Alamitos Land Company Papers: Finding Aid
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Bibliographic Essay
BIBLIOGRAPHIC ESSAY Any study of Rancho Los Alamitos will be enriched by familiarity with the history of the state and region of which it is a part. In this connection West of the West: Witnesses to the California Experience, 1542-1906 by Robert Kirsh and William S. Murphy (New York, 1967) is valuable for the way firsthand accounts are woven into the text. There is no comparable book for the twentieth century. Carey McWilliams’ classic if somewhat outdated Southern California Country (New York, 1946) narrows the historical focus to the region of which Rancho Los Alamitos is a part. More recently, Kevin Starr’s ambitious work, Inventing the Dream: California Through Progressive Era (New York, 1985) focuses on the turn-of-the-century years and the emergence of Southern California culture. Harris Newmark’s Sixty Years in Southern California (Los Angeles, 1919) is an ill-organized but monumental gathering of data by a Los Angeles merchant of the latter part of the nineteenth century. A third edition was published in New York in 1930. The dominant city of the region has been treated in many books. For obvious reasons I used David Lavender’s Los Angeles Two Hundred (Tulsa, Oklahoma, 1980). A twin volume by the same publisher and also amply illustrated is Larry Meyer and Patricia L. Kalayjian’s Long Beach: Fortune’s Harbor (Tulsa, 1983). Much of Long Beach spreads across lands that once belonged to members of the Bixby family. The story of that development is touched on in Walter H. Case’s detailed, two-volume History of Long Beach and Vicinity (Chicago, 1927). -
Historic Preservation Element
HISTORIC PRESERVATION ELEMENT City of Long Beach, California 2030 General Plan Department of Development Services Planning Bureau, Advance Planning Division 333 West Ocean Boulevard Long Beach, California 90802 http:www.lbds.info/planning/advance_planning/ HISTORIC PRESERVATION ELEMENT Mayor and City Council Bob Foster, Mayor Val Lerch, Vice-Mayor, 9th District Robert Garcia, 1st District Suja Lowenthal, 2nd District Gary DeLong, 3rd District Patrick O’Donnell, 4th District Gerrie Schipske, 5th District Dee Andrews, 6th District Tonia Reyes Uranga, 7th District Rae Gabelich, 8th District Planning Commission Philip Saumur, Chair Melani Smith, Vice-Chair Becky Blair Charles Durnin Alan Fox Leslie Gentile Donita Van Horik Cultural Heritage Commission Laura H. Brasser Shannon Carmack Irma Hernandez Karen L. Highberger Louise Ivers Harvey Keller Richard Powers City Staff Reginald Harrison, Acting Development Services Director Michael J. Mais, Assistant City Attorney Jill Griffiths, Advance Planning Officer Pat Garrow, Project Manager/Senior Planner Derek Burnham, Current Planning Officer and Historic Resources Group Hollywood, CA ADOPTED BY THE CITY COUNCIL ON JUNE 22, 2010 City of Long Beach Historic Preservation Element Long Beach 2030 Plan TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY.................................................................................................iii PART ONE: BACKGROUND AND CONTEXT…………………………………..…………1 INTRODUCTION............................................................................................................ -
Long Beach Water Department [ Vii ] J CONTENTS TABLES (Continued) Page Nlllllvcr Page LETTER of Transmitral
WATER DEPARTMENT CITY OF LONG BEACH. CALIFORNIA HISTORY AND ANNUAL REPORT -.k 1943 - 1944 , i --_.--- ---- --- WATER DEPARTMENT CITY OF LONG BEACH, CALIFORNIA HISTORICAL SKETCH and ANNUAL REPORT July 1, 1943 to June 30, 1944 I i I I LONG BEACH 1944 Dedicated to tile memory of GEORGE ROYAL WADE, beloved GenerallY!ana!ler of tIle Long Beach Waler Department from December 19, 1940, to November 24-, 19#. under 'Whose direction tile book 'Was pre pared. His great desire -'Was to see it in print, but the Supreme Architect of tile Universe 'Willed otherwise and called him while it was still unfillislud. ---------------~ • ~ drop of water~ taken up from the ocean by a Slln healll~ shall fall as a snowflake upon the moun/a"in top, rest in the frozen silence through the long winter~ stir again under the summer sun and seek to find its way back to the sea down the granite steeps and fissures. It shall join its fellows in mad frolics in mountain gorgesJ singing the song of falling waters and dancing with the fairies in the moonlight. It shall lie upon the bosom of a crystal lake, and forget for a while its quest of the ocean level. Again it shall obey the law and resume its journey with mUT111urSflnd !rettinULo and then it shall pass out of the sunlight and the free air and be borne along a weary way in darkness and silence. for many days. And at last the drop that fell as a snowflake upon the Sierra)s crest and set out to find its home in the sea) shall be taken up from beneath the ground by a thirsty rootlet and distilled into the perfume of an orange blossom in a garden . -
Geology and Oil Resources of the Western Puente Hills Area, Southern California
L: ... ARY Geology and Oil Resources of the Western Puente Hills Area, Southern California GEOLOGICAL SURVEY PROFESSIONAL PAPER 420-C Geology and Oil Resources of the Western Puente Hills Area, Southern California By R. F. YERKES GEOLOGY OF THE EASTERN LOS ANGELES BASIN, SOUTHERN CALifORNIA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY PROFESSIONAL PAPER 420-C A study of the stratigraphy, structure, and oil resources of the La Habra and Whittier quadrangles UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE, WASHINGTON : 1972 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR ROGERS C. B. MORTON, Secretary GEOLOGICAL SURVEY V. E. McKelvey, Director Library of Congress catalog-card No. 72-600163 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Washington, D.C. 20402 CONTENTS Page Page Abstract __________________________________________ _ Structure _________________________________________ _ C1 c 28 Introduction ______________________________________ _ 2 Whittier fault zone _____________________________ _ 29 Location and purpose __________________________ _ 2 Workman Hill fault ____________________________ _ Previous work _________________________________ _ 29 3 Whittier Heights fault __________________________ _ 30 Methods and acknowledgments ________________ .,. __ 3 Rowland fault _________________________________ _ Stratigraphy ______________________________________ _ 31 4 Norwalk fault _________________________________ _ Rocks of the basement complex _________________ _ 4 31 Unnamed greenschist ________ . _______________ _ Historic ruptures _______________ -
The History of Zaferia the Story of Zaferia & East Long Beach
The History of Zaferia The Story of Zaferia & East Long Beach Early Zaferia The Zaferia village of the early 1900’s was one of the last vestiges of the old Californio days of the Ranchos in Los Angeles County. Situated in what would have been a high valley between Rancho Los Alamitos’ adobe farmhouse property and the imposing peak of Signal Hill, Zaferia was a sleepy enclave where Bixby Ranch laborers lived and held small truck farms. These mostly Mexican families worked on the Rancho for the Bixby family in various capacities; they leased land from Fred Bixby in the fields surrounding the rancho, which included what they called Zaferia. Bixby would buy their produce and crops from them if they wanted, but they were never obligated to sell to him. Children of the ranch hands either went to the Bixby ranch school (vaguely recorded in a LBUSD Chronology as “one mile north of Bixby Ranch” or to an early school established at Anaheim Road at Temple, called the Alamitos Heights School (established in 1898). Later, many children of these early families attended Bryant school on Termino. The name “Zaferia” has been credited as a Spanish word meaning “little village,” but no dictionary supports that theory. There was supposedly a man named R.H. Zaferia who lived in Long Beach and was on the early school board, but, again, there is no supporting data that he lived in the village or was of any great importance. Spain has a Zaferia Pass in Andalucia – could that be the origin? Zaferia also has Greek roots. -
An Expanded Matrix to Scope the Technical and Economic Feasibility
PROCEEDINGS, 41st Workshop on Geothermal Reservoir Engineering Stanford University, Stanford, California, February 22-24, 2016 SGP-TR-209 An Expanded Matrix to Scope the Technical and Economic Feasibility of Waste Heat Recovery from Mature Hydrocarbon Fields Jawhara AL-Mahrouqi (*), Gioia Falcone(**) (*)Imperial College London, South Kensington Campus, London SW7 2AZ, UK Now with Petroleum Development Oman (PDO) (**)Clausthal University of Technology, Agricolastraβe 10, 38678 Clausthal-Zellerfeld, Germany [email protected] Keywords: co-production, waste heat recovery, decision matrix ABSTRACT Substantial volumes of water are co-produced with hydrocarbons during the latter stages of an oil or gas field’s producing life. Such volumes require costly treatment schemes and inevitably force operators to cease field production, which leaves potentially recoverable hydrocarbons in the ground. However, the flowing temperature of these waste streams is high enough for it to be exploited for district heating and/or power generation. This opens up opportunities for mature hydrocarbon fields with the potential of extending their lifespan, improving their ultimate recovery, providing an alternative renewable low carbon energy source and reducing their operational expenditure. With several feasibility studies and pilots supporting the feasibility of this concept, the objective of this paper is to identify key technical and economic parameters of waste heat recovery from mature and abandoned hydrocarbon fields, both onshore and offshore. These are translated into a set of indices, forming a practical screening matrix for geothermal feasibility. With reference to an existing decision matrix (Soldo and Alimonti, 2015) which was designed to select between two heat extraction technologies, the new matrix is an expanded version, with wider applicability. -
Architectural Narrative “Rancho Los Alamitos” by Sally Woodbridge (Original Research by Loretta Berner and Pamela Young)
Architectural Narrative “Rancho Los Alamitos” by Sally Woodbridge (Original research by Loretta Berner and Pamela Young) The legacies passed from one generation to the next are many and varied. Each reveals some aspect of human endeavor and achievement, but perhaps the most universal and enduring expressions of tastes, attitudes, and circumstances are to be found in the buildings each generation chooses to construct or modify to provide shelter and a place called “home.” Changing needs, lifestyles, and values dictate constantly changing patterns of settlement and building style and use. Multitudes of structures vanish without a trace, to be replaced by a new generation of buildings suited to contemporary taste. However, those structures that do survive for an extended period as archaeological fragments, romantic ruins, or, more rarely, as relatively intact buildings, tell us much about the people who built and used them, and occasionally, about those who preserved these tangible links to our past. On Rancho Los Alamitos mesa the buildings of the earliest inhabitants are gone. The impermanent structures erected by the Tongva, native inhabitants of Puvunga, left little trace beyond holes in the earth for lodge poles and fire pits. The Spaniards and Mexicans who followed built structures of adobe mud—only slightly more permanent than the reed and willow “wickiups” of the Tongva. However, in the case of Rancho Lo Alamitos, and at other rare sites, circumstances have intervened. The adobe walls of the Alamitos Ranch House, which date from the Spanish period, have survived because, layered over the old mud brick walls, generations of ranchers have added their own walls, successive structural modifications, and extensions. -
Los Fierros Hike Guide Overview: the Los Fierros Award Was Developed to Promote Interest in Long Beach History Within Scouts
Long Beach Area Council Boy Scouts of America Los Fierros Hike Guide Overview: The Los Fierros Award was developed to promote interest in Long Beach history within Scouts. This award contains important sites of interest within Long Beach to include ones important to the Tongva (Gabrielino) Tribe, Spanish Colonial, Mexican, and American expansion. This urban hike will introduce Scouts to local history and prompt them to imagine themselves in the same locations 50, 100, 200, and 500 years ago. Number of Nights Day Hike Trailhead Location Houghton Park, 6301 Myrtle Avenue, Long Beach, CA 90805 Directions (from the LBAC Scout Service Center) • Turn right onto Long Beach Blvd • Turn left onto East Roosevelt Rd • Turn right onto Virginia Rd Trailhead Distance 3.3 mi. (from LBAC Scout Service Center) Distance 24.3 mi Elevation 150 ft. High Adventure Award LBAC Los Fierros Award Water Source Multiple business locations/parks along route Bathroom Facility Multiple business locations/parks along route Contact 562-400-1901 Cost $4 award Los Fierros Hike Route 0. Houghton Park: Take a moment to appreciate the cultural history of the vast State of California. Many of us don’t spend much time thinking about what happened in Long Beach, much less California, over 500 years ago. The first settlers of California were the Native Americans and the area around Long Beach was the home to the Tongva (Gabrielino) tribe. The first European settlers to arrive in California were the Spanish. Many of us may not be aware, but Cabrillo and his fellow explorers anchored their ship offshore from present day Long Beach, just 50 years after Columbus discovered America. -
City of Long Beach Historic Context Statement
City of Long Beach Historic Context Statement Prepared for: City of Long Beach Department of Development Services Office of Historic Preservation 333 West Ocean Boulevard Long Beach, California 90802 Prepared by: Sapphos Environmental, Inc. 430 North Halstead Street Pasadena, California 91107 July 10, 2009 TABLE OF CONTENTS SECTIONS PAGE 1.0 INTRODUCTION .............................................................................................................. 5 1.1 Objectives and Scope............................................................................................. 5 1.2 Working Definitions............................................................................................... 6 1.3 Report Preparation ................................................................................................. 8 1.4 Historic Context Statement Organization................................................................ 8 2.0 LOCATION...................................................................................................................... 10 3.0 STUDY METHODS.......................................................................................................... 14 3.1 Historical Research............................................................................................... 14 3.2 Previous Surveys................................................................................................... 15 3.3 Field Reconnaissance........................................................................................... -
In the Beginning Lee W
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany Volume 9 Issue 1 Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden—The First Article 6 Fifty Years, 1927–1977 1977 In the Beginning Lee W. Lenz Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden, Claremont, California Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.claremont.edu/aliso Part of the Botany Commons, Horticulture Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Lenz, Lee W. (1977) "In the Beginning," Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany: Vol. 9: Iss. 1, Article 6. Available at: http://scholarship.claremont.edu/aliso/vol9/iss1/6 IN THE BEGINNING On Friday, 28 July 1769, members of the Gaspar de Portola Expedition on their way from the port of San Diego de Alcala to Monterey camped on the left bank of a rather broad river where mass was celebrated. Because it was St. Anne's day they called the river the Santa Ana; the location of the camp was near the present-day city of Olive in Orange CO .I Fray Juan Crespi noted in his diary that on the right bank of the river there was a populous village of Indians who received them with great Friend- liness'! The Indians were undoubtedly those later known as the Gabrielinos who occupied a considerable area in what is now Orange and Los Angeles counties.? Crespi commented about the bed of the river being well grown with sycamores, alders, willows and other trees which they had not recognized. He noted from the sand on its banks that in the rainy season the river must be subject to great floods. -
Ethnohistoric South Gate?
ETHNOHISTORIC SOUTH GATE? MARC A. BEHEREC AECOM A pervasive belief perpetuated by local histories in South Gate in southeast Los Angeles County is that the city was founded on the sites of the Gabrielino villages Ahau and Tibahangna. Ethnographers have also suggested Houtgna existed in South Gate. This study traces the Tibahangna and Ahau claims to a single source, evaluates all three place names, and finds none of these places were within the confines of the City of South Gate. However, evidence is revealed that at least one of the claims is based on an accidental archaeological discovery that, until now, was not documented in the archaeological literature. South Gate is a Massachusetts-shaped city in southeastern Los Angeles County. Just north of Interstate 105 and bisected by Interstate 710, it is bordered on the north by the unincorporated community of Walnut Park and the cities of Bell Gardens, Cudahy, and Huntington Park, on the west by the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles and unincorporated Willowbrook, on the south by the cities of Lynwood and Paramount, and on the east by the City of Downey. The modern bed of the Los Angeles River cuts through the city, which is located on the river’s flat alluvial floodplain. The city is located within the center of traditional territory of the Gabrielino (Johnston 1962; Kroeber 1925; McCawley 1996). The City of South Gate originated as the community of Southgate Gardens, which was developed as a white working-class suburb of Los Angeles beginning on September 3, 1917. The community originally consisted of 17 blocks bounded by Santa Ana Street (formerly Old Ranch Road) to the north, Independence Avenue to the south, Long Beach Boulevard to the west, and Garden View to the east (Bicentennial Heritage Committee 1976:8). -
Heritage Square Mixed-Use Project November 2018 Initial Study I TABLE of CONTENTS
CITY OF SIGNAL HILL H E R I T A G E S Q U A R E MIXED -U SE P ROJECT INITIAL STUDY Prepared for: CITY OF SIGNAL HILL COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT 2175 CHERRY AVENUE SIGNAL HILL, CA 90755 Prepared by: MICHAEL BAKER INTERNATIONAL 3760 KILROY AIRPORT WAY, SUITE 270 LONG BEACH, CA 90806 NOVEMBER 2018 CITY OF SIGNAL HILL H E R I T A G E S Q U A R E M IXED - U SE P ROJECT Initial Study Prepared for: CITY OF SIGNAL HILL COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT 2175 CHERRY AVENUE SIGNAL HILL, CA 90755 Prepared by: MICHAEL BAKER INTERNATIONAL 3760 KILROY AIRPORT WAY, SUITE 270 LONG BEACH, CA 90806 NOVEMBER 2018 TABLE OF CONTENTS ENVIRONMENTAL CHECKLIST FORM ....................................................................................................... 1 ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS POTENTIALLY AFFECTED ............................................................................... 11 DETERMINATION ............................................................................................................................... 12 INITIAL STUDY CHECKLIST RESPONSES 1. Aesthetics ........................................................................................................................................ 13 2. Agriculture and Forestry ................................................................................................................ 16 3. Air Quality ........................................................................................................................................ 18 4. Biological Resources .....................................................................................................................