3/15/2022 Chatsworth Historical Society - Chatsworth Hills Homesteaders Part 2 1
Chatsworth Hills Homesteaders - Part 2
Chatsworth Hills Homesteaders Part 2
This is Part 2 of a three part presentation, as we share the history of some of
the 45 Chatsworth Homesteading Families. Topics we will cover tonight:
Homesteading Overview
Research Tools supporting this presentation
Homesteading History in California
Homesteading Requirements
Overview of Chatsworth Hills Homesteaders
Part 2 - Homesteader Families in the Simi Hills, south of Chatsworth
Street, north of Plummer, and west of Andora. Includes Hill, Bannon
and Miranda.
3/15/2022 Chatsworth Historical Society - Chatsworth Hills Homesteaders Part 2 2
3/15/2022 Chatsworth Historical Society - Chatsworth Hills Homesteaders Part 2 3
Online Research Tools used in this Presentation
Online Census Data, and supplemental Genealogical Websites, i.e. Ancestry.com
Online Township Master Title Plats from California Bureau of Land Management
(BLM)
Online US Dept. of Interior BLM, listing Names and Doc numbers of
Homesteaders, and any other transfer/sale of public lands to private lands
Google Earth, allowing us to plot Homesteader parcels as an overlay
Earth Point, allowing an overlay of the Federal townships and sections on Google
Earth.
As a background, a township is 36 square miles (6 miles to each side). A township
is divided into 36 sections of one square mile each (1 mile to each side). Each
section is 640 acres, a quarter section is 160 acres.
A special thanks to Rich Krugel and Ken Ditto, who helped us compile the Homestead
Data
Research Tools and Homesteader Overlay
For those of you who are interested in the sources we used for this
presentation, email us at
chatsworthhistory@gmail.com
We will email you the online links, plus a
Chatsworth Hills Homesteader file
that you can open up as an overlay on
Google Earth.
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3/15/2022 Chatsworth Historical Society - Chatsworth Hills Homesteaders Part 2 5
Homesteading History in California
Spanish Rule 1542-1821
1542 - Cabrillo anchors his ships off the shore of Santa Monica.
1769 - Spanish Colonization and the Mission Period begins.
1781 Pueblo de Los Angeles is founded. Spanish pioneer colonists are given land grants after
five years.
1795 Rancho Simi and Rancho Encino established. In 1797, the San Fernando Mission is
established, and Rancho Encino gives up much of its land for the use of the Mission.
Mexican Rule 1821 1848
1834 The Mexican government dissolves the Missions, allowing Mission lands to be granted to
individuals.
1845 - Rancho Encino is regranted to three Tongva Native Americans, and El Escorpion is granted
to three Chumash Native Americans. In 1846, Rancho Ex-Mission de San Fernando established.
1848 the Treaty ending the Mexican-American war provides that land grants will be honored.
American Rule 1848
1862 The Homestead Act gave an applicant ownership of government land of up to 160 acres.
Requirements were that the homesteader needed to live on the land for five years, and improve it by
building a 12’ x 14’ dwelling and growing crops.
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Homesteaders Overview Spanish Land Grants in 1848
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45 Homesteaders pioneer the Santa Susana and Simi Hills
The orange section is the area between Rancho
Simi and Rancho Ex-Mission de San Fernando,
that became federal land after the Mexican
American war in 1848.
Some Homesteaders arrived as early as the
1860’s and 1870’s, although most did not file for
their homesteads until the mid 1890’s
Chatsworth Park (in blue) was originally a part
of Rancho Ex-Mission de San Fernando. It was
founded in 1888, about the same time as many
homesteaders settled in the area. The railroad
came in 1893.
Notice that Chatsworth Park was bordered by
Andora, the Mission Road (Rinaldi), Mason and
DeSoto, Roscoe, and Fallbrook.
Homesteaders South
of Chatsworth Street
and North of Plummer
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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)
Francisco Miranda
Arrived 1880 or earlier. In the
1880 census, he is 29 years
old and married to Maria
Antonia Salas, 23. They
would have 14 children.
Their neighbors in 1880 were
Rita de la Ossa to the north
(Stagecoach Swing Station),
and Pierre Domec to the
south (Chatsworth Lake
Manor).
Their homestead was 133
acres, issued in 1903.
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The Miranda Adobe, in yellow just east of a creekbed, still
stands today in the parking lot of Oakwood Cemetery. The
blue line is the 1898 railroad spur to the Bannon Quarry.
Francisco Miranda
Francisco was born in 1846 in Sonora,
Mexico. His father Francesco was born
in 1788 in Spain.
His wife Maria Antonia Salas was born in
1856 in San Juan Batista, Monterey
California, as was her mother. The San
Juan Batista Mission (1797) is next to the
Monterey Presidio (1770 Spanish fort).
Maria Antonia Miranda was descended
from one of the families that came with
the second Anza Expedition in 1775. Her
ancestor gave birth along the trail on
Dec. 24th, 1775.
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William H. Miranda and wife Irene Lyon. This photo was
taken about 1918-1919 in Chatsworth. He worked on the
Iverson Ranch about this time. He served in WWII and died
in the Sylmar VA hospital collapse in the 1971 earthquake.
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Miranda Family in 1953. Maria Antonia Miranda is 97 years old in this picture.
In 1974, Joseph Bannon gave an oral history to Jan
Hinkston. One of his remembrances was the 1917
filming of Jack and the Beanstalk. Joe Bannon was 15
years old at the time….
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“Interesting sidelight to that Miranda place. The first filming
of Jack and the Beanstalk was done there and the little
canyon back of their home was where the pygmy village was
and the false fronted castle was up on the hill on the left side
of the entrance of the cemetery there. I know because at the
time they were filming it, all the kids in the area worked there.
Some of them as pygmies.
My job was to drive a team pulling what they called a stone-
boat - it's just a slab that they haul stone on. I would haul the
giant up that hill whenever they were going to film in the
morning. He was huge - he was 8 foot 4. Jim Tarver. And
weighed about 350 lbs.”
In 1923, Oakwood Memorial Park Cemetery purchased
the eastern portion of the Miranda homestead.
In 1979, the western portion became a part of the Santa
Susana Pass State Historic Park.
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1886 - James and Rhoda Hill moved to
Chatsworth with their 4 children Ruth
(18), Lovell (10), Mary (4) and Minnie
(born), and two grandchildren, and
take up squatter’s rights on their
homestead.
They build a wood-frame house, an
adjacent barn, well and fencing, and
cultivate 10-12 acres.
1888 Daughter Ruth marries Frank
Ackerman, who homesteads an
adjacent 42 acres.
1901 Homestead documents on 120
acres recorded.
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James Hill
The original
Homestead House,
circa 1900.
Minnie is in the center
with black stockings.
James and Rhoda Hill
are to the right
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James Hill
The Graves & Hill
General Store was
operating on Topanga at
Lassen from 1906 to
1915.
Fred Graves and Lovell
Hill bought the store after
the death of Mr. and Mrs.
Jackson, the previous
owners.
Lovell Hill was the
postmaster from 1912 to
1915.
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James Hill
The Hill family cottage,
circa 1911, built by son
Lovell Hill.
In 1920, daughter Minnie
and husband Alfred
Palmer move back to the
cottage to care for Rhoda
Hill, who is now 74.
Minnie remained living at
the cottage until 1976.
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James Hill
1955 - Minnie sells off the
homestead to the Aqua
Sierra Sportsman’s Club,
keeping a life tenancy on the
house on 1.3 acres.
1957-58 - Aqua Sierra
Sportsman’s Club opens
with a gun club, a fishing
lake and a nine-hole golf
course (‘white’).
In 1961 the group leased the
33 acre Butler homestead
parcel, and 15 acres of the
Dejeremias parcel, and
added the ‘red’, ‘yellow’ and
‘orange’ courses.
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James Hill
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A view east of the
Aqua Sierra Gun
Club.
Trap, skeet and high
tower clay pigeon
shooting were offered
on 5 shooting ranges.
Clark Gable, Roy
Rogers, Bing Crosby,
John Wayne and
other Hollywood
celebrities used the
center.
1972 - the City of Los Angeles
acquires the eastern 55 acres,
which included the Homestead
Acre and Chatsworth Park South.
1976 - Minnie moves out of the
cottage.
1978 - the Chatsworth Historical
Society is named as conservator
of the Homestead Acre.
1979 The State of California
purchases the western portion of
the Hill Homestead and it
becomes the Santa Susana Pass
State Historic Park.
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James Hill
In 2007, the Historical Society museum was renamed
“The Virginia Watson Chatsworth Museum”
Frank Ackerman was from
Germany, and immigrated to
the U.S. in 1868.
In 1888, Frank marries Ruth
Hill, daughter of Rhoda and
James Hill, and homesteads
an adjacent 42 acres.
The Homestead was recorded
in 1900, and the family sold the
property and moved to Santa
Paula by the 1900 census.
Frank Ackerman later had a
livery stable in Los Angeles; he
died in the flu epidemic of 1917
in the Boyle heights area.
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Frank Ackerman
In the 1920s, a 32 acre
modern poultry ranch was
established by the Long
family, appropriately called
Longview Ranch.
Later the property was
known as the Rim Rock
Ranch, which ran cattle.
In 1965 the property was
sold to the Rockpointe
Townhome project.
The Larwin St. entrance to
the Santa Susana Pass
State Historic Park is on this
parcel.
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Frank Ackerman
Alexander was born in
California in 1873; in the 1880
census he was living in Santa
Ana.
His 1892 voter registration has
him living in Downey as a
farmer, age 19.
In 1896 or earlier he is in
Chatsworth homesteading his
33 acres. He is listed as a
farmer, and is single.
His homestead is recorded in
1901.
By 1910 he has returned to his
mother’s farm in Downey.
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Alexander Butler
In 1958, The Devonshire Golf club
opened with a nine hole golf course
on the Hill property.
By 1961, they had added 3 nine-hole
golf courses (red, yellow and
orange), a pro shop, and restaurant
on the 33 acre Butler homestead
(plus 19 acres of the Dejeremias
homestead)
In 1965, the land that the golf course
was leasing is sold to the Rockpointe
Townhome project. Townhomes are
being sold by 1969.
In 1970, the Clubhouse/Pro Shop is
moved and later becomes the
Chatsworth Museum.
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Alexander Butler
William Bannon
William Bannon homesteaded 160 acres in
1901, and purchased an additional 40 acres that
same year.
These 200 acres have three stories to tell:
The 1861 Stagecoach Trail Swing Station, La
Cuesta, run by the De la Ossas from Encino
(before Bannon)
William Bannon’s contributions to Chatsworth
and Southern California via Chatsworth Park
Quarry dimension stone and road building
projects
The Chatsworth Park Quarry supplying millions
of tons of rip rap sandstone to form the core of
the San Pedro Breakwater (after Bannon sells
his ranch and quarry in 1901 to the California
Construction Company)
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The Yellow Line is the 1861 Stagecoach Trail. The
Blue Line is the 1901 Breakwater SPRR line
extension into the Chatsworth Park Quarry, the
Green Line is the 1901 Empties Track
De la Ossa Stagecoach Swing Station
Vicente and Rita De la Ossa are prominent citizens in Alta
California, owning Rancho Providencia (Burbank) in 1839, then
Rancho Los Encinos in 1849.
In 1851, Manuela, their oldest daughter, marries James
Thompson.
In 1852, Thompson obtains a 5 year lease to half of Rancho La
Brea. In 1857, Thompson captures the bandit Juan Flores in
Santa Susana Pass. He serves as the LA County Sheriff in
1858-59.
In 1858, Fabricio, son of the Vicente and Rita, owns land near
the base of the Santa Susana Pass called La Cuesta (the slope).
In 1859, the state provided $15,000 to fix up the Santa Susana
Pass Wagon Road, under the supervision of James P.
Thompson. He had also been awarded the contract to use the
pass for carrying mail.
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Jim and Manuela
Thompson
De la Ossa Stagecoach Swing Station
In 1861, The first overland stagecoach to use the pass made its run
between San Francisco and Los Angeles on April 6. It was the
Butterfield Stage line and the trip took 72 hours (3 days).
1861-1877, Fabricio runs the Stagecoach Swing Station at La
Cuesta, and builds the De la Ossa adobe on the site. In 1868, the
widowed Rita De la Ossa and her seven children under the age of 17
move into the adobe at La Cuesta with Fabricio.
The 1876 completion of the Southern Pacific Railroad (SP) tunnel
through San Fernando ended the need to provide long-distance
stagecoach service in California.
In the 1880 census, Rita De la Ossa, 63, is living in Chatsworth with
son Fabricio, 40, and four other children at the De la Ossa adobe.
Her neighbor to the south was Francisco Miranda.
William Bannon acquires the De la Ossa adobe in 1891.
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Rita De la Ossa
William Bannon Homestead
William Bannon was an experienced quarryman.
Before arriving in California, he had worked for over 10
years in Texas, in charge of the quarries used for the
Galveston Harbor jetties, and the stone used in the
Austin State Capital Building.
In 1887 he came to California and was in charge of the
Grayrock quarries that produced the rock for the
buildings at Stanford University.
In 1891 he acquired the De la Ossa adobe which was
held as a stone (mining) claim by Gabriel Allen, who
had served on the LA County Board of Supervisors.
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In 1892, 50-year-old William Bannon homesteaded 160 acres with his wife and eight children.
He restored and expanded the existing two stone reservoirs, added fencing, and cultivated 50
to 90 acres of “rolling farmland” to raise seasonal crops and grow fruit trees.
In August 1901, he earned the 160 homestead acres, and purchased an additional 40 acres.
Crop of 1900-05-24 LA Times article
introducing William Bannon
William Bannon dispute with James Hill over 40 acres
James Hill arrived in Chatsworth in 1886, William Bannon arrived five
years later in 1891. Yet James Hill only ended up with 120 acres, not
the normal 160 acres.
An 1896 LA Times newspaper article accounts that, according to JD
Hill, the 40 acres missing from the lower left section of the Hill
homestead was “forcibly taken” by Bannon in 1892. Bannon claims to
have purchased the property (Gabriel Allen stone claim) and asserts
legal right to it.
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The article records a dispute where Bannon is Fined Ten Dollars for
Disturbing the Peace:
“Bannon says he was out driving in his cart and took a few glasses of wine at
a neighbors; in driving by the Hill place, he met two of the Hill boys, and
having heard that one of them had threatened to whip him, told him now was
the opportunity of his life. Young Hill refused to fight. The Hills testified that
he swore fearfully and threatened to go and get two six-shooters and do up
the whole ------ ------- family……. Bannon pleaded guilty to disturbing the
peace under the advice of his attorney, and was fined $10 or ten days in jail.”
In 1892 Chatsworth Park Stone Quarry
operations began.
In 1893, the Southern Pacific Railroad
completes Burbank Branch to Chatsworth.
For a period of 9 years, 1892-1901, the
Chatsworth Park Quarry produced dimensional
stone for use as building foundations or
ornamental stonework.
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1893-1901 trip from the Quarry to the Railroad via wagon:
The yellow line shows the route from the quarry to Lassen
near Shoup, extrapolated from the 1903 topo map to the
right. The orange line would take the dimensional stone
east on Lassen and then south on Topanga to the rail yard.
Bannon/Chatsworth
Park Quarry
In 1895 Los Angeles County built a new
road to the north of the Stagecoach
Trail.
This dirt road was cut into the pass and
featured turnouts and retaining walls
built of dimensional sandstone from the
Bannon quarry.
Initially named the “New Santa Susanna
Pass Road (through William’s Cañon)”
per the 1893 map to the right, it was
later referred to as the Chatsworth
Grade Road. In the SSPSHP, it is
named “El Camino Nuevo”.
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The 1895 Chatsworth
Grade Road was
replaced in 1917 with the
asphalt Santa Susana
Pass Road.
Bannon/Chatsworth
Park Quarry
Larger blocks were sent to the Bly
Brothers Stone Cutting yard in Los
Angeles, where workers used
mechanical drills, saws, planers,
and surfacing machines to cut and
shape the stone.
Several downtown landmark
buildings used the stone, including
the California Club, Southern
California Edison, the Police
Station and Jail.
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Bannon/Chatsworth
Park Quarry
One building still in existence is
the Church of the Angels,
Pasadena, at right.
The Yellow Line is the 1861 Stagecoach
Trail. Using a 1903 topo at the Cemetery
and south for reference.
In 1901, Southern Pacific laid another
mile of track into the quarry, as a result of
the San Pedro Breakwater contract.
The Blue Line is the main spur and the
Green Line is the Empties Track, based
on a 1928 ucsb aerial. See The
Chatsworth Park Quarry Presentation for
more information.
The yellow line at the bottom is the
turntable at the 1893 Chatsworth Station.
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Lassen
Devonshire
Farralone
Bannon/Chatsworth
Park Quarry
There is a nine month wait from Bannon’s introduction to delivering the first load of
rock.
May 1900 (LA Times) Bannon expresses confidence his quarry will be selected
by the California Construction Company to supply rock for the breakwater.
Oct. 1900 (LA Times) Hauling is to commence at Chatsworth Park quarry in two
or three days.
Feb 1901 (LA Times) The first trainload of 23 carloads is dumped in the
breakwater.
the second trainload is held up pending inspection. The subheadline reads:
“When broken into fragments the size of a hen’s egg, it crumbles to dust in
one’s hands”.
Additional articles claim that some rock is rotten, and “is about as suitable
for breakwater work as snowballs would be.”
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1901-1907 Supplying the San Pedro Breakwater
Apr 1901 (LA Times) A special committee and an exhaustive report published in the LA Times
determines that the quality of the Chatsworth Rock used is pronounced “satisfactory”.
The conclusion is that a bad trainload of rock was refused, and procedures are in place to
ensure quality rock by inspections on site at the quarry. In addition, the sandstone will form
the core of the breakwater, and be covered by granite and protected from direct action of the
seas.
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1901-1905 Supplying the San Pedro Breakwater
In Jan 1902, work is delayed as derricks and railroad tracks
are moved to a more advantageous point in the quarry.
In 1904, 300,000 tons of rock were delivered to the
breakwater.
In Jan 1905, operations are improved by a guy line derrick
with a horizontal sweep of 100 feet, an 87 foot mast, and a
78 foot boom. A single “shot” or blast made recently
loosened 7,500 tons of rock. The quarry employs fifty men
in winter and 75 men in summer months.
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1901-1905 Supplying the San Pedro Breakwater
Apr 1901 (LA Times) 17 carloads of Chatsworth Park rock are added to the breakwater.
Jun 1901 (LA Times) The California Construction Company is shipping 16 carloads of
sandstone daily, and the amount will soon be doubled. William Bannon has sold his quarry
and ranch to the California Construction Company and will move to Texas.
Operations continue at the Chatsworth Park Quarry supplying rip rap to the Breakwater
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In 1906, Bannon was called down to where the Colorado River had broken through into
the Salton Sea. Southern Pacific hired him to blast rock that went into the levee used to
redirect the runaway Colorado River back into it’s channel.
William Bannon returned from Texas in 1906 to direct quarrying operations for Oliver
Charlton near Stoney Point. Oliver was the son of George Charlton, who homesteaded
the 137 acres that include Stoney Point.
William Bannon died in 1910, and his wife Marie remarried in 1912 to William Morris, a
road builder per the 1920 census.
Marie and William Morris are living at the De la Ossa adobe in 1912-1919. During this
time, her son Joseph Bannon experiences the filming of Jack and the Beanstalk at the
Miranda’s.
In the 1920 census, they are in Long Beach. In the 1940 census, Marie is living with her
daughter Minnie in Alhambra.
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A final Bannon chapter
Ferdinand Tetzlaff
Born in 1855 in Germany,
immigrated to the US in 1868.
In 1880 Ferdinand, 25 and Ida, 23
are living in Watertown, Wisconsin
with their two young children Oscar,
3 and Helena, 1.
In 1889 Ferdinand is the Postmaster
of Palmdale and listed as a
Merchant.
In 1893 the family is in Chatsworth
when Edwin is born.
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Ferdinand Tetzlaff homesteaded 42 acres, issued in 1906.
Today, a 7,000 sq.ft. home known as Eagles Nest, built in
1975, is on the remaining 38 acre parcel. It sold in August
2013.
Ferdinand Tetzlaff
In 1900, Ferdinand, Ida and their
8 children are living on the
homestead, Ferdinand is listed as
a farmer.
In the 1903 Directory Guide of
Los Angeles, for the Chatsworth
Township, Ferdinand is the
Justice of the Peace, and Fred
Graves is the Constable.
The 1920 Census lists Ferdinand
age 64 and Ida age 63 living on
Devonshire.
In 1926 they move to Pasadena.
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Ferdinand Tetzlaff homesteaded 42 acres, issued in 1906.
Today, a 7,000 sq.ft. home known as Eagles Nest, built in
1975, is on the remaining 38 acre parcel. It sold in August
2013.
Ferdinand Tetzlaff
There was a rumor for many years in
Chatsworth that the “Eagles Nest” home was
owned by the Captain and Tennille. In 2012 the
Historical Society sent them an email asking if
this rumor was true.
The Captain’s (Daryl Dragon) response below:
3/15/2022 Chatsworth Historical Society - Chatsworth Hills Homesteaders Part 2 41
We rented the historic, tiny home on CREE TRAIL ( in
Twin Lakes-editor’s note.) for a few years ($200.00 per
month). Toni wrote a hit record called THE WAY I WANT
TO TOUCH YOU, and I did the arrangement for LOVE
WILL KEEP US TOGETHER in that home as well. We got
our A&M Records recording contract at that time (1974)
and when we received our first royalties check - we moved
and bought a home in Pacific Palisades, CA.
PS; We 'heard' we lived in a big house in Chatsworth called
EAGLES NEST - but that was, and still is a BIG RUMOR
Swan Paulson
Swan was born in 1860 in Sweden and
immigrated to the U.S. in 1880.
In 1890 he filed for citizenship in Los Angeles.
In 1895, 35 years old, he arrives in Chatsworth
and homesteads 129 acres.
In 1900 he is widowed and living alone as a
farmer.
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In the 1910 census he is still widowed, 49 years old and his family of 4 girls join him.
He has twins daughters born in 1895, so he probably left his young family with relatives
for at least five years while he homesteaded the property. Also living with him in 1910
are a husband and wife Carl (32) and Anna (34) Paulson, and their two young children.
In 1920, we do not find Swan, but Carl and Anna are living in Whittier.
Swan Paulson
In 1955, Roy Rogers purchased the 129 acres and renamed
it the Double R Bar Ranch.
The ranch had a small house on it built in 1938, that was
expanded to 6,000 square feet and still exists today.
In a 1987 quote Dusty Rogers said, "We moved from the
Hollywood Hills to Encino, then to a ranch in Chatsworth.
We always moved away from the encroaching population
because Dad liked his privacy. He wanted his kids raised on
a ranch, where they could have horses and pigs and
chickens and cows.“
Episodes of The Roy Rogers Show on NBC TV featured the
Double R Bar Ranch in Chatsworth.
In 1964, they sold most of the ranch to a subdivider, and in
1965, Roy and Dale sold the remainder and moved to Apple
Valley, Ca. near Victorville.
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Swan Paulson
In 1964, 55 units were approved on 33 acres. The first homes appeared in 1964, and
new homes were built over the next 25 years.
In 1969, Eugene Kilmer purchased the undeveloped 96 acres and moved into the Roy
Rogers house on Trigger Street. His son Val Kilmer became a well known movie actor.
Val Kilmer was a drama student at Chatsworth High School with Kevin Spacey in
the late 1970’s.
Kevin Spacey’s film production company is named “Trigger Street Productions
87 acres of the original Paulson homestead is still undeveloped. It was sold in 2000 for
$2.3 million and is known locally as the “Tone Yee” parcel, named after the development
company that owns the property.
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Cora Henry
She was born in 1880 in White Pine, Nevada, an only
child, and her father Jacob was a German immigrant.
In 1900, she is in Santa Paula living with her
mother’s sister. In 1910 she is in Los Angeles, a
single renter.
In 1914, Cora Etta Henry, age 34, purchases 135
acres at the top of the Stagecoach Trail at Lilac Lane.
In 1917, she marries Charles James, a 76 year old
physician in San Diego County.
In 1930 and 40, she manages an apartment building
in Los Angeles. She dies in 1974 and is buried with
her parents in Piru, CA.
Today, the center section of her parcel includes two
homes on Lilac Lane. The remainder is a part of the
Santa Susana Pass State Historic Park.
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Today, the property includes a 7,000 sq.ft. home
on 9 acres, and a 2,100 sq.ft. home on 21 acres.
And yes, the 1939 Stagecoach Trail Monument
is on her parcel.
Cora Henry
The sharing of research puzzle, behind the scene activities:
The 1910 census has Cora’s Profession and General Nature of Industry listed below:
Ken Ditto asked Ray his opinion on what the profession was (he already had formed his
own conclusion, but wanted an independent response).
By comparing similar cursive words written by the census taker, Ray concluded that the
profession was “Draughts lady”. But that made no sense. So he searched “Draughts lady”
on Google, it is a German term, still used today in South Africa, for a Receptionist.
So our combined conclusion (Ken agreed) is that Cora was a Receptionist in a Building
Company in 1910. We still don’t know where she worked, but WHAT FUN!
3/15/2022 Chatsworth Historical Society - Chatsworth Hills Homesteaders Part 2 46
Sources/Acknowledgements
3/15/2022 Chatsworth Historical Society - Chatsworth Hills Homesteaders Part 2 47
“History of San Fernando Valley”, Frank Keefer,
1934
“The Cattle on a Thousand Hills, Southern
California, 1850-80”, Robert Glass Cleland, 1957,
Huntington Library
“The Story of San Fernando Valley”, Title Insurance
and Trust Company, 1962
“El Escorpion”, Chester G. Cohen, 1989, Leonis
Adobe Museum
“The Boom of the Eighties in Southern California”,
Glenn S. Dumke, 1991, Huntington Library
Los Encino Docent Association,
http://historicparks.org/imagegallery/delaosa/
“Santa Susana Pass State Historic Park
Cultural Resources Inventory Historic
Overview”, Alexander Bevil, 2007
Jerry England’s blogspot, http://a-drifting-
cowboy.blogspot.com
Prepared by Ann and Ray Vincent,
Chatsworth Historical Society, November
2013 revised 1/2016, 1/2021, 3/2022
For our list of online resources, please
send an email to:
chatsworthhistory@gmail.com