| Los Angeles Landmarks includes historic
adobes, houses built by renown architects such as Frank Lloyd Wright, forests,
parks and even a Bougainvillea plant.
NO. 1006 BEALE'S CUT STAGECOACH
PASS - Beale's Cut is the only physical and cultural feature of its
kind in the entire Los Angeles Basin. At the time of its construction in
1862, the actual creation and maintenance of the Cut was considered a significant
technological and physical feat consisting of breaching the former impassable
geographic barrier of the San Gabriel and Santa Susana Mountain ranges.
General Edward F. Beale is attributed with the construction of a toll road
across the mountains. Beale's Cut was also used as a favorite film-making
location by pioneer film maker, David Wark Griffith, and others.
Location: Intersection of
Sierra Hwy and Clampitt Rd, Santa Clarita
NO. 1011 FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT
TEXTILE BLOCK HOUSES (THEMATIC), ENNIS HOUSE - This house was designed
by Frank Lloyd Wright and built in 1924 for Charles and Mabel Ennis. It
is one of four textile block houses registered as Landmark No. 1011.
Location: 2655 Glendower
Ave, Los Angeles
NO. 1011 FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT
TEXTILE BLOCK HOUSE (THEMATIC), FREEMAN HOUSE - The Samuel and Harriet
Freeman House, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and built in 1924, is one
of four residences that were designed to be affordable and modular constructed
using the cheap building material of concrete. These houses were constructed
from a textile block system of handmade concrete tiles held in a matrix
of steel bars, anchored and protected by a concrete mixture, and stacked
without grout.
Location: 1962 Glencoe Way,
Los Angeles
NO. 1014 LONG BEACH MARINE STADIUM
- Created in 1932 for the rowing events of the Xth Olympiad, the Stadium
was the first manmade rowing course in the United States. Its width allowed
four teams to race abreast, eliminating additional heats and allowing oarsmen
to enter the finals at the peak of their form. Later it served as the venue
for the 1968 and 1976 United States men's Olympic rowing trials and the
1984 United States women's Olympic rowing trials. The site remains an important
training and competitive center for rowers, including our National and
Olympic teams.
Location: Appian Way and
Nietro, Long Beach
NO. 1018 MANHATTAN BEACH STATE
PIER - Designed by City Engineer A.L. Harris, this pier was constructed
by the City of Manhattan Beach during the years 1917-1920. The roundhouse
building was added a year later. Harris' innovative design featured a rounded
end to the pier, which helped it withstand the pounding of the Pacific.
Although the roundhouse was reconstructed in 1989, the pier itself survives
as Southern California's oldest remaining example of early reinforced concrete
pier construction.
Location: West of Manhattan
Beach Blvd, Manhattan Beach
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
VENICE
NO. 1021 LIBERTY HILL SITE
- In 1923 the Marine Transport Workers Industrial Union 510, a branch of
the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), called a strike that immobilized
90 ships here in San Pedro. The union protested low wages, bad working
conditions, and the imprisonment of union activists under California's
Criminal Syndicalism Law. Denied access to public property, strikers and
their supporters rallied here at this site they called "Liberty Hill."
Writer Upton Sinclair was arrested for reading from the Bill of Rights
to a large gathering. The strike failed but laid a foundation for success
in the 1930s. The Syndicalism Law was ruled unconstitutional in 1968.
Location: Vicinity of 5th
St. & Harbor Blvd., San Pedro
NO. 127 CASA DE GOVERNOR PÍOPICO
- Following the Mexican War, Pío Pico, last Mexican governor, acquired
9,000-acre Rancho Paso de Bartolo and built here an adobe home that was
destroyed by the floods of 1883-1884. His second adobe casa, now known
as Pío Pico Mansion, represents a compromise between Mexican and
American cultures. While living here the ex-Governor was active in the
development of American California.
Location: Pio Pico State
Historic Park, 6003 Pioneer Blvd, Whittier
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
WHITTER
NO. 144 NUESTRA SEÑORA
LA REINA DE LOS ANGELES - La Iglesia de Nuestra Senora la Reina de
Los Angeles-the Church of Our Lady the Queen of the Angels-was dedicated
on December 8, 1822 during California's Mexican era. Originally known as
La Iglesia de Nuestra Senora de Los Angeles, the church was the only Catholic
church for the pueblo. Today it primarily serves the Hispanic population
of Los Angeles.
Location: 535 N Main St near
Macy St, Los Angeles
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
LOS ANGELES
NO. 145 AVILA ADOBE - This
adobe house was built ca. 1818 by Don Francisco Avila, alcalde (mayor)
of Los Angeles in 1810. Used as Commodore Robert Stockton's headquarters
in 1847, it was repaired by private subscription in 1929-30 when Olvera
Street was opened as a Mexican marketplace. It is the oldest existing house
in Los Angeles.
Location: El Pueblo de Los
Angeles Historic Monument, Olvera St, Los Angeles
NO. 147BANNING PARK
- General Phineas Banning, State Senator and pioneer in the development
of transportation in Southern California, built this house in the 1850s,
soon after founding the town of Wilmington. He and his family lived here
until his death in 1885. In 1927 the property was deeded to the city.
Location: 401 East M St at
Banning Place, Wilmington
NO. 150 BRAND PARK (MEMORY GARDEN)
- Brand Park, also called Memory Garden, was given to the city for a park
November 4, 1920. It is a part of the original land grant of Mission San
Fernando de Rey de España, and the colorful and picturesque atmosphere
of the early California missions is preserved in Memory Garden.
Location: 15174 San Fernando
Mission Blvd, Los Angeles
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
SAN FERNANDO
NO. 151 CAMPO DE CAHUENGA
- 'Here was made the Treaty of Cahuenga by General Andrés Pico,
commanding forces for Mexico, and Lieutenant-Colonel J. C. Frémont,
U.S. Army, for the United States. By this treaty, agreed upon January 13th,
1847, the United States acquired California - finally secured to us by
the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, made February 2nd, 1848.' This legend
was written February 9, 1898 by Mrs. Jessie Benton Frémont.
Location: 3919 Lankershim
Blvd, North Hollywood
NO. 152 DOMÍNGUEZ RANCHHOUSE
- The central portion of the ranchhouse was built in 1826 by Manuel Domínguez.
Rancho San Pedro, ten square leagues granted provisionally by Governor
Fages to Juan José Domínguez in 1784, was regranted by Governor
Solá to Cristobal Domínguez in 1822. In the battle of Domínguez
Ranch, fought here October 8 and 9, 1846, Californians led by José
Antonio Carrillo repelled United States forces under Captain William Mervine,
U.S. Navy, in an attempt to recapture the Pueblo of Los Angeles.
Location: 18127 S Alameda,
Compton
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
SOUTH GATE
NO. 156 LOS ANGELES PLAZA
- A part of the original pueblo lands of El Pueblo de la Reina de Los Angeles
de Porciuncula founded in 1781 under the Spanish Laws of the Indies during
the reign of King Carlos III, the plaza is located close to the site of
the original plaza. It was the center of the settlement founded by Governor
Felipe de Neve. When the Plaza Church was completed in 1822, this site
was reserved as a public plaza. It was landscaped in 1871 and has served
since that date as a public park.
Location: El Pueblo de Los
Angeles Historic Monument, 500 block of N Main St, Los Angeles
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
LOS ANGELES
NO. 157 MISSION SAN FERNANDO
REY DE ESPAÑA - Mission San Fernando Rey de España was
founded by Father Lasuén in September 8, 1797. A house belonging
to Francisco Reyes, on Encino Rancho, furnished temporary shelter for the
missionary in charge. An adobe chapel, built and blessed in December 1806,
was damaged by the destructive earthquake of 1812 - a new church was completed
in 1818.
Location: 15151 San Fernando
Mission Blvd, Mission Hills
Listed on the National Register of
Historic Places: NPS-88002147
NO. 158 MISSION SAN GABRIEL
ARCÁNGEL - The mission was founded September 8, 1771 by Padres
Pedro Benito Cambon and Angel Fernández de la Somera. The present
church building was begun during the latter part of the 18th century and
completed in the year 1800.
Location: 537 W Mission Dr
at Junipero St, San Gabriel
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
EL MONTE
Listed on the National Register of
Historic Places: NPS-71000158
NO. 159 PICO HOUSE (HOTEL)
- Pío Pico constructed the Pico House in 1869-70. The first three-story
hotel built in Los Angeles, it had about eighty rooms, large windows, a
small interior court, and a grand staircase.
Location: El Pueblo de Los
Angeles Historic Monument, 400 block of Main St, Los Angeles
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
LOS ANGELES
Listed on the National Register of
Historic Places: NPS-72000231
NO. 160 PLUMMER PARK AND OLDEST
HOUSE IN HOLLYWOOD - Known as the 'Oldest House in Hollywood,' this
house was built in the 1870s by Eugene Raphael Plummer.
Location: Old location: 7377
Santa Monica Blvd, Hollywood (Los Angeles) New location: 23537 Calabasas
Rd, Calabasas
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
HOLLYWOOD
NO. 161 SITE OF MISSION VIEJA
- 'Mission Vieja,' Old Mission, was the name given to the first buildings
erected, and later abandoned, by the fathers for Mission San Gabriel Arcángel.
The permanent buildings for the mission were located about five miles distant.
Location: SW corner N San
Gabriel Blvd and N Lincoln Ave, Montebello
NO. 167 LA MESA BATTLEFIELD
- La Mesa Battlefield served as a campsite for the California forces under
General Castro in the summer of 1846, during the United States' occupation
of California in the Mexican War. The battle of La Mesa, last military
encounter of the war on the California front, was fought here January 9,
1847.
Location: 4490 Exchange Ave
at Downey Rd, Vernon
NO. 168 OAK OF THE GOLDEN DREAM
- Francisco López made California's first authenticated gold discovery
on March 9, 1842. While gathering wild onions near an oak tree in Placerita
Canyon he found gold particles clinging to the roots of the bulbs. The
San Fernando placers and nearby San Feliciano Canyon were worked by Sonoran
miners using panning, sluicing and dry washing methods. Lopez's find predated
James Marshall strike at Sutter's Mill by six years.
Location: Site: Placerita
Canyon State and County Park, Placerita Canyon Rd, 4.6 mi NE of Newhall
(Los Angeles) Plaque: SE corner I-5 and Lyons Ave, Newhall
NO. 169 DRUM BARRACKS -
Established in 1862, Drum Barracks became the United States military headquarters
for Southern California, Arizona, and New Mexico. It was a garrison and
base for supplies, and a terminus for camel pack trains operated by the
Army until 1863. Abandoned in 1866, the site remains a landmark of the
Civil War in California.
Location: 1053 Cary St (corner
Cary and Opp), Wilmington
NO. 170 HANCOCK PARK LA BREA
- The bones of thousands of prehistoric animals that had been entrapped
during the Ice Age in pools of tar that bubbled from beneath the ground
were exhumed from this site. First historic reference to the pools, part
of the 1840 Rancho La Brea land grant, was recorded by Gaspar de Portolá
in 1769 - first scientific excavations were made by the University of California
in 1906. The site was presented to the County of Los Angeles in 1916 by
Captain G. Allan Hancock to be developed as a scientific monument.
Location: Hancock Park, 5801
Wilshire Blvd between Ogden and Curson Sts, Los Angeles
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
LOS ANGELES
NO. 171 MERCED THEATRE -
The Merced Theatre, erected in 1870 on North Main Street next to the Pico
House, was the first building built expressly for theatrical purposes in
Los Angeles. It was built by William Abbot, a cabinetmaker, and named in
honor of his wife Merced Garcia.
Location: El Pueblo de Los
Angeles Historic Monument, 420 Main St, Los Angeles
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
LOS ANGELES
Listed on the National Register of
Historic Places: NPS-72000231
NO. 172 PIONEER OIL REFINERY
- In 1875 the Star Oil Company, one of the predecessors of the Standard
Oil Company of California, drilled its first Pico Canyon well, which yielded
about one hundred barrels per day. The discovery resulted in the erection
of the first commercial oil refinery in California the following year.
Location: Site and private
plaque at 238 Pine St, Newhall - state plaque at Lang Blvd exit of I-5
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
NEWHALL
NO. 289 FIRST HOME OF POMONA
COLLEGE - Pomona College, incorporated October 14, 1887, held its first
class in this small frame cottage on September 12, 1888. Those in attendance
consisted of a mere handful of eager students, five faculty members, and
the president, Professor Edwin C. Norton. Five months later, in January
1889, the college moved to an unfinished boom hotel on a plot of land in
the town of Claremont.
Location: SW corner Mission
Blvd and S White St, Pomona
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
ONTARIO
NO. 301 LUGO ADOBE (SITE OF)
- The Lugo Adobe, said to have been built in the 1840s by Don Vicente Lugo,
was one of the very few two-story houses in the pueblo of Los Angeles.
In 1867, Lugo donated this house on the Plaza to St. Vincent's School (forerunner
of Loyola University). From the 1880s until it was razed in 1951, the building
was occupied by the Chinese.
Location: El Pueblo de Los
Angeles Historic Monument, SE corner Los Angeles and Alameda Sts, Los Angeles
NO. 302 OLD MILL - The
Old Mill, El Molino Viejo, was designed by Father José María
Zalvidea and built of fired bricks and adobe about 1816 to serve Mission
San Gabriel. Another grist mill was built in 1823 near the mission and
the old mill was gradually abandoned - it passed from mission control in
1846. The property remained in private hands until 1903, when Henry E.
Huntington bought the building and used it for a golf clubhouse. Later
owners, Mr. and Mrs. James Brehm, had the mill restored in 1928 by Frederick
Rupple.
Location: 1120 Old Mill Rd,
San Marino
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
EL MONTE
NO. 362 RÓMULO PICO ADOBE (RANCHITO RÓMULO)
- The oldest portion of the adobe was built about 1834 by ex-mission Indians.
It was enlarged by Eulogio de Celís in 1846, and an upper story
added by Rómulo Pico in 1874. The house was restored by Mr. and
Mrs. M. R. Harrington in 1930.
Location: 10940 N Sepulveda
Blvd, Mission Hills
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
SAN FERNANDO
Listed on the National Register of
Historic Places: NPS-66000211
NO. 363 CENTINELA SPRINGS
- Bubbling springs once flowed here from their source in a deep water basin
that has existed continuously since the Pleistocene Era. Prehistoric animals,
Indians, and early Inglewood settlers were attracted here by the pure artesian
water. The springs and valley were named after sentinels guarding cattle
in the area.
Location: Centinela Park,
700 Warren Ln, Inglewood
NO. 367 E. J. BALDWIN'S QUEEN
ANNE COTTAGE - Designed by A. A. Bennett for entertaining, the cottage
was constructed by Elias Jackson ('Lucky') Baldwin in 1881. Since there
was no kitchen, meals were served from the nearby adobe (built by Hugo
Reid in 1839) where Baldwin actually lived. The building was restored and
dedicated May 18,1954 as part of Los Angeles State and County Arboretum.
Location: Los Angeles State
and County Arboretum, 301 N Baldwin, Arcadia
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
PASADENA
NO. 368 HUGO REID ADOBE
- Hugo Reid, a Scotsman, petitioned the government of Mexico to grant him
Rancho Santa Anita. His claim strengthened by his marriage to Victoria,
a native Indian of the San Gabriel Mission, he received the grant on April
16, 1841. Immediately upon filing his petition, Reid took possession of
the land, started to farm and plant vineyards, and built the first house-the
Hugo Reid Adobe-in 1839. In 1875, E. J. Baldwin purchased the rancho and
in 1879 added a wooden wing to the old adobe.
Location: Los Angeles State
and County Arboretum, 301 N Baldwin Ave, Arcadia
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
PASADENA
NO. 372 ADOBE DE PALOMARES
- Completed about 1854 and restored in 1939, this was the family home of
Don Ygnacio Palomares. Governor Juan B. Alvarado granted Rancho San Jose
to Don Ygnacio and Don Ricardo Vejar in 1837.
Location: 491 E Arrow Hwy,
Pomona
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
ONTARIO
NO. 373 OLD SALT LAKE -
The Indians of this area obtained salt from this lake. Sometime in the
1850s, Johnson and Allanson erected the necessary works to manufacture
salt by artificial as well as solar evaporation. The salt yield for 1879
was 450 tons.
Location: SE corner Harbor
Dr and Yacht Club Way, Redondo Beach
NO. 380 SITE OF HOME OF DIEGO
SEPÚLVEDA - This adobe home, built by Diego Sepúlveda
in the 1850s, was the first two-story Monterey-type adobe built in Southern
California.
Location: 700 block of Channel
St, San Pedro
NO. 381 SITE OF OLD WHALING
STATION - The whaling industry is said to have been started by Captain
Clark in 1864. Captain Frank Anderson, a Portuguese, tried 2,166 barrels
of whale oil at this station from 1874 to 1877. The station was abandoned
because of a lack of fuel rather than vessels.
Location: Portuguese Bend
Club, Palos Verdes Dr. and Maritime Rd, Rancho Palos Verdes
NO. 383 SITE OF ADOBE HOME OF
JOSÉ DOLORES SUPULVEDA - This adobe was built in 1818. Dolores
had trouble getting his land title cleared, so he took a trip to Monterey
to get the matter definitely settled and, on his return trip, he was shot
with an arrow by a hostile Indian at Mission La Purísima Concepción.
Location: Approx intersection
of Madison St and Courtney Way, Torrance
NO. 384 TIMMS' POINT AND LANDING
- In 1852 German immigrant Augustus W. Timms obtained Sepúlveda's
Landing on the mudflats near here. He built a wharf, added a warehouse,
corral and other facilities to service shipping and the running of stages
to Los Angeles. Timms was a pioneer in the development of the harbor and
for over fifty years this area was known as Timms Point.
Location: Sampson Way at
Southern Pacific Slip, San Pedro
NO. 385 RIO SAN GABRIEL BATTLEFIELD
- Near this site on January 8, 1847, American forces commanded by Captain
Robert F. Stockton, U.S. Navy, Commander in Chief, and Brigadier General
Stephen W. Kearney, U.S. Army, fought Californians commanded by General
José María Flores in the Battle of the Río San Gabriel.
Location: NE corner of Washington
Blvd and Bluff Rd, Montebello
NO. 386 LA CASA DE CARRIÓN
- This house, built in 1868 by Saturnino Carrión, was restored in
1951 by Paul E. Traweek.
Location: 919 Puddingstone
Dr, La Verne
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
SAN DIMAS
NO. 451 THE ORTEGA-VIGARE ADOBE
- Erected during mission days, 1792-1805, this is the second oldest adobe
in this region. Originally 'L'-shaped, it is now only half its original
size. In 1859, the adobe became the property of Don Jean Vigare and in
the early 1860s, as San Gabriel's first bakery, it was separated from the
mission's lime orchard by a high cactus wall.
Location: 616 S Ramona St,
San Gabriel
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
EL MONTE
NO. 514 POMONA WATER POWERPLANT
- The first hydroelectric installation in California for long-distance
transmission of alternating current at high voltage was built in 1892 on
San Antonio
Creek below this spot by the San Antonio Light and Power Company
organized by Dr. Cyrus Grandison Baldwin, President of Pomona College.
The first high-voltage transformers built by George Westinghouse for this
installation provided for transmission of 10,000 volts from the plant to
Pomona.
Location: Camp Baldy Rd (P.M.
2.0), San Antonio Canyon, 8.1 mi N of State Hwy 166, Claremont
NO. 516 WELL, CSO 4 (PICO 4)
- On this site stands CSO-4 (Pico No. 4), California's first commercially
productive well. It was spudded in early 1876 under direction of Demetrious
G. Scofield who later became the first president of Standard Oil Company
of California, and was completed at a depth of 300 feet on September 26,
1876, for an initial flow of 30 barrels of oil a day. Later that year,
after the well was deepened to 600 feet with what was perhaps the first
steam rig employed in oil well drilling in California, it produced at a
rate of 150 barrels a day - it is still producing after 77 years (1953).
The success of this well prompted formation of the Pacific Coast Oil Company,
a predecessor of Standard Oil Company of California, and led to the construction
of the state's first refinery nearby. It was not only the discovery well
of the Newhall Field, but was a powerful stimulus to the subsequent development
of the California petroleum industry.
Location: On W Pico Canyon
Rd, 3.3 mi W of I-5, Newhall
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
SAN FERNANDO
NO. 516-2 MENTRYVILLE -
Named after pioneer oil developer Charles Alexander Mentry, who in 1876
drilled the first successful oil well in California. His restored home
and barn and Felton School remain here where the Star Oil Company, one
of the predecessors of Standard Oil of California, was born.
Location: 27201 W Pico Canyon
Rd, 2.8 mi W of I-5, Newhall
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
NEWHALL
NO. 522 SERRA SPRINGS -
The Portolá Expedition of 1769 encamped at this spring, and it is
reported that in 1770 Father Serra said Mass here to the Indians of this
area. This spring was also the former water supply of the town of Santa
Monica. The site is now the campus of the University High School.
Location: University High
School Horticulture Area, 11800 Texas Ave, Los Angeles
NO. 531 LUMMIS HOME - This
building was constructed by Charles F. Lummis (1859-1928), author, editor,
poet, athlete, librarian, historian, archeologist, etc. He selected this
site in 1895 chiefly because of a mammoth, ancient sycamore (El Alisal)
which has since died and been replaced by four saplings.
Location: 200 E Ave 43 at
Pasadena Freeway No. 11, Los Angeles
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
LOS ANGELES
Listed on the National Register of
Historic Places: NPS-71000148
NO. 536 ORIGINAL BUILDING OF
THE UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA - Dedicated on September 4, 1880,
this original building of the University of Southern California has been
continuously in use for educational purposes since October 6, 1880, when
its doors were first opened to students by the university's first president,
Marion McKinley Bovard. The building was constructed under the guiding
hand of Judge Robert M. Widney, the university's leading founder, on land
donated by Ozro W. Childs, John G. Downey, and Isaias W. Hellman.
Location: Widney Hall Alumni
House, University of Southern CA, Childs Way, between Hoover Blvd and University
Ave, Los Angeles
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
LOS ANGELES
NO. 554 CECIL B. DeMILLE STUDIO
BARN - Cecil B. DeMille rented half of this structure, then used as
a barn, as the studio in which was made the first feature-length motion
picture in Hollywood-The Squaw Man-in 1913. Associated with Mr. DeMille
in making The Squaw Man were Samuel Goldwyn and Jesse Lasky, Sr. Originally
located at the corner of Selma and Vine Streets, in 1927 the barn was transferred
to Paramount Studios.
Location: 2100 N Highland
Ave, Hollywood
NO. 556 RANCHO SAN FRANCISCO
- Approximately one-half mile south of the point was the adobe headquarters
of Rancho San Francisco, originally built about 1804 as a granary of Mission
San Fernando. The rancho was granted to Antonio de Valle in 1839. Here,
in January 1850, William Lewis Manly and John Rogers obtained supplies
and animals to rescue their comrades in a California-bound gold-seeking
emigrant party that was stranded and starving in Death Valley, some 250
miles to the northeast.
Location: SW corner of 'The
Old Road' and Henry Mayo Drive, 0.2 mi S of I-5 and State Hwy 126 interchange,
Valencia
NO. 568 HERNANDO DE ALARCÓN EXPEDITION - Alarcón's
mission was to provide supplies for Francisco Coronado's expedition in
search of the fabled Seven Cities of Cibola. The Spaniards led by Hernando
de Alarcón ascended the Colorado River by boat from the Gulf of
California past this point, thereby becoming the first non-Indians to sight
Alta California on September 5, 1540.
Location: On Algondes Rd,
State Hwy 186 (P.M. 0.4), 0.5 mi S of I-8, 0.4 mi N of Andrade Border,
Andrade
NO. 580 WELL, ALAMITOS 1
- One of the world's most famous wells. Started on March 23,1921, it flowed
590 barrels of oil a day when it was completed June 25, 1921, at a depth
of 3,114 feet. This discovery well led to the development of one of the
most productive oil fields in the world and helped to establish California
as a major oil producing state.
Location: NE corner of Temple
Ave and Hill St, Signal Hill
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
LONG BEACH
NO. 590 LANG - On September
5, 1876, Charles Crocker, President of the Southern Pacific Company, drove
a gold spike here to complete his company's San Joaquin Valley line, the
first rail connection of Los Angeles with San Francisco and transcontinental
lines.
Location: Soledad Canyon,
Lang Station Rd, 0.4 mi S of State Hwy 14 (P.M. 35.6), Shadow Pines Blvd,
4. 7 mi E of Canyon CountryNO. 632 OLD SHORT CUT - This is
California's first ranger station, built in 1900 by Louie Newcomb and Phillip
Begue, early Forest Service men. The cabin took its name from the 'Short
Cut Canyon Trail,' as the cabin was one of the main stopping points on
this trail.
Location: Angeles National
Forest, Chilao Visitor's Center, Angeles Crest Hwy (State Hwy 2), 27 mi
E of La Canada
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
MT. WILSON
NO. 646 GRAVE OF GEORGE CARALAMBO,
(GREEK GEORGE) - This is the grave of 'Greek George,' a camel driver
from Asia Minor who came to the United States with the second load of camels
purchased by the War Department as an experiment to open a wagon road to
Fort Tejón from Fort Defiance, New Mexico. Because of the Civil
War, the experiment was abandoned. 'Greek George' became a naturalized
citizen in 1867 under the name of George Allen. He built an adobe home
on Santa Monica Boulevard.
Location: Founders' Memorial
Park, Broadway at Gregory Ave, Whittier (gravestone in storage, 1993)
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
WHITTER
NO. 653 THE CASCADES - This
is the terminus of the Los Angeles-Owens River Aqueduct, which brings water
338 miles from the eastern slopes of the Sierra Nevada to the City of Los
Angeles. Begun in 1905, the great aqueduct was completed November 5, 1913.
The Mono Craters Tunnel project, completed in 1940, extended the system
27 miles to its present northernmost intake near Tioga Pass.
Location: 0.1 mi N of intersection
of Foothill Blvd and Balboa Blvd, 4 mi NW of San Fernando
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
MINT CANYON
NO. 655 PORTOLÁ
TRAIL CAMPSITE (I) - Spanish colonization of California began in 1769
with the expedition of Don Gaspar de Portolá from Mexico. With Captain
Don Fernando Rivera v Moncada, Lieutenant Don Pedro Fages, Sgt. José
Francisco Ortega, and Fathers Juan Crespí and Francisco Gómez,
he and his party camped near this spot on August 2, 1769, en route to Monterey.
Location: Elysian Park entrance,
NW corner of N Broadway and Elysian Park Dr, Los Angeles
NO. 656 BELLA UNION HOTEL SITE
- Near this spot stood the Bella Union Hotel, long a social and political
center. Here, on October 7, 1858, the first Butterfield Overland Mail stage
from the east arrived 21 days after leaving St. Louis. Warren Hall was
the driver, and Waterman Ormsby, a reporter, the only through passenger.
Location: Fletcher Bowron
Square, 300 block of N Main, between Temple and Aliso Sts, Los Angeles
NO. 664 HERITAGE HOUSE -
As originally built in 1869 by A. R. Loomis, the house had only two rooms,
but other rooms were added by subsequent occupants. It was marked as the
'Oldest House in Compton' in 1955 - in 1957, it was purchased by the city
and moved from 209 South Acacia Street to its present site. It has been
restored, refurnished, and renamed by the citizens of Compton as a tribute
to early settlers of the community.
Location: NW corner of Willowbrook
Ave and Myrrh St, Compton
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
SOUTH GATE
NO. 665 PORTOLÁ TRAIL
CAMPSITE, 2 - The expedition of Don Gaspar de Portolá from Mexico
passed this way en route to Monterey to begin the Spanish colonization
of California. With Captain Don Fernando Rivera y Moncada, Lieutenant Don
Pedro Fages, Sergeant José Francisco Ortega, and Fathers Juan Crespí
and Francisco Gómez, Portolá and his party camped near this
spot on August 3, 1769.
Location: 300 S block of
La Cienega Blvd between Olympic and Gregory, Beverly Hills
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
BEVERLY HILLS
NO. 669 GOVERNOR STONEMAN ADOBE,
LOS ROBLES - This was the site of 'Los Robles,' the 400-acre estate
of Governor George Stoneman. President Rutherford B. Hayes was entertained
here in 1880. The first schoolhouse in the San Gabriel Valley, California's
first tennis club, and the first municipal Christmas tree of San Marino
were located here.
Location: 1912 Montrobles
Place, San Marino
NO. 681 PARADOX HYBRID WALNUT
TREE - Planted in 1907 by George Weinshank and assistants under the
direction of Professor Ralph Smith as part of an experimental planting
for the University of California Experiment Station, this tree stands as
a monument to the early cooperation of state educational system with local
walnut industry.
Location: 12300 Whittier
Blvd at Mar Vista, Whittier
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
VENICE
NO. 688 LYONS STATION STAGECOACH
STOP - This site was the location of a combination store, post office,
telegraph office, tavern, and stage depot accommodating travelers during
the Kern River gold rush in the early 1850s. A regular stop for Butterfield
and other early California stage lines, it was purchased by Sanford and
Cyrus Lyons in 1855, and by 1868 at least twenty families lived here. Eternal
Valley Memorial Park has called their final resting place 'The Garden of
the Pioneers.'
Location: Eternal Valley
Memorial Park, 23287 N Sierra Hwy, near State Hwy 14 and San Fernando Rd,
Newhall
NO. 689 LOS ENCINOS STATE HISTORIC
PARK - The Franciscan padres used Encino as their headquarters while
exploring the valley before establishing Mission San Fernando in 1797.
In 1849 Vincente de la Osa built an adobe with nine rooms. The next owner
of El Encino Rancho was Eugene Garnier, who built the existing two-story
limestone house in 1872. In December 1891 Domingo Amestoy acquired the
property.
Location: Los Encinos State
Historic Park, 16756 Moorpark St, Encino
Listed on the National Register of
Historic Places: NPS-71000142
NO. 716 GRIFFITH RANCH -
Originally part of the San Fernando Mission lands, this ranch was purchased
by David Wark Griffith, revered pioneer of silent motion pictures, in 1912.
It provided the locale for many western thrillers, including Custer's Last
Stand, and was the inspiration for the immortal production, Birth of a
Nation. In 1948 it was acquired by Fritz B. Burns, who has perpetuated
the Griffith name in memory of the great film pioneer.
Location: 12685 Foothill
Blvd at Vaughn St, San Fernando
NO. 717 THE ANGELES NATIONAL
FOREST - The first national forest in the State of California and second
in the United States, Angeles National Forest was created by proclamation
of President Benjamin Harrison on December 20, 1892. The first name given
to the forest, 'San Gabriel Timberland Reserve,' was changed to 'San Gabriel
National Forest' March 4, 1907 and then to 'Angeles National Forest' on
July 1, 1908.
Location: San Gabriel Mtns,
Clear Creek vista point, State Hwy 2 (P.M. 32.8), 8.3 mi N of I-210, La
Canada
NO. 718 SITE OF THE INITIAL
UNITED STATES AIR MEET - About a half mile southeast of this spot,
on Dominquez Hill in historic Rancho San Pedro, the first air meet in the
United States was held during January 10-20, 1910. This area has evolved
into one of the world's leading aviation-industrial centers.
Location: 18501 S Wilmington
Ave, Carson
NO. 730 OLD PLAZA FIREHOUSE
- Dedicated to the firemen of the Los Angeles Fire Department-past, present,
and future-who, by their courage and faithful devotion to duty, have protected
the lives and property of the citizens of Los Angeles from the ravages
of fire since 1871. This was the first building constructed as a fire station
in Los Angeles. Built in 1884, it served as a firehouse until 1897. After
this it was used for various purposes until restored in 1960 and opened
as a museum of fire-fighting equipment of the late 19th century.
Location: El Pueblo de Los
Angeles Historic Monument, 501 N Los Angeles St
NO. 744 THE MIRROR BUILDING
(SITE OF BUTTERFIELD STAGE STATION) - The Butterfield Overland Mail
Company took an option on this piece of property in August 1858 and acquired
it on December 7, 1859. A large brick building containing offices and living
quarters, with shops and stables in the rear, was completed in 1860. With
the exception of the station at El Paso, Texas, this was the largest and
best equipped station on the entire route.
Location: 145 S Spring St,
Los Angeles
NO. 753 SAN FERNANDO CEMETERY
- Earlier known as Morningside Cemetery, this is the oldest nonsectarian
cemetery in San Fernando Valley. It was used from the early 1800s until
1939, it was legally abandoned in 1959, when Mrs. Nellis S. Noble donated
the site in memory of the pioneers of San Fernando.
Location: SW corner of Bledsoe
and Foothill, Sylmar
NO. 789 SITE OF THE LOS ANGELES
STAR - Southern California's first newspaper, The Los Angeles Star,
was founded in this block on May 17, 1851 and for many years exerted a
major influence upon this part of the state. Suspended temporarily from
1864 to 1868, it continued later as an effective voice of the people until
its final termination date in 1879.
Location: Fletcher Bowron
Square, 300 block of N Main, between Temple and Aliso Sts, Los Angeles
NO. 822 FIRST JEWISH SITE IN
LOS ANGELES - The Hebrew Benevolent Society of Los Angeles (1854),
first charitable organization in the city, acquired this site from the
city council by deed of April 9, 1855. This purchase of a sacred burial
ground represented the first organized community effort by the pioneer
Jewish settlers.
Location: Chavez Ravine,
behind US Naval and Marine Corps Reserve Center, 800 W Lilac Terrace near
Lookout Dr, Los Angeles
NO. 840 OLD SANTA MONICA FORESTRY
STATION - In 1887, the State Board of Forestry established the nation's
first experimental forestry station. Located in Rustic Canyon, the station
tested exotic trees for planting in California, established plantations
for management studies, and produced planting stock for scientific and
conservation purposes. The station was operated by the Board of Forestry
until 1893 and by the University of California until 1923.
Location: Rustic Canyon Recreation
Center, NW corner of Latimer and Hilltree Rds, Los Angeles
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
SAN FERNANDO
NO. 871 THE GAMBLE HOUSE
- Built in 1908, the David B. Gamble House is a tribute to the genius of
architects Charles Sumner Greene and Henry Mather Greene. Its design represents
a unique California lifestyle and is a masterpiece of American craftsmanship.
In 1966 it was made a gift by the Gamble family to the City of Pasadena
in a joint agreement with the University of Southern California.
Location: 4 Westmoreland
Place, Pasadena
NO. 874 WORKMAN HOME AND FAMILY
CEMETERY - William Workman and John Rowland organized the first wagon
train of permanent eastern settlers, which arrived in Southern California
on November 5, 1841. Together they owned and developed the 48,790-acre
La Puente Rancho. Workman began this adobe home in 1842 and remodeled it
in 1872 to resemble a manor house in his native England. He also established
'El Campo Santo,' this region's earliest known private family cemetery,
in 1850, the miniature Classic Grecian mausoleum was built in 1919 by grandson
Walter P. Temple.
Location: 15415 E Don Julian
Rd, City of Industry
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
EL MONTE
NO. 881 SITE OF PORT LOS ANGELES
LONG WHARF - In 1893 the Southern Pacific Railroad Company completed
its 4,720-foot wharf, which served as a deep water port for the Los Angeles
area. But after San Pedro became Los Angeles's official harbor in 1897,
shipping activity at Port Los Angeles declined and the wharf was finally
dismantled. Today, no trace remains of what was once the longest wooden
pier in the world.
Location: Will Rogers State
Beach lifeguard hdqtrs, 15100 W Pacific Coast Hwy 1 (P.M. 375), Pacific
Palisades
NO. 887 PASADENA PLAYHOUSE
- Founded in 1917 by Gilmor Brown, the Pasadena Playhouse was designed
by architect Elmer Grey and the cornerstone laid May 31, 1924. In 1928
the College of Theatre Arts was incorporated with the Pasadena Playhouse
Association as a non-profit institution. In 1937, the Playhouse received
the honorary title 'State Theatre of California' from the California Legislature.
Location: 39 El Molino Ave,
Pasadena
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
PASADENA
NO. 894 S.S. CATALINA -
Commonly referred to as the Great White Steamer, the ship was specially
built by William Wrigley to serve his Catalina Island as a passenger ferry.
She was christened on May 23, 1924. During World War II, she was requisitioned
for use as a troop carrier, but in 1946 she resumed her voyages to Avalon.
Location: Original location:
Port of Los Angeles, Catalina Terminal, Berth 96. New location: Ensenada
Harbor Ensenada, Mexico
NO. 911 CHATSWORTH CALERA SITE - The
Chatsworth Calera is one of the few surviving representative structures
of the early 19th century lime industry. This kiln marked the introduction
to California of the European industrial process for vitrifying limestone
building blocks which were used in the construction of the missions.
Location: From State Hwy
27 and Plummer, go W 2.7 mi to the intersection of Woolsey Canyon Rd and
Valley Circle Blvd, site is 500 feet NE of intersection, Chatsworth
NO. 912 GLENDORA BOUGAINVILLEA
- Planted in 1901 by the R. H. Hamlins, early citrus growers, the Glendora
bougainvillea is the largest growth of this exotic plant in the United
States. The parent stock was brought to California by a whaling ship about
1870. The vines are one of the best remaining illustrations of the image
of California as a paradise that was spread by early 20th-century promoters.
Location: 400 block of E
Bennet Ave at Minnesota Ave, Glendora
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
GLENDORA
NO. 919 ST. FRANCIS DAM DISASTER
SITE - The 185-foot concrete St. Francis Dam, part of the Los Angeles
aqueduct system, stood a mile and a half north of this spot. On March 12,
1928, just before midnight, it collapsed and sent over twelve billion gallons
of water roaring down the valley of the Santa Clara River. Over 450 lives
were lost in this, one of California's greatest disasters.
Location: San Francisquito
Power Plant No. 2, 32300 N San Francisquito Canyon Rd, 9.2 mi N of Saugus
NO. 920 CASA DE SAN PEDRO
- The first known commercial structure on the shore of San Pedro Bay was
built here in 1823 by the trading firm of McCulloch and Hartnell to store
cattle hides from the San Gabriel and San Fernando missions. Richard Henry
Dana described this adobe hide house in Two Years Before the Mast. Thus
began the development of the Port of Los Angeles.
Location: Middle Reservation,
Fort MacArthur, 2400 block of Pacific Ave, E side of parade field, 300
feet S of intersection of Meyler and Quartermaster Rds, San Pedro
NO. 933 SITE OF LLANO DEL RIO
COOPERATIVE COLONY - This was the site of the most important non-religious
Utopian experiment in western American history. Its founder, Job Harriman,
was Eugene Debs' running mate in the presidential election of 1900. In
subsequent years, Harriman became an influential socialist leader and in
1911 was almost elected mayor of Los Angeles. At its height in 1916, the
colony contained a thousand members and was a flourishing communitarian
experiment dedicated to the principal of cooperation rather than competition.
Location: On State Hwy 138
(P.M. 64.1), Llano
NO. 934 TEMPORARY DETENTION
CAMPS FOR JAPANESE AMERICANS-SANTA ANITA ASSEMBLY CENTER AND POMONA ASSEMBLY
CENTER - The temporary detention camps (also known as 'assembly centers')
represent the first phase of the mass incarceration of 97,785 Californians
of Japanese ancestry during World War II. Pursuant to Executive Order 9066
signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on February 19, 1942, thirteen
makeshift detention facilities were constructed at various California racetracks,
fairgrounds, and labor camps. These facilities were intended to confine
Japanese Americans until more permanent concentration camps, such as those
at Manzanar and Tule Lake in California, could be built in isolated areas
of the country. Beginning on March 30, 1942, all native-born Americans
and long-time legal residents of Japanese ancestry living in California
were ordered to surrender themselves for detention.
Location: Arcadia and Pomona
NO. 939 Twentieth Century Folk
Art Environments (Thematic)-OLD TRAPPER'S LODGE - Old Trapper's Lodge
is one of California's remarkable Twentieth Century Folk Art Environments.
It represents the life work of John Ehn (1897-1981), a self-taught artist
who wished to pass on a sense of the Old West, derived from personal experiences,
myths, and tall tales. From 1951 to 1981, using his family as models, and
incorporating memorabilia, the 'Old Trapper' followed his dreams and visions
to create the Lodge and its 'Boot Hill.'
Location: Original location:
10340 Keswick Ave at San Fernando Rd, Sun Valley. New location: Los Angeles
Pierce College, Cleveland Park, 6201 Winnelka Ave, Woodland Hills
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
SUNLAND
NO. 947 REFORM SCHOOL FOR JUVENILE
OFFENDERS (FRED C. NELLES SCHOOL) - The March 11, 1889 Act of the California
Legislature authorized the establishment of a school for juvenile offenders.
Dedication and laying of cornerstone was done by Governor R. W. Waterman
on February 12, 1890. Officially opened as 'Whittier State School' for
boys and girls on July 1, 1891. Girls were transferred in 1916 and only
boys have been in residence since that time. Renamed 'Fred C. Nelles School
for Boys' in 1941 ('For Boys' was dropped around 1970). This school has
been in continuous operation serving the needs of juvenile offenders since
1891.
Location: Department of the
Youth Authority entrance, 11850 E Whittier Blvd, Whittier
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
EL MONTE
NO. 960 LOS ANGELES MEMORIAL
COLISEUM - This stadium was originally completed in 1923. It was partially
redesigned and enlarged for the 1932 Olympic Games. Both designs were by
architects John and Donald B. Parkinson. The coliseum has witnessed many
important sports, political, and historical events. When the games of the
XXIIIrd Olympiad began here on July 28, 1984, the coliseum became the first
stadium in the world to host the Olympic Games twice.
Location: South end of University
of Southern California, 3911 S Figueroa, Los Angeles
NO. 961 HAROLD LLOYD ESTATE
(GREENACRES) - Greenacres, one of the greatest estates of Hollywood's
Golden Era, was built in 1929 for the internationally known silent screen
comedian, Harold Lloyd. With its formal gardens, it is one of the finest
Mediterranean/Italian Renaissance style residential complexes remaining
in the state. The 44-room house was designed by Sumner Spaulding and the
gardens planned by A. E. Hansen. The estate is patterned after the Villa
Gamberaia near Florence, Italy.
Location: 1740 Green Acres
Place, Beverly Hills
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
BEVERLY HILLS
NO. 965 POINT DUME - On
November 24, 1793, English explorer George Vancouver, commander of an expedition
to determine the extent of settlement of the northwest coast of America,
named this rocky promontory, Point Dume, after his Franciscan friend, Father
Francisco Dumetz, at Mission San Buenaventura. Point Dume is the western
terminus of Santa Monica Bay and has been an important landmark for navigators
since Vancouver's voyage in 1793.
Location: Point Dume State
Beach, corner of Cliffside Dr and Birdview Ave, Malibu
NO. 966 ADAMSON HOUSE AT MALIBU
LAGOON STATE BEACH - Designed by Stiles O. Clements in 1929, this Spanish
Colonial Revival home contains the best surviving examples of decorative
ceramic tile produced by Malibu Potteries. During its short existence from
1926 to 1932, Malibu Potteries made an outstanding contribution to ceramic
art in California through its development and production of a wide range
of artistic and colorful decorative tile. The home was built for Merritt
Huntley Adamson and Rhoda Rindge Adamson, daughter of Frederick Hastings
Rindge and May Knight Rindge, last owners of the Rancho Malibu Spanish
grant.
Location: 23200 Pacific Coast
Hwy, Malibu
NO. 972 NAVY AND MARINE CORPS
RESERVE CENTER - Designed as the largest enclosed structure without
walls in the world by noted California architects Robert Clements and Associates,
this Art Deco building, constructed between 1938 and 1941 by the WPA, is
the largest and second-oldest Navy Reserve Center in the United Stages.
It has served as the induction, separation, and training center for more
than 100,000 sailors since World War II well as the filming site for countless
motion pictures and television shows.
Location: 1700 Stadium Way,
Los Angeles
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
VENICE
NO. 975 EL MONTE-FIRST SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA SETTLEMENT BY IMMIGRANTS FROM UNITED STATES - El Monte,
on the bank of the San Gabriel River, played a significant part in California's
early pioneer history. It was first an encampment on the Old Spanish Trail,
an extension of the trail from Missouri to Santa Fe. By the 1850s, some
began to call El Monte the 'End of the Santa Fe Trail.' Early in that decade
a permanent settlement was established by immigrants from Texas, the first
settlement in Southern California founded by citizens of the United States.
Location: Santa Fe Trail
Historical Park, Valley Blvd and Santa Anita Ave, El Monte
NO.
978 RANCHO LOS CERRITOS HISTORIC SITE - The 27,000-acre Rancho
was once part of an 18th-century Spanish land grant to soldier Manuel Nieto.
The Monterey-style adobe was constructed in 1844 and served the Temple
and Bixby families as headquarters for large-scale cattle and sheep ranching
operations in the 19th century. In the 1880s, the land was subdivided for
farming and city development.
Location: 4600 Virginia Rd,
Long Beach
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
LONG BEACH
NO. 984 CASA DE RANCHO SAN ANTONIO
(HENRY GAGE MANSION) - Contained within this building are the remaining
portions of an adobe house built by Francisco Salvador Lugo and his son
Antonio María Lugo. Francisco Lugo was a prominent early landholder
and Antonio served as the Alcalde of Los Angeles. They completed the building
by 1810. Henry Tifft Gage acquired the property in 1880 and lived here
from 1883 until 1924. Gage served as the Governor of California from 1899
to 1903.
Location: 7000 E Gage, Bell
Gardens
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
SOUTH GATE
NO. 988 PACIFIC ASIA MUSEUM
(GRACE NICHOLSON'S TREASURE HOUSE OF ORIENTAL AND WESTERN ART) - Grace
Nicholson, a noted collector and authority on American Indian and Asian
Art and artifacts, supervised the design of her combination gallery and
museum which was completed in 1929. It has been called an outstanding example
of 1920s revival architecture and is unique for its use of Chinese ornamentation.
Location: 46 North Los Robles
Ave, Pasadena
NO. 990 CHRISTMAS TREE LANE
- The 135 Deodar Cedar trees were planted in 1885 by the Woodbury Family,
the founders of Altadena. First organized by F.C. Nash in 1920, the 'Mile
of Christmas Trees' has been strung with 10,000 lights each holiday season
through the efforts of volunteers and the Christmas Tree Lane Association.
It is the oldest large-scale Christmas lighting spectacle in Southern California.
Location: Santa Rosa Ave,
both sides of street from Woodbuty Ave to Altadena Dr, Altadena
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
PASADENA
NO. 993 WATTS TOWERS OF SIMON
RODIA - The Watts Towers are perhaps the nation's best known work of
folk art sculpture. Using simple hand tools, cast off materials (glass,
shell, pottery pieces and broken tile) Italian immigrant Simon Rodia spent
30 years building a tribute to his adopted country and a monument to the
spirit of individuals who make their dreams tangible. Rodia's Towers inspired
many to rally and preserve his work and protect it for the future.
Location: 1765 East 107th
St, Los Angeles
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name:
LOS ANGELES
NO. 997 TUNA CLUB OF AVALON
- The Tuna Club of Avalon marks the birthplace of modern big game sportfishing
in 1898. Led by Dr. Charles Frederick Holder, the club's founding members
adopted the rules of conduct stressing conservationist ethics and sporting
behavior. Today, their work remains the basis for the sport's internationally
accepted principles.
Location: 100 St. Catherine
Way, Avalon
Properties of historical importance in
California are currently designated as significant resources in three state
registration programs: State Historical Landmarks, Points of Historical
Interest, and the California Register of Historic Places. Below is
a list of the State Historical Landmarks for Los Angeles County.
This data is provided by the Office of Historic Preservation - California
Department of Parks and Recreation and is also available in the California
Historical Landmarks Book.
Alphabetical Cities
List Cities by County
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