Owensmouth
Owensmouth may refer to:
Owensmouth, California was a town founded in 1912 in the Western part of the San Fernando Valley. Owensmouth joined the city of Los Angeles in 1917, and was renamed Canoga Park on March 1, 1931. Owensmouth was named for the 1913 Owens River aqueduct's terminus in current Canoga Park. The town was started by the Los Angeles Suburban Homes Company as part of an extraordinary real estate development in Southern California.[1] Los Angeles Suburban Homes Company was owned by a syndicate of rich Los Angeles investors, developers, and speculators: including Harrison Gray Otis, Harry Chandler, Moses Sherman, Hobart Johnstone Whitley, and others.[2] It anticipated possible connections to but was planned independent of the soon to be completed (1913) Los Angeles Aqueduct from the Owens River watershed to the City of Los Angeles through the San Fernando Valley in Los Angeles County.The newly built Sherman Way double drive and the Pacific Electric street cars, opened on December 7, 1912, gave new access to the town and to the other new towns in the valley Van Nuys (1911) and Marion (now Reseda); At the time the new road and streetcar seemed like route to an open agricultural fields at the end of the line — but was a necessity to promote development. Sherman Way was a paved boulevard with lush landscaping and no speed limit where one might get up to 35 mph, there was a separate dirt road for farm wagons/equipment, and telegraph lines.[2]
The new town had its problems, not till 1913 did electricity get installed. In 1916 there were only 200 residents. The town and orchards did not get any aqueduct water till 1917, when City of Los Angeles annexed Owensmouth. The street, Owensmouth Avenue that runs north-west through the Valley, is one of the few reminders of the 1910s.[3]
- The community's name was changed to Canoga Park in 1931.
- Current West Hills, Los Angeles, was part of Owensmouth from 1912 to1931. In 1987 West Hills was formed from a homeowners break way from Canoga Park forming the new community.
- Owensmouth Ave, a street running north and south through the San Fernando Valley just east of Topanga Canyon Blvd, from just south of the CA 118 to just north of CA 101.
- Owensmouth (Pacific Electric) Street car line to Owensmouth ran from 1911 to 1952.[1][2]
- San Fernando (Pacific Electric) Street car line to Owensmouth (1911 to 1952). Built by Moses Sherman's Los Angeles Pacific Railroad sold to PE.[4][5]
- Owensmouth Southern Pacific Railroad line and station opened in 1912. The 1912 station is at 21355 Sherman Way, Canoga Park, CA. The station was damaged by fire in 1995.[6]
- Parts of the old Rancho El Escorpión were in the Owensmouth. The Mexican land grant was on the land before Owensmouth.[7][8][9]
- Los Angeles Suburban Homes Company was in Owensmouth, The company built homes, owned by Isaac Newton Van Nuys[10]
- State Bank of Owensmouth, was in Owensmouth, its President was H.J. Whitley.[11]
- Owensmouth High School in Canoga Park, California opened October 4, 1914, it is now called Canoga High School, the oldest High School in the west San Fernando Valley.[12]
- Owensmouth Continuation high school is in Canoga Park.[13]
See also
- State Water Project
- Warner Center (Los Angeles Metro station)
- William Mulholland
- Glendale and Montrose Railway
- Bell Canyon Park
- Sherman Way (Los Angeles Metro station)
References
- 1 2 "Pacific Electric and the Growth of the San Fernando Valley"; by David Coscia; Shade Tree Books; ©2011; ISBN 1-57864-735-5.
- 1 2 3 "The Owensmouth Baby"; by Catherine Mulholland; Santa Susana Press (CSUN—California State University, Northridge); ©1987; ISBN 0-937048-42-9.
- ↑ KCET, Canoga Park at 100: A Brief History of the Birth of Owensmouth
- ↑ Electric Railway Heritage Association
- ↑ Electric Railway Heritage Association, San Fernando Valley Line
- ↑ santasusannadepot.org Southern Pacific Railroads’s Owensmouth Depot
- ↑ LoC-HABS: Escorpion (1937); p. 2
- ↑ LoC-HABS: Leonis (1963); p.3
- ↑ Santa Susana Pass State Historic Park (SSPSHP); Ethnohistory; p. 46.
- ↑ dailynews.com, A hundred years ago, Van Nuys was founded in a strategic land rush, By Dana Bartholomew, Staff Writer, 02/20/11
- ↑ Early Los Angeles Historical Buildings (1900 - 1925) Historical Photos of Early Los Angeles
- ↑ canogaparkhs.org CANOGA high school
- ↑ education.com, Owensmouth Continuation High School
Coordinates: 34°12′04″N 118°35′50″W / 34.20111°N 118.59722°W
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Los Angeles Aqueduct. |
- Canoga-Owensmouth Historical Museum
- LADWP Los Angeles Aqueduct web site
- Los Angeles Aqueduct Landscape Atlas
- Mono Lake Committee Website
- LADWP History page on William Mulholland
- Los Angeles Aqueduct Slideshow
- The William Mulholland Memorial Fountain
- Los Angeles Aqueduct Digital Platform