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The Second Los Angeles Aqueduct Cascades near Sylmar, California. The Historic-Cultural Monuments in the San Fernando Valley are spread across the Valley from Chatsworth in the northwest to Studio City in the southeast, and from the City of Calabasas in the southwest to Tujunga and La Crescenta in the northeast.
The Stonehurst Historic Preservation Overlay Zone is located in the Sun Valley neighborhood of Los Angeles, in the northeastern San Fernando Valley. [1] It is a city-designated Historic Preservation Overlay Zone (HPOZ). [2]
Landmarks on the National Register of Historic Places located within the San Fernando Valley — in Los Angeles County, southern California. Pages in category "National Register of Historic Places in the San Fernando Valley"
The San Fernando Valley Historical Society has a Museum about the Valley's history, housed in the landmark Andres Pico Adobe. The museum offers vintage room settings of the era, antique and artifact displays, and period gardens. [3] The museum is located near the Mission San Fernando Rey de España in Mission Hills, California. [4] [5]
He called the trapezoidal building, listed as an L.A. Historic-Cultural Monument, "the earliest commercial heart of Pacific Palisades." A representative of the development did not respond to a ...
They are believed to have been grown from cuttings taken from the Spanish Colonial c. 1800 planted olive orchard trees at the Mission San Fernando Rey de España across the Valley. [2] When the site was designated a Historic-Cultural Monument in 1967, there were 76 olive trees along several blocks of western of Lassen Street.
San Fernando Line; San Fernando Pass; San Fernando Pioneer Memorial Cemetery; San Fernando Valley Historical Society; Santa Susana Field Laboratory; Santa Susana Pass; Old Santa Susana Stage Road; Santa Susana Pass State Historic Park; Joseph Francis Sartori; Saway-yanga, California; Sepulveda Basin; Sesnon Fire; Shadow Ranch; Moses Sherman ...
The monument site now looks like a hole in the ground with walls of vitrified limestone and brick. The pit measures about fifteen feet deep and six and a half feet across. The kiln was in use during early California history (Spanish/Mission and Mexican periods). The area rich with oak trees and lime deposits was ideal for kiln operation ...