Native Americans

#223: Rancho Los Alamitos (Long Beach)

#223: Rancho Los Alamitos (Long Beach)

August 6, 2024
Rancho Los Alamitos compresses 150+ years of Los Angeles history into a single site. It went from Tongva village and sacred site, to Spanish land grant, to Yankee cattle and sheep ranch, to the center of a massive agricultural operation, and now a beautifully-preserved educational site, open to the public for free.
#150: Vasquez Rocks (Agua Dulce)

#150: Vasquez Rocks (Agua Dulce)

May 5, 2023
Visit the Vasquez Rocks for a lil' slice of Mars less than an hour out of LA. These heaving piles of sandstone jut out at impossible angles, yielding an alien landscape that's backdropped westerns, horror flicks and sci-fi epics since the 1920s. Read on for a capsule history of the Rocks, with cameos from the indigenous Tataviam, the Spanish missionaries, and the Mexican bandit that gave the Vasquez Rocks their name.
#129: The Lummis House/”El Alisal” (Highland Park)

#129: The Lummis House/”El Alisal” (Highland Park)

December 9, 2022
The Lummis House (aka El Alisal) in Highland Park is a playful castle-like structure of stone, cement and telephone poles (!), hand-built by one of the most colorful figures in LA history, Charles Lummis. You can appreciate it for its architectural uniqueness, or as a 3D manifestation of Lummis's philosophy. Either way, it's one of my favorite LA landmarks.
#43: Mission San Gabriel Arcángel (San Gabriel)

#43: Mission San Gabriel Arcángel (San Gabriel)

November 20, 2021
Mission San Gabriel Arcángel is the grandaddy of LA historic sites. Legend has it that the 44 “pobladores” set out from here the day they founded Los Angeles in 1781. For three years, it was closed to visitors due to the pandemic and a devastating arson. On July 1, 2023, the Mission finally reopened, with a reimagined museum that tells the Mission's complex story of deracination and development.