Tag Archives: California vernacular architecture

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.

Walker Cabin in Placerita Canyon

The Walker Cabin, 1920. In 1949 the family gave the land of Placerita Canyon over to the county for natural preservation. (Bravo!)

The local stones on the foundations and the chimney are awesome, and were chosen with an artistic eye. They sing out to the stones in the surrounding canyon, and they help turn this rustic building into a treasure, a place suitable for a family to love and wish to preserve.

An El Camino Real Bell, beloved California symbol of historical memory, has recently been presented to the Romulo Pico Adobe, aka the Andres Pico Adobe. This is an exciting acquisition for a very interesting Los Angeles landmark, which deserves more attention from history buffs and tourists.

The 1834 adobe sits a stone’s throw from the Mission Convento. It is the second oldest house in Los Angeles (Avila’s is first), and the oldest in the Valley. It was the home of the mayordomo of Pico’s sprawling and productive Rancho Ex-Mission San Fernando, and was probably built by the mayordomo, who was Valentin Lopez.

The building in his day was much smaller than it is now. Andres’s (illegitimate?) heir Romulo moved in and made additions, then it fell into ruin in the late 19th century, like many rancho adobes. In the 1920s it was rescued by the Southwest Museum’s curator, Mark Harrington, who rebuilt the casa with his wife for their own home. They added the second floor, and many comfortable amenities, to make the place into a proper hacienda.

Today the adobe makes a fitting home for the San Fernando Valley Historical Society, which runs free tours on Sundays and Mondays, and also makes available its library of California historical materials.

San Rafael Rancho, granted to retired soldier Jose Maria Verdugo in 1784. I believe this grant, green, fertile and cool, was the very first land transfer of all the ranchos in California. It is a dramatic accident of history that, 62 years later, the last proud Californios found themselves holed up at Verdugo’s, arguing about how they could protect what they saw as their patrimony from American annihilation.

The humble but useful ox-drawn careta is, along with the ubiquitous bell, a symbol of California life during the Mission and rancho period. In fact, many of the famous mission bells, including those used at San Diego in 1769, arrived in California strapped onto a careta. During the Mexican War, caretas served as artillery carriages for both sides. This careta carries a dracaena as cargo.

This cactus on the grounds has fruited, and is setting seed.

The chimney cap on the old river-stone chimney seems almost Streamline. (If it is, thank the Native Daughters of the Golden West!)