This is the twelfth post in the series sharing these photos on the blog and comprises a trio of images of workers at the oil field, which was opened in 1897 after Edward Doheny, who with Charles Canfield brought in the celebrated Los Angeles field west of downtown, developed a partnership with the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe railroad to drill for oil on the Olinda Ranch.
This great image shows, from left to right, Andy Lyle, Earl Brown, a man listed only as Kramer, and Foster Norton at an oil well site in Olinda in 1910. |
In fact, the first well brought on to production at Olinda is still operating today as part of the Olinda Oil Museum in the midst of the Olinda Ranch subdivision just north of Carbon Canyon Road. From there, companies flocked to the field to search for black gold. As noted, there was a substantial population of workers and their families mostly living in company-owned houses throughout the field. Stores and a fine grammar school were part of the general Olinda community, though as the automobile became more affordable, people began to move to nearby towns away from the noises and smells of the field.
In this snapshot, Earle Brown is doing a little clowning around at the well site. With such difficult, dirty work, there must obviously have been a lot of humor displayed at Olinda! |
With regard to the oil wells, they've gradually been shut down, disassembled and capped in recent decades, replaced mainly by housing developments, and those that remain will not do so for long. As noted here recently, a proposal to build a large number of homes on land on both sides of Valencia Avenue north of Rose Drive/Birch Street and both sides of Lambert Road west of Carbon Canyon is in the works.
Look soon for the thirteenth part of this series of great images, courtesy of Joyce, from the Brown and Gaines families at Carbon Canyon.
3 comments:
I am new to your blog and I am impressed with the quality of your reporting. When I was a child of about eight to ten years old (1962-1963) my dad would bring me from our house in La Habra to Carbon Canyon for the purpose of target shooting. Immediately west of Carbon Canyon Park, on the south side of the road is a "hollow" surrounded on three sides by a hill. This was an oil well spot, but it was perfect for setting up our targets next to the hill. I remember one time a law enforcement officer stopped by and asked us not to shoot there, but I recall that he was very friendly. The highlight of these shooting trips was always a visit to the La Vida Hot Springs restaurant for a slice of pie afterward.
Later, in early 1973, I rented a house at the top of Observation Lane, off Canon Lane. At that time it was the last house on the lane. In late 1973, I purchased a small house on Rosemary Lane just up from what was a bridge across the creek at that time. I bought this house from the owner of the restaurant/gas station, Joel B. Norris, which was on the north side of Carbon Canyon Road just east of Rosemary Lane (just inside the county line). Joel Norris at the time owned several properties in Sleepy Hollow that he rented out. He lived on Hay Dr., which is also the street my future wife's family lived on. I lived there until 1978, when I sold that house and moved to the north end of Chino off Monte Vista and Francis, where I still reside today.
I am truly saddened by what is happening in Carbon Canyon today. I know you can't stop progress, and the almighty dollar always seems to win out. The canyon is quickly losing it's rustic charm, which is why I moved there in the first place.
My grandma made that pie! She ran/owned the restaurant at that time, I lived in the apartment attached to the back of the restaurant, she lived in sleepy hallow in the big red house at top of hill as first come into canyon, she was married to Jim Harris
Hello Unknown, was the house on the left or right as you approached Sleepy Hollow from the Brea (La Vida) side? Anything on the history of La Vida or Sleepy Hollow that you might have would be appreciated.
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