of 12 articles after “Desert Refuge” appeared in the Saturday Evening Post in March 1939. In that article, he described his successful experiment in primitive living and his family’s Robinson Crusoe existence on Ghost Mountain.

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The popularity of his series called “Desert Diary” led to a permanent monthly column that ran continuously until Tanya filed for divorce in the fall of 1946. After the separation, South wrote a series for Desert Magazine entitled “Desert Trails” until he died in October 1948.

First and foremost, South was a good writer that knew his audience. He wrote with lyric quality and he painted vivid word pictures. He wrote about the desert with passion. He wrote this about the desert: “Either you will love it or you will hate it. If you hate it you will fly from it and never wish to see its face again. If you love it, it will hold you and draw you as will no other land on earth.”

Desert Magazine readers adopted his family, sending so many Christmas presents yearly that it took literally two weeks to open all of them. The children did not lack for toys or books. The Souths had an extensive correspondence with readers that led to about 50 guests a year visiting Yaquitepec. They began enforcing their “no clothes” rule to control the number of guests visiting. Guests included representatives from the Peruvian Consulate, the Missouri Botanical Garden, and James L. Kraft who was seeking advice about raising cactus. For years afterwards, the Souths received a large box of Kraft cheese for Christmas.

South wrote not only about his family’s adventures and the desert, but also about his unconventional philosophy of life. The naysayers, his supporters, and even his guests never knew that things were not going well on the personal side. He took care to only write about the positive aspects of life on Ghost Mountain. He made life there sound so interesting. From Tanya’s perspective, however, it was a very difficult life with no future. It was even more difficult for her because of Marshal’s steadfastness to his own personal beliefs and his inability to compromise and meet Tanya part way.

Personal tension continued to mount as they both voiced different opinions over how the children should be raised. The two moves away from Yaquitepec in the mid 1940s set the stage for the divorce and final move.

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Because water was such a problem with a growing family that now consisted of three children, two goats, and two burrows, the South decided to move in the fall of 1942. They sealed up Yaquitepec, packed their Model A Ford and trailer, and went in search of a new home in Utah or Arizona. But with no money to buy land with the needed isolation to live their chosen lifestyle, the Souths returned to Yaquitepec a year later with determination to improve and enlarge their cisterns. Before their plans could be completed, the U.S. Navy asked them to move as Ghost Mountain was in the flight path for an artillery range.

Neighbors Everett and Lena Campbell came to the rescue and offered them the use of a comfortable stone line shack in Storm Canyon from July or August 1945 to June 1946. In June the Navy moved the family and all of their belongings back to the foot of Ghost Mountain. Marshal would not allow the Navy to carry their household goods to Yaquitepec because the officer in charge insisted on using a caterpillar tractor that would have left a tremendous scar on the mountainside. So the Navy left them to carry their own goods back up the hill.

Unbeknown to anyone outside of the immediate family was the increased tension between Marshal and Tanya. It finally came to a head a few months later when Tanya summoned up the courage to file for divorce. As divorce could only be granted for cause, Tanya exaggerated the charges.

Marshal did not contest the divorce because he felt the children would be better off with their mother. He wrote the judge and told him to give everything to Tanya. He only requested that the land not be sold until the youngest child was of age. He wanted to make sure that if Tanya could not survive in the city that she would have a home she could return to.

Tanya’s attorney briefed Rider on what to say at the divorce proceedings in January 1947. As instructed, he said that his father had beaten and threatened his mother. The fact was that he had not. But he stated that to prove cause, and a judgment favorable to Tanya was granted.

Marshal never recovered from the divorce. His whole world was shattered. The experiment in primitive living had failed. He died in October 1948, and he was buried in an unmarked grave, paid for by Myrtle and Louis Botts and Marshal Jr. and his mother Margaret. Tanya and the children did not attend the service, but they visited the funeral home in El Cajon before the body was taken to Julian.

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Years later the location of South’s grave was lost because cemetery records were burned in a fire. The discovery of a letter written by Myrtle Botts to Marshal Jr. while doing research for the South book has established the location of the grave. The letter lives detailed instructions on how to find the gravesite. In January 2005, the South children will be placing a headstone on their father’s grave.

Tanya lived to be a few months short of 100 years. She died in 1997. She remained bitter about Marshal and her life on Ghost Mountain to the end. In retrospect, her plan for the children was best for them. All have had very successful lives, and each has had their own happy and bright children.


  •  Read about who was Marshal South?
  •  Books About the Souths & the Anza-Borrego Desert available for purchase

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