The Chatsworth Historical Society was established in 1963 with the goal of saving the historic Pioneer Church from demolition. Over the next 50+ years, the Society worked to restore the church and establish a museum. They acquired the historic Minnie Hill Palmer homestead and worked to preserve it. The Society led efforts to celebrate Chatsworth's centennial in 1988. They have fundraised through events like garden festivals and pioneer days. The Society has played a key role in Chatsworth history for over 50 years.
Chatsworth Hills Homesteaders Part 3, California
Homesteader Families in the Simi Hills, south of Plummer, west of Valley Circle, and north of Roscoe. Includes Schweikhard, Domec, Woolsey and Dayton.
Chatsworth Hills Homesteaders Part 1
Homesteader Families in the Santa Susana Mountains, north of Chatsworth Street and west of Andora. Includes Dejeremias, Johnson, Graves, Williams, Iverson, Charlton
Chatsworth Stagecoach Trail -- The Old Santa Susana Stage Road was designated Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument #92 in 1972, and was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1974. It is located in the Santa Susana Pass State Historic Park in Chatsworth, California
This document summarizes the history of Chatsworth Lake Manor from its Chumash Native American origins to its early 20th century development. It describes how in 1797 Chief Odón Chihuya was born at a Chumash village and later lived at the San Fernando Mission. His granddaughter Francesca Domec was granted a 148-acre homestead in 1901 that became the Lake Manor area. The document also outlines the history of Pierre Domec, a French settler who married Odón's daughter and operated a lime kiln in the 1850s-60s, and how his daughter Francesca later inherited the land.
The document summarizes a presentation given by the Chatsworth Historical Society about 19 postcards from 1912 depicting scenes in Chatsworth, California. The postcards were taken by photographer H.F. Rile and show what rural Chatsworth looked like at that time, with dirt roads and farms. The postcards are divided into categories based on location, such as scenes around Andora Avenue, the Johnson/Iverson homestead, and near the railroad. Each postcard is analyzed in detail, comparing the historic photos to the modern landscape. Messages written on the postcards by early Chatsworth residents are also discussed.
The Hill-Palmer House, named to the National Register of Historic Places as the only remaining homestead cottage and surrounding gardens in the San Fernando Valley, was built about 1911 by James David and Rhoda Jane Enlow Hill.
In 1974 it was named Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument #133, and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.
Located within the Homestead Acre in Chatsworth Park South, the property is owned by the Los Angeles City Department of Recreation and Parks, with the Chatsworth Historical Society as conservators.
The house, gardens and Chatsworth Museum is open for tours from 1-4 p.m. the first Sunday of every month.
Topics to be covered:
1860’s to 1886 – The Hill family travels from Arkansas to Visalia Ca. to Los Angeles to Chatsworth
Family photographs
1886-1940’s The homesteading years
1950-60’s – the sale of their homestead property to Henry Berkenkamp, Aqua Sierra, and the Roy Roger’s Sports Center
1970’s – Chatsworth Historical Society conservators
Chatsworth Hills Homesteaders Part 3, California
Homesteader Families in the Simi Hills, south of Plummer, west of Valley Circle, and north of Roscoe. Includes Schweikhard, Domec, Woolsey and Dayton.
Chatsworth Hills Homesteaders Part 1
Homesteader Families in the Santa Susana Mountains, north of Chatsworth Street and west of Andora. Includes Dejeremias, Johnson, Graves, Williams, Iverson, Charlton
Chatsworth Stagecoach Trail -- The Old Santa Susana Stage Road was designated Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument #92 in 1972, and was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1974. It is located in the Santa Susana Pass State Historic Park in Chatsworth, California
This document summarizes the history of Chatsworth Lake Manor from its Chumash Native American origins to its early 20th century development. It describes how in 1797 Chief Odón Chihuya was born at a Chumash village and later lived at the San Fernando Mission. His granddaughter Francesca Domec was granted a 148-acre homestead in 1901 that became the Lake Manor area. The document also outlines the history of Pierre Domec, a French settler who married Odón's daughter and operated a lime kiln in the 1850s-60s, and how his daughter Francesca later inherited the land.
The document summarizes a presentation given by the Chatsworth Historical Society about 19 postcards from 1912 depicting scenes in Chatsworth, California. The postcards were taken by photographer H.F. Rile and show what rural Chatsworth looked like at that time, with dirt roads and farms. The postcards are divided into categories based on location, such as scenes around Andora Avenue, the Johnson/Iverson homestead, and near the railroad. Each postcard is analyzed in detail, comparing the historic photos to the modern landscape. Messages written on the postcards by early Chatsworth residents are also discussed.
The Hill-Palmer House, named to the National Register of Historic Places as the only remaining homestead cottage and surrounding gardens in the San Fernando Valley, was built about 1911 by James David and Rhoda Jane Enlow Hill.
In 1974 it was named Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument #133, and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.
Located within the Homestead Acre in Chatsworth Park South, the property is owned by the Los Angeles City Department of Recreation and Parks, with the Chatsworth Historical Society as conservators.
The house, gardens and Chatsworth Museum is open for tours from 1-4 p.m. the first Sunday of every month.
Topics to be covered:
1860’s to 1886 – The Hill family travels from Arkansas to Visalia Ca. to Los Angeles to Chatsworth
Family photographs
1886-1940’s The homesteading years
1950-60’s – the sale of their homestead property to Henry Berkenkamp, Aqua Sierra, and the Roy Roger’s Sports Center
1970’s – Chatsworth Historical Society conservators
Three homestead parcels were combined in the 1950’s and 60’s to create a 127 acre sports center at the west end of Devonshire, on what is today’s Chatsworth Park South and part of Rockpointe.
•There are multiple stories involved:
•The founding of the Aqua Sierra Sportsmans club in 1949, and the building of two skeet and trap stations by 1951/52, before Minnie Hill Palmer sold the Hill homestead.
•The expansion of Aqua Sierra after the 1956 purchase of the Hill homestead by Henry Berkenkamp of Oroweat Bakeries. By 1959, there were five skeet and trap stations, a 90 foot hi-tower, one nine-hole golf course, a driving range, and two trout lakes. In 1959 it is advertised as the Roy Rogers Sports Center.
• In 1961, three additional nine-hole golf courses were added on the adjacent 52 acre Butler/De Jeremias homestead parcels. This acreage was leased from the Scheplers.
•The decline of the sports center began in 1968, when Rockpointe began development on the Butler homestead parcel. In 1973 the City of Los Angeles purchased the 75 acre skeet/fishing/golf course site and it became today’s Chatsworth Park South.
Docia A. Conley Corporation was one of Chatsworth’s successful icons from 1915 -1979, located at 21032 Devonshire.
Known to most of us as The Paradise Gift Shop, it also had a Tea Room.
It has been said that The Paradise Tea Room was always a favorite destination to “motor” out to for a Sunday drive.
The family owned business, started by Docia and George Conley, combined a tea room garden setting surrounded by a variety of plants, trees and exotic birds.
1924 – Real Estate subdivider William George Loomis creates the Kadota Fig Farms in Chatsworth
1924 - WG Loomis plants 148 acres of figs at Devonshire and DeSoto
Background on WG Loomis and other Fig Acreage in California
1926 – Docia and George Conley buy a 2 acre fig farm in Chatsworth
Docia Conley has been processing/canning fruit since 1908
In 1915 Conley & Conley is incorporated, and a fruit preserving plant is built in Highland Park on Pasadena Ave.
In 1926 they build The Paradise Tea Room and Gift Shoppe, and a processing plant on their 2 acre fig farm.
20’s and 30’s events, including hosting visitors at the 1932 Summer Olympics
Private Labels for Roy Rogers, Major Dept Stores…
In 1979 the Paradise Gift shop closes and the land is developed.
The document discusses the lime industry that existed in the western San Fernando Valley in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Limekilns were located in Woolsey Canyon, Dayton Canyon, and Bell Canyon and produced lime that was used for construction at the Mission San Fernando and in Los Angeles. Recent archaeological findings uncovered two limekilns and an ash field at Dayton Canyon. The industry was operated by Native Americans and involved transporting quarried limestone to the kilns, heating it to produce quicklime, and transporting the product to market.
Chatsworth Railroad History
A presentation of historical transportation routes in Chatsworth, focusing on the construction of the Montalvo cutoff completed in 1904
--1769 - El Camino Real
--1861-1895 – Stagecoach Trail
--1876 –San Fernando Tunnel connects Los Angeles to San Francisco and Northern California
--1893 – Southern Pacific Railroad completes Burbank Branch to Chatsworth
--1901 – Southern Pacific opens the Coast Line, linking Los Angeles and San Francisco via major coastal cities
--1904 – Southern Pacific Railroad completes the Montalvo cutoff, making Chatsworth a part of the Southern Pacific Coast Line
--Video clips of Movies filmed at the Chatsworth Tunnels and Depots
The History of the Bells of the El Camino Real. Focused on Chatsworth California history and the Mission Trail from the San Fernando Mission to the Simi House to Mission San Buenaventura.
Includes a clip: The Bells of El Camino Real Huell Howser
The Apeta Momonga Mission Trail is an integral piece of our Native American and Spanish heritage, comprising two stories.
First, it was a historic trail that was used beginning at least 3,000 years ago to travel from Achoicominga (San Fernando) to the village of Momonga (Santa Susana Pass/Stoney Point).
Second, after Mission San Fernando was established in 1797, the trail was used to travel from Mission San Fernando to the Simi Adobe to Mission San Buenaventura. The Mission Trail became a part of the El Camino Real along the north end of the San Fernando Valley, offering safe passage to travelers along its route.
This presentation will cover the following topics, which were also presented to the Los Angeles Cultural Heritage Commission in September and November of 2018:
Statement of Significance
Background and Site Introduction
Summary of the approval process
The History of the Apeta Momonga (“Trail to” Momonga)
The History of the Mission Trail
The Trail as it exists today
Here are the key details about National Register listings in Los Angeles from the Wikipedia article:
- There are over 1,600 properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Los Angeles County, California.
- This includes over 1,000 individual properties either listed locally or as contributors to historic districts.
- Some of the notable listings include the Los Angeles Theatre, Bradbury Building, Gamble House, Watts Towers, and El Pueblo de Los Angeles Historical Monument.
- Districts include areas like Angelino Heights, West Adams, and South Park. These districts contain hundreds of contributing properties between them.
- Listings represent architectural styles from the Spanish/Mexican era to mid-
Lionel Barrymore (1878-1954) was a member of the theater’s “royal family” of Barrymores – Lionel, Ethel and John.
His parents were Maurice Barrymore and Georgiana Drew, reigning stage stars of their day that came to America in the 1870’s and performed Hamlet in New York, also performing in London often.
While Lionel’s parents traveled to their performances, the three children lived with their grandmother in various great houses in Philadelphia.
All of the children were well educated in the arts and theatre.
In 1938, at the age of 60, Lionel purchased 22 acres in Browns Canyon at 11050 Independence Ave, Chatsworth.
Lionel was Honorary Mayor of Chatsworth in 1952, and died of a heart attack in 1954 at the age of 76.
Lionel is the great-uncle of Drew Barrymore, who had a breakout role as a child actress in E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982), which had scenes filmed in nearby Porter Ranch.
Atlanta Phoenix Project (MARTA Collection, GSU): Lot 9Fu80, Ashby and Hunter....Yosef Razin
This document summarizes the history of a 4 acre site in West Atlanta from pre-history to the 1970s. It describes how the land was originally part of Muscogee territory and was acquired by the Elliot family in the 1830s. By the late 19th century, the area saw development of houses and commercial buildings. In the early 20th century, it became a working class white neighborhood but shifted to a predominantly African American community after the 1917 fire. The area contained residential and commercial buildings until it was demolished in the 1970s for the construction of the MARTA rail system.
The document provides information about Lancaster County, Pennsylvania as a tourism destination. It highlights the Amish community and farms, covered bridges, and attractions that provide glimpses into Amish lifestyle such as The Amish Village and Kitchen Kettle Village. It also discusses the towns of Bird-in-Hand and Lititz, known for pretzels and chocolate, as well as nearby day trip destinations like Hersheypark, Philadelphia with its art museum and food tours, and Baltimore with Fort McHenry and Camden Yards baseball stadium.
Phyllis Martinez was born in Pasadena, CA and has lived there for over 80 years. Her great-grandparents immigrated to Pasadena from Guadalajara, Mexico in 1910 for better opportunities. Her great-grandfather worked as a gardener for the Huntington Library. Religion, particularly Catholicism, was very important in her family growing up and they attended mass every Sunday at St. Andrews Catholic Church in Pasadena. Phyllis came from a poor family during the Great Depression and had to leave school after the 9th grade to work, but found stable employment during World War II manufacturing radios used by the military.
Mr. Korb presents the case for an organization dedicated to marketing, preserving, and interpreting the anthracite region’s industrial heritage, cultural diversity, the labor traditions and capitalist innovations, creation of landscapes and ecosystems, and its people and their stories.
Melissa Meade, Temple University, “Dialogical Communication and Digital Citiz...Michael Hewitt, GISP
Emerging from doctoral research and adding infrastructure to the fragmented digital footprint of the Anthracite Region, Melissa created the “Anthracite Region” Facebook page (now with 7,700 members) and the anthracitecoalregion.com website as a public digital collaboratory wherein residents engage in community dialogue. This talk will discuss issues of environmental and economic concern expressed by residents: What is the socio-economic legacy of the Anthracite Coal Industry? What does extraction mean to residents in this single-industry area? How do residents relate to local landscapes and ruins?
The document provides a summary of the history of the Hutson family cabins and the Hutsonville Historical Society in Illinois. It describes how Isaac Hutson built a cabin in 1811 where his family was later killed by Native Americans. It then discusses the founding of the Hutsonville Historical Society in 1967 and the restoration and addition of several historic buildings to the site over the decades, including the original Hutson cabin, a museum, country store, barn, and chapel to preserve the local history.
The Valentine has been collecting, preserving and interpreting Richmond stories for over a century. Located in the heart of historic downtown, the Valentine is a place for residents and tourists to discover the diverse stories that tell the broader history of this important region.
A comprehensive program of exhibitions, tours, special events, research opportunities, school programs and other public programs engage the broadest audience in an ongoing dialogue about the significance and relevance of the city's history.
1) In the Heights is set in the diverse Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan and focuses on the residents, including bodega owner Usnavi who dreams of returning to the Dominican Republic.
2) It explores the lives of characters like Usnavi, Nina who has dropped out of college, and Vanessa who works at the local salon, as well as the historical context of immigration and gentrification in Washington Heights.
3) The musical examines the tight-knit community and themes of culture, family, and finding a sense of belonging.
Sarah Josepha Hale campaigned in the 19th century for an annual national Thanksgiving holiday after the 1621 Plymouth harvest celebration was incorrectly deemed the first Thanksgiving. While prayers were likely said in 1621, the first recorded religious Thanksgiving was in 1623 when the colonists gave thanks for rain after a drought. The modern Thanksgiving holiday was declared by President Lincoln in 1863 to commemorate the Battle of Gettysburg and give general thanks in November.
Mary Draper Ingles found refuge in Bedford County, Virginia in the 1750s after being captured by Shawnee Native Americans and escaping. She was the mother of two sons still held captive. Records show she and her husband William Ingles later established a home called Ingleside in the area, and their descendants also named homes after their family. Historians still have many unanswered questions about Mary Ingles' ordeal and life after escaping captivity.
Here are some suggested chapter headings for a children's textbook covering Virginia history through the end of the 19th century:
1. Early Native Americans
2. Early Explorers - Spanish, English, French
3. Jamestown
4. Pocahontas
5. Bacon's Rebellion
6. Slavery Begins
7. The Lost Colony
8. Frontier Life
9. George Washington
10. Thomas Jefferson
11. War of 1812
12. Westward Expansion
13. Slavery Expands
14. Civil War Begins
15. Robert E. Lee
16. Stonewall Jackson
17. Life During the Civil War
18. Reconstruction
Originally the Chatsworth Community Church,
located at 10051 Topanga Canyon Blvd, Chatsworth, California. The Church was built in 1903 with volunteer labor. In 1965, it was moved to Oakwood Memorial Park. Church services continue every Sunday at 10 am
In 1921, 24 women formed the Chatsworth Women's Club at the home of founder Grace Hageman. Over the past 100 years, the club has grown to over 100 members and has made many contributions to improving the Chatsworth community. Notable accomplishments include building the first Chatsworth Community Building in 1922, continuing to host fundraisers and community events, and helping establish the Chatsworth library and parks. The club has adapted to changes in the community and women's roles over the decades while remaining dedicated to serving Chatsworth.
Three homestead parcels were combined in the 1950’s and 60’s to create a 127 acre sports center at the west end of Devonshire, on what is today’s Chatsworth Park South and part of Rockpointe.
•There are multiple stories involved:
•The founding of the Aqua Sierra Sportsmans club in 1949, and the building of two skeet and trap stations by 1951/52, before Minnie Hill Palmer sold the Hill homestead.
•The expansion of Aqua Sierra after the 1956 purchase of the Hill homestead by Henry Berkenkamp of Oroweat Bakeries. By 1959, there were five skeet and trap stations, a 90 foot hi-tower, one nine-hole golf course, a driving range, and two trout lakes. In 1959 it is advertised as the Roy Rogers Sports Center.
• In 1961, three additional nine-hole golf courses were added on the adjacent 52 acre Butler/De Jeremias homestead parcels. This acreage was leased from the Scheplers.
•The decline of the sports center began in 1968, when Rockpointe began development on the Butler homestead parcel. In 1973 the City of Los Angeles purchased the 75 acre skeet/fishing/golf course site and it became today’s Chatsworth Park South.
Docia A. Conley Corporation was one of Chatsworth’s successful icons from 1915 -1979, located at 21032 Devonshire.
Known to most of us as The Paradise Gift Shop, it also had a Tea Room.
It has been said that The Paradise Tea Room was always a favorite destination to “motor” out to for a Sunday drive.
The family owned business, started by Docia and George Conley, combined a tea room garden setting surrounded by a variety of plants, trees and exotic birds.
1924 – Real Estate subdivider William George Loomis creates the Kadota Fig Farms in Chatsworth
1924 - WG Loomis plants 148 acres of figs at Devonshire and DeSoto
Background on WG Loomis and other Fig Acreage in California
1926 – Docia and George Conley buy a 2 acre fig farm in Chatsworth
Docia Conley has been processing/canning fruit since 1908
In 1915 Conley & Conley is incorporated, and a fruit preserving plant is built in Highland Park on Pasadena Ave.
In 1926 they build The Paradise Tea Room and Gift Shoppe, and a processing plant on their 2 acre fig farm.
20’s and 30’s events, including hosting visitors at the 1932 Summer Olympics
Private Labels for Roy Rogers, Major Dept Stores…
In 1979 the Paradise Gift shop closes and the land is developed.
The document discusses the lime industry that existed in the western San Fernando Valley in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Limekilns were located in Woolsey Canyon, Dayton Canyon, and Bell Canyon and produced lime that was used for construction at the Mission San Fernando and in Los Angeles. Recent archaeological findings uncovered two limekilns and an ash field at Dayton Canyon. The industry was operated by Native Americans and involved transporting quarried limestone to the kilns, heating it to produce quicklime, and transporting the product to market.
Chatsworth Railroad History
A presentation of historical transportation routes in Chatsworth, focusing on the construction of the Montalvo cutoff completed in 1904
--1769 - El Camino Real
--1861-1895 – Stagecoach Trail
--1876 –San Fernando Tunnel connects Los Angeles to San Francisco and Northern California
--1893 – Southern Pacific Railroad completes Burbank Branch to Chatsworth
--1901 – Southern Pacific opens the Coast Line, linking Los Angeles and San Francisco via major coastal cities
--1904 – Southern Pacific Railroad completes the Montalvo cutoff, making Chatsworth a part of the Southern Pacific Coast Line
--Video clips of Movies filmed at the Chatsworth Tunnels and Depots
The History of the Bells of the El Camino Real. Focused on Chatsworth California history and the Mission Trail from the San Fernando Mission to the Simi House to Mission San Buenaventura.
Includes a clip: The Bells of El Camino Real Huell Howser
The Apeta Momonga Mission Trail is an integral piece of our Native American and Spanish heritage, comprising two stories.
First, it was a historic trail that was used beginning at least 3,000 years ago to travel from Achoicominga (San Fernando) to the village of Momonga (Santa Susana Pass/Stoney Point).
Second, after Mission San Fernando was established in 1797, the trail was used to travel from Mission San Fernando to the Simi Adobe to Mission San Buenaventura. The Mission Trail became a part of the El Camino Real along the north end of the San Fernando Valley, offering safe passage to travelers along its route.
This presentation will cover the following topics, which were also presented to the Los Angeles Cultural Heritage Commission in September and November of 2018:
Statement of Significance
Background and Site Introduction
Summary of the approval process
The History of the Apeta Momonga (“Trail to” Momonga)
The History of the Mission Trail
The Trail as it exists today
Here are the key details about National Register listings in Los Angeles from the Wikipedia article:
- There are over 1,600 properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Los Angeles County, California.
- This includes over 1,000 individual properties either listed locally or as contributors to historic districts.
- Some of the notable listings include the Los Angeles Theatre, Bradbury Building, Gamble House, Watts Towers, and El Pueblo de Los Angeles Historical Monument.
- Districts include areas like Angelino Heights, West Adams, and South Park. These districts contain hundreds of contributing properties between them.
- Listings represent architectural styles from the Spanish/Mexican era to mid-
Lionel Barrymore (1878-1954) was a member of the theater’s “royal family” of Barrymores – Lionel, Ethel and John.
His parents were Maurice Barrymore and Georgiana Drew, reigning stage stars of their day that came to America in the 1870’s and performed Hamlet in New York, also performing in London often.
While Lionel’s parents traveled to their performances, the three children lived with their grandmother in various great houses in Philadelphia.
All of the children were well educated in the arts and theatre.
In 1938, at the age of 60, Lionel purchased 22 acres in Browns Canyon at 11050 Independence Ave, Chatsworth.
Lionel was Honorary Mayor of Chatsworth in 1952, and died of a heart attack in 1954 at the age of 76.
Lionel is the great-uncle of Drew Barrymore, who had a breakout role as a child actress in E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982), which had scenes filmed in nearby Porter Ranch.
Atlanta Phoenix Project (MARTA Collection, GSU): Lot 9Fu80, Ashby and Hunter....Yosef Razin
This document summarizes the history of a 4 acre site in West Atlanta from pre-history to the 1970s. It describes how the land was originally part of Muscogee territory and was acquired by the Elliot family in the 1830s. By the late 19th century, the area saw development of houses and commercial buildings. In the early 20th century, it became a working class white neighborhood but shifted to a predominantly African American community after the 1917 fire. The area contained residential and commercial buildings until it was demolished in the 1970s for the construction of the MARTA rail system.
The document provides information about Lancaster County, Pennsylvania as a tourism destination. It highlights the Amish community and farms, covered bridges, and attractions that provide glimpses into Amish lifestyle such as The Amish Village and Kitchen Kettle Village. It also discusses the towns of Bird-in-Hand and Lititz, known for pretzels and chocolate, as well as nearby day trip destinations like Hersheypark, Philadelphia with its art museum and food tours, and Baltimore with Fort McHenry and Camden Yards baseball stadium.
Phyllis Martinez was born in Pasadena, CA and has lived there for over 80 years. Her great-grandparents immigrated to Pasadena from Guadalajara, Mexico in 1910 for better opportunities. Her great-grandfather worked as a gardener for the Huntington Library. Religion, particularly Catholicism, was very important in her family growing up and they attended mass every Sunday at St. Andrews Catholic Church in Pasadena. Phyllis came from a poor family during the Great Depression and had to leave school after the 9th grade to work, but found stable employment during World War II manufacturing radios used by the military.
Mr. Korb presents the case for an organization dedicated to marketing, preserving, and interpreting the anthracite region’s industrial heritage, cultural diversity, the labor traditions and capitalist innovations, creation of landscapes and ecosystems, and its people and their stories.
Melissa Meade, Temple University, “Dialogical Communication and Digital Citiz...Michael Hewitt, GISP
Emerging from doctoral research and adding infrastructure to the fragmented digital footprint of the Anthracite Region, Melissa created the “Anthracite Region” Facebook page (now with 7,700 members) and the anthracitecoalregion.com website as a public digital collaboratory wherein residents engage in community dialogue. This talk will discuss issues of environmental and economic concern expressed by residents: What is the socio-economic legacy of the Anthracite Coal Industry? What does extraction mean to residents in this single-industry area? How do residents relate to local landscapes and ruins?
The document provides a summary of the history of the Hutson family cabins and the Hutsonville Historical Society in Illinois. It describes how Isaac Hutson built a cabin in 1811 where his family was later killed by Native Americans. It then discusses the founding of the Hutsonville Historical Society in 1967 and the restoration and addition of several historic buildings to the site over the decades, including the original Hutson cabin, a museum, country store, barn, and chapel to preserve the local history.
The Valentine has been collecting, preserving and interpreting Richmond stories for over a century. Located in the heart of historic downtown, the Valentine is a place for residents and tourists to discover the diverse stories that tell the broader history of this important region.
A comprehensive program of exhibitions, tours, special events, research opportunities, school programs and other public programs engage the broadest audience in an ongoing dialogue about the significance and relevance of the city's history.
1) In the Heights is set in the diverse Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan and focuses on the residents, including bodega owner Usnavi who dreams of returning to the Dominican Republic.
2) It explores the lives of characters like Usnavi, Nina who has dropped out of college, and Vanessa who works at the local salon, as well as the historical context of immigration and gentrification in Washington Heights.
3) The musical examines the tight-knit community and themes of culture, family, and finding a sense of belonging.
Sarah Josepha Hale campaigned in the 19th century for an annual national Thanksgiving holiday after the 1621 Plymouth harvest celebration was incorrectly deemed the first Thanksgiving. While prayers were likely said in 1621, the first recorded religious Thanksgiving was in 1623 when the colonists gave thanks for rain after a drought. The modern Thanksgiving holiday was declared by President Lincoln in 1863 to commemorate the Battle of Gettysburg and give general thanks in November.
Mary Draper Ingles found refuge in Bedford County, Virginia in the 1750s after being captured by Shawnee Native Americans and escaping. She was the mother of two sons still held captive. Records show she and her husband William Ingles later established a home called Ingleside in the area, and their descendants also named homes after their family. Historians still have many unanswered questions about Mary Ingles' ordeal and life after escaping captivity.
Here are some suggested chapter headings for a children's textbook covering Virginia history through the end of the 19th century:
1. Early Native Americans
2. Early Explorers - Spanish, English, French
3. Jamestown
4. Pocahontas
5. Bacon's Rebellion
6. Slavery Begins
7. The Lost Colony
8. Frontier Life
9. George Washington
10. Thomas Jefferson
11. War of 1812
12. Westward Expansion
13. Slavery Expands
14. Civil War Begins
15. Robert E. Lee
16. Stonewall Jackson
17. Life During the Civil War
18. Reconstruction
Originally the Chatsworth Community Church,
located at 10051 Topanga Canyon Blvd, Chatsworth, California. The Church was built in 1903 with volunteer labor. In 1965, it was moved to Oakwood Memorial Park. Church services continue every Sunday at 10 am
In 1921, 24 women formed the Chatsworth Women's Club at the home of founder Grace Hageman. Over the past 100 years, the club has grown to over 100 members and has made many contributions to improving the Chatsworth community. Notable accomplishments include building the first Chatsworth Community Building in 1922, continuing to host fundraisers and community events, and helping establish the Chatsworth library and parks. The club has adapted to changes in the community and women's roles over the decades while remaining dedicated to serving Chatsworth.
Homesteaders Families in the Simi Hills
South of Chatsworth Street and North of Plummer
Names and dates of arrival:
Francisco Miranda (1880)
James Hill (1886)
Frank Ackerman (1888)
William Bannon (1891)
Ferdinand Tetzlaff (1893)
Swan Paulson (1895)
Alexander Butler (1896)
Cora Henry (1914)
The Rockpointe Community in Chatsworth is comprised of 739 units, 4 pools and a clubhouse on 90 acres.
It is west of Valley Circle at Devonshire.
It borders Chatsworth Park South and the Santa Susana Pass State Historic Park to the east, Chatsworth Park North to the north, and Oakwood Cemetery to the south.
It was built in phases, from 1967 to 1971.
Rockpointe South of Devonshire –Ackerman, Shadwick, Longview Poultry, Rim Rock Ranch (Hutchinson, Haberfeld)
Rockpointe North of Devonshire –Dejeremias, Butler, Schepler, Roy Rogers Sports Center
The document summarizes Westerville, Ohio's celebration of its 100th anniversary in 1958. Over 12,000 people participated in a week of festivities that included a ball, parade, and pageant reenacting the town's history. Popular events for children were pioneer demonstrations and a pet parade. The anniversary celebration highlighted Westerville's growth from a small settlement to a town with local history and heritage.
Stoney Point is the most recognized landmark in Chatsworth, California.
Topics include:
Geology – The Chatsworth Formation
Prehistory – Momonga, and The Apeta Momonga Mission Trail
1871 – Earliest map with Stoney Point
1886 – Homesteader George Charlton and family arrives
1920’s residents – Driscoll, Turner, Haworth, Wilson, Johnson
The seven names of Stoney Point
Later residents at the Charlton Residence site
1948-50 – American Legion 4th of July Parade, Carnival and BBQ at Stoney Point
1974 – Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument # 132
1982 – Stoney Point is purchased and becomes a 22 acre City Park,
1999 – 52 acres added north of Stoney Point
2007 – The 5 acre Stoney Point Ranch is purchased by the City
Rock Climbing at Stoney Point
Films with Stoney Point
Milton and Collette Parsons ran the Cookie Jar Theatre from 1948 to 1963, where they directed local Chatsworth children in plays. The performances were held at various local venues and involved the entire community. The theatre began with a production of "Princess Nina's Birthday" in 1948. Over the years, the Parsons put on productions of other plays like "Little Women" and "Tom Sawyer". The Parsons held rehearsals at their home and the productions involved professional level costumes, sets and performances, despite having child actors. The Cookie Jar Theatre helped bring artistic culture to Chatsworth children during this era.
Temple Lutheran Church was formed in 1916 in Brookline, Pennsylvania by 30 charter members. The congregation originally met in various locations before constructing their first building, the Bible School Building, in 1920. Over subsequent decades, the congregation grew and constructed additional buildings, including a sanctuary that was dedicated in 1927. The church became involved in the community through outreach programs and supported its members serving in World War II.
The document provides a history of the Hammonds Plains Baptist Cemetery in Halifax County, Nova Scotia from its establishment in the 1820s to 2000. It details how Amos and Dorothy Melvin donated land for a burial ground and schoolhouse. Over time, the Baptist Church took over maintenance and secured ownership of the cemetery. The document also provides biographies of important individuals buried in the cemetery and notes about the cemetery's expansion and guidelines.
The Santa Susana Pass State Historic Park is a California State Park of 670 acres.
Located in the city of Los Angeles, in Los Angeles County on the boundary between Ventura and Los Angeles counties, between the communities of Chatsworth and Simi Valley
The first six years, 1969 to 1974 - Jan Hinkston and the founding of the SSMPA and FPSSM
The next 23 years, 1975 to 1998 –Land acquisitions culminating in the State Park designation, and volunteer efforts to educate the public about the park.
1986-A short clip from the “Santa Susana Where the Past is Present” promotional video.
1998 –A short video trailer from the 1998 dedication video, and a short clip of Jan Hinkston speaking at the dedication.
The next 25 years, 1998 to 2023 –The drive for improvements, Educational materials created by State Parks, and Volunteer efforts, in coordination with California State Parks, to maintain the park, train volunteers, and lead hikes.
A listing of Educational Resources
Appendix 1 - A History of The SSMPA by Jan Hinkston (up to 1973)
Appendix 2 - Acquisition Summary by Parcel (670 acres)
Preserving the History of Ukrainian Pioneer Communitiesdrjenniedutchak
This document summarizes the history of three Ukrainian pioneer communities in southeastern Saskatchewan from their early history in the 1800s through the present day. It details the arrival of settlers from Eastern Europe in 1897, the establishment of homesteads, schools, churches, and cultural traditions. It also outlines milestones like church anniversaries, publications produced, and the online documentation of pioneer cemeteries. The decline of these communities is noted from the closure of rural schools in 1963 and ongoing depopulation of the farms.
This presentation summarizes the 1984 revitalization of the Con Foster Museum in Traverse City, Michigan. The original 1935 museum building was refurbished and retrofitted to better serve as a site for collections. New exhibits and programs were designed to more effectively interpret the community's history using the collections. After reopening for the museum's 50th anniversary, the director continued working with volunteers and leaders to operate the site and establish a friends group to support ongoing programs and exhibits.
The document discusses various aspects of Caribbean culture, including definitions of culture, festivals, and music. It provides details on:
- Carnival celebrations in Trinidad and how they have evolved over time, incorporating both African and European influences.
- The Hosay festival in parts of the Caribbean, which originated from the Moharram festival in India but became creolized through the participation of various ethnic groups.
- Jonkonnu celebrations among enslaved peoples that featured African drumming and dance mixed with European traditions like masquerading.
- How Caribbean music has roots in indigenous, African, European and some Asian influences, and often represents a fusion of different cultural elements with an African base.
The document provides a history of the Baptist Church of Christ at Melissa, which was organized in 1884 with 22 charter members. It discusses the early pastors and church leaders. The church held monthly services until 1898 when it switched to twice-monthly. The church built its first building in 1890. A 1921 tornado damaged the church along with other buildings in Melissa, requiring the church to rebuild. The history also lists the 37 pastors of First Melissa Baptist Church over the past 130 years.
St. Luke's Brockport - 175th history slide showkewanyk
St. Luke's Episcopal Church was established in 1838 in Brockport, NY and has a long history of community outreach and social ministry. Over its 180 year history, the church has expanded its building, started programs like the Crypt Coffee House and Food Shelf, and remains actively involved in causes like Amnesty International and supporting local migrant workers. St. Luke's rich history reflects the growth of Brockport and changes in the Episcopal church over two centuries.
The document describes the early history and founding of Minersville, Pennsylvania. It discusses how Thomas Reed settled in the area in 1783, building structures like a log cabin and sawmill. The development of the coal industry in the early 1800s attracted immigrants and promoted growth. Minersville was officially incorporated as a borough in 1831. It later gained attention for a 1940 Supreme Court case regarding flag salutes in schools. The document also provides 2000 census data and demographic information about Minersville.
History of the Berkeley County Library System 1936-2011Ramona Grimsley
The document summarizes the history of libraries in Berkeley County, South Carolina from 1810 to 2007. It describes the founding of the first library society in Pineville in 1810. The first public library opened in 1936 in Moncks Corner and was housed in rented rooms. In the 1930s, the Works Progress Administration built a new library. Over the decades, the library system expanded to include branches in Hanahan, Goose Creek, St. Stephen, and bookmobiles. The libraries integrated in 1965 after the Civil Rights Act and moved to new locations multiple times as the system and communities grew.
Imagination, Collaboration & Recession-Era Financing: Out-of-the-Box Centenni...K L
The recession is in full swing with its characteristic budget cuts and museum downsizing; with its discretionary spending spent; with its the directional arrow in all forecasts happily pointing in the wrong direction – UP for joblessness, UP for bankruptcy, and UP for unemployment... in essence the “state of our state” in jeopardy, so... who’s thinking about our 100th birthday party? We are!
Working on the assumption that the sum is greater than the parts, two Arizona counties are working on a regional scale to optimize their respective resources.
Join Cochise County team players to learn just how far we, the museum community in Cochise County, work together with City & County governments, Sheriff’s departments and military forts, history buffs and writers, college professionals and business owners in using our imagination, knowledge, and resources to replace that budget long lost down the proverbial rabbit hole! Cochise’s “History in the Park” is a traveling, out-door exhibition of life-sized figures (with an accompanying publication) whose collective stories created our history.
Join Yavapai County team players to learn how they engage their communities in developing “cachets”, or first-day covers designed by school children, to coincide with the release of the Arizona State Centennial stamp in 2012 and individualized postal cancellation stamp; learn how we collaborated on a book about Yavapai County communities and their history, trail maps, riparian areas, art, and events.
Co-Chairs: Carrie Gustavson, Bisbee Mining & Historical Museum, Director Denise Lundin, Cochise County, Clerk of the Superior Court
Panelists: Janis Ann Sterling, Chairman, Yavapai County State Centennial Committee
For more on the Museum Association of Arizona Conference (including other presentations), see http://www.azmuseums.org/annual-meeting/2010-annual-meeting-presentations
Flora can be part of Indiana's Bicentennial celebration by participating in historical, educational, community involvement, and nature conservation projects. Some potential local projects include restoring the Flora Depot, creating a Facebook page about Flora memories, and branding annual events like the Hog Jog with the Bicentennial theme. The Bicentennial celebration provides an opportunity to preserve Carroll County's history through projects like updating historical markers, writing histories of towns and organizations, and restoring cemeteries. The statewide Torch Relay will pass through Carroll County on October 6, 2016.
Similar to Chatsworth Historical Society History (20)
This presentation will discuss and show three westerns filmed in Chatsworth
A 10 minute Western Spoof filmed in 1968, Blaze Glory
Two TV commercials of Mattel's "Blaze the Galloping Horse" filmed in 1961 and 1962
Episode 5 of the television show Fury, filmed in 1955, which introduces the Fury Barn at Iverson Movie Ranch.
This presentation will cover the following items.
Our focus tonight is on the 1948 and 1950 Superman movie serials starring Kirk Alyn. Twenty-nine of the 30 movie serial chapters have scenes filmed in Chatsworth.
A brief history of movie serials, aka “Cliffhangers”.
History of Superman from comics to radio to movie serials to TV to big budget movies.
Kirk Alyn photographs from the Jerry England collection
We have posted 58 clips of Superman episodes filmed in Chatsworth (under 5 minutes each) on our YouTube channel. We will share screenshots of some of the scenes, with shooting locations and rock descriptions provided by Dennis Liff.
Viewing of Chapter 1 of 1948 Superman, followed by the beginning of Chapter 2.
This presentation was shared online on February 5 2022
as a part of the Simi Hills Naturalist/Hike Leader Training
• Contributors/Presenters
Dottie Acker
Teena Takata
Ann Vincent
Topics to be covered
•Native American History – The Burro Flats Painted Cave
•Rancho Simi History
•Eddie Maier ownership in 1910
•Henry and Max Silvernale and Bill Hall ownership as partners 1939 to 1954
•Movie History 1937-1954
•Santa Susana Field Lab History 1947 to today
•North American Aviation (NAA) History
•NAA leases land in the Simi Hills 1947, the first test stand was completed in 1949 (Area I)
•NAA purchased Burro Flats/Sky Valley in 1954. The Rocketdyne Division builds four test stand complexes (Area II). The Atomics International Division builds the Sodium Reactor Experiment (Area IV).
•Nuclear research ends 1988; Rocket testing ends in 2006, cleanup continues
This PowerPoint describes the important contribution made by Native Americans during the conquest of California, during the Mexican-American War of 1846-1848. The “Naval Battalion of Mounted Volunteer Riflemen,” or California Battalion, was one of the most remarkably diverse American military formations in the history of the “Wild West.” Although the California Battalion as a whole never fought a battle, it played a significant role in the conquest of what is now the western United States. And on January 13, 1847, the California Battalion was part of the United States Naval force that accepted the surrender of the last Mexican forces, in what is now the United States, at Campo de Cahuenga, in the San Fernando Valley.
Program presented by Albert Knight (Anthropology Department Associate at the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History) and Ray Vincent (Historian Chatsworth Historical Society).
This presentation was first shown in November 2011. In addition to the history of the Nike Missile Base LA88 at Oat Mountain, Chatsworth, it featured two videos, “The Nike Hercules Story” (1959, 27 min.), and
“Duck and Cover” (1951, 9 min.). Both of these are available on
YouTube, by searching for the title and “chatsworthhistory1”.
• This presentation includes new history provided to us by Greg Brown, Nike Hercules Crewman LA 88, from 1968-1971.
• Greg also told us about a 1961 “Lassie” TV episode (1961, 21 min.) filmed at LA88 Chatsworth, that will be shown at the end of this presentation.
This presentation was prepared by Dennis Liff, Chatsworth Movie Historian.
This presentation shows examples of spectacular sets that were created at the Garden of the Gods, at Iverson Movie Ranch, during the silent movie era. It analyzes movie stills and publicity photos used from these early times, and discusses how the magnificent and unique silent movie sets were created.
It covers 4 silent movies, and includes silent movie scenes filmed in Chatsworth for the following three movies:
1923 Three Ages – Buster Keaton
1921 Man-Woman-Marriage
1926 Tell it to the Marines
This Presentation will document the filming of the 1917 silent movie Jack and the Beanstalk in today’s Santa Susana Pass State Historic Park (SSPSHP), at the Miranda Homestead in Chatsworth.
It encompasses four chapters:
1. Promotional photographs and identified filming locations of the movie, courtesy of Iverson Ranch and Chatsworth movie historian Dennis Liff.
2. A 1974 interview with Joe Bannon (son of the Chatsworth Park Quarry homesteader William Bannon), who played an integral part in the filming of the 1917 movie. He was interviewed by Jan Hinkston, who in 1970 founded the Santa Susana Mountain Park Association (SSMPA), which led to our current 670 acre SSPSHP in 1998.
3. The recent “rediscovery” of glass lantern slides from the Chatsworth Historical Society, made by Chatsworth Park School students circa 1917, of Jack and the Beanstalk.
4. A recently found 16 minute 4th reel of the previously lost movie, available from the Prelinger archives, that we will watch at the end of the presentation….
Dennis Liff's research identified locations in Chatsworth, California where scenes from two pioneering 1914 feature films, D.W. Griffith's "Judith of Bethulia" and Cecil B. DeMille's "The Squaw Man", were filmed. Several scenes from "Judith of Bethulia" totaling 27 minutes were filmed at Chatsworth Lake Manor, including a 4-minute battle scene featuring a distinctive rock formation. A two-minute "Alpine sequence" from "The Squaw Man" was also filmed in Chatsworth Lake Manor, recognizable by "Squaw Man Bluff" and the "Alpine Bump". These were among the earliest Hollywood productions to utilize on
This presentation will cover the following items:
1. A brief history of movie serials, aka “Cliffhangers”
2. The movie history of “Nyoka Cliff” at Iverson Movie Ranch
3. A listing of the main characters, and plot summary, of the 15 chapter 1942 movie serial “Perils of Nyoka”
4. Viewing of two 16 minute chapters, Monster’s Clutch and Tuareg Vengeance, (which just happens to include the classic cliffhanger on Nyoka Cliff)
Topics to be covered
• By 1901 the Bannon family had homesteaded 160 acres, and purchased an additional 40 acres that same year. These 200 acres have four stories to tell:
• De la Ossa Adobe: The 1861 Stagecoach Trail Swing Station, La Cuesta, run by the De la Ossas from Encino (before Bannon)
• Dimension Stone: William Bannon’s contributions to Chatsworth and Southern California via Chatsworth Park Quarry dimension stone and road building projects 1892 to 1901.
• Breakwater Riprap: The Chatsworth Park Quarry supplying millions of tons of riprap sandstone to form the core of the San Pedro Breakwater (after Bannon sells his ranch and quarry in 1901 to the California Construction Company)
• Bannon returns: A final chapter, the Bannon family returns to
Chatsworth in 1906, and live in the Swing Station Adobe from 1912 to 1917.
1903 – The 133-acre Miranda Homestead Property land patent is issued. Their adobe is now a flower
shop in the Oakwood parking lot
• 1923 – Oakwood Cemetery is purchased by Merrick & Ruddick, real estate subdividers. Their Oakwood
Cemetery permit is approved despite protests in 1924.
• 1924 – Oakwood Cemetery Brochure
• 1926 – First Annual Valley-wide Memorial Day Services more than 1,000 people attend
• 1927 – 1
st Mausoleum built by Frank Knapp
• 1928 – St Francis Dam disaster
• 1930 – Fernando Septimo Lopez Moraga
• 1933 – Oakwood Office, Chapel and Crematorium are built
• 1947 – Oakwood Water Well, now in SSPSHP
• 1965 – The 1903 Pioneer church is moved to Oakwood
• 1970-79 – The Cryonics Society stores 9 bodies in an underground vault at Oakwood
• Homestead families buried at Oakwood
• 14 minute movie - “FAMOUS GRAVE TOUR - Oakwood”
Frank Knapp Senior (1875-1952), his wife Maria, and their first three children (Mary, Frank and Alfonso) immigrated from the Tyrol region of Austria to the United States, in 1903.
There would eventually be eight siblings: six boys and two girls. By 1911 the family was established in the new community of Owensmouth, the core area of what would later become Canoga Park, in the west San Fernando Valley.
Frank Senior was a craftsman that worked in wood, stone, concrete, and plaster, and he did a considerable amount of work, much of it artistic, in those medium in the then just-beginning modern development of the west San Fernando Valley.
This presentation was inspired by the 3 hour public television program “West of the West – Tales from California’s Channel Islands”. The three episodes first aired in Southern California in May 2016 on KCET-TV. The DVD is available for purchase at http://www.thecifilm.com/. Several DVDs have been donated to the Los Angeles Public Library.
The first one hour program is Ancient Peoples of the Channel Islands. Beginning with the discovery of the oldest human remains ever found in North America – 13,000 year old Arlington Springs Man on Santa Rosa Island – to the true story of the Lone Woman of San Nicolas Island – the inspiration for the best selling children’s book Island of the Blue Dolphins.
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
This presentation includes basic of PCOS their pathology and treatment and also Ayurveda correlation of PCOS and Ayurvedic line of treatment mentioned in classics.
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
A review of the growth of the Israel Genealogy Research Association Database Collection for the last 12 months. Our collection is now passed the 3 million mark and still growing. See which archives have contributed the most. See the different types of records we have, and which years have had records added. You can also see what we have for the future.
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
हिंदी वर्णमाला पीपीटी, hindi alphabet PPT presentation, hindi varnamala PPT, Hindi Varnamala pdf, हिंदी स्वर, हिंदी व्यंजन, sikhiye hindi varnmala, dr. mulla adam ali, hindi language and literature, hindi alphabet with drawing, hindi alphabet pdf, hindi varnamala for childrens, hindi language, hindi varnamala practice for kids, https://www.drmullaadamali.com
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
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বাংলাদেশ অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা (Economic Review) ২০২৪ UJS App.pdf
Chatsworth Historical Society History
1. 1/20/2020 1
The Chatsworth Historical Society
50+ Years of History – 1963 to 2020
The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
2. The First 10 years -- It all started in 1963 about saving the
Pioneer Church…
• In February of that year, the Pioneer Church was declared a Historical Monument by Los
Angeles, based on paperwork submitted by Katharine Johnson, a member of one of
Chatsworth’s pioneer families. This step postponed the pending demolition and provided
the time needed to create an organization that would be responsible for the Church.
• As the story goes… on April 17, 1963, according to the minutes of the first meeting, Virginia
Watson, Katharine and Kelly Johnson, Art Honey, Evie Bowers, Keith Watts, and Charles
and Eileen Janess all gathered at Katharine Johnson’s house. The Historical Society was
established that evening as a community organization to save the church and eventually
use a portion of it as a museum to contain historical memorabilia. Charles Janess was
elected President, Arthur Honey was Treasurer and Sheila Watts became Secretary.
1/20/2020 2The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
3. • A few months later Lila Schepler stepped in as president replacing Charles Janess due to
illness. She led the group through the challenges of finding a home for the church at
Oakwood Memorial Park.
• In January of 1965, the Church was moved from its site on Topanga Blvd to Oakwood
Cemetery.
• It took another 6 years to raise funds for plumbing and electric, and to paint the church. In
1971 a “Concluding Stone Ceremony” was held to celebrate the placing of the cornerstone
for the church.
• In 1976 the Oakwood Cemetery completes electric hookups and a road to the church, and
there is a rededication ceremony as the restoration project is complete.
• In 1981 the church was leased to an Episcopal Church, and the church continues holding
services to this day.
The First 10 years -- It all started in 1963 about saving the
Pioneer Church…
1/20/2020 3The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
4. The 2nd 10 years – Saving the Homestead Acre
• In 1955, Minnie Hill Palmer sells off her farmland, and
retains her house and 1.3 acres of land surrounding it.
• In 1970, the golf course that surrounded her property
closed. The Pro Shop building was offered to Minnie
and it was moved on to her property.
• In 1972, The LA Dept. of Recreation and Parks
purchased Chatsworth Park South, and Minnie retained
a Life Tenancy agreement for the 1911 cottage and 1.3
acres.
• In 1978, after Minnie had moved to a retirement home,
the Historical Society, with Minnie’s approval, worked
out an agreement with the Department of Recreation
and Parks and became the conservator of the property.
The Golf Pro Shop building eventually became the
Chatsworth Museum.
• It was not until 1998 that the
Caretaker’s trailer was removed
from the property by Recreation
and Parks and the Acre finally
looked as it does today.
Hill Palmer Cottage in 1979
1/20/2020 4The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
5. The 3rd 10 years – Maintaining and Improving the Homestead Acre
• Cleaning and new furnishings were needed for Minnie’s house which had been empty since
she moved into a nursing home.
• Lawns and Gardens are taken care of by volunteers, members bring their own mowers to
mow the lawns.
• New member Candy Craig volunteers to be “keeper of the Homestead Gardens”, her
husband Dean, “kills all the weeds and cuts down the grass”.
• 1982 - First Rose Garden established.
• 1986 – A riding lawnmower is purchased for volunteer Dean Craig to use.
• Fundraisers include: Yard sales and Bake sales, hosting weddings and funerals at the
Pioneer Church, used book sales at Topanga Plaza, weddings at the Acre.
• 1984 – First Garden/Rose Festival
• 1991 – First Pioneer Day
1/20/2020 5The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
6. The 3rd 10 years – Celebrating Chatsworth’s Centennial Birthday in 1988
• A Centennial Committee is formed to celebrate
Chatsworth’s 100th Birthday (chaired by Bea
Berman).
• A quilt is made representing Chatsworth’s History
(spearheaded by Ruth Grant, Zena Thorpe and
nine other local needlewomen).
1/20/2020 6The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
7. The 3rd 10 years – Celebrating Chatsworth’s Centennial Birthday in 1988
• A new Chatsworth song is
written and performed at
the celebration, presented
by the Natural High Group
led by Lester Smith Jr.,
composer.
1/20/2020 7The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
8. • The event is held
at the Chatsworth
Park South
recreation center.
• The Mistress of
Ceremonies is
Catherine
Mulholland, and
Mayor Tom
Bradley is in
attendance.
1/20/2020 8The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
The 3rd 10 years – Celebrating Chatsworth’s Centennial Birthday in 1988
9. •Bea Berman, LA County
Supervisor Michael Antonovich
and Ca. State Assembly member
Cathie Wright at the Time
Capsule dedication at the
Chatsworth Homestead Acre, to
be opened in 2088.
•Porter Hudshon and Lillian
Schepler were in charge of
gathering items to be placed
inside.
•Included are essays from school
children, 1988 newspapers and
other items that portray life in
Chatsworth in 1988.
1/20/2020 9The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
The 3rd 10 years – Celebrating Chatsworth’s Centennial Birthday in 1988
10. CHS Adventures – Fundraising
• Saving the Church and getting it back in
shape took lots of fundraising and over the
first 20 years a variety of methods were
used. The most successful at that time were
the Spring and Fall Yard Sales run by Ioline
Cleveland and the annual Book Sale at
Topanga Plaza run by Lillian Schepler.
• Once the Historical Society acquired the
Acre, then Candy Craig began the idea of a
Rose Festival in the Spring of 1982 but it was
only about roses. Eventually that event
evolved by 1993 to the Garden Festival we
have now, replacing the Yard sales.
A happy crew ready to sell you one of the many items
donated for the Yard Sale.
• In 1993 you could also become a
member of the Chatsworth Museum
Council and receive a medallion worthy of
framing. The $100 membership funds were
specified for improving the museum.
1/20/2020 10The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
11. CHS Adventures – Fundraising
• Pioneer Day evolved based on the 100 year
celebration of the Homestead Acre in 1986
demonstrating spinning, quilting and more.
• Following the 1986 event, Weddings were
held at the Acre and could also be held at the
Pioneer Church, both supervised by the
Chatsworth Historical Society. However the
volunteers were soon burned out by from
what was a very busy schedule every
weekend.
• In 1991 they tried the Pioneer Day idea and it
became an annual event. The Chili Cook-off
was added to it in 1995.
1/20/2020 11The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
12. CHS Adventures – Parades
1965 - A community
group at heart, it
didn’t take long for
the CHS to
participate in the
Chatsworth Parade
letting everyone know
their accomplishment
of saving the Pioneer
Church.
1/20/2020 12The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
13. In 1966 this float
says ”Pioneering
with Books” the
book was made
with chicken wire
stuffed with
tissue paper.
Art Honey is
standing, Minnie
Hill Palmer is
seated.
1/20/2020 13The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
CHS Adventures – Parades
14. In 1968 Minnie
Hill Palmer was
an honored
guest in the
Parade.
1/20/2020 14The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
CHS Adventures – Parades
15. 1/20/2020 15The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
CHS Adventures – Parades
In 1982, The Docent
program was in full
swing and participated
on this float.
Includes: Tricia Plucknett,
Marion Hyland, Betty and
Jim Summers
Note that people are wearing
Santa hats. Previous
Chatsworth Parades were
held in July, and then were
held in December….
16. 1/20/2020 16The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
CHS Adventures – Parades
In 1982, The
Docent
program was in
full swing and
participated on
this float.
Although you
can’t see her
face, the lady in
green is Virginia
Watson
17. 1/20/2020 17The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
CHS Adventures – Parades
In 1986, this
float
celebrated
100 years of
the Acre
Featured on
the float are
Candy Craig,
Paul Gossett
and Matt
Mitchell
18. 1/20/2020 18The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
CHS Adventures – Parades
1987 - Riding in
the buggy are
Millie Goff,
Marion Hyland,
Betty Summers
and Ramon
Avila
19. 1/20/2020 19The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
CHS Adventures – Parades
1989 - Included docents Betty Summers and Sheila Watts
20. In 1990, Bea
Berman made
arrangements for
the Wells Fargo
Wagon to represent
the CHS with Lila
and Bill Schepler
riding inside
celebrating their
50th wedding
Anniversary at the
parade.
1/20/2020 20The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
CHS Adventures – Parades
21. 1998
2000
1/20/2020 21The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
CHS Adventures – Parades
Zena and John Thorpe on a bicycle built for two…
Keith Watts and John Thorpe
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CHS Adventures – Parades
2001 - To the right Bea
Berman and Elaine
Campbell
showing the historic
flat iron
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CHS Adventures – Parades
2005 – Military Uniforms on Display.
Virginia Watson, Betty Summers,
Elaine Campbell, Ray and Ann Vincent
24. 1/20/2020 24The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
CHS Adventures – Parades
2006 - Gary Bercow,
Jelena Csanyi, Linda
van der Valk, and a
variety of
Grandchildren
With Roy Rogers poster
showing Roy and Dale
riding in the parade.
25. 1/20/2020 25The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
CHS Adventures – Parades
2009 - Andre
van der Valk
and his Army
Jeep, riding
with a variety of
grandchildren
26. 1/20/2020 26The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020
CHS Adventures – Parades
2011 – Connie
Ager in an
antique car
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CHS Adventures – Parades
2013 – Carol &
Mike Lucas in
their antique car
28. Preserving History was a top priority…
Pictures, Presentations, Articles and Books
• The group had already begun collecting Chatsworth photos from pioneer families including
the Williams family and Minnie Hill Palmer.
• Bill Schepler, who grew up as a boy in Chatsworth, created a slide show called “Grizzlies to
Caterpillars” depicting the early Pioneer life and how it evolved into Caterpillar tractors
bulldozing our area to make way for tract homes.
• Virginia Watson prepared a slide presentation to give at Chatsworth Park Elementary
school.
• Sheila Watts, Katharine Johnson and Virginia wrote articles for local papers.
• Books authored by members about Chatsworth include “Chatsworth History” (Watson),
“Chatsworth Park Elementary School” (Ioline Cleveland), “Our Pioneer Mother” (Johnson
Family) and “Window into the Past” (Bill Schepler), “A Short Horse is Soon Curried” (Bob
Turner), “Quiet on the Set” by Bob Sherman.
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29. Presidents during the first 50 years……
Terms
Charles Janess 1963-64 1
Lila Schepler 1964-65, 72-74, 75-76, 86-87 5
Ebert Chatham 1965-66 1
Garvin Aulepp 1966-68 2
Lillian Schepler 1968-70, 76-78 4
Virginia Watson 1970-72, 78-79, 87-88, 96-97 5
Dr. Ruth Boak 1974-75 1
Jane Matthews 1979-80, 88-89 2
Sheila Watts 1980-82, 90-91, 94-96 5
Ioline Cleveland 1982-1986 4
Zena Thorpe 1991-93 2
Bea Berman 1993-94 1
John Thorpe 1997-2000 3
Linda & Andre van der Valk 2000-present 20
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30. Museum Archives and Collections
• Frank Schepler was the “Director of
Photography” creating slides of over 300
photos to use in slide shows.
• These photos and more are being digitized
and added to our collection.
• Collections of materials continue to be
donated for display and reference, i.e.
Twin Lakes, clothing, scrapbooks, etc.
• Oral Histories of our residents are being
recorded and preserved.
• Archiving methods for storage continue to
improve.
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31. And along the way – Creating/Supporting a few
Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments……
• 1963 – (#14) The Pioneer Church
• 1967 – (#49) Olive Trees on Lassen
• 1972 – (#92) The Stagecoach Trail
• 1974 – (#132) Stoney Point Outcroppings
• 1974 – (#133) Minnie Hill Palmer House
• 1975 – (#141) Chatsworth Reservoir Kiln Site
• 1997 – (#645) Harvester Farms
• 2003 – (#750) The Munch Box
• 2019 – (#1177) The Apeta Momonga Mission Trail
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32. How can you help, or to borrow a 1973
theme from Lila Schepler,
“If it’s to BE, it HAS to be ME”
• Volunteer at our Wednesday morning meetings:
• In the Garden helping with Weeds and Roses, and maybe pruning some trees.
• Our Digital Archiving project, which includes scanning our photos and collections.
• Welcome Guests at our Open House, the 1st Sunday of each month from 1 to 4.
• Help support our two big fundraisers, the Garden Festival and Pioneer Day. We can
always use help the Saturday before setting up, Sunday morning before the events as
vendors arrive, and Sunday afternoon during tear down.
Send us an email at chatsworthhistory@gmail.com and let us know your interests!
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33. 1/20/2020 33
Sources/Acknowledgements
• Various archived materials at the Chatsworth Historical Society, most notably the “Smoke Signal”
Newsletters published over the 50+ years by the Chatsworth Historical Society.
Prepared by Ann & Ray Vincent, Chatsworth Historical Society, May 2013, for the 50th Anniversary of
the Chatsworth Historical Society - Updated 4/27/2015, 11/21/2017, 1/20/2020
The Chatsworth Historical Society 50+ Years of History - 1963-2020