Tag Archives: adobes

The Casa de Lopez Adobe

The Lopez family were among the founders of the city of San Fernando, in 1874, but the family had been in the area of the north Valley for generations. Francisco Lopez found the gold in Placerita canyon in 1842; Valentin Lopez may have built the Andres Pico Adobe as early as 1834. Anyway, by the Victorian era, building an adobe home on a downtown block would have been a deliberate exercise in Californio vernacular continuity; thousands of Anglos were building wood-framed Eastlakes and Stick Styles all over So Cal. The house seems to have stayed in the family until the Brady Bunch years, though somebody in the 1950s split the building up into three apartments, by adding lean-to kitchens — styled in exactly the same yellow and burgundy tile that graces my own kitchen in Valley Village. How amazing that some lucky people got to enjoy their dumpy Valley apartment experience in an adobe!!

The Feliz Adobe, now part of the Griffith Park staff headquarters (note the brusque signage warning the public away.)

Jose Vicente Feliz received the original 1795 grant for 20 years of royal service. “Rancho de Nuestra Senora de Refugio de Los Feliz” included almost all of Griffith Park, Silverlake and Los Feliz. I believe it may also have come with water rights to the LA river, specially granted in the deed.

Cpl. Felix had come with the de Anza Expedition in 1775; he was widowed just outside Tubac, helped found San Francisco, and rose from private to corporal as a guard at San Gabriel, while raising five motherless Felizes. Then, despite his low rank he was named Comisionado of the infant Pueblo de Los Angeles. (He may have been a mestizo, thus not “white” enough to have been eligible for commissioned rank in the Spanish army.)  As Comisionado he was LA’s military honcho, above the alcalde and the city council, reporting directly to the governor. Pretty good for a mere corporal.

His mission was to protect the pueblo – not so much from invaders as from deserters. Gov. de Neve had invested a great deal in the pueblo as a farming community to produce food surpluses. Colonists were scarce; fewer than half the families recruited, actually arrived to settle LA. Among these, good farmers were even scarcer. Incompetency at cultivation and demoralization took time to correct; unfit or dissipated colonists might sell off their precious tools, like hoes and rakes, for liquor. There were quitters, disappearances, Indian troubles, and deaths – conditions were extremely tough the first few years. But the farmers were under binding contracts with the King, and would only get their town lots and arable grants if they stuck to LA and tilled the soil.

Thanks to Corporal Feliz, most of them did. This plum of a land grant – one of the earliest, prettiest and most advantageously sited –  reflects Spain’s gratitude.

The Catalina Verdugo Adobe, which its first owner jokingly referred to as “The Ditch”.  The ranch is set in an extremely secluded bowl at the bottom of a gulch in the Verdugo Hills. The spot is always cool and shady from the fine encinal, or oak grove, that fills the dell.

While it seems paradise now, and certainly also was in 1847, one must take in View those splendid trees at the edge of verandah; these are Coast Redwoods, probably planted by the DAR in the 30′s, way too near the house. They are already impinging upon the delicate structure. 

These trees point to a hard but important lesson – even California native plants can be invasive in the front yard, especially when they want to grow 300 feet tall.