Discovered Website Text
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FULL TEXT EXTRACTION: Altadena Heritage – Short History of Altadena
URL: https://altadenaheritage.org/a-short-history-of-altadena/
Extracted: 2026-01-10T04:18:51.669527Z
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PAGE 1: A Short History of Altadena | Altadena Heritage
URL: https://altadenaheritage.org/a-short-history-of-altadena/#
Words: 949
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A Very Short History of Altadena Written by Michele Zack, author of Altadena: Between Wilderness and City, for the commemoritve booklet produced for the community’s 125th birthday, Nov. 3, 2012. Altadena is an unincorporated community of Los Angeles County, next to and within the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains. It is bounded on three sides by wilderness (the Arroyo Seco, Angeles National Forest, and Eaton Canyon), and on the south by the city of Pasadena. Throughout its history and up until today, as Altadena celebrates its 125th year, this distinct geography has nurtured an independent spirit and given the community a close-to-nature feel. Citizens here have consistently resisted annexation to Pasadena (although that city has taken 46 “bites” of it over the years, seeking tax revenues), and voted down incorporating as a city. Altadenans prefer a looser political structure that still manages to foster an unmistakable identity. Altadena’s American roots date to the period immediately following statehood, when settlers began tapping water sources in its canyons. Benjamin Eaton began developing water systems for Don Benito Wilson and Dr. John Griffin, who purchased the 14,000 acre San Pasqual Rancho (eventually developed into Pasadena, South Pasadena, Altadena, and parts of other adjacent communities) from Manuel Garfias in 1858. Eaton was soon successfully growing grapes with little water just beneath the foothills, and also citrus, which he proved could thrive at higher altitudes than previously believed. Pasadena pioneers, mainly from the Midwest, were led by Eaton and others to buy the central 2,400 acres of the Rancho San Pasqual from Wilson and Griffin in 1873. They began building a temperance community of educated, well-heeled citizens who sought to create an island of beauty, civilization, and health in the west. Many early residents suffered from tuberculosis and other illness and injury suffered during the Civil War, and many were Union vets. The ranchers and farmers a few miles to the north, however, resisted Pasadena’s attempt to include the highland area within the new city’s limits in 1886, when it incorporated in the middle of the great Southern California boom. Most grew wine grapes and wanted no interference from prohibition-minded folks. In this period Los Angeles County was the state’s largest wine producer, helped along by Altadena’s abundant harvest. Altadena was opened as a subdivision in late 1887 by John and Fred Woodbury from Marshalltown, Iowa. The Woodburys envisioned a millionaires’ rural suburb north of busy Pasadena, hoping to add to the wealthy class already gathering here, including Col. Charles Greene and Andrew McNally. Their timing was off, the real estate bubble burst in 1888, and the region was thrown into an economic panic that grew worse as it merged into a great national depression lasting through much of the 1890s. A bright spot in this period was the development of Thaddeus Lowe’s elegant mountain railway, which created a connection from Los Angeles though Pasadena and up to Altadena and beyond, to the many hotels and camps in the mountains. There, temperance was not an issue. From this era, the 1890s through the 1920’s, ranchers and residents continued slowly buying up Altadena land, growing grapes, and expanding into oranges, olives, walnuts — and in the early 20th century, dates, avocados, and commercial fruit and ornamental plant nurseries. Business magnates also came, mainly from Chicago and other midwestern cities, attracted by climate, rural ambiance, and the delights of nearby Pasadena. They built many grand winter and retirement homes, gradually moving the center of wealth from Mariposa Street east toward Eaton Canyon in the ‘teens and ‘twenties. Despite the grandeur of its estates, Altadena also attracted regular folks, fewer of them farmers as time went on. Excellent public transportation lines made jobs in Pasadena and Los Angeles easily accessible. Somehow, Altadena retained its rustic character and rural flavor through the 1930s, when people continued to arrive, and into the 1940s. A cadre artists, writers, and bohemians joined the population of blue and white collar workers and millionaires. Economic growth and GI benefits fueled the largest expansion of the middle class in U.S. history following World War II. This included rising rates of home ownership; a huge building boom ate up most of Altadena’s remaining open land and turned it into housing for the newly upwardly mobile. It consisted of infill around estates in Central Altadena, and new tracts built on the west side — where farming had lasted longest because of excellent water sources. In the 1940s and 50s, Altadena reached its present day population in the 40,000s (peaking at 46,000 in the early 1950s, and settling down to 43,000 today). About 96% were white. This time of an expanding economy, modernization, business growth, and community building took place during the Cold War, when ideological battles and fear of communism played out across America and around the world. Altadena’s present day diversity came into being largely during the tumult of social change in the 1960s and 70s. The Civil Rights movement, protests against the Vietnam War, the rising youth culture, and other national issues of the day played out locally in lawsuits over school integration, neighborhoods carved apart by new freeways, and redevelopment conflicts in Pasadena. All of these causes, along with a thickening layer of smog piling up against the mountains, prompted half of Altadena’s population to leave in a flurry of white flight. New residents were mainly people of color. In a shifting mosaic of ethnic diversity over the past 40 to 50 years, virtually every Altadena neighborhood has become mixed racially, although the west side remains more diverse and working class. The community’s many groups are now reflected in civic life, making Altadena one of the most integrated communities in Southern California.
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PAGE 2: Altadena Heritage: 30 Years of Activism | Altadena Heritage
URL: https://altadenaheritage.org/about
Words: 900
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Altadena Heritage: 30 Years of Activism History Founded as a Committee of the Altadena Town Council in the mid-1980s, the issue sparking Heritage’s formation was the destruction, and/or imminent plans to tear down and redevelop many historically significant homes and properties. The prospect of losing so much of what makes Altadena special was an emergency of that era that rallied a group of committed residents. It was recognized that a lack of any historical designation or protective ordinance for unincorporated areas of Los Angeles County often put the best interests of Altadena in peril. The first committee of Altadena Heritage decided to study the problem and design strategies to empower us to advocate for our town’s heritage and to preserve neighborhood integrity. The creation of Altadena’s Community Standards District (CSD) was promoted by the Heritage Committee, which alerted the Town Council to what was happening when rampant “mansionization” was allowed to destroy the fabric of neighborhoods. Allowing new “super-sized” homes to be built right up to property lines next to old farmhouses surrounded by large gardens and orange groves was draining the character of cities such as Arcadia, and creating unhappy neighbor relations. Heritage members served on the Town Council committee that pushed through the complex process to incorporate our CSD into L.A. County’s building code to establish building setback requirements and “total buildable areas” based on lot size. These have gone a long way toward preserving Altadena’s charming and livable neighborhoods, and are currently being reevaluated and updated after a generation of use. In 1987, the Heritage Committee had its first big success in saving Scripps Hall (now the Waldorf School) on Mariposa Street from subdivision into a housing tract. Highview, the much grander William Kellogg home next door, had been sold in 1959, torn down, and met this fate — and Scripps was about to go on the chopping block. At that time, members determined that forming a 501 c-3 organization, separate from the Town Council, would be the best vehicle to accomplish the purpose the group articulated: to identify and seek the protection of Altadena’s significant architectural, historical, cultural, and natural resources. The application to the State of California to become a non-profit community benefit corporation was approved February 24, 1989. Over the years Altadena Heritage’s purpose has remained constant. The organization was designed to be one whose strategies could evolve; thus our emphasis and activities have responded to changing needs over 25 years without losing sight of basic goals set in 1987. An immediate concern back then was to complete a survey of Altadena’s architectural resources before too many more significant ones were lost. Much early effort went into raising money for and conducting this, and Altadena Heritage was among the first organizations in California to digitize such information. Efforts went into identifying and saving existing paper files on Altadena properties as well, such as those from the William Wilson Real Estate Agency, which operated from after the turn of the century through the 1980s. Thus Altadena Heritage’s archives have also evolved into a “collection of collections” available to the public for research. These have been housed in the Altadena Heritage office within the Community Center, where we moved when it opened in 2003. The board takes stewardship of our data very seriously, and in 2011 is in process of migrating it to a new and sustainable digital platform that eventually will be launched on the California Historic Resources Inventory Database (CHRID). Over the years Altadena Heritage’s purpose has remained constant. The organization was designed to be one whose strategies could evolve; thus our emphasis and activities have responded to changing needs over 25 years without losing sight of basic goals set in 1987. An immediate concern back then was to complete a survey of Altadena’s architectural resources before too many more significant ones were lost. Much early effort went into raising money for and conducting this, and Altadena Heritage was among the first organizations in California to digitize such information. Efforts went into identifying and saving existing paper files on Altadena properties as well, such as those from the William Wilson Real Estate Agency, which operated from after the turn of the century through the 1980s. Thus Altadena Heritage’s archives have also evolved into a “collection of collections” available to the public for research. These have been housed in the Altadena Heritage office within the Community Center, where we moved when it opened in 2003. The board takes stewardship of our data very seriously, and in 2011 is in process of migrating it to a new and sustainable digital platform that eventually will be launched on the California Historic Resources Inventory Database (CHRID). Altadena Altadena is an unincorporated community of 43,000 sited on an outwash plane beneath the abruptly rising San Gabriel Mountain Range and between the Arroyo Seco and Eaton Canyon. Altadena is 13 miles northeast of the city of Los Angeles and directly north of the city of Pasadena. Founded at the time of Southern California’s land boom of the 1880s, the town’s uniqueness derives from a distinct history, “live free or die” culture, and stunning physical setting. Architecturally diverse with significant examples of every style of home from modest Craftsman bungalow to Italianate mansion and Modernist gem–Altadena has also been a racially diverse community since the 1960s. More Altadena History Altadena: Between Wilderness & City Altadena Town Council Website Altadena’s Wikipedia Page
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PAGE 3: Contact Us | Altadena Heritage
URL: https://altadenaheritage.org/contact-us
Words: 48
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Contact Altadena Heritage Contact Altadena Heritage First Name Last Name Email Message CAPTCHA Altadena Heritage 730 E Altadena Drive Altadena, CA 91001 Altadenaheritage@gmail.com Hours are Friday from 11am to 1pm and by appointment. Subscribe Monthly Updates Join our mailing list to receive the latest news and updates. SUBSCRIBE!
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PAGE 4: Board of Directors | Altadena Heritage
URL: https://altadenaheritage.org/board-of-directors/
Words: 1,164
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Board of Directors Hans Allhoff Chair Biography Hans grew up outside of Washington D.C. and moved to California to go to law school. He moved to the Rubio Canyon area of Altadena in 2022. Hans is a lawyer at Spertus, Landes & Josephs, a litigation boutique that handles civil and criminal cases in state and federal courts. The lawyer in him is drawn to stories of mischievous Altadenans, and the madness of the Mount Lowe Railway for its time. Hans is an AC100 Endurance Run finisher, from Wrightwood to Altadena. He enjoys exploring Altadena’s streets, canyons, and mountains, and he enjoys reading western novels and memoirs of western places. Kathleen McDonnell Communications Biography Kathleen grew up in the northeast and lived in Washington DC for 10 years before moving to California for graduate school where she earned degrees in social psychology and public policy. Kathleen’s tenure at the Getty Trust involved technology in the visual arts, mostly with international partners. Her work with the Ahmanson Foundation was strictly local — philanthropy supporting LA county non-profits working in the arts, education, health care, and a wide range of human services. Kathleen found her way to Altadena in 2019 and soon after discovered Altadena Heritage. She has had a commitment to the environment since the 1970s and needs a daily dose of nature to survive. Gary Mendes Treasurer Biography Raised in the windward cities of O’ahu, Hawai’i, Gary learned early the value of a diverse community. Moving to Pasadena in 1976, he attended John Marshall Fundamental. As freshman class president at Pasadena City College, he has had success in creating policies to assist and empower disenfranchised student communities. Gary enjoyed careers in retail, service and finance before starting his own business in 1997 providing small office solutions. After success during the early days of e-commerce, he retired early in 2007. Gary is happy to help others when they are challenged by digital technology. He enjoys creating low carb recipes, especially treats. He reads historical fiction, listens to EDM music, and enjoys dancing. Val Zavala Recording Secretary Biography Val Zavala is a six-year resident of Altadena and lives with her artist-husband, Mark Greenfield and their dog, Casey. Val retired in 2018 after thirty years as a journalist, producer and executive producer at KCET, public television for Southern California. There she anchored SoCal Connected and Life & Times among many other programs, winning 19 LA Area Emmy Awards. She also won a prestigious Walter Cronkite Excellence in Journalism award for her popular 1-minute ballot proposition explainers. Val currently serves on the board of public television for Southern California. She has a deep concern for the environment and enjoys gardening, hiking, yoga and pickle ball. Darrell Weber Membership Biography Native Californian Darrell Weber grew up in the Walnut Creek area, worked at his family’s fast-food restaurant starting at age nine, and graduated from UC Berkeley with a degree in Computer Science. His career in IT includes jobs with Xerox, Digital Equipment Corporation and DIRECTV. His expertise is in Business Intelligence to empower clients to make better decisions. He remained lead data architect until his early retirement in 2022. Darrell met his husband Gary in 1988. They purchased their first west Altadena home in 1990. They have since moved to their “forever home” in the Rubio Highlands neighborhood having fallen in love with the bohemian character of the Altadena area. Darrell is an avid sci-fi reader, enjoys playing piano, live music, and travel. He is a new student of yoga. You may encounter him on his morning walks through the Rubio Canyon area. Bill Stuart Biography Bill Stuart is a Film & TV producer and CEO of Aurora Productions, where he supervises the day-to-day operations of the company. For the past many years he has also been the US representative for the famed Barrandov Studios in Prague. Bill and his wife Maureen moved to Altadena 4 years ago and have become enthusiastic supporters of maintaining the unique quality of life that the town affords. He is an advocate of Altadena’s open trails system and has worked with the Arroyo Foothills Conservancy to preserve and enhance them. Becky Nicolaides Biography An Altadena resident since 2008, Becky is a historian of American suburbs. She earned her PhD in history at Columbia University, and went on to write three books, her latest The New Suburbia, which explores how LA’s suburbs transition from Ozzie-and-Harriet sameness to extraordinary diversity. After an academic career at ASU West and UCSD, Becky became a historic consultant, working on numerous public history and preservation projects from Survey LA, to projects for the LA Conservancy, State of California, and City of LA. She is co-founder of History Studio, a historical consulting company for film, tv, and podcasts. Becky loves taking walks on the hilly streets of Altadena, baking, travelling, and going to movies with her actor-producer husband. After seeing and studying many suburbs across the globe, Becky always loves returning to Altadena – her “perfect suburb.” Ken Haber Biography Ken Haber worked as a feature film location scout and manager, for more than thirty years. Some of his projects included “Fatal Attraction,” “Wall Street,” “Black Rain,” Thelma and Louise,” and “The Bridges of Madison County. Ken has also worked as a professional photographer, specializing in film and television “Set Photography,” as well as “Fine Art and Nature Photography.” His work has appeared in books and magazines. Ken lives in Altadena with his wife, film set decorator, Rosemary Brandenburg, where they love to bike, hike and go birding in the numerous parks, trails and neighborhoods throughout the area. Claire Smith Biography Born and raised in Pasadena, Claire has always enjoyed the diverse and notable architecture of the area. She was introduced to Altadena by attending Eliot Middle School, housed in the beautiful 1931 Art Deco building on Lake Avenue. At this time her love of local history and architectural design was explored further by becoming a Junior Docent at the Gamble House in Pasadena. A proud Mustang, a graduate of John Muir High School, Claire decided to put down roots and buy her first home in Altadena in 2003. At the time she was an international travel agent, until her Realtor, Ms. Meindl, recruited and mentored her in real estate. She has loved facilitating real estate transactions since 2006. Claire is thrilled to build continued engagement with the community, advocate for positive changes and preserve everything that makes Altadena especially unique.” Huan Gu Biography Huan Gu lived in Pasadena for 16 years before moving to Altadena with her husband Frank Mayor in 2021. She owned and operated an art gallery in Old Pasadena before becoming a real estate agent. Living in and renovating a historical house has allowed her to use her passion for art and architecture in preserving an important part of Altadena’s history. An animal lover and avid hiker, Huan has been thrilled by hiking the trails around her new home and encountering the numerous wildlife that populates Altadena.
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PAGE 5: Altadena Heritage | Advocacy and Preservation
URL: https://altadenaheritage.org/
Words: 345
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Altadena Heritage is dedicated to helping our community rebuild after devastating fires, focusing on fire-resilient designs and preserving the unique architectural character of our area. We aim to ensure everyone has the opportunity to rebuild and will host workshops, talks, and community events to support this effort. Join us in coming together to assist our neighbors and restore the community we cherish. Altadena Libraries LA Fires – Connected Wellness Critical Programs to help get our neighbors back on their feet. Wildfire Prepared Home The Wildfire Prepared Home designation program enables homeowners to take preventative measures for their home and yard to protect against wildfire Fire Adapted Communities People learning and working together are the foundation of fire adaptation. FAC Net invests in people and in place-based efforts to change relationships with fire. National Firewise USA Protect your home and neighborhood as well as your family’s safety. The Firewise USA® program is here to help you get started. About AH Membership Owen Brown Gravesite Altadena Heritage is a nonprofit volunteer-based advocacy organization dedicated to protecting, preserving, and raising awareness of our foothill community’s rich architectural, environmental, and cultural heritage. Upcoming Events Patron+ Appreciation Event November 9, 3 to 5pm • Learn More Altadena Heritage Holiday Gathering Sunday December 14, 3 to 6pm • Learn More Recent Events Altadena Revealed Lecture Series Halloween Special at Mountain View Cemetery with Brian Alan Baker Altadena Revealed 6 Owen Brown’s body, a film screening and conversation. Altadena Revealed #05 Tim Gregory is a nationally certified archivist and a registered public historian. Outlaws This lecture explores an essential layer of Altadena’s rich and historic human… « Older Entries Altadena Heritage Newsletters Online Art & Artists Issue Fall Winter 2024 Mountain View Fall Winter 2023 Land Use Issue Spring Summer 2023 Wildlife Issue Fall Winter 2022 Sustainability Issue Fall Winter 2021 Health Issue Spring Summer 2021 Altadena Heritage Infographics TV Show May 28, 2024 Sender House May 28, 2024 Altadena Community Events May 28, 2024 Ask an Arborist April 19, 2024 Advocate for Positive Change Preserve What We Love Celebrate Community Membership
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PAGE 6: A Short History of Altadena | Altadena Heritage
URL: https://altadenaheritage.org/a-short-history-of-altadena/
Words: 949
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A Very Short History of Altadena Written by Michele Zack, author of Altadena: Between Wilderness and City, for the commemoritve booklet produced for the community’s 125th birthday, Nov. 3, 2012. Altadena is an unincorporated community of Los Angeles County, next to and within the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains. It is bounded on three sides by wilderness (the Arroyo Seco, Angeles National Forest, and Eaton Canyon), and on the south by the city of Pasadena. Throughout its history and up until today, as Altadena celebrates its 125th year, this distinct geography has nurtured an independent spirit and given the community a close-to-nature feel. Citizens here have consistently resisted annexation to Pasadena (although that city has taken 46 “bites” of it over the years, seeking tax revenues), and voted down incorporating as a city. Altadenans prefer a looser political structure that still manages to foster an unmistakable identity. Altadena’s American roots date to the period immediately following statehood, when settlers began tapping water sources in its canyons. Benjamin Eaton began developing water systems for Don Benito Wilson and Dr. John Griffin, who purchased the 14,000 acre San Pasqual Rancho (eventually developed into Pasadena, South Pasadena, Altadena, and parts of other adjacent communities) from Manuel Garfias in 1858. Eaton was soon successfully growing grapes with little water just beneath the foothills, and also citrus, which he proved could thrive at higher altitudes than previously believed. Pasadena pioneers, mainly from the Midwest, were led by Eaton and others to buy the central 2,400 acres of the Rancho San Pasqual from Wilson and Griffin in 1873. They began building a temperance community of educated, well-heeled citizens who sought to create an island of beauty, civilization, and health in the west. Many early residents suffered from tuberculosis and other illness and injury suffered during the Civil War, and many were Union vets. The ranchers and farmers a few miles to the north, however, resisted Pasadena’s attempt to include the highland area within the new city’s limits in 1886, when it incorporated in the middle of the great Southern California boom. Most grew wine grapes and wanted no interference from prohibition-minded folks. In this period Los Angeles County was the state’s largest wine producer, helped along by Altadena’s abundant harvest. Altadena was opened as a subdivision in late 1887 by John and Fred Woodbury from Marshalltown, Iowa. The Woodburys envisioned a millionaires’ rural suburb north of busy Pasadena, hoping to add to the wealthy class already gathering here, including Col. Charles Greene and Andrew McNally. Their timing was off, the real estate bubble burst in 1888, and the region was thrown into an economic panic that grew worse as it merged into a great national depression lasting through much of the 1890s. A bright spot in this period was the development of Thaddeus Lowe’s elegant mountain railway, which created a connection from Los Angeles though Pasadena and up to Altadena and beyond, to the many hotels and camps in the mountains. There, temperance was not an issue. From this era, the 1890s through the 1920’s, ranchers and residents continued slowly buying up Altadena land, growing grapes, and expanding into oranges, olives, walnuts — and in the early 20th century, dates, avocados, and commercial fruit and ornamental plant nurseries. Business magnates also came, mainly from Chicago and other midwestern cities, attracted by climate, rural ambiance, and the delights of nearby Pasadena. They built many grand winter and retirement homes, gradually moving the center of wealth from Mariposa Street east toward Eaton Canyon in the ‘teens and ‘twenties. Despite the grandeur of its estates, Altadena also attracted regular folks, fewer of them farmers as time went on. Excellent public transportation lines made jobs in Pasadena and Los Angeles easily accessible. Somehow, Altadena retained its rustic character and rural flavor through the 1930s, when people continued to arrive, and into the 1940s. A cadre artists, writers, and bohemians joined the population of blue and white collar workers and millionaires. Economic growth and GI benefits fueled the largest expansion of the middle class in U.S. history following World War II. This included rising rates of home ownership; a huge building boom ate up most of Altadena’s remaining open land and turned it into housing for the newly upwardly mobile. It consisted of infill around estates in Central Altadena, and new tracts built on the west side — where farming had lasted longest because of excellent water sources. In the 1940s and 50s, Altadena reached its present day population in the 40,000s (peaking at 46,000 in the early 1950s, and settling down to 43,000 today). About 96% were white. This time of an expanding economy, modernization, business growth, and community building took place during the Cold War, when ideological battles and fear of communism played out across America and around the world. Altadena’s present day diversity came into being largely during the tumult of social change in the 1960s and 70s. The Civil Rights movement, protests against the Vietnam War, the rising youth culture, and other national issues of the day played out locally in lawsuits over school integration, neighborhoods carved apart by new freeways, and redevelopment conflicts in Pasadena. All of these causes, along with a thickening layer of smog piling up against the mountains, prompted half of Altadena’s population to leave in a flurry of white flight. New residents were mainly people of color. In a shifting mosaic of ethnic diversity over the past 40 to 50 years, virtually every Altadena neighborhood has become mixed racially, although the west side remains more diverse and working class. The community’s many groups are now reflected in civic life, making Altadena one of the most integrated communities in Southern California.
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PAGE 7: Contact Us | Altadena Heritage
URL: https://altadenaheritage.org/contact
Words: 48
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Contact Altadena Heritage Contact Altadena Heritage First Name Last Name Email Message CAPTCHA Altadena Heritage 730 E Altadena Drive Altadena, CA 91001 Altadenaheritage@gmail.com Hours are Friday from 11am to 1pm and by appointment. Subscribe Monthly Updates Join our mailing list to receive the latest news and updates. SUBSCRIBE!
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"page_name": "A Short History of Altadena | Altadena Heritage",
"title": "A Short History of Altadena | Altadena Heritage",
"content": "A Very Short History of Altadena Written by Michele Zack, author of Altadena: Between Wilderness and City, for the commemoritve booklet produced for the community’s 125th birthday, Nov. 3, 2012. Altadena is an unincorporated community of Los Angeles County, next to and within the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains. It is bounded on three sides by wilderness (the Arroyo Seco, Angeles National Forest, and Eaton Canyon), and on the south by the city of Pasadena. Throughout its history and up until today, as Altadena celebrates its 125th year, this distinct geography has nurtured an independent spirit and given the community a close-to-nature feel. Citizens here have consistently resisted annexation to Pasadena (although that city has taken 46 “bites” of it over the years, seeking tax revenues), and voted down incorporating as a city. Altadenans prefer a looser political structure that still manages to foster an unmistakable identity. Altadena’s American roots date to the period immediately following statehood, when settlers began tapping water sources in its canyons. Benjamin Eaton began developing water systems for Don Benito Wilson and Dr. John Griffin, who purchased the 14,000 acre San Pasqual Rancho (eventually developed into Pasadena, South Pasadena, Altadena, and parts of other adjacent communities) from Manuel Garfias in 1858. Eaton was soon successfully growing grapes with little water just beneath the foothills, and also citrus, which he proved could thrive at higher altitudes than previously believed. Pasadena pioneers, mainly from the Midwest, were led by Eaton and others to buy the central 2,400 acres of the Rancho San Pasqual from Wilson and Griffin in 1873. They began building a temperance community of educated, well-heeled citizens who sought to create an island of beauty, civilization, and health in the west. Many early residents suffered from tuberculosis and other illness and injury suffered during the Civil War, and many were Union vets. The ranchers and farmers a few miles to the north, however, resisted Pasadena’s attempt to include the highland area within the new city’s limits in 1886, when it incorporated in the middle of the great Southern California boom. Most grew wine grapes and wanted no interference from prohibition-minded folks. In this period Los Angeles County was the state’s largest wine producer, helped along by Altadena’s abundant harvest. Altadena was opened as a subdivision in late 1887 by John and Fred Woodbury from Marshalltown, Iowa. The Woodburys envisioned a millionaires’ rural suburb north of busy Pasadena, hoping to add to the wealthy class already gathering here, including Col. Charles Greene and Andrew McNally. Their timing was off, the real estate bubble burst in 1888, and the region was thrown into an economic panic that grew worse as it merged into a great national depression lasting through much of the 1890s. A bright spot in this period was the development of Thaddeus Lowe’s elegant mountain railway, which created a connection from Los Angeles though Pasadena and up to Altadena and beyond, to the many hotels and camps in the mountains. There, temperance was not an issue. From this era, the 1890s through the 1920’s, ranchers and residents continued slowly buying up Altadena land, growing grapes, and expanding into oranges, olives, walnuts — and in the early 20th century, dates, avocados, and commercial fruit and ornamental plant nurseries. Business magnates also came, mainly from Chicago and other midwestern cities, attracted by climate, rural ambiance, and the delights of nearby Pasadena. They built many grand winter and retirement homes, gradually moving the center of wealth from Mariposa Street east toward Eaton Canyon in the ‘teens and ‘twenties. Despite the grandeur of its estates, Altadena also attracted regular folks, fewer of them farmers as time went on. Excellent public transportation lines made jobs in Pasadena and Los Angeles easily accessible. Somehow, Altadena retained its rustic character and rural flavor through the 1930s, when people continued to arrive, and into the 1940s. A cadre artists, writers, and bohemians joined the population of blue and white collar workers and millionaires. Economic growth and GI benefits fueled the largest expansion of the middle class in U.S. history following World War II. This included rising rates of home ownership; a huge building boom ate up most of Altadena’s remaining open land and turned it into housing for the newly upwardly mobile. It consisted of infill around estates in Central Altadena, and new tracts built on the west side — where farming had lasted longest because of excellent water sources. In the 1940s and 50s, Altadena reached its present day population in the 40,000s (peaking at 46,000 in the early 1950s, and settling down to 43,000 today). About 96% were white. This time of an expanding economy, modernization, business growth, and community building took place during the Cold War, when ideological battles and fear of communism played out across America and around the world. Altadena’s present day diversity came into being largely during the tumult of social change in the 1960s and 70s. The Civil Rights movement, protests against the Vietnam War, the rising youth culture, and other national issues of the day played out locally in lawsuits over school integration, neighborhoods carved apart by new freeways, and redevelopment conflicts in Pasadena. All of these causes, along with a thickening layer of smog piling up against the mountains, prompted half of Altadena’s population to leave in a flurry of white flight. New residents were mainly people of color. In a shifting mosaic of ethnic diversity over the past 40 to 50 years, virtually every Altadena neighborhood has become mixed racially, although the west side remains more diverse and working class. The community’s many groups are now reflected in civic life, making Altadena one of the most integrated communities in Southern California.",
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"url": "https://altadenaheritage.org/about",
"page_name": "Altadena Heritage: 30 Years of Activism | Altadena Heritage",
"title": "Altadena Heritage: 30 Years of Activism | Altadena Heritage",
"content": "Altadena Heritage: 30 Years of Activism History Founded as a Committee of the Altadena Town Council in the mid-1980s, the issue sparking Heritage’s formation was the destruction, and/or imminent plans to tear down and redevelop many historically significant homes and properties. The prospect of losing so much of what makes Altadena special was an emergency of that era that rallied a group of committed residents. It was recognized that a lack of any historical designation or protective ordinance for unincorporated areas of Los Angeles County often put the best interests of Altadena in peril. The first committee of Altadena Heritage decided to study the problem and design strategies to empower us to advocate for our town’s heritage and to preserve neighborhood integrity. The creation of Altadena’s Community Standards District (CSD) was promoted by the Heritage Committee, which alerted the Town Council to what was happening when rampant “mansionization” was allowed to destroy the fabric of neighborhoods. Allowing new “super-sized” homes to be built right up to property lines next to old farmhouses surrounded by large gardens and orange groves was draining the character of cities such as Arcadia, and creating unhappy neighbor relations. Heritage members served on the Town Council committee that pushed through the complex process to incorporate our CSD into L.A. County’s building code to establish building setback requirements and “total buildable areas” based on lot size. These have gone a long way toward preserving Altadena’s charming and livable neighborhoods, and are currently being reevaluated and updated after a generation of use. In 1987, the Heritage Committee had its first big success in saving Scripps Hall (now the Waldorf School) on Mariposa Street from subdivision into a housing tract. Highview, the much grander William Kellogg home next door, had been sold in 1959, torn down, and met this fate — and Scripps was about to go on the chopping block. At that time, members determined that forming a 501 c-3 organization, separate from the Town Council, would be the best vehicle to accomplish the purpose the group articulated: to identify and seek the protection of Altadena’s significant architectural, historical, cultural, and natural resources. The application to the State of California to become a non-profit community benefit corporation was approved February 24, 1989. Over the years Altadena Heritage’s purpose has remained constant. The organization was designed to be one whose strategies could evolve; thus our emphasis and activities have responded to changing needs over 25 years without losing sight of basic goals set in 1987. An immediate concern back then was to complete a survey of Altadena’s architectural resources before too many more significant ones were lost. Much early effort went into raising money for and conducting this, and Altadena Heritage was among the first organizations in California to digitize such information. Efforts went into identifying and saving existing paper files on Altadena properties as well, such as those from the William Wilson Real Estate Agency, which operated from after the turn of the century through the 1980s. Thus Altadena Heritage’s archives have also evolved into a “collection of collections” available to the public for research. These have been housed in the Altadena Heritage office within the Community Center, where we moved when it opened in 2003. The board takes stewardship of our data very seriously, and in 2011 is in process of migrating it to a new and sustainable digital platform that eventually will be launched on the California Historic Resources Inventory Database (CHRID). Over the years Altadena Heritage’s purpose has remained constant. The organization was designed to be one whose strategies could evolve; thus our emphasis and activities have responded to changing needs over 25 years without losing sight of basic goals set in 1987. An immediate concern back then was to complete a survey of Altadena’s architectural resources before too many more significant ones were lost. Much early effort went into raising money for and conducting this, and Altadena Heritage was among the first organizations in California to digitize such information. Efforts went into identifying and saving existing paper files on Altadena properties as well, such as those from the William Wilson Real Estate Agency, which operated from after the turn of the century through the 1980s. Thus Altadena Heritage’s archives have also evolved into a “collection of collections” available to the public for research. These have been housed in the Altadena Heritage office within the Community Center, where we moved when it opened in 2003. The board takes stewardship of our data very seriously, and in 2011 is in process of migrating it to a new and sustainable digital platform that eventually will be launched on the California Historic Resources Inventory Database (CHRID). Altadena Altadena is an unincorporated community of 43,000 sited on an outwash plane beneath the abruptly rising San Gabriel Mountain Range and between the Arroyo Seco and Eaton Canyon. Altadena is 13 miles northeast of the city of Los Angeles and directly north of the city of Pasadena. Founded at the time of Southern California’s land boom of the 1880s, the town’s uniqueness derives from a distinct history, “live free or die” culture, and stunning physical setting. Architecturally diverse with significant examples of every style of home from modest Craftsman bungalow to Italianate mansion and Modernist gem–Altadena has also been a racially diverse community since the 1960s. More Altadena History Altadena: Between Wilderness & City Altadena Town Council Website Altadena’s Wikipedia Page",
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"page_name": "Contact Us | Altadena Heritage",
"title": "Contact Us | Altadena Heritage",
"content": "Contact Altadena Heritage Contact Altadena Heritage First Name Last Name Email Message CAPTCHA Altadena Heritage 730 E Altadena Drive Altadena, CA 91001 Altadenaheritage@gmail.com Hours are Friday from 11am to 1pm and by appointment. Subscribe Monthly Updates Join our mailing list to receive the latest news and updates. SUBSCRIBE!",
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"url": "https://altadenaheritage.org/board-of-directors/",
"page_name": "Board of Directors | Altadena Heritage",
"title": "Board of Directors | Altadena Heritage",
"content": "Board of Directors Hans Allhoff Chair Biography Hans grew up outside of Washington D.C. and moved to California to go to law school. He moved to the Rubio Canyon area of Altadena in 2022. Hans is a lawyer at Spertus, Landes & Josephs, a litigation boutique that handles civil and criminal cases in state and federal courts. The lawyer in him is drawn to stories of mischievous Altadenans, and the madness of the Mount Lowe Railway for its time. Hans is an AC100 Endurance Run finisher, from Wrightwood to Altadena. He enjoys exploring Altadena’s streets, canyons, and mountains, and he enjoys reading western novels and memoirs of western places. Kathleen McDonnell Communications Biography Kathleen grew up in the northeast and lived in Washington DC for 10 years before moving to California for graduate school where she earned degrees in social psychology and public policy. Kathleen’s tenure at the Getty Trust involved technology in the visual arts, mostly with international partners. Her work with the Ahmanson Foundation was strictly local — philanthropy supporting LA county non-profits working in the arts, education, health care, and a wide range of human services. Kathleen found her way to Altadena in 2019 and soon after discovered Altadena Heritage. She has had a commitment to the environment since the 1970s and needs a daily dose of nature to survive. Gary Mendes Treasurer Biography Raised in the windward cities of O’ahu, Hawai’i, Gary learned early the value of a diverse community. Moving to Pasadena in 1976, he attended John Marshall Fundamental. As freshman class president at Pasadena City College, he has had success in creating policies to assist and empower disenfranchised student communities. Gary enjoyed careers in retail, service and finance before starting his own business in 1997 providing small office solutions. After success during the early days of e-commerce, he retired early in 2007. Gary is happy to help others when they are challenged by digital technology. He enjoys creating low carb recipes, especially treats. He reads historical fiction, listens to EDM music, and enjoys dancing. Val Zavala Recording Secretary Biography Val Zavala is a six-year resident of Altadena and lives with her artist-husband, Mark Greenfield and their dog, Casey. Val retired in 2018 after thirty years as a journalist, producer and executive producer at KCET, public television for Southern California. There she anchored SoCal Connected and Life & Times among many other programs, winning 19 LA Area Emmy Awards. She also won a prestigious Walter Cronkite Excellence in Journalism award for her popular 1-minute ballot proposition explainers. Val currently serves on the board of public television for Southern California. She has a deep concern for the environment and enjoys gardening, hiking, yoga and pickle ball. Darrell Weber Membership Biography Native Californian Darrell Weber grew up in the Walnut Creek area, worked at his family’s fast-food restaurant starting at age nine, and graduated from UC Berkeley with a degree in Computer Science. His career in IT includes jobs with Xerox, Digital Equipment Corporation and DIRECTV. His expertise is in Business Intelligence to empower clients to make better decisions. He remained lead data architect until his early retirement in 2022. Darrell met his husband Gary in 1988. They purchased their first west Altadena home in 1990. They have since moved to their “forever home” in the Rubio Highlands neighborhood having fallen in love with the bohemian character of the Altadena area. Darrell is an avid sci-fi reader, enjoys playing piano, live music, and travel. He is a new student of yoga. You may encounter him on his morning walks through the Rubio Canyon area. Bill Stuart Biography Bill Stuart is a Film & TV producer and CEO of Aurora Productions, where he supervises the day-to-day operations of the company. For the past many years he has also been the US representative for the famed Barrandov Studios in Prague. Bill and his wife Maureen moved to Altadena 4 years ago and have become enthusiastic supporters of maintaining the unique quality of life that the town affords. He is an advocate of Altadena’s open trails system and has worked with the Arroyo Foothills Conservancy to preserve and enhance them. Becky Nicolaides Biography An Altadena resident since 2008, Becky is a historian of American suburbs. She earned her PhD in history at Columbia University, and went on to write three books, her latest The New Suburbia, which explores how LA’s suburbs transition from Ozzie-and-Harriet sameness to extraordinary diversity. After an academic career at ASU West and UCSD, Becky became a historic consultant, working on numerous public history and preservation projects from Survey LA, to projects for the LA Conservancy, State of California, and City of LA. She is co-founder of History Studio, a historical consulting company for film, tv, and podcasts. Becky loves taking walks on the hilly streets of Altadena, baking, travelling, and going to movies with her actor-producer husband. After seeing and studying many suburbs across the globe, Becky always loves returning to Altadena – her “perfect suburb.” Ken Haber Biography Ken Haber worked as a feature film location scout and manager, for more than thirty years. Some of his projects included “Fatal Attraction,” “Wall Street,” “Black Rain,” Thelma and Louise,” and “The Bridges of Madison County. Ken has also worked as a professional photographer, specializing in film and television “Set Photography,” as well as “Fine Art and Nature Photography.” His work has appeared in books and magazines. Ken lives in Altadena with his wife, film set decorator, Rosemary Brandenburg, where they love to bike, hike and go birding in the numerous parks, trails and neighborhoods throughout the area. Claire Smith Biography Born and raised in Pasadena, Claire has always enjoyed the diverse and notable architecture of the area. She was introduced to Altadena by attending Eliot Middle School, housed in the beautiful 1931 Art Deco building on Lake Avenue. At this time her love of local history and architectural design was explored further by becoming a Junior Docent at the Gamble House in Pasadena. A proud Mustang, a graduate of John Muir High School, Claire decided to put down roots and buy her first home in Altadena in 2003. At the time she was an international travel agent, until her Realtor, Ms. Meindl, recruited and mentored her in real estate. She has loved facilitating real estate transactions since 2006. Claire is thrilled to build continued engagement with the community, advocate for positive changes and preserve everything that makes Altadena especially unique.” Huan Gu Biography Huan Gu lived in Pasadena for 16 years before moving to Altadena with her husband Frank Mayor in 2021. She owned and operated an art gallery in Old Pasadena before becoming a real estate agent. Living in and renovating a historical house has allowed her to use her passion for art and architecture in preserving an important part of Altadena’s history. An animal lover and avid hiker, Huan has been thrilled by hiking the trails around her new home and encountering the numerous wildlife that populates Altadena.",
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"url": "https://altadenaheritage.org/",
"page_name": "Altadena Heritage | Advocacy and Preservation",
"title": "Altadena Heritage | Advocacy and Preservation",
"content": "Altadena Heritage is dedicated to helping our community rebuild after devastating fires, focusing on fire-resilient designs and preserving the unique architectural character of our area. We aim to ensure everyone has the opportunity to rebuild and will host workshops, talks, and community events to support this effort. Join us in coming together to assist our neighbors and restore the community we cherish. Altadena Libraries LA Fires – Connected Wellness Critical Programs to help get our neighbors back on their feet. Wildfire Prepared Home The Wildfire Prepared Home designation program enables homeowners to take preventative measures for their home and yard to protect against wildfire Fire Adapted Communities People learning and working together are the foundation of fire adaptation. FAC Net invests in people and in place-based efforts to change relationships with fire. National Firewise USA Protect your home and neighborhood as well as your family’s safety. The Firewise USA® program is here to help you get started. About AH Membership Owen Brown Gravesite Altadena Heritage is a nonprofit volunteer-based advocacy organization dedicated to protecting, preserving, and raising awareness of our foothill community’s rich architectural, environmental, and cultural heritage. Upcoming Events Patron+ Appreciation Event November 9, 3 to 5pm • Learn More Altadena Heritage Holiday Gathering Sunday December 14, 3 to 6pm • Learn More Recent Events Altadena Revealed Lecture Series Halloween Special at Mountain View Cemetery with Brian Alan Baker Altadena Revealed 6 Owen Brown’s body, a film screening and conversation. Altadena Revealed #05 Tim Gregory is a nationally certified archivist and a registered public historian. Outlaws This lecture explores an essential layer of Altadena’s rich and historic human… « Older Entries Altadena Heritage Newsletters Online Art & Artists Issue Fall Winter 2024 Mountain View Fall Winter 2023 Land Use Issue Spring Summer 2023 Wildlife Issue Fall Winter 2022 Sustainability Issue Fall Winter 2021 Health Issue Spring Summer 2021 Altadena Heritage Infographics TV Show May 28, 2024 Sender House May 28, 2024 Altadena Community Events May 28, 2024 Ask an Arborist April 19, 2024 Advocate for Positive Change Preserve What We Love Celebrate Community Membership",
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"url": "https://altadenaheritage.org/a-short-history-of-altadena/",
"page_name": "A Short History of Altadena | Altadena Heritage",
"title": "A Short History of Altadena | Altadena Heritage",
"content": "A Very Short History of Altadena Written by Michele Zack, author of Altadena: Between Wilderness and City, for the commemoritve booklet produced for the community’s 125th birthday, Nov. 3, 2012. Altadena is an unincorporated community of Los Angeles County, next to and within the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains. It is bounded on three sides by wilderness (the Arroyo Seco, Angeles National Forest, and Eaton Canyon), and on the south by the city of Pasadena. Throughout its history and up until today, as Altadena celebrates its 125th year, this distinct geography has nurtured an independent spirit and given the community a close-to-nature feel. Citizens here have consistently resisted annexation to Pasadena (although that city has taken 46 “bites” of it over the years, seeking tax revenues), and voted down incorporating as a city. Altadenans prefer a looser political structure that still manages to foster an unmistakable identity. Altadena’s American roots date to the period immediately following statehood, when settlers began tapping water sources in its canyons. Benjamin Eaton began developing water systems for Don Benito Wilson and Dr. John Griffin, who purchased the 14,000 acre San Pasqual Rancho (eventually developed into Pasadena, South Pasadena, Altadena, and parts of other adjacent communities) from Manuel Garfias in 1858. Eaton was soon successfully growing grapes with little water just beneath the foothills, and also citrus, which he proved could thrive at higher altitudes than previously believed. Pasadena pioneers, mainly from the Midwest, were led by Eaton and others to buy the central 2,400 acres of the Rancho San Pasqual from Wilson and Griffin in 1873. They began building a temperance community of educated, well-heeled citizens who sought to create an island of beauty, civilization, and health in the west. Many early residents suffered from tuberculosis and other illness and injury suffered during the Civil War, and many were Union vets. The ranchers and farmers a few miles to the north, however, resisted Pasadena’s attempt to include the highland area within the new city’s limits in 1886, when it incorporated in the middle of the great Southern California boom. Most grew wine grapes and wanted no interference from prohibition-minded folks. In this period Los Angeles County was the state’s largest wine producer, helped along by Altadena’s abundant harvest. Altadena was opened as a subdivision in late 1887 by John and Fred Woodbury from Marshalltown, Iowa. The Woodburys envisioned a millionaires’ rural suburb north of busy Pasadena, hoping to add to the wealthy class already gathering here, including Col. Charles Greene and Andrew McNally. Their timing was off, the real estate bubble burst in 1888, and the region was thrown into an economic panic that grew worse as it merged into a great national depression lasting through much of the 1890s. A bright spot in this period was the development of Thaddeus Lowe’s elegant mountain railway, which created a connection from Los Angeles though Pasadena and up to Altadena and beyond, to the many hotels and camps in the mountains. There, temperance was not an issue. From this era, the 1890s through the 1920’s, ranchers and residents continued slowly buying up Altadena land, growing grapes, and expanding into oranges, olives, walnuts — and in the early 20th century, dates, avocados, and commercial fruit and ornamental plant nurseries. Business magnates also came, mainly from Chicago and other midwestern cities, attracted by climate, rural ambiance, and the delights of nearby Pasadena. They built many grand winter and retirement homes, gradually moving the center of wealth from Mariposa Street east toward Eaton Canyon in the ‘teens and ‘twenties. Despite the grandeur of its estates, Altadena also attracted regular folks, fewer of them farmers as time went on. Excellent public transportation lines made jobs in Pasadena and Los Angeles easily accessible. Somehow, Altadena retained its rustic character and rural flavor through the 1930s, when people continued to arrive, and into the 1940s. A cadre artists, writers, and bohemians joined the population of blue and white collar workers and millionaires. Economic growth and GI benefits fueled the largest expansion of the middle class in U.S. history following World War II. This included rising rates of home ownership; a huge building boom ate up most of Altadena’s remaining open land and turned it into housing for the newly upwardly mobile. It consisted of infill around estates in Central Altadena, and new tracts built on the west side — where farming had lasted longest because of excellent water sources. In the 1940s and 50s, Altadena reached its present day population in the 40,000s (peaking at 46,000 in the early 1950s, and settling down to 43,000 today). About 96% were white. This time of an expanding economy, modernization, business growth, and community building took place during the Cold War, when ideological battles and fear of communism played out across America and around the world. Altadena’s present day diversity came into being largely during the tumult of social change in the 1960s and 70s. The Civil Rights movement, protests against the Vietnam War, the rising youth culture, and other national issues of the day played out locally in lawsuits over school integration, neighborhoods carved apart by new freeways, and redevelopment conflicts in Pasadena. All of these causes, along with a thickening layer of smog piling up against the mountains, prompted half of Altadena’s population to leave in a flurry of white flight. New residents were mainly people of color. In a shifting mosaic of ethnic diversity over the past 40 to 50 years, virtually every Altadena neighborhood has become mixed racially, although the west side remains more diverse and working class. The community’s many groups are now reflected in civic life, making Altadena one of the most integrated communities in Southern California.",
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"page_name": "Contact Us | Altadena Heritage",
"title": "Contact Us | Altadena Heritage",
"content": "Contact Altadena Heritage Contact Altadena Heritage First Name Last Name Email Message CAPTCHA Altadena Heritage 730 E Altadena Drive Altadena, CA 91001 Altadenaheritage@gmail.com Hours are Friday from 11am to 1pm and by appointment. Subscribe Monthly Updates Join our mailing list to receive the latest news and updates. SUBSCRIBE!",
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"full_text": "================================================================================\nFULL TEXT EXTRACTION: Altadena Heritage – Short History of Altadena\nURL: https://altadenaheritage.org/a-short-history-of-altadena/\nExtracted: 2026-01-10T04:18:51.669527Z\n================================================================================\n\n\n────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────\nPAGE 1: A Short History of Altadena | Altadena Heritage\nURL: https://altadenaheritage.org/a-short-history-of-altadena/#\nWords: 949\n────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────\n\nA Very Short History of Altadena Written by Michele Zack, author of Altadena: Between Wilderness and City, for the commemoritve booklet produced for the community’s 125th birthday, Nov. 3, 2012. Altadena is an unincorporated community of Los Angeles County, next to and within the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains. It is bounded on three sides by wilderness (the Arroyo Seco, Angeles National Forest, and Eaton Canyon), and on the south by the city of Pasadena. Throughout its history and up until today, as Altadena celebrates its 125th year, this distinct geography has nurtured an independent spirit and given the community a close-to-nature feel. Citizens here have consistently resisted annexation to Pasadena (although that city has taken 46 “bites” of it over the years, seeking tax revenues), and voted down incorporating as a city. Altadenans prefer a looser political structure that still manages to foster an unmistakable identity. Altadena’s American roots date to the period immediately following statehood, when settlers began tapping water sources in its canyons. Benjamin Eaton began developing water systems for Don Benito Wilson and Dr. John Griffin, who purchased the 14,000 acre San Pasqual Rancho (eventually developed into Pasadena, South Pasadena, Altadena, and parts of other adjacent communities) from Manuel Garfias in 1858. Eaton was soon successfully growing grapes with little water just beneath the foothills, and also citrus, which he proved could thrive at higher altitudes than previously believed. Pasadena pioneers, mainly from the Midwest, were led by Eaton and others to buy the central 2,400 acres of the Rancho San Pasqual from Wilson and Griffin in 1873. They began building a temperance community of educated, well-heeled citizens who sought to create an island of beauty, civilization, and health in the west. Many early residents suffered from tuberculosis and other illness and injury suffered during the Civil War, and many were Union vets. The ranchers and farmers a few miles to the north, however, resisted Pasadena’s attempt to include the highland area within the new city’s limits in 1886, when it incorporated in the middle of the great Southern California boom. Most grew wine grapes and wanted no interference from prohibition-minded folks. In this period Los Angeles County was the state’s largest wine producer, helped along by Altadena’s abundant harvest. Altadena was opened as a subdivision in late 1887 by John and Fred Woodbury from Marshalltown, Iowa. The Woodburys envisioned a millionaires’ rural suburb north of busy Pasadena, hoping to add to the wealthy class already gathering here, including Col. Charles Greene and Andrew McNally. Their timing was off, the real estate bubble burst in 1888, and the region was thrown into an economic panic that grew worse as it merged into a great national depression lasting through much of the 1890s. A bright spot in this period was the development of Thaddeus Lowe’s elegant mountain railway, which created a connection from Los Angeles though Pasadena and up to Altadena and beyond, to the many hotels and camps in the mountains. There, temperance was not an issue. From this era, the 1890s through the 1920’s, ranchers and residents continued slowly buying up Altadena land, growing grapes, and expanding into oranges, olives, walnuts — and in the early 20th century, dates, avocados, and commercial fruit and ornamental plant nurseries. Business magnates also came, mainly from Chicago and other midwestern cities, attracted by climate, rural ambiance, and the delights of nearby Pasadena. They built many grand winter and retirement homes, gradually moving the center of wealth from Mariposa Street east toward Eaton Canyon in the ‘teens and ‘twenties. Despite the grandeur of its estates, Altadena also attracted regular folks, fewer of them farmers as time went on. Excellent public transportation lines made jobs in Pasadena and Los Angeles easily accessible. Somehow, Altadena retained its rustic character and rural flavor through the 1930s, when people continued to arrive, and into the 1940s. A cadre artists, writers, and bohemians joined the population of blue and white collar workers and millionaires. Economic growth and GI benefits fueled the largest expansion of the middle class in U.S. history following World War II. This included rising rates of home ownership; a huge building boom ate up most of Altadena’s remaining open land and turned it into housing for the newly upwardly mobile. It consisted of infill around estates in Central Altadena, and new tracts built on the west side — where farming had lasted longest because of excellent water sources. In the 1940s and 50s, Altadena reached its present day population in the 40,000s (peaking at 46,000 in the early 1950s, and settling down to 43,000 today). About 96% were white. This time of an expanding economy, modernization, business growth, and community building took place during the Cold War, when ideological battles and fear of communism played out across America and around the world. Altadena’s present day diversity came into being largely during the tumult of social change in the 1960s and 70s. The Civil Rights movement, protests against the Vietnam War, the rising youth culture, and other national issues of the day played out locally in lawsuits over school integration, neighborhoods carved apart by new freeways, and redevelopment conflicts in Pasadena. All of these causes, along with a thickening layer of smog piling up against the mountains, prompted half of Altadena’s population to leave in a flurry of white flight. New residents were mainly people of color. In a shifting mosaic of ethnic diversity over the past 40 to 50 years, virtually every Altadena neighborhood has become mixed racially, although the west side remains more diverse and working class. The community’s many groups are now reflected in civic life, making Altadena one of the most integrated communities in Southern California.\n\n\n────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────\nPAGE 2: Altadena Heritage: 30 Years of Activism | Altadena Heritage\nURL: https://altadenaheritage.org/about\nWords: 900\n────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────\n\nAltadena Heritage: 30 Years of Activism History Founded as a Committee of the Altadena Town Council in the mid-1980s, the issue sparking Heritage’s formation was the destruction, and/or imminent plans to tear down and redevelop many historically significant homes and properties. The prospect of losing so much of what makes Altadena special was an emergency of that era that rallied a group of committed residents. It was recognized that a lack of any historical designation or protective ordinance for unincorporated areas of Los Angeles County often put the best interests of Altadena in peril. The first committee of Altadena Heritage decided to study the problem and design strategies to empower us to advocate for our town’s heritage and to preserve neighborhood integrity. The creation of Altadena’s Community Standards District (CSD) was promoted by the Heritage Committee, which alerted the Town Council to what was happening when rampant “mansionization” was allowed to destroy the fabric of neighborhoods. Allowing new “super-sized” homes to be built right up to property lines next to old farmhouses surrounded by large gardens and orange groves was draining the character of cities such as Arcadia, and creating unhappy neighbor relations. Heritage members served on the Town Council committee that pushed through the complex process to incorporate our CSD into L.A. County’s building code to establish building setback requirements and “total buildable areas” based on lot size. These have gone a long way toward preserving Altadena’s charming and livable neighborhoods, and are currently being reevaluated and updated after a generation of use. In 1987, the Heritage Committee had its first big success in saving Scripps Hall (now the Waldorf School) on Mariposa Street from subdivision into a housing tract. Highview, the much grander William Kellogg home next door, had been sold in 1959, torn down, and met this fate — and Scripps was about to go on the chopping block. At that time, members determined that forming a 501 c-3 organization, separate from the Town Council, would be the best vehicle to accomplish the purpose the group articulated: to identify and seek the protection of Altadena’s significant architectural, historical, cultural, and natural resources. The application to the State of California to become a non-profit community benefit corporation was approved February 24, 1989. Over the years Altadena Heritage’s purpose has remained constant. The organization was designed to be one whose strategies could evolve; thus our emphasis and activities have responded to changing needs over 25 years without losing sight of basic goals set in 1987. An immediate concern back then was to complete a survey of Altadena’s architectural resources before too many more significant ones were lost. Much early effort went into raising money for and conducting this, and Altadena Heritage was among the first organizations in California to digitize such information. Efforts went into identifying and saving existing paper files on Altadena properties as well, such as those from the William Wilson Real Estate Agency, which operated from after the turn of the century through the 1980s. Thus Altadena Heritage’s archives have also evolved into a “collection of collections” available to the public for research. These have been housed in the Altadena Heritage office within the Community Center, where we moved when it opened in 2003. The board takes stewardship of our data very seriously, and in 2011 is in process of migrating it to a new and sustainable digital platform that eventually will be launched on the California Historic Resources Inventory Database (CHRID). Over the years Altadena Heritage’s purpose has remained constant. The organization was designed to be one whose strategies could evolve; thus our emphasis and activities have responded to changing needs over 25 years without losing sight of basic goals set in 1987. An immediate concern back then was to complete a survey of Altadena’s architectural resources before too many more significant ones were lost. Much early effort went into raising money for and conducting this, and Altadena Heritage was among the first organizations in California to digitize such information. Efforts went into identifying and saving existing paper files on Altadena properties as well, such as those from the William Wilson Real Estate Agency, which operated from after the turn of the century through the 1980s. Thus Altadena Heritage’s archives have also evolved into a “collection of collections” available to the public for research. These have been housed in the Altadena Heritage office within the Community Center, where we moved when it opened in 2003. The board takes stewardship of our data very seriously, and in 2011 is in process of migrating it to a new and sustainable digital platform that eventually will be launched on the California Historic Resources Inventory Database (CHRID). Altadena Altadena is an unincorporated community of 43,000 sited on an outwash plane beneath the abruptly rising San Gabriel Mountain Range and between the Arroyo Seco and Eaton Canyon. Altadena is 13 miles northeast of the city of Los Angeles and directly north of the city of Pasadena. Founded at the time of Southern California’s land boom of the 1880s, the town’s uniqueness derives from a distinct history, “live free or die” culture, and stunning physical setting. Architecturally diverse with significant examples of every style of home from modest Craftsman bungalow to Italianate mansion and Modernist gem–Altadena has also been a racially diverse community since the 1960s. More Altadena History Altadena: Between Wilderness & City Altadena Town Council Website Altadena’s Wikipedia Page\n\n\n────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────\nPAGE 3: Contact Us | Altadena Heritage\nURL: https://altadenaheritage.org/contact-us\nWords: 48\n────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────\n\nContact Altadena Heritage Contact Altadena Heritage First Name Last Name Email Message CAPTCHA Altadena Heritage 730 E Altadena Drive Altadena, CA 91001 Altadenaheritage@gmail.com Hours are Friday from 11am to 1pm and by appointment. Subscribe Monthly Updates Join our mailing list to receive the latest news and updates. SUBSCRIBE!\n\n\n────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────\nPAGE 4: Board of Directors | Altadena Heritage\nURL: https://altadenaheritage.org/board-of-directors/\nWords: 1,164\n────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────\n\nBoard of Directors Hans Allhoff Chair Biography Hans grew up outside of Washington D.C. and moved to California to go to law school. He moved to the Rubio Canyon area of Altadena in 2022. Hans is a lawyer at Spertus, Landes & Josephs, a litigation boutique that handles civil and criminal cases in state and federal courts. The lawyer in him is drawn to stories of mischievous Altadenans, and the madness of the Mount Lowe Railway for its time. Hans is an AC100 Endurance Run finisher, from Wrightwood to Altadena. He enjoys exploring Altadena’s streets, canyons, and mountains, and he enjoys reading western novels and memoirs of western places. Kathleen McDonnell Communications Biography Kathleen grew up in the northeast and lived in Washington DC for 10 years before moving to California for graduate school where she earned degrees in social psychology and public policy. Kathleen’s tenure at the Getty Trust involved technology in the visual arts, mostly with international partners. Her work with the Ahmanson Foundation was strictly local — philanthropy supporting LA county non-profits working in the arts, education, health care, and a wide range of human services. Kathleen found her way to Altadena in 2019 and soon after discovered Altadena Heritage. She has had a commitment to the environment since the 1970s and needs a daily dose of nature to survive. Gary Mendes Treasurer Biography Raised in the windward cities of O’ahu, Hawai’i, Gary learned early the value of a diverse community. Moving to Pasadena in 1976, he attended John Marshall Fundamental. As freshman class president at Pasadena City College, he has had success in creating policies to assist and empower disenfranchised student communities. Gary enjoyed careers in retail, service and finance before starting his own business in 1997 providing small office solutions. After success during the early days of e-commerce, he retired early in 2007. Gary is happy to help others when they are challenged by digital technology. He enjoys creating low carb recipes, especially treats. He reads historical fiction, listens to EDM music, and enjoys dancing. Val Zavala Recording Secretary Biography Val Zavala is a six-year resident of Altadena and lives with her artist-husband, Mark Greenfield and their dog, Casey. Val retired in 2018 after thirty years as a journalist, producer and executive producer at KCET, public television for Southern California. There she anchored SoCal Connected and Life & Times among many other programs, winning 19 LA Area Emmy Awards. She also won a prestigious Walter Cronkite Excellence in Journalism award for her popular 1-minute ballot proposition explainers. Val currently serves on the board of public television for Southern California. She has a deep concern for the environment and enjoys gardening, hiking, yoga and pickle ball. Darrell Weber Membership Biography Native Californian Darrell Weber grew up in the Walnut Creek area, worked at his family’s fast-food restaurant starting at age nine, and graduated from UC Berkeley with a degree in Computer Science. His career in IT includes jobs with Xerox, Digital Equipment Corporation and DIRECTV. His expertise is in Business Intelligence to empower clients to make better decisions. He remained lead data architect until his early retirement in 2022. Darrell met his husband Gary in 1988. They purchased their first west Altadena home in 1990. They have since moved to their “forever home” in the Rubio Highlands neighborhood having fallen in love with the bohemian character of the Altadena area. Darrell is an avid sci-fi reader, enjoys playing piano, live music, and travel. He is a new student of yoga. You may encounter him on his morning walks through the Rubio Canyon area. Bill Stuart Biography Bill Stuart is a Film & TV producer and CEO of Aurora Productions, where he supervises the day-to-day operations of the company. For the past many years he has also been the US representative for the famed Barrandov Studios in Prague. Bill and his wife Maureen moved to Altadena 4 years ago and have become enthusiastic supporters of maintaining the unique quality of life that the town affords. He is an advocate of Altadena’s open trails system and has worked with the Arroyo Foothills Conservancy to preserve and enhance them. Becky Nicolaides Biography An Altadena resident since 2008, Becky is a historian of American suburbs. She earned her PhD in history at Columbia University, and went on to write three books, her latest The New Suburbia, which explores how LA’s suburbs transition from Ozzie-and-Harriet sameness to extraordinary diversity. After an academic career at ASU West and UCSD, Becky became a historic consultant, working on numerous public history and preservation projects from Survey LA, to projects for the LA Conservancy, State of California, and City of LA. She is co-founder of History Studio, a historical consulting company for film, tv, and podcasts. Becky loves taking walks on the hilly streets of Altadena, baking, travelling, and going to movies with her actor-producer husband. After seeing and studying many suburbs across the globe, Becky always loves returning to Altadena – her “perfect suburb.” Ken Haber Biography Ken Haber worked as a feature film location scout and manager, for more than thirty years. Some of his projects included “Fatal Attraction,” “Wall Street,” “Black Rain,” Thelma and Louise,” and “The Bridges of Madison County. Ken has also worked as a professional photographer, specializing in film and television “Set Photography,” as well as “Fine Art and Nature Photography.” His work has appeared in books and magazines. Ken lives in Altadena with his wife, film set decorator, Rosemary Brandenburg, where they love to bike, hike and go birding in the numerous parks, trails and neighborhoods throughout the area. Claire Smith Biography Born and raised in Pasadena, Claire has always enjoyed the diverse and notable architecture of the area. She was introduced to Altadena by attending Eliot Middle School, housed in the beautiful 1931 Art Deco building on Lake Avenue. At this time her love of local history and architectural design was explored further by becoming a Junior Docent at the Gamble House in Pasadena. A proud Mustang, a graduate of John Muir High School, Claire decided to put down roots and buy her first home in Altadena in 2003. At the time she was an international travel agent, until her Realtor, Ms. Meindl, recruited and mentored her in real estate. She has loved facilitating real estate transactions since 2006. Claire is thrilled to build continued engagement with the community, advocate for positive changes and preserve everything that makes Altadena especially unique.” Huan Gu Biography Huan Gu lived in Pasadena for 16 years before moving to Altadena with her husband Frank Mayor in 2021. She owned and operated an art gallery in Old Pasadena before becoming a real estate agent. Living in and renovating a historical house has allowed her to use her passion for art and architecture in preserving an important part of Altadena’s history. An animal lover and avid hiker, Huan has been thrilled by hiking the trails around her new home and encountering the numerous wildlife that populates Altadena.\n\n\n────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────\nPAGE 5: Altadena Heritage | Advocacy and Preservation\nURL: https://altadenaheritage.org/\nWords: 345\n────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────\n\nAltadena Heritage is dedicated to helping our community rebuild after devastating fires, focusing on fire-resilient designs and preserving the unique architectural character of our area. We aim to ensure everyone has the opportunity to rebuild and will host workshops, talks, and community events to support this effort. Join us in coming together to assist our neighbors and restore the community we cherish. Altadena Libraries LA Fires – Connected Wellness Critical Programs to help get our neighbors back on their feet. Wildfire Prepared Home The Wildfire Prepared Home designation program enables homeowners to take preventative measures for their home and yard to protect against wildfire Fire Adapted Communities People learning and working together are the foundation of fire adaptation. FAC Net invests in people and in place-based efforts to change relationships with fire. National Firewise USA Protect your home and neighborhood as well as your family’s safety. The Firewise USA® program is here to help you get started. About AH Membership Owen Brown Gravesite Altadena Heritage is a nonprofit volunteer-based advocacy organization dedicated to protecting, preserving, and raising awareness of our foothill community’s rich architectural, environmental, and cultural heritage. Upcoming Events Patron+ Appreciation Event November 9, 3 to 5pm • Learn More Altadena Heritage Holiday Gathering Sunday December 14, 3 to 6pm • Learn More Recent Events Altadena Revealed Lecture Series Halloween Special at Mountain View Cemetery with Brian Alan Baker Altadena Revealed 6 Owen Brown’s body, a film screening and conversation. Altadena Revealed #05 Tim Gregory is a nationally certified archivist and a registered public historian. Outlaws This lecture explores an essential layer of Altadena’s rich and historic human… « Older Entries Altadena Heritage Newsletters Online Art & Artists Issue Fall Winter 2024 Mountain View Fall Winter 2023 Land Use Issue Spring Summer 2023 Wildlife Issue Fall Winter 2022 Sustainability Issue Fall Winter 2021 Health Issue Spring Summer 2021 Altadena Heritage Infographics TV Show May 28, 2024 Sender House May 28, 2024 Altadena Community Events May 28, 2024 Ask an Arborist April 19, 2024 Advocate for Positive Change Preserve What We Love Celebrate Community Membership\n\n\n────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────\nPAGE 6: A Short History of Altadena | Altadena Heritage\nURL: https://altadenaheritage.org/a-short-history-of-altadena/\nWords: 949\n────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────\n\nA Very Short History of Altadena Written by Michele Zack, author of Altadena: Between Wilderness and City, for the commemoritve booklet produced for the community’s 125th birthday, Nov. 3, 2012. Altadena is an unincorporated community of Los Angeles County, next to and within the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains. It is bounded on three sides by wilderness (the Arroyo Seco, Angeles National Forest, and Eaton Canyon), and on the south by the city of Pasadena. Throughout its history and up until today, as Altadena celebrates its 125th year, this distinct geography has nurtured an independent spirit and given the community a close-to-nature feel. Citizens here have consistently resisted annexation to Pasadena (although that city has taken 46 “bites” of it over the years, seeking tax revenues), and voted down incorporating as a city. Altadenans prefer a looser political structure that still manages to foster an unmistakable identity. Altadena’s American roots date to the period immediately following statehood, when settlers began tapping water sources in its canyons. Benjamin Eaton began developing water systems for Don Benito Wilson and Dr. John Griffin, who purchased the 14,000 acre San Pasqual Rancho (eventually developed into Pasadena, South Pasadena, Altadena, and parts of other adjacent communities) from Manuel Garfias in 1858. Eaton was soon successfully growing grapes with little water just beneath the foothills, and also citrus, which he proved could thrive at higher altitudes than previously believed. Pasadena pioneers, mainly from the Midwest, were led by Eaton and others to buy the central 2,400 acres of the Rancho San Pasqual from Wilson and Griffin in 1873. They began building a temperance community of educated, well-heeled citizens who sought to create an island of beauty, civilization, and health in the west. Many early residents suffered from tuberculosis and other illness and injury suffered during the Civil War, and many were Union vets. The ranchers and farmers a few miles to the north, however, resisted Pasadena’s attempt to include the highland area within the new city’s limits in 1886, when it incorporated in the middle of the great Southern California boom. Most grew wine grapes and wanted no interference from prohibition-minded folks. In this period Los Angeles County was the state’s largest wine producer, helped along by Altadena’s abundant harvest. Altadena was opened as a subdivision in late 1887 by John and Fred Woodbury from Marshalltown, Iowa. The Woodburys envisioned a millionaires’ rural suburb north of busy Pasadena, hoping to add to the wealthy class already gathering here, including Col. Charles Greene and Andrew McNally. Their timing was off, the real estate bubble burst in 1888, and the region was thrown into an economic panic that grew worse as it merged into a great national depression lasting through much of the 1890s. A bright spot in this period was the development of Thaddeus Lowe’s elegant mountain railway, which created a connection from Los Angeles though Pasadena and up to Altadena and beyond, to the many hotels and camps in the mountains. There, temperance was not an issue. From this era, the 1890s through the 1920’s, ranchers and residents continued slowly buying up Altadena land, growing grapes, and expanding into oranges, olives, walnuts — and in the early 20th century, dates, avocados, and commercial fruit and ornamental plant nurseries. Business magnates also came, mainly from Chicago and other midwestern cities, attracted by climate, rural ambiance, and the delights of nearby Pasadena. They built many grand winter and retirement homes, gradually moving the center of wealth from Mariposa Street east toward Eaton Canyon in the ‘teens and ‘twenties. Despite the grandeur of its estates, Altadena also attracted regular folks, fewer of them farmers as time went on. Excellent public transportation lines made jobs in Pasadena and Los Angeles easily accessible. Somehow, Altadena retained its rustic character and rural flavor through the 1930s, when people continued to arrive, and into the 1940s. A cadre artists, writers, and bohemians joined the population of blue and white collar workers and millionaires. Economic growth and GI benefits fueled the largest expansion of the middle class in U.S. history following World War II. This included rising rates of home ownership; a huge building boom ate up most of Altadena’s remaining open land and turned it into housing for the newly upwardly mobile. It consisted of infill around estates in Central Altadena, and new tracts built on the west side — where farming had lasted longest because of excellent water sources. In the 1940s and 50s, Altadena reached its present day population in the 40,000s (peaking at 46,000 in the early 1950s, and settling down to 43,000 today). About 96% were white. This time of an expanding economy, modernization, business growth, and community building took place during the Cold War, when ideological battles and fear of communism played out across America and around the world. Altadena’s present day diversity came into being largely during the tumult of social change in the 1960s and 70s. The Civil Rights movement, protests against the Vietnam War, the rising youth culture, and other national issues of the day played out locally in lawsuits over school integration, neighborhoods carved apart by new freeways, and redevelopment conflicts in Pasadena. All of these causes, along with a thickening layer of smog piling up against the mountains, prompted half of Altadena’s population to leave in a flurry of white flight. New residents were mainly people of color. In a shifting mosaic of ethnic diversity over the past 40 to 50 years, virtually every Altadena neighborhood has become mixed racially, although the west side remains more diverse and working class. The community’s many groups are now reflected in civic life, making Altadena one of the most integrated communities in Southern California.\n\n\n────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────\nPAGE 7: Contact Us | Altadena Heritage\nURL: https://altadenaheritage.org/contact\nWords: 48\n────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────\n\nContact Altadena Heritage Contact Altadena Heritage First Name Last Name Email Message CAPTCHA Altadena Heritage 730 E Altadena Drive Altadena, CA 91001 Altadenaheritage@gmail.com Hours are Friday from 11am to 1pm and by appointment. Subscribe Monthly Updates Join our mailing list to receive the latest news and updates. SUBSCRIBE!\n\n",
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