Here is another postcard in a series of views of the La Vida Mineral Springs resort in the Brea side of Carbon Canyon, dating to probably the early 1960s and published by Amescolor Publishers of Escondido.
It is a view of the "blanket room," where, presumably, patrons were wrapped in blankets after emerging from the hot steam baths depicted in an earlier posting on this blog.
The setting is hardly the kind of "aroma therapy" environment that you'd see now. Instead, this almost looks like it could be a prison or a mental hospital!
Which isn't to say that the staff didn't take good care of its customers at the Springs fifty something years ago, but it was definitely a different era.
This blog is about the unique setting of Carbon Canyon, a rural oasis lying between the suburban sprawl of Orange and San Bernardino counties. Here you'll find information about the canyon's history, beauty, communities and issues that threaten to affect its character and special qualities. Readers are encouraged to submit comments, explore links, and make suggestions to improve the blog. Thanks for checking out the Carbon Canyon Chronicle!
30 July 2013
29 July 2013
Chino Hills Maternity Home in Foreclosure
The house overlooking the intersection of Carbon Canyon Road and Chino Hills Parkway that briefly hosted a notorious "maternity hotel" for Chinese women and which business, known as "Los Angeles Hermas Hotel" was shut down after numerous code and health and safety violations is going into foreclosure, according to an article in today's Inland Valley Daily Bulletin.
The nearly 8,000 square foot home and surrounding property, amounting to about five acres, was listed by owner Hai Wong Yu for $3.3 million, but with no offers coming in, the listing was pulled. Now, the parcel will be heading for public auction with a stated value of $1.9 million.
Regardless of its colorful recent past, the size of the house and lot and its amazing views should make it an attractive remodel for someone looking to buy the house at a value price and then flip it or for someone intending to live on the premises. It will, however, take a significant amount of work to revert the house back to a single-family residence.
For the full article, click here.
The nearly 8,000 square foot home and surrounding property, amounting to about five acres, was listed by owner Hai Wong Yu for $3.3 million, but with no offers coming in, the listing was pulled. Now, the parcel will be heading for public auction with a stated value of $1.9 million.
Regardless of its colorful recent past, the size of the house and lot and its amazing views should make it an attractive remodel for someone looking to buy the house at a value price and then flip it or for someone intending to live on the premises. It will, however, take a significant amount of work to revert the house back to a single-family residence.
For the full article, click here.
22 July 2013
A 1925 Photo of C.C.M.O. Workers, Olinda, Part One
Typically, photos of oil fields are heavy on the physical characteristics of the site, whether these are broad panoramas or focused views, including derricks, associated structures, open or closed tanks, and so forth. Occasionally, people might be included in a view celebrating the "gusher," commemorating an oil fire or a tank explosion, or perhaps a shot of workers "on the pump" to demonstrate the workings of a particular well.
The 1925 image, from the collection of the Workman and Temple Family Homestead Museum in the City of Industry, in this post, though, is probably somewhat rare and unusual, with the focus exclusively on the nearly sixty people pictures on the lease of the C.C.M.O., or Chanslor-Canfield Midway Oil Company, at the Olinda oil field. While portions of the physical site are in the background, the subject are workers. No company executives are to be found, but there are plenty of truck drivers, derrick workers, gaugers, tool dressers, roustabouts and other common laborers.
Fortunately, someone took the time to write the surnames and the first initial of the given names of everyone, excepting the one child found in the image, totaling fifty-seven men. While information could not be found on some of those pictures, most can be identified through census and other records, and a snapshot of what the oil field's population was like about ninety years ago.
The image was simply titled "C.C.M.O.—Olinda" and was taken by C. C. Duffey of Long Beach and was taken in September 1925. The Chanslor-Canfield Midway Oil Company was founded in 1899 by Joseph A. Chanslor and Charles A. Canfield to develop oil wells in the new Midway field of Kern County. First, some background on the company's founders.
In 1887, with his newfound riches, Canfield migrated to Los Angeles, then undergoing a massive real estate boom known as the "Boom of the Eighties" and following the completion by the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad of a direct transcontinental line to the town. As the boom mushroomed Canfield invested in the real estate market, only to see his investments disappear in the inevitable bust that came by the end of the decade. Another failed project during that boom was the Olinda Ranch, created in 1887 by William H. Bailey of Maui, Hawaii.
Meanwhile, Doheny made his way to Los Angeles and was flat broke, but met up with Canfield again and convinced him to invest a small sum on a hunch that there was petroleum to be found in the hills northwest of downtown Los Angeles. With a $400 stake and primitive drilling equipment, Doheny hit it big in December 1892 with the first successful well in Los Angeles city limits, inaugurating the Los Angeles City Oil Field. The Doheny-Canfield Oil Company became a successful concern for several years and the two men were instrumental in convincing the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway, known commonly as the Santa Fe, to convert their engine fuel from coal to oil.
By 1897, however, Doheny, in partnership with the Southern California Railway Company, a subsidiary of the Santa Fe, turned his attentions to Olinda and Canfield took his interests north and opened the Coalinga Oil Field in 1896 with Joseph A. Chanslor.
Chanslor was born in May 1868 in Fishing River, Missouri, just northeast of Kansas City, and his family appears to have come to Los Angeles during the same fabled boom of the 1880s that brought Canfield. His father, John, had a successful grocery business and Joseph worked there as a clerk and, for a time, as an Internal Revenue Service collector, before joining forces with Canfield as vice-president of the Coalinga Oil Company. How exactly he became partner with a man twenty years his senior is not known, but Chanslor, Canfield and Doheny also had a gold mining operation in the Mojave Desert of San Bernardino County, though this proved unsuccessful.
The three men formed separate oil companies, but kept their alliances intact. Doheny's Petroleum Development Company drilled wells at Olinda under lease from the Southern California Railway, which was eventually disbanded by its parent company, so that the Santa Fe operated in name at Olinda from the first decade of the 20th century onward.
Meantime, Canfield and Chanslor formed their Chanslor-Canfield Midway Oil Company in 1901 for their new enterprise in the Midway field, on the west side of the lower San Joaquin Valley, southwest of Bakersfield. The two operated the company for just a few years and the two men were instrumental in major deals like the purchase of 108,000 acres of oil and mining lands in Wyoming, Utah and Colorado in 1902, before it was purchased by the Santa Fe Railway, which then merged it with Doheny's Petroleum Development Company. The Santa Fe's Olinda operation was under the auspices of the C.C.M.O. name for many years.
Meantime, Doheny and Canfield continued their alliance, especially as Doheny expanded his oil empire into Mexico in 1902 and sold off his interests in California to pursue his projects in the Tampico area, though he did return to California oil endeavors within several years. Doheny's Pan-American Petroleum Company was wildly successful in Mexico, with one well, the "Casiano" producing 75 million barrels of crude in just under a decade. Canfield was a partner in the Mexican oil project and his 1913 "Who's Who in the Pacific Coast" entry made a point of noting that he was involved in the paving of "all streets" in Mexico City, as well as work to install gas lines in the capital.
Canfield was also an investor in the early 1900s with a syndicate including railroad tycoon Henry H. Huntington and others in buying the Rancho Rodeo de las Aguas, on which Beverly Hills was later developed. He also had a major interest in developing the San Diego beachfront community of Del Mar, where he built a palatial residence in 1910. Canfield did endure the tragedy of having his wife, Chloe, killed at their Los Angeles home in 1906 by a former coachman employed by the family when she rebuffed his attempt at a loan. Canfield later moved to his Del Mar home, but died there only a few years later, in 1913, at age 65.
As a sidenote, his daughter Daisy was married to the Pan-American Petroleum vice-president, and an attorney, Jay Danziger, and she inherited a quarter of her father's $8 million fortune. Later, she sold about 1,700 acres of Rancho Rodeo de las Aguas land she inherited to real estate and oil magnate Alphonzo Bell, who established the tony subdivision of Bel-Air. After separating from her husband, on grounds of "cruelty" (meaning she alleged he had affairs) in 1918 and securing a divorce a few years later, she married film star Antonio Moreno (known for his staring role in the Clara Bow smash "It" in 1927.) They resided in a massive mansion in the Los Feliz neighborhood of Los Angeles, which still stands, but later separated. In 1933, Daisy Canfield was killed when the car in which she was being driven, rolled off Mulholland Highway in the Santa Monica Mountains.
As for Joseph Chanslor, the sale of the C.C.M.O. to the Santa Fe allowed him to move to San Francisco, though he maintained an interest in the company for some years afterward. Later, he was president of a coal company in Monterey County, was a founder of the Associated Oil Company in 1902, and was a director of the Tidewater Oil Company (later purchased by oil tycoon J. Paul Getty) until just before his death in San Francisco in 1946.
Next, details of this great photo and of the men depicted in it.
The 1925 image, from the collection of the Workman and Temple Family Homestead Museum in the City of Industry, in this post, though, is probably somewhat rare and unusual, with the focus exclusively on the nearly sixty people pictures on the lease of the C.C.M.O., or Chanslor-Canfield Midway Oil Company, at the Olinda oil field. While portions of the physical site are in the background, the subject are workers. No company executives are to be found, but there are plenty of truck drivers, derrick workers, gaugers, tool dressers, roustabouts and other common laborers.
Fortunately, someone took the time to write the surnames and the first initial of the given names of everyone, excepting the one child found in the image, totaling fifty-seven men. While information could not be found on some of those pictures, most can be identified through census and other records, and a snapshot of what the oil field's population was like about ninety years ago.
The image was simply titled "C.C.M.O.—Olinda" and was taken by C. C. Duffey of Long Beach and was taken in September 1925. The Chanslor-Canfield Midway Oil Company was founded in 1899 by Joseph A. Chanslor and Charles A. Canfield to develop oil wells in the new Midway field of Kern County. First, some background on the company's founders.
In 1887, with his newfound riches, Canfield migrated to Los Angeles, then undergoing a massive real estate boom known as the "Boom of the Eighties" and following the completion by the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad of a direct transcontinental line to the town. As the boom mushroomed Canfield invested in the real estate market, only to see his investments disappear in the inevitable bust that came by the end of the decade. Another failed project during that boom was the Olinda Ranch, created in 1887 by William H. Bailey of Maui, Hawaii.
Meanwhile, Doheny made his way to Los Angeles and was flat broke, but met up with Canfield again and convinced him to invest a small sum on a hunch that there was petroleum to be found in the hills northwest of downtown Los Angeles. With a $400 stake and primitive drilling equipment, Doheny hit it big in December 1892 with the first successful well in Los Angeles city limits, inaugurating the Los Angeles City Oil Field. The Doheny-Canfield Oil Company became a successful concern for several years and the two men were instrumental in convincing the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway, known commonly as the Santa Fe, to convert their engine fuel from coal to oil.
By 1897, however, Doheny, in partnership with the Southern California Railway Company, a subsidiary of the Santa Fe, turned his attentions to Olinda and Canfield took his interests north and opened the Coalinga Oil Field in 1896 with Joseph A. Chanslor.
Chanslor was born in May 1868 in Fishing River, Missouri, just northeast of Kansas City, and his family appears to have come to Los Angeles during the same fabled boom of the 1880s that brought Canfield. His father, John, had a successful grocery business and Joseph worked there as a clerk and, for a time, as an Internal Revenue Service collector, before joining forces with Canfield as vice-president of the Coalinga Oil Company. How exactly he became partner with a man twenty years his senior is not known, but Chanslor, Canfield and Doheny also had a gold mining operation in the Mojave Desert of San Bernardino County, though this proved unsuccessful.
The three men formed separate oil companies, but kept their alliances intact. Doheny's Petroleum Development Company drilled wells at Olinda under lease from the Southern California Railway, which was eventually disbanded by its parent company, so that the Santa Fe operated in name at Olinda from the first decade of the 20th century onward.
Meantime, Canfield and Chanslor formed their Chanslor-Canfield Midway Oil Company in 1901 for their new enterprise in the Midway field, on the west side of the lower San Joaquin Valley, southwest of Bakersfield. The two operated the company for just a few years and the two men were instrumental in major deals like the purchase of 108,000 acres of oil and mining lands in Wyoming, Utah and Colorado in 1902, before it was purchased by the Santa Fe Railway, which then merged it with Doheny's Petroleum Development Company. The Santa Fe's Olinda operation was under the auspices of the C.C.M.O. name for many years.
Meantime, Doheny and Canfield continued their alliance, especially as Doheny expanded his oil empire into Mexico in 1902 and sold off his interests in California to pursue his projects in the Tampico area, though he did return to California oil endeavors within several years. Doheny's Pan-American Petroleum Company was wildly successful in Mexico, with one well, the "Casiano" producing 75 million barrels of crude in just under a decade. Canfield was a partner in the Mexican oil project and his 1913 "Who's Who in the Pacific Coast" entry made a point of noting that he was involved in the paving of "all streets" in Mexico City, as well as work to install gas lines in the capital.
Canfield was also an investor in the early 1900s with a syndicate including railroad tycoon Henry H. Huntington and others in buying the Rancho Rodeo de las Aguas, on which Beverly Hills was later developed. He also had a major interest in developing the San Diego beachfront community of Del Mar, where he built a palatial residence in 1910. Canfield did endure the tragedy of having his wife, Chloe, killed at their Los Angeles home in 1906 by a former coachman employed by the family when she rebuffed his attempt at a loan. Canfield later moved to his Del Mar home, but died there only a few years later, in 1913, at age 65.
As a sidenote, his daughter Daisy was married to the Pan-American Petroleum vice-president, and an attorney, Jay Danziger, and she inherited a quarter of her father's $8 million fortune. Later, she sold about 1,700 acres of Rancho Rodeo de las Aguas land she inherited to real estate and oil magnate Alphonzo Bell, who established the tony subdivision of Bel-Air. After separating from her husband, on grounds of "cruelty" (meaning she alleged he had affairs) in 1918 and securing a divorce a few years later, she married film star Antonio Moreno (known for his staring role in the Clara Bow smash "It" in 1927.) They resided in a massive mansion in the Los Feliz neighborhood of Los Angeles, which still stands, but later separated. In 1933, Daisy Canfield was killed when the car in which she was being driven, rolled off Mulholland Highway in the Santa Monica Mountains.
As for Joseph Chanslor, the sale of the C.C.M.O. to the Santa Fe allowed him to move to San Francisco, though he maintained an interest in the company for some years afterward. Later, he was president of a coal company in Monterey County, was a founder of the Associated Oil Company in 1902, and was a director of the Tidewater Oil Company (later purchased by oil tycoon J. Paul Getty) until just before his death in San Francisco in 1946.
Next, details of this great photo and of the men depicted in it.
12 July 2013
Towers of Terror: A Tempered Triumph?
Earlier today, the California Public Utilities Commission by a split 3-2 margin approved commission president Michael Peevey's "alternate decision" ordering Southern California Edison to remove the existing 198-foot tall "towers of terror" from Section 8 of the Tehachapi Renewable Transmission Project and reroute the lines underground for 3 1/2 miles through primarily residential areas of Chino Hills.
This order reverses a 2009 affirmative ruling by the commission allowing SCE to construct the towers and the company made significant headway before a halt was ordered pending the appeal and review by the commission. About a month ago, Peevey's "alternate decision" was countered by a non-binding ruling by the commission's administrative law judge Jean Vieth which determined that Edison should not have to rework the segment underground because it was an undue burden on the company.
This was an impressive, hard-fought victory to the City of Chino Hills and, especially, the grass-roots organization Hope for the Hills, which had a significant contingent of members present at today's hearing. Their achievement is notable and they are to be congratulated for their successful strategy.
Obviously, there will be some significant impacts with the underground work: mainly in the establishment of two large vaults at the western and eastern end of the 3 1/2 mile work area and the tunneling under major thoroughfares, principally Chino Hills Parkway and Pipeline Avenue. Future maintenance might well be more difficult and costly with below-ground components as opposed to what would have been above the surface.
But, for those living next to or quite near the segment, the extra effort and expense will, naturally, be worth it. As for everyone else, whether in Chino Hills or in Edison's broad service areas, the matter is somewhat different. Some will argue that spreading the cost of conducting the underground work among all of Edison's ratepayers benefits a few at the expense of the many. Proponents of the underground work will respond that the cost, per household, is small when calculated over the course of years.
What seems obvious to this observer is that the split vote, far removed from unanimity, reflects the fact that the battle over the Towers of Terror was not fundamentally about right versus wrong. It was not really about the indisputability of EMF exposure risks or the likelihood of a catastrophic failure of a tower or several towers, or the assurance of billions and billions of declining property values should the project have been allowed to continue.
Rather, this was, it seems, a decision reflective of the power of political persuasion. In this sense, Hope for the Hills and the City of Chino Hills, aided by others, mounted an astute and skillful campaign. There was no way really to know whether those behemoths represented anything more than a visual and, perhaps, auditory nuisance. But, it doesn't matter now, although the matter is hardly finished. The work to bury the lines and the years that follow will be interesting to observe to see whether the reversal turned out to be the total triumph the victors now savor or will be tempered by other sets of realities that might arise.
For now, Hope for the Hills, the City and their allies have much to celebrate.
Here are some links to sources on today's decision:
KNBC-TV news: here
Pasadena Star-News: here
Inland News Today: here
This order reverses a 2009 affirmative ruling by the commission allowing SCE to construct the towers and the company made significant headway before a halt was ordered pending the appeal and review by the commission. About a month ago, Peevey's "alternate decision" was countered by a non-binding ruling by the commission's administrative law judge Jean Vieth which determined that Edison should not have to rework the segment underground because it was an undue burden on the company.
This was an impressive, hard-fought victory to the City of Chino Hills and, especially, the grass-roots organization Hope for the Hills, which had a significant contingent of members present at today's hearing. Their achievement is notable and they are to be congratulated for their successful strategy.
Obviously, there will be some significant impacts with the underground work: mainly in the establishment of two large vaults at the western and eastern end of the 3 1/2 mile work area and the tunneling under major thoroughfares, principally Chino Hills Parkway and Pipeline Avenue. Future maintenance might well be more difficult and costly with below-ground components as opposed to what would have been above the surface.
But, for those living next to or quite near the segment, the extra effort and expense will, naturally, be worth it. As for everyone else, whether in Chino Hills or in Edison's broad service areas, the matter is somewhat different. Some will argue that spreading the cost of conducting the underground work among all of Edison's ratepayers benefits a few at the expense of the many. Proponents of the underground work will respond that the cost, per household, is small when calculated over the course of years.
What seems obvious to this observer is that the split vote, far removed from unanimity, reflects the fact that the battle over the Towers of Terror was not fundamentally about right versus wrong. It was not really about the indisputability of EMF exposure risks or the likelihood of a catastrophic failure of a tower or several towers, or the assurance of billions and billions of declining property values should the project have been allowed to continue.
Rather, this was, it seems, a decision reflective of the power of political persuasion. In this sense, Hope for the Hills and the City of Chino Hills, aided by others, mounted an astute and skillful campaign. There was no way really to know whether those behemoths represented anything more than a visual and, perhaps, auditory nuisance. But, it doesn't matter now, although the matter is hardly finished. The work to bury the lines and the years that follow will be interesting to observe to see whether the reversal turned out to be the total triumph the victors now savor or will be tempered by other sets of realities that might arise.
For now, Hope for the Hills, the City and their allies have much to celebrate.
Here are some links to sources on today's decision:
KNBC-TV news: here
Pasadena Star-News: here
Inland News Today: here
03 July 2013
M-80 (Or Something) in Sleepy Hollow?
Several minutes ago a large explosion was heard coming from somewhere in Sleepy Hollow that, with the canyon walls, was really startling, especially to kids who had just gone to bed.
In Carbon Canyon, at any time, it is irresponsible to use even "safe and sane" fireworks, but, given the long-term drought and the paltry five inches of rain that fell this last winter, anything that involves illegal (anywhere) incendiaries is insanity.
So, the police were called out to patrol, but it doesn't seem likely that anything can be done unless someone was caught in the act. Besides, who knows from where the explosion came?
Tonight was the monthly meeting of the Carbon Canyon Fire Safe Council and local fire department representatives noted that extra crews would be out to respond to reports of firework activity--presumably tomorrow. At least one person decided to launch something pretty powerful (a M-80?) tonight--in an area that is very fire prone. It'd be pure wishful thinking to hope that they would get caught doing it again.
In Carbon Canyon, at any time, it is irresponsible to use even "safe and sane" fireworks, but, given the long-term drought and the paltry five inches of rain that fell this last winter, anything that involves illegal (anywhere) incendiaries is insanity.
So, the police were called out to patrol, but it doesn't seem likely that anything can be done unless someone was caught in the act. Besides, who knows from where the explosion came?
Tonight was the monthly meeting of the Carbon Canyon Fire Safe Council and local fire department representatives noted that extra crews would be out to respond to reports of firework activity--presumably tomorrow. At least one person decided to launch something pretty powerful (a M-80?) tonight--in an area that is very fire prone. It'd be pure wishful thinking to hope that they would get caught doing it again.