Jackrabbit Homestead
  • About
  • JRHS Primer
    • Wonder Valley: Place and Paradox
    • Home: Finding Our Place
  • DESERT X 2021
  • JRHS Audio Tour
  • JRHS Photos
  • JRHS at the Autry
  • Order the Book
  • About
  • JRHS Primer
    • Wonder Valley: Place and Paradox
    • Home: Finding Our Place
  • DESERT X 2021
  • JRHS Audio Tour
  • JRHS Photos
  • JRHS at the Autry
  • Order the Book

Phillips Homestead, U.S. Patent No. 1197717

  • About this project

    JACKRABBIT HOMESTEAD is a book, audio tour and installation project by Kim Stringfellow exploring the cultural legacy of the Small Tract Act in Southern California’s Morongo Basin region near Joshua Tree National Park. Stories from this underrepresented regional history are told through the voices of local residents, historians, and area artists—many of whom reside in reclaimed historic cabins and use the structures as inspiration for their creative work.

  • News & Events

    • Lost in Palm Springs @ HOTA (Home of the Arts) March 11 – May, 21, 2023 03.12.23
    • Jackrabbit Homesteading essay for Log 55 Summer 2022 10.29.22
    • Art Journal Open: X Marks the Land by Emily Eliza Scott 03.04.22
    • Jackrabbit Homestead cabin on public display at the Joshua Tree Retreat Center 12.07.21
    • Desert X 2021 – The Film premiers on KCET Artbound (PBS SoCal) November 3, 2021 10.31.21
  • Newsletter

Jackrabbit Homestead acknowledges that U.S. public lands disposed by the federal government for Small Tracts during the mid-twentieth century are traditional lands of the American Southwest’s Indigenous people, including but not limited to, the various bands of Cahuilla, Chemehuevi, Serrano, Western Shoshone, and Southern Paiute people—all who are past, present, and future stewards of the regions where jackrabbit homesteading occurred.
Click here to learn about Indigenous acknowledgment & the lands you occupy.

CREDITS | RESOURCES
All content © Kim Stringfellow 2009-2024 unless otherwise specified.