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Showing posts with label Chatsworth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chatsworth. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 3, 2015


TREASURES OF THE SAN FERNANDO VALLEY 


The rocky hills of Chatsworth, in the northwest corner of the San Fernando Valley are now places for family picnics and areas in which to practice the popular recreation of rock climbing.  From the late 1920s to the 1960s dozens of motion pictures were made here, and one can encounter an occasional t.v. production going on today. 

Handcar coming through Chatsworth c. 1930
Vintage postcard - Gift to The Museum of the San Fernando Valley
from Gary Fredburg 2015.  (click on image to enlarge it.)

Your Museum collects, studies and presents the history of Chatsworth and the other communities of the Greater San Fernando Valley.                                                              comments by Jerry Fecht


The Museum of the San Fernando Valley 
18860 Nordhoff St., Suite 204 
Northridge, CA 91324-3885 
Telephone:  818-347-9665

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

A PEEK AT CHATSWORTH IN 1951

BUILDING A GREAT MUSEUM FOR THE SAN FERNANDO VALLEY

Sixty three years ago downtown Chatsworth in the San Fernando Valley looked a lot like it does today, except for the priceless vintage automobiles.  Writing to Fran Irvine on Sunnydell Trail in Hollywood, Emme said on her August 1951 postcard, "Dear Fran, Hope Orman and family have arrived and all ok. I am busy preparing to move. Packing a few things every day. Everything ok. Hope to see you soon. Emme".

Vintage postcards from Chatsworth, California 1951 - Gift to The Museum of the San Fernando Valley from Gary Fredburg 2014.  (click on imafges to enlarge them.)  Chatsworth Market, Valley Country Cafe.






Tuesday, November 12, 2013

FRED ASTAIRE AND GINGER ROGERS

CHERISHING OUR VALLEY         2013

My son Brendan and I drove to Chatsworth on Veterans' Day to visit his uncle's grave. While we were there we walked to the entrance area of Oakwood Cemetery to see the final resting places of two very famous American performers. 


Ginger Rogers 
1911 to 1995
 An amazing performer, Ginger Rogers was an actress, singer and wonderful dancer. She starred on the stage, in films, radio and television. She was one of the greatest stars of the 20th century. Ginger Rogers frequently worked with the great dancer Fred Astaire.

Fred Astaire 
1899 – 1987

A mega-star performer, Fred Astaire was an actor, musician, singer, stage actor, and above all one of the greatest dancers in American history. He was the dance partner of Ginger Rogers in many films.

 "The history of dance on film begins with Astaire". 
Gene Kelly  

Help your Museum build our San Fernando Valley Entertainment Industry library. 
Donate tax-deductible videos, films, records and other artifacts to your Museum today.
The Museum of the San Fernando Valley
Acquisitions Committee
21031 Ventura Blvd., Suite 419
Woodland Hills, CA 91364-2230

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Friday, July 19, 2013

SNOW IN CHATSWORTH

CHERISHING OUR VALLEY                  2013

F.H. Schepler Realty Chatsworth, California after a snow - Photograph - Gift to The Museum of the San Fernando Valley from Gary Fredburg 2013. 

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

CHATSWORTH FROM THE AIR IN 1954

CHERISHING OUR VALLEY                  2013

In November 1954, photographer Steve Barrett took these great images of Chatsworth overlooking Devonshire and Topanga. The images, gifts to The Museum of the San Fernando Valley from Gary Fredburg in 2013, were among items that once belonged to a Chatsworth realtor F. H. Schepler.

 Looking east on Devonshire Avenue in Chatsworth - November 9, 1954

  Looking north on Devonshire Avenue in Chatsworth - November 9, 1954

  Looking south on Devonshire Avenue in Chatsworth - November 9, 1954

Real estate office of F. H. Schepler in Chatsworth c. 1954

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

CHATSWORTH FARM 1928

CHERISHING OUR VALLEY        2013

These images of 1928 Chatsworth were likely taken on the Schlepler ranch property. Photos are a gift to The Museum of the San Fernando Valley 2013.  (click on images to enlarge them)

 Note: farmhouse hidden in the trees to the right.



Saturday, April 13, 2013

THANKS TO THE MUSEUM WALKING TOUR GUESTS TODAY

CHERISHING OUR VALLEY                  2013

Special thanks to the walking tour guests of The Museum today. I've been on the tour myself a half dozen times and learn more about Van Nuys every time I take, or lead the tour. Don't forget LA Heritage Day tomorrow (Sunday) at the Pueblo Plaza by Olvera Street.  And, make sure you come to the Mural Manifesto at the Madrid Theatre in Canoga Park on Tuesday. Flyers on each event are on this blog. Plan on attending the North Hollywood walking tour next month.




Thanks to Bronwyn Ralph and Michel Stevens for their tour support today. Join The Museum soon, and, better yet, consider becoming one of our volunteer tour docents.

 Santa Susana School c. 1894. Gift to The Museum of the San Fernando Valley from Gary Fredburg 2013 (click on the image to enlarge it.)


Thursday, April 11, 2013

SCHAPLER FAMILY CHATSWORTH 1943

CHERISHING OUR VALLEY            2013

Eleanor Schapler, Ralph De Clemonts and baby Louise Schapler - February1943 - looking West from a home on Andora Street. Gift to The Museum of the San Fernando Valley from Gary Fredburg 2013.
Pants suits became fashionable for women during the years of the Second World War.
Eleanor Schapler, Frank Schapler holding baby Louise, and Ralph De Clemonts - February 1943

POSTCARD VIEWS OF CHATSWORTH

CHERISHING OUR VALLEY                   2013

Our faithful contributor to the archives of The Museum of the San Fernando Valley Gary Fredburg seems to be concentrating these days on the town of Chatsworth.  What red blooded Valley kid didn't take a try to climb these photogenic rocks at Stoney Point?  (click on images to enlarge them.)



Stoney Point "famous landmark on Santa Susana Pass in the San Fernando Valley. This impressive rugged rock formation, offering a challenge to mountain climbers, in Los Angeles Historic Monument No. 132. Card is printed as a bicentennial project of the Chatworth Historical Society."

The Paradise Shop - "located in the beautiful West end of the San Fernando Valley, intriguing the visitor to this unique shop of California fruit creations. Featuring sweet spiced figs and sweet sliced watermelon, jams and jellies.:

CHATSWORTH PARK SCHOOL c 1949

CHERISHING OUR VALLEY       2013

Around 64 years ago this photograph of children and their teachers was taken at Chatsworth Park
School.  It is a gift to The Museum of the San Fernando Valley from Gary Fredburg 2013. (click on the image to enlarge it.)


Friday, March 15, 2013

CHATSWORTH PHARMACY

CHERISHING OUR VALLEY                 2013

Gary Fredburg, the Museum's largest contributor of historic paper memorabilia to our archives, never ceases to amaze us with his discoveries of Valley historical materials. Here's a "Seasons Greetings" holiday card from a bygone time in Chatsworth.
"Chatsworth Drug Store building, owned by McIntyrs for a while - Corner Devonshire & Topanga."

Chatsworth Pharmacy - historic postcard - Gift to The Museum of the San Fernando Valley from Gary Fredburg 2013.  (click on image to enlarge it.)

Sunday, February 26, 2012

2012 Community Resource Directory - Northridge - Porter Ranch - Chatsworth - Grandada Hills

        MY VALLEY    MY MUSEUM    MY STORY       

With the North Valley Regional Chamber of Commerce, Los Angeles City Councilman Mitchell Englander, and the North Valley Community Connection newspaper, The Museum of the San Fernando Valley has provided a useful area-wide  2012 community resource guide. The Museum provided editorial and photo content for the work. Nancy Cartwright (perhaps better known as the voice of Bart Simpson) has an inspirational community message as the honorary mayor of Northridge.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

COUNTRY DELI RESTAURANT CHATSWORTH

 Cherishing Our Valley  2012

On January 5th, some members of The Museum Community were able to witness the winter sunrise at the ancient Native American pictograph cave in the Santa Suzanna Mountains. After that once in a lifetime opportunity, Board Members Scott Sterling, Gary Fredburg and I went to the Country Deli Restaurant on Topanga Canyon in Chatsworth. The food was great, the service super and the prices more than fair. Plied with terrific coffee, we walked through the restaurant to enjoy the home-made murals of Chatsworth celebrities.  Unfortunately, I only had a cell phone camera with me, so you can bet that the Country Deli Restaurant will be high on my list to take better pictures of its art ... and the pancakes!

COUNTRY DELI RESTAURANT
9901 Topanga Canyon. Chatsworth 91311
1 (818) 709-5612








When he asked why we were taking pictures, this young worker at the Country Deli asked if
he could be included. I told this the would be subtracted from his 15 minutes of fame. 

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

THE KING OF THE COWBOYS LIVED AND WORKED IN THE SAN FERNANDO VALLEY

DISCOVERING OUR VALLEY   2011
Just so that you old time cowboy movie enthusiasts don't feel slighted, here is a vintage postcard photograph of "The King of the Cowboys" Roy Rogers. 
Owning a genuine Roy Rogers' cap pistol was a major status symbol for school kids in the late 1940's and early 1950's.  Roy and Dale had a small ranch just off of Topanga Canyon Boulevard between Canoga Park and Chatsworth. Do you remember the name of Roy's faithful dog? How about his horse, or his Jeep's name?

Roy Rogers - Cowboy movie star and recording artist - postcard gift to The Museum of the San Fernando Valley from Gary Fredburg 2011.  (click on image to enlarge)

Saturday, July 30, 2011

CHATSWORTH'S WONDERFUL STONEY POINT

DISCOVERING OUR VALLEY    2011

The impressive stoney outcroppings of Stoney Point in Chatsworth were, in the 1930s and '40s a national symbol of the American West. Cowboy and adventure movies were often filmed among these huge boulders.

Stoney Point Chatsworth - vintage postcard - gift to The Museum of the San Fernando Valley from Gary Fredburg 2011.  (click on image to enlarge)

" Famous landmark on Santa Susana Pass in the San Fernando Valley. This impressive rugged rock formation, offering a challenge to mountain climbers, it Los Angeles Historic Monument Nop. 132. Card is printed as a Bicentennial project of the Chatsworth Historical Society."

Note: The Bicentennial of the City of Los Angeles was in 1981. The American Bicentennial was in 1976. 

Monday, November 8, 2010

MIKE BREEDEN THINKS ABOUT CHATSWORTH IN 1962

2010  THE YEAR OF VALLEY ADVENTURES



“Oh I remember – Chatsworth about 1962
by Mike Breeden

         You speak of the Munch Box and yes, it was such a special place that it still is a special place. It is a part of Chatsworth which seemed to have many special places.
          I could tell you of a few, oh yes I remember, I remember walking past the Candy Cat and the Country Squire and Sunset Liquors and Los Toros every morning on my way to Miss Lee's kindergarten class at Chatsworth Park Elementary, but let me share a memory of Chatsworth that though gone now, was cool and dim and beautiful and green and timeless. Let me remind you.
         When I was young, Chatsworth was in transition from a quiet agricultural town of endless sunny orange groves to becoming suburbia. Many of us were children of the city and the suburbs that technology created, but we were lucky enough to grow up in this quiet, idyllic village before it became part of the mega city that is
now LA.
         Walk with me up Canoga Avenue in another time when orange groves stretched from Topanga Canyon to Balboa. As you cross Devonshire you would cross Brown's Creek that starts far up in Oat Mountain. Cross the street and look at the huge row of eucalyptus trees on the left of the street protecting an orange grove from the Santana Winds. On the right are houses of the new people in town that work in the young aerospace industry, the movie industry and the new local business of the San Fernando Valley.
         Still, now Canoga is just a dusty dirt road running through farmland. On the other side of the creek is a large meadow that is a sheep farm that goes from the creek to Eton Avenue. As you pass San Jose Street there is a field on the right where they grow squash to feed cattle and small ranch spreads on the left backing to the railroad tracks including a pheasant farm. The sides of the road rise up to the thin fences of the fields. Tumble weeds line the road.
          Now you are walking in to Chatsworth as it was, a quiet place of farms that usually show no movement except in the frenetic times that mark the seasons of a farm. It is dusty. The plants have a brown cover from dirt the occasional car leaves drifting behind. There are dark brown beer bottles in the space beside the road. Not that so many are thrown there, but that there has been so much time for them to gather undisturbed. You cross Chatsworth Street, an adventure so pristine that no child today would be allowed in such an unspoiled solitary place. Then it was children that imagined monsters in the unknown. Now it is the adults. Really, it was just quiet farm fields beyond where the developers had ventured and the city had spread. To us then, it was nature undisturbed or just perhaps not despoiled by humans.
         I knew I was past where I was supposed to venture, but this was remote enough that my parents had not thought to forbid my venturing here. It was empty anyway. It was fields surrounded by giant eucalyptus with a majesty I was to young to understand, but still a presence I could sense. There were real giants when I grew up. They were ageless dark green giants and very mysterious. The farms had a vitality I could feel and still feel to this day. There was life in those fields, from the giant trees to the fragrant groves to the spreading vines and the big green caterpillars on the silkweed plants beside the road. I remember the buzzards circling high above that told of both life and death. It was quiet and empty and had the beauty of empty places and the peace of quiet places and then I would think I should go no further and I would head home to the familiar comfort of a so civilized home. Chatsworth sometimes seemed too wild even to an adventurous child as myself.
         The dirt roads were dusty, but as they were paved, the vitality and wildness vanished, but oh yes, oh yes, I do remember. Beauty and wonder like that must not be forgotten and the mountains will always be there to remind those that remember to look for those small remaining places of Chatsworth as it was.”

Sunday, September 20, 2009

SPHYNX ROCK IN CHATSWORTH

2009 The Year of Valley History

In a short time, Phyllis Hansen and Michael Stevens of your Museum's Board will have our first interactive website on line. This vintage postcard of Sphynx Rock and other images featured in this blog will be included with hundreds more stories and objects from the Archives of The Museum. Fortunately, because we are not as yet burdened with physical site expenses, contributions (even small ones) can really facilitate our progress. If you would like to support the website or help us secure artifacts such as Sphynx Rock, contact us today 1 (818) 347-9665 or mail your tax deductible support to:
The Museum of the San Fernando Valley
21031 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 419
Woodland Hills, CA 91364

Sphynx Rock Chatsworth Park Canyon - vintage postcard in the Archives of the Museum of the San Fernando Valley - gift of Gerald Fecht September 2009

Detail of Sphynx Rock Chatsworth Park Canyon - vintage postcard