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Visit Heritage Valley Sandi Wards Train Stop Elkins Ranch Golf Course 4 11 Visit Heritage Valley 435 A Santa Clara Street 1386 Chambersburg Road (On the train track in Central Park) Fillmore, CA 93015 Step back in time and experience the natural wonders of 805.524.1752 805.524.1121 Southern California's last pristine agricultural valley, the Antiques, collectibles, toys, something www.elkinsranchgc.com Heritage Valley, which is nestled along historic Highway to interest everyone. Many one-of-a-kind 126 between I-5 and Highway 101 and includes the items. Rail related apparel, gifts, cards and toys. Enjoy our view for lunch or a round of golf! communities of Piru, Fillmore, Santa Paula and the Rancho Camulos National Historic Landmark. Take a day Fillmore & Western Railway Co. The Green Oasis trip to visit working ranches, farms, apiaries, fruit stands, 5 Ticket Office at: 12 3531 E Telegraph Rd unique restaurants, great local shops, and interesting 364 Main Street (Central Park) Fillmore, CA 93015 Fillmore, CA 93015 museums. Ride a vintage train, tour the valley and beyond 805.524.2546 / www.fwry.com 407 963 1768 by airplane, or bike the back roads and byways. Spend the All Aboard! Vintage trains that transport visitors http://www.the-green-oasis.com night in accommodations ranging from teepees to through the Heritage Valley on year round train Farm Fresh Eggs boutique hotels. Discover the Heritage Valley’s hidden rides. Also known as "Home of the Movie Trains" because of the more than 400 gems and down-home hospitality. movies, television series and commercials shot on the train and on the tracks. Bennett’s Honey Farm 6 Diamond Realty 13 3176 Honey Lane 460 Santa Clara St. Fillmore, CA 93015 Fillmore, CA 93015 805.521.1375 805.625.4450 D R DIAMOND REALTY www.bennetthoney.com www.diamondrealtyteam.com Just off Highway 126 between Fillmore & Piru, We appreciate the opportunity to help buyers Bennett's is the source for top quality local honey. There is a "honey store" for and sellers navigate the real estate process Free honey tasting and many other bee related items available in the store. by listening to your needs and desires in this constantly changing market. Piru Motocross Park 7 Little Shoppe of Hoarders 14 4375 Center Street 354 Central Avenue Piru, CA 93040 Fillmore, CA 93015 805.521.0515 805.625.2935 www.pirumx.com Visit our website Enjoy the motocross track as a spectator or a rider. A delightful and eclectic variety of collectibles, Great quality track with elevation changes,banked turns, jumps/obstacles are fun HeritageValley.net novelties and antiques. for a wide variety of skills. Fillmore Chamber of Commerce Rancho Camulos National Heritage Valley Tourism Bureau 15 Historic Landmark Museum 1 8 246 Central Avenue 364 Main Street (Central Park) 5164 E. Telegraph Road, Piru Fillmore, CA 93015 Hwy 126, 10 miles west of I-5 Fillmore, CA 93015 805.524.0351 805.521.1501 805.524.7500 www.fillmorechamber.net www.ranchocamulos.org www.heritagevalley.net Stimulate a network of current and future business for Tour the "Home of Ramona", an authentic Mexican land grant with buildings from The bureau assists travelers and visitors to the Heritage Valley in economic development and growth, creating a partnership the 1800s...Where the history, myth, and romance of Old California still linger...The their quest to find Things To Do, Places To Stay, Where To Eat and between business, city, and government. setting for the novel Ramona and the 1910 film starring Mary Pickford. Historic Sites and Museums in Santa Paula, Fillmore & Piru. CJ Financial Home Loans Fillmore Historical Museum Bella Vista Groves 2 9 539 Sespe Avenue Suite 1 16 3117 West Telegraph Road 350 Main Street, Fillmore, CA Fillmore, CA 93015 805.524.0948 805.391.1008 Fillmore, CA 93015 www.fillmorehistoricalmuseum.com www.cjfinancial.com 805.377.5499 This four building complex includes We have been making dreams come true in the www.bellavistagroves.com the 1905 Hinkley House,1919 Rancho Heritage Valley since 1988. Nestled among the citrus and avocado orchards Sespe Bunk House, the 1887 Southern Pacific Railroad Depot and between Fillmore and Santa Paula, Bella Vista Groves is a unique location for the late 1800s original Bardsdale post office. weddings or special events unlike anywhere else on the West Coast. C J Financial Best Western-La Posada Motel Santa Clara River Valley Fillmore & Western Railway El Pescador #12 3 10 827 Ventura St, Railroad Historical Society Green Oasis 17 1305 W. Ventura St. Santa Paula Chamber of Commerce Fillmore, CA 93015 455 Main St. Fillmore, CA 93015 805.524.0440 Fillmore CA, 93015 805.524.2254 www.bestwesterncalifornia.com/hotels/best- 805.524.9999 www.scrvrhs.com August 2016 Photo by: Dan Harding western-la-posada-motel The society was established in 1993 to assist in the The LaPosada is conveniently located on SR 126 in Fillmore and accommodates Our menu captures the vibrant flavors and preservation and restoration of the railroad corridor Heritage Valley Tourism Bureau travelers with well-appointed rooms featuring high-speed internet access, a daily fresh ingredients from Mexico and the between Montalvo and Saugus, California. HeritageValley.net complimentary continental breakfast and an outdoor swimming pool and hot tub. modern decor delivers a casual, relaxed dining experience. 5164 E. Telegraph Rd (Hwy 126) Telegraph 5164 E. Rancho Camulos Museum - Piru Concert Santa Clarita Cowboy Festival First Sunday at the Airport Railfest - Fillmore First Friday Cruise Night - Santa Paula Fillmore Flower Show Wine & Wings - Aviation Museum Summer Smash Community Event Santa Paula Airport Last Full Weekend in March Historic Downtown Main Street Annual Event 2nd Weekend of April Late Spring Annual Event Early Summer Annual Event 10:00 AM - 3:00 PM Downtown Fillmore Central Park First Friday Night of the Month Apr-Oct Senior Center - 533 Santa Clara St Santa Paula Airport Piru Square First Sunday of every month 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM 5:00 PM - 8:00 PM 12:00 PM - 3:00 PM 6:00 PM Piru Neighborhood Council April www.amzp.org scrvrhs.com or fwry.com www.santapaulapoa.org/cruisenight.htm www.aviationmuseumofsantapaula.org Music, Games, Piru Mansion tours www.fillmorechamber.net/Events Pancake Breakfast Fillmore FFA Avenue AM Central Parade 10:00 Thurs-Sun Festival Central Park in May annually Third Weekend Fillmore May Festival Christmas Parade - Piru Second Saturday in Dec. Downtown Piru 12:00 noon bennettshoneyfarm.com or fwry.com AM - 5:00 PM 9:00 Bennett's Honey Farm (Hwy 126) Central Park - Downtown Fillmore and Annual Festival-Mid June California Honey Harvest Festival Lions Club Christmas Parade First Saturday in December in Historic Avenue Central Downtown Fillmore 12:00 PM - 3:00 Annual Christmas Parade Santa Paula Thanksgiving Saturday after Main Street in Historic Downtown Santa Paula Facebook/Downtown Jazz and Art Santa Paula Facebook/Downtown Jazz and 6:00 PM - 10:00 Annual Event Assoc. Downtown Merchants Summer Jazz and Art - Santa Paula PumpkinLiners - Fillmore Railway - Fillmore & Western Central Park Every weekend in October www.fwry.com Santa Paula Chamber Historic Santa Paula Agriculture Museum California Oil Museum 1 2 3 4 of Commerce Railroad Depot 926 Railroad Avenue 1001 E. Main Street 200 N. Tenth Street, Railroad Plaza and Santa Paula, CA 93061 805.933.0076 Santa Paula, CA 93060 original 1887 805.525.3100 www.oilmuseum.net 805.525.5561 Southern Pacific www.venturamuseum.org The original home of Union Oil www.santapaulachamber.com Railroad Depot The Agriculture Museum hosts exhibits and events that showcase Co., the museum is housed in an 1890 Queen Anne-Italianate- Southern Pacific Depot in its original location since 1887 on the style building on the corner of Main Street and Highway 150 (10th The Chamber provides the support for businesses to grow and corner of 10th Street (Highway 150) and Santa Barbara Street the evolution of Ventura County’s farming and ranching traditions. The Museum experience includes rare historical photographs, a Street). Museum features permanent displays of the oil industry, thrive through networking and marketing opportunities, advocacy, houses the Chamber of Commerce and Santa Paula Center of the but also has rotating exhibits of science, history and art. Tours economic development, community development and tourism Arts gallery. working beehive, interactive elements, a vintage tractor, and and museum store shopping are available. www.ci.santa-paula.ca.us Harding Park, 1300 E. Harvard Blvd. July 4th 9:00 PM - Free Event Fireworks Extravaganza - Santa Paula support. family-friendly activities. Santa Paula Art Historic Downtown Santa Paula Murals 5 6 7 8 Santa Paula Inn Santa Paula Halloween Parade Late October Saturday - Main St AM 10:00 Museum Santa Paula 805.525.7804 111 N. 8th Street 117 North 10th Street www.santapaulamurals.org Santa Paula, CA 93060 Santa Paula, CA 93060 Main Street and the 805.933.0011 805.525.5554 Historic Downtown Santa surrounding streets Paula is home to some of www.santapaulainn.com www.santapaulaartmuseum.org were established in the finest murals in California. the early 1900s with Each mural tells a different story from Santa Paula’s The Santa Paula Inn offers comfort for business, The Santa Paula Art Museum features rotating exhibitions of rich history. All the murals are within walking distance leisure, weddings, family reunions, film crews and murals, eateries, shops, museums, historic parents visiting Thomas Acquinas College. This vintage and contemporary art, educational programming for both of each other and provide a great way for visitors and charming Inn is a perfect romantic southern CA children and adults, artist talks and demonstrations, a gift shop, inns abound under the historic clocktower. locals to explore art and history as they discover the getaway.
Recommended publications
  • 4.3 Cultural Resources
    4.3 CULTURAL RESOURCES INTRODUCTION W & S Consultants, (W&S) conducted an archaeological survey of the project site that included an archival record search conducted at the local California Historic Resource Information System (CHRIS) repository at the South Central Coastal Information Center (SCCIC) located on the campus of California State University, Fullerton. In July 2010, a field survey of the 1.2-mile proposed project site was conducted. The archaeological survey report can be found in Appendix 4.3. Mitigation measures are recommended which would reduce potential impacts to unknown archeological resources within the project site, potential impacts to paleontological resources, and the discovery of human remains during construction to less than significant. PROJECT BACKGROUND Ethnographic Setting Tataviam The upper Santa Clara Valley region, including the study area, was inhabited during the ethnographic past by an ethnolinguistic group known as the Tataviam.1 Their language represents a member of the Takic branch of the Uto-Aztecan linguistic family.2 In this sense, it was related to other Takic languages in the Los Angeles County region, such as Gabrielino/Fernandeño (Tongva) of the Los Angeles Basin proper, and Kitanemuk of the Antelope Valley. The Tataviam are thought to have inhabited the upper Santa Clara River drainage from about Piru eastwards to just beyond the Vasquez Rocks/Agua Dulce area; southwards as far as Newhall and the crests of the San Gabriel and Santa Susana Mountains; and northwards to include the middle reaches of Piru Creek, the Liebre Mountains, and the southwesternmost fringe of Antelope Valley.3 Their northern boundary most likely ran along the northern foothills of the Liebre Mountains (i.e., the edge of Antelope Valley), and then crossed to the southern slopes of the Sawmill Mountains and Sierra Pelona, extending 1 NEA, and King, Chester.
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  • The Heritage Junction Dispatch a Publication of the Santa Clarita Valley Historical Society
    The Heritage Junction Dispatch A Publication of the Santa Clarita Valley Historical Society Volume 47, ISSUE 1 January-February 2021 President’s Message by Alan Pollack Calendar Rancho Camulos novel “Ramona” in 1884. Two years prior, and the Southern Jackson had briefly visited Camulos as part Due to the coronavirus pandemic, Pacific Line in of her research for the book. Although she Heritage Junction is closed until 1886 never revealed to the public the actual sites further notice. on which her book was based, Jackson’s n 1886, Rancho description of the “Home of Ramona” in the Camulos had I novel very closely matched the location of already become Rancho Camulos: known worldwide, just as the Southern “…midway in the valley to the east and west, Pacific Railroad was running tracks through which had once belonged to the Missions of San Monday, February 1 the Santa Clara River Valley, right by its Fernando and San Bonaventura.” doorstep. The Del Valle family, residents Deadline for the March-April “The house was of adobe; low, with a wide of Camulos, were prominent members of Dispatch veranda on the three sides of the inner court; and Los Angeles society ever since patriarch a still broader one across the entire front, which Antonio Del Valle was granted the Rancho looked to the south…. The two westernmost San Francisco (now the Santa Clarita Valley) rooms had been added on, and made four steps by Governor Juan Alvarado in 1839. But the higher than the others … Between the veranda Del Valle’s home at Camulos became known and the river meadows, out on which it looked, all worldwide after the publication of Helen was garden, orange grove, and almond orchards”.
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  • Historical Society of Southern California Collection -- Charles Puck Collection of Negatives and Photographs: Finding Aid
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  • To Oral History
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  • GC 1002 Del Valle Family Papers
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  • Los Días Pasados
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  • The Heritage Junction Dispatch a Publication of the Santa Clarita Valley Historical Society
    The Heritage Junction Dispatch A Publication of the Santa Clarita Valley Historical Society Volume 44, Issue 3 May - June 2018 President’s Message by Alan Pollack Calendar n the last edition the majority of which resides today at the Monday, May 28 Iof the Dispatch, Peabody Museum of American Ethnology at Board of Directors Meeting we discussed the life Harvard University. 6:30 PM Saugus Station and untimely death Early Life of Bowers Friday, June 1 of McCoy Pyle, one Deadline for the July-August of two brothers who Stephen Bowers was born near Wilmington, Dispatch in 1884 discovered Indiana, in 1832. In 1856, he was ordained Monday, June 25 a magnificent cache as a Methodist minister. A few years later, Board of Directors Meeting of Tataviam Native the Civil War began, and in 1862, Bowers 6:30 PM Saugus Station American artifacts in a cave above the enlisted as a private soldier in an Indiana present-day Chiquita Canyon Landfill along infantry regiment. He eventually became a Highway 126. first lieutenant and chaplain of the regiment. After a year in the military, Bower’s health The namesake of that famous cave was Check www.scvhistory.org for declined, and he resigned to enter the other upcoming events. Dr. Stephen Bowers, a renowned preacher, ministry. He furthered his education, gaining author, reformer, geologist, archeologist, an M.A. degree from Indiana State University, collector, and, at the time, editor of the and a Ph.D. from Willamette University of Ventura Free Press. Bowers found out Oregon. He spent the next nine years after about the Pyle discovery and offered the leaving the army preaching the Methodist brothers $1500 to purchase the contents faith at various locations in Indiana.
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  • 2014 Camulos Campanero
    It was a picturesque life…The aroma of it lingers there still; industries and inventions Cowboy Festiivall have not yet slain it; it will last out its century…so long as there is left standing one Apriill 25,, 2014 such house… – Helen Hunt Jackson, 1884, Ramona See page 4!! The Camulos CampanWeintrer 2o014 Newsletter of the Rancho Camulos Museum Ventura County’s Only National Historic Landmark research sheds new light on del vale daughter by Margie Brown-Coronel, PhD fter ten years of researching and writing about Josefa Josefa came of age in the decades that followed the Treaty del Valle Forster, the eldest daughter of Ygnacio and of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848), which ended the U.S. Mexican AYsabel del Valle, I find it difficult to imagine any War, and resulted in the U.S. acquiring more than 500,000 corner of Rancho Camulos without thinking of her life. While square miles of territory. The aftermath of this conflict left other del Valle family members such as California in a state of economic and her mother Ysabel and her brother social chaos, with a shaky infrastructure Reginaldo have received attention, in terms of government, business and Josefa’s life has remained somewhat in social order. Development picked up in the shadows. Josefa led a quiet yet 1875 when the Central Pacific and Union dynamic life that centered on her family, Pacific Railroads connected California to her home at Camulos and in Los Angeles, the rest of the United States, facilitating and a vast network of friends. Letters that the migration of settlers and businesses.
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  • The Heritage Junction Dispatch a Publication of the Santa Clarita Valley Historical Society
    The Heritage Junction Dispatch A Publication of the Santa Clarita Valley Historical Society Volume 41, Issue 6 November - December 2015 Calendar President’s Message by Alan Pollack Saturday, November 7 Talk on Fillmore’s Legendary as the story cattle. Needing some rest on a hot day, Locals 2:00 PM Old Town Newall Library Wof the Oak of Lopez fell asleep under an old oak tree and the Golden Dream dreamed of finding gold. Upon awakening, Monday, November 23 fact or legend? he decided to make some lunch. Under a Board of Directors Meeting 6:30 PM Saugus Station In this three-part nearby sycamore tree was a patch of wild series of articles we onions. Upon digging up some of the onions, Tuesday, December 1 will examine the Lopez found clinging to their roots some Deadline for the January-February evidence available flecks of gold. Shortly thereafter, Lopez Dispatch to us. sent a letter to California Governor Juan Saturday, December 5 Alvarado notifying him of the gold discovery As the story goes, on March 9, 1842, Christmas Open House and seeking permission to mine the gold. forty-year-old Jose Francisco de Gracia Heritage Jct.; Thus we have the first documented gold Part of Vintage Christmas Lopez (more commonly known as discovery in California history, fully six years Celebration. See page 9 Francisco Lopez), foreman of the Rancho before the more famous discovery of gold Saturday, December 12 San Francisco, and two of his coworkers, by John Marshall on the South fork of the Manuel Cota and Domingo Bermúdez, 40th anniversary of the SCVHS American River.
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  • A Little History on Rancho Camulos Museum
    SPOTLIGHT A Little History on from 58 Rancho Camulos Museum Rancho Camulos Museum is located 10 for maintaining the traditional rancho miles west of Valencia on scenic Highway lifestyle long after it had disappeared THE HOME OF RAMONA 126. When the ranch was granted by Mexi- elsewhere. Camulos bustled with extended co’s California governor to Lt. Antonio del family members and ranch workers, with Rancho Camulos is also part of Valle in 1839, it spanned 48,000 acres of the up to 200 people living on the property literary folklore as the setting for Santa Clarita Valley including the present during years of peak agricultural produc- Helen Hunt Jackson’s novel Ramona, communities of Newhall, Saugus, Valencia, tion. Among the frequent guests at first published in 1884 and still in print Stevenson Ranch and surrounding areas. Camulos during the late 19th and early today. It is the romantic tale of a young Visitors can see the 1853 Del Valle 20th centuries were a number of promi- girl raised by a Spanish Californio adobe home, their 1860s chapel and other nent writers and artists, including Charles family who falls in love with an Indian features on most Sunday afternoons. Along F. Lummis, James Walker and Alexander ranch hand. Their life together mirrors a well traveled road known as El Camino Harmer, who were inspired time and again the fate of Indians at the hands of white Real (The King’s Highway) lies a place out by the rancho’s idyllic setting. settlers. With its tragic love story and of time…Rancho Camulos.
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  • Rancho Camulos Museum: 2017 Annual Report
    RANCHO CAMULOS MUSEUM NATIONAL HISTORIC LANDMARK . I . I • I i ' I i RCM ACHIEVES MAJOR MILESTONES IN 2017 Artifacts from RCM's New Library Opens in Newly Rancho Camu/os are prominently Renovated Small Adobe featured in "Many Voices One Nation," After more a new exhibit at than a decade the Smithsonian's of hard work National Museum by volunteers of American and generous History, that donors, RCM's debuted in June small adobe, 2017. A large which was nearly wooden cross from the rancho's destroyed in the chapel garden, a 1994 Northridge red glass sacred earthquake, heart from the has once again Camulos chapel, opened its doors and a mortar and to the public. pestle attributed In addition to to the Tataviam Introducing visitors to RCM's new research making the Native American library, which houses books and archival people, who worked manuscripts relevant to Camulos and Southern 1920 building at Camu/os - tell California history structurally the story of the sound, restoring de/ Valle family its electricity, putting in a new septic and plumbing system, in Southern painting the interiors and restoring the building's original California. The artifacts from Rancho Camulos are expected to be on beautiful hardwood floors, the small adobe is ready for visitors display for three years or more. and now also houses RCM's new research library. A dedication and ribbon cutting celebration was hosted in June. Smithsonian Features RCM Artifacts The new library represents a major achievement in the In early October, a group of museum members, docents and museum's history.
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  • Oil Museum and Rancho Camulos
    !1 Neighbors: “Neighbors” team: Mary Goldberg, Bet Miler, and Bev Taylor Special tanks to or guet autors: Jeanne Beach, Executive Director, California Oil Museum and Mara Chrsoper, Docent Rancho Camulos Museum !2 Introduction by Mary Goldberg In this part of the “Neighbors” series, we learn about two historic museums located off Highway 126. The California Oil Museum in Santa Paula, and the Rancho Camulos Museum, one mile east of Piru. This series of articles which started with a look at the McCrea Ranch, showcases our “Neighbors” that you might like to explore both virtually and to visit when they reopen. How many have YOU visited? Please send us your memories of places that you recommend. I’ll include them in a future article. The California Oil Museum Honoring the Past, Exploring the Future By Jeanne Beach, Executive Director The California Oil Museum is housed in the magnificent, turreted Italianate building that centers Santa Paula’s historic downtown and museum district. Site of the original offices of the Union Oil Company, the Museum now offers permanent and rotating exhibits, educational programming, event spaces, filming locations, lecture series, and special events. Completed in 1890, the building’s downstairs held the Santa Paula Hardware Company and the town’s first Post Office, while the second floor was devoted to office space. In !3 1950, the first floor was established as the Union Oil Museum. For its 100th anniversary, the upstairs offices were restored to reproduce the original 1890 appearance, and the entire building was renovated and became the California Oil Museum. The Museum’s permanent exhibits explore the science and historic context of the discovery of petroleum in California – from early use of oil and petroleum precursors by local Native American cultures to modern production and marketing – and look to the future of emerging technologies of renewable energy sources.
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