Tel: (818) 347-9665 PST

TheMuseumSFV@gmail.com

www.TheMuseumSFV.org




Showing posts with label WEDDINGTON HOUSE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WEDDINGTON HOUSE. Show all posts

Monday, October 19, 2009

YOUR MUSEUM - WORKING EVERY DAY TO SAVE THE HISTORIC WEDDINGTON HOUSE

2009 The Year of Valley History

Preserving the Weddington House is a major priority for The Museum of the San Fernando Valley. Here are four snapshots from the early days of the historic house from the David High Collection. Now highly endangered, the Weddington House could provide educators, school children and others interested in Valley history with a great venue from which to glimpse into another time and "place within a place."

Fred Weddington & Two Unknown Women
in front of Weddington House, Lankershim California - Gift to The Museum of the San Fernando Valley by David High - July 2009 (click on image to enlarge) Refer to photograph HC-114 Likely a wedding related photograph. but it might have been before the Pasadena Rose Parade, an important events for the Weddingtons.

Unknown Woman at Weddington House. Gift to The Museum of the San Fernando Valley by David High - July 2009 (click on image to enlarge) Refer to photograph HC-112
Note the details in this snapshot. A hammock on the front porch, a hose connection for the front lawn, a vintage automobile.

Fred Weddington & Group of Lankershim Residents - Gift to The Museum of the San Fernando Valley by David High - July 2009 (click on image to enlarge) Refer to photograph HC-113
Fred Weddington is at extreme left, with his fist on lawn.

Unidentified woman at the Weddington House, Gift to The Museum of the San Fernando Valley by David High - July 2009 (click on image to enlarge) Refer to photograph HC-112

Notes: very faint “Printed by Merick Reynolds Co.
222 South Broadway, Los Angeles, California

Your gift to The Museum of the San Fernando Valley let's us know that we aren't alone in our effort to create a great Museum of history and culture for the San Fernando Valley. Call today to become part of the Museum Community. 1 (818) 347-9665

Thursday, July 23, 2009

SOME VERY BAD NEWS ABOUT THE WEDDINGTON HOUSE

During the best of times, preserving, moving and restoring an historic house is a time consuming challenge. Unfortunately, time is not on the side of the highly endangered Weddington House in the San Fernando Valley.
Once hidden between industrial buildings that have been torn down, the grand old Weddington has for some months been totally exposed. Without residential neighbors and development projects slowed by the failed economy, the Mother House of North Hollywood was struck by vandals this week.
For the last several months, the issues of weed abatement, jimmied doors, a broken window and pigeons in the attic have been the old structure's bane, but this week has been different!
An entire roof section of one of the most historic houses in the Valley has been the target of destructive tagging by a dangerous, territorial street gang. The glaring markings are, in effect, a challenge to rival thugs a statement that the area belongs to the vandals. Retaliation, in the form of more tagging will follow.
History and cultural communities must act now, if the Weddington House is to be saved for us, and for future generations.
In the early days of our Republic, townspeople alarmed their neighbors and demanded action through something called a "huy and cry". Let's cry out together that the Weddington House must be protected and moved to North Hollywood Park immediately.

Jerry Fecht - The Museum of the San Fernando Valley 1 (818) 347-9665



The San Fernando Valley, in the heart of the Creative Capital of the World, deserves a great Museum of history and culture.

Thursday, June 11, 2009

STORM LAKE IOWA AND THE SAN FERNANDO VALLEY'S HISTORIC WEDDINGTON HOUSE

From this week's STORM LAKE PILOT TRIBUNE
by editor Dana Larson

"On a plain concrete lot, surrounded by bowed chain-link fence and in the shadows of stark industrial warehouses, sits a boarded-up old clapboard house, out of place and frequented by vandals and homeless squatters. It doesn't look like much of anything. But to hundreds of people in North Hollywood, California, it represents their heritage - they fondly call it "The Mother House" - and they are fighting to save it, Storm Lake roots and all.
It's a long story, reaching back into the earliest days of Storm Lake, as well as meandering through the heart of California history.
Wilson C. Weddington was born in 1847 in Anderson, Indiana, and apparently fought in the Civil War while still very young. After taking a bride, Mary Ann, the daughter of a Civil War surgeon, he was lured to her home state of Iowa by the promise of rich land to be homesteaded.
In the 1870s, the couple settled at the just-founded village of Storm Lake to farm, but Weddington soon left his land when asked to become the third sheriff in Buena Vista County history, an office he held for a dozen years while raising his two sons.
Indians and gypsies and pioneers were giving way to modern trappings in Iowa, and in the fall of 1887, Weddington decided to travel west to visit his sister Mollie, who was married to the superintendent of the vast, desolate Lankershim Ranch which sprawled across 12,000 acres of the sunbaked San Fernando Valley, from the current location of Burbank to the foot of what is now knows as the Hollywood Hills. The region was still frequented by cowboys and Indians. According to family lore, the Iowa sheriff was "dazzled" by what he saw.
The ranch had an auction for some small, dusty parcels of land it didn't need, and Wilson decided to buy a corner lot on streets that existed only on paper - now known as the trendy Riverside Drive. The family went back to Iowa, packed up what they could carry, and left Storm Lake for good the following year. They rented a tiny house on the ranch site, what is now Burbank; scraped up what money they could to start buying a few acres of empty, desolate land - land that today is worth millions and millions of dollars in the heart of the Hollywood Arts District.
They took all of Iowa that they could with them, reportedly having their home in Storm Lake dismantled and carried 1,700 miles west by railroad and wagons, to be reassembled at the edge of a vast barley field on the ranch in 1891.
He probably couldn't have known that he was standing on the most important spot in California. Long known as Toluca, or "fertile valley" to the native Tongva Indians, the region is home to Spanish missions that date to the time of the American Revolution. The precise spot Weddington chose to homestead was the same one where Lt. Col. John C. Fremont of the United States and General Andres Pico of Mexico met on the porch of an adobe to sign the treaty that was to end the war between their two countries. The spot is known as the beginning of statehood for California and the Manifest Destiny for Americans. Every January there is a fiesta and reenactment of this fateful moment.
In 1890, Wilson, convinced his lonely homestead would one day be the site of a booming community, established the location as a city, which he named Taluca in honor of the natives who had preceded him there. Weddington bought 12 acres of the future town site himself for $720 and later purchased an additional 20 acres, and encouraged the 10 other families ranching in the region to support his bold scheme.
Taluca did indeed become a small village, then a thriving town, and by the time it was renamed North Hollywood at Wilson's urging in an attempt to woo the fledgling film industry, it became the host to the new "Universal City" pioneering movie studio and home of film stars such as Bob Hope, as well as the daring female aviator Amelia Earheart
In the beginning, when the Southern Pacific railroad was reaching to bisect the nation, its path went right through the Weddingtons' few acres, and he provided the land they needed, sacrificing his acres of carefully-tended fruit trees. A grateful President Grover Cleveland personally declared Weddington as the first postmaster of that region of California. The railroad named the station Lankershim in honor of one of two original owners of the ranch. The other is the namesake for Van Nuys Blvd. The living room of Wilson's home became the first post office, then he established a general store.
His son Milo became superintendent of the rachos, and president of his own fruit company as rich orchards thrived in the California soil. In fact, the Weddington family, with a few neighbors, are credited with developing the cling peach, still a staple of every grocery store. Area farmers, thanks to the Weddingtons, could now ship their crops across the country and beyond by rail.
Younger son Fred, born in Storm Lake, became the first constable of Lankershim. Around the turn of the century, he earned fame for single-handedly riding down and capturing two holdup men, having them tried, overseeing the sentencing and delivering them personally to San Quentin prison, all within less than 24 hours. Guy and Fred later established and led Hollywood National Bank, opened in 1905, and the Weddington Investment Company, incorporated in 1910. Fred remained active in bulding the community as a land developer until his death in the 1960s.
"The vision, hard work and perseverance of the Weddingtons enabled the town to grow and prosper," a history of the region says.
So much so that the Weddington's family home had to be moved away to make way for progress. Wilson Weddington pushed for a theater to be developed in the 1920s, moving his own house to make way for it beside the family bank.
In all the house was moved three times, finally plunked down in a residential neighborhood a few blocks from the original site, both on Weddington Street. Slowly the neighborhood gave way to the industrial area it is now until only the Weddington House remained. The home's history was largely forgotten, and it passed through the hands of various owners and tenants, its charming touches slowly stripped away, and by a few years ago, it faced likely demolition.
Guy Weddington McCreary, a descendant of the former sheriff from Storm Lake, traced the home to Iowa and a local museum revealed its history and its significance in the establishment of the Hollywood region; destruction of the house was staved off. It was named a California Historical-Cultural Monument in 2007.
Still, controversy raged around the little house, even amid the efforts to save it. The powers that be decided the house should be moved 15 miles away to a museum in Highland Park near the Pasadena Freeway.
Residents of North Hollywood rallied.
"Thank God for e-mail, because literally overnight 400 to 500 people had objected to the city, and that got the city council behind the effort to keep the house here in North Hollywood. We think history belongs where it was made," Gerald Fecht, former director of The Museum of the San Fernando Valley in Beverly Hills, told the Pilot-Tribune this week.
The locals propose to move the house to popular nearby North Hollywood Park, which coincidentally was developed on land Weddington donated to the city for parks. There, it would be restored not to its original form, but to represent the era somewhat later when farmers from places like Iowa journeyed west to transform the arid valley.
It will be fitted out with cutting-edge interactive technology. Visitors to the house will be able to virtually visit historical landmarks all over the state from the house, and use their cell phones to interact with electronic stars around the property.
"It's pretty amazing," Fecht says.
With California hard-hit by the economic crisis, there is no money yet to move the house, even though the descendant of the Weddingtons has pledged $100,000 to.renovate and maintain the home - only if it is kept in North Hollywood. Supporters worry. Four times in the past three months, it has been broken into and vandalized. One fire in what appears to be a vacant old house, and priceless history will be lost, Fecht says.
For Fecht and others, Storm Lake is a part of the history of Hollywood.
Still in the attic of the home are big crates stenciled with the words "Storm Lake," likely used to ship parts of the house and some of the furnishings.
The Los Angeles Times, which has editorialized to keep the landmark in North Hollywood, says it was build in Storm Lake. So does the historical group PreserveLA. But one researcher claims that it was a different house build in Iowa and moved to the ranch, which was torn down years ago. That controversy too rages on, but Fecht said that numerous items and materials found in the original portions of the house can be easily traced to Iowa. Regardless, the house is the oldest surviving home in the North Hollywood region.
Many of the residents of the area have their own roots in Iowa, too - Fecht and his wife among them, both grew up in Iowa.
"There is a strong stereotype here of Iowa - that it is the salt of the earth, and that the hard working and energetic people from Iowa came here with not a lot of money, but they created this place. The Weddingtons alone discovered wells, built the first post office, first bank, first parks, first fire station, first pool - they built a little Iowa town in California."
And there's another legacy. Weddington planted the first English walnut tree in that part of the country. Thanks to countless generations of birds carrying the seeds in their stomachs, English walnut trees are now found all over that part of California.
The Weddingtons never lost their love for Iowa, Fecht says. "They brought all of their Iowa memorabilia with them. And it is strange, but our museum in California has lots of Iowa history, and even a lot of stuff from the Sac and Fox Indians who must have still been in northwest Iowa when the Weddingtons were there."
Even the ambitious pioneer couldn't have imagined what was ahead for the rural village he founded.
Today, a new Universal CityWalk complex has emerged not far from where Weddington first herded cattle. A growing movie studio and modern subway have sprung up where he tended orchards. There are nearly 35 theaters in the area, and the San Fernando Valley he pioneered is home to some 1.8 million people. The bank, the theater, the parks, the fire stations, the railroad depot Weddington established are still there.
Wilson Weddington was a prominent citizen for the remainder of his life, guiding the city he founded for many years. He served as the President of the Chamber of Commerce he created until 1929, almost 40 years after he arrived.
There are few records today of Wilson Weddington's time as sheriff of the barely-founded Buena Vista County, but in the Hollywood Hills, his name will be forever connected with the bold ambition that began it all."

Minor corrections: The Weddington House was very near Campo de Cahuenga where the final stages of the War with Mexico concluded. Dr. Fecht is the present president of The Museum of the San Fernando Valley. The Museum is not located in Beverly Hills.

Friday, May 15, 2009

VANDALS STRIKE THE WEDDINGTON HOUSE

There is something about “crisis reporting” that always reminds me of the story of the Little Boy Who Cried Wolf. However, like brush fires, small issues if not announced often magnify with destructive consequences. In the last two months, 4 windows have been broken in historic mother-house of North Hollywood. It doesn’t seem like much, but considering the present situation of the Weddington House, continued neglect could easily escalate into a tragedy for generations.

As you may recall, the Weddington House sits today in an area of North Hollywood under commercial development. Once near other structures, it now stands vacant and alone, beckoning vagrants and vandals. As with most historic houses, the aged wooden structure would only take a discarded cigarette or an attempt to cook something, to become a footnote in the heritage of the San Fernando Valley.

Now is the time for all stake holders in the Weddington House preservation and relocation into North Hollywood Park to put the house at the top of their priorities list. The Museum Community calls for action now. Let’s put history to work for today and the future.
Jerry Fecht

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

VANDALS SET FIRE TO HISTORIC HOUSES

Historic houses at San Dieguito - Photo by Gerald Fecht for the Archives of The Museum of the San Fernando Valley 2009 (click on image to enlarge)

My wife Janne, along with two great friends, and I regularly explore the gardens, historic sites and museums of Southern California. Our adventures have taken us from the poppy fields of the Mojave to the Latin American Art Museum in Long Beach. We are poster children for California "in-tourism". Our most recent exploration took us to the San Elijo Lagoon Preserve in San Diego County. The new nature center at the lagoon is a paragon of "green" thinking and construction. I came away with dozens of ideas for future sites for The Museum of the San Fernando Valley. (A fence of recycled re-bar protects the wonderful structure while celebrating the native tule' reeds that are vital to the health of the lagoon.)
After our morning at San Elijo, our friend and lagoon-docent, Elizabeth Venrick took us to yet another terrific experience, the San Dieguito Heritage Museum.
The San Dieguito Heritage Museum is a perfect example of an emerging community-based museum. With its rustic facade and inviting interior, its hard to image that the main museum structure is composed of two surplus classroom trailers. The museum has a simple but meaningful collection of historic artifacts, models, and good photographs. Best of all, it is blessed with really good docents. Two great displays were made by nearby university students who obviously related to the area's histories of surfing and skate boarding.
Outside the museum, two volunteers were cooking lima beans for us visitors. The property of the museum was once one of the largest lima bean growing areas in the United States. Those folks were so nice, they made me wish that I could find lima beans eatable.
Sadly, there was a profound lesson for those of us seeking to preserve the historic Weddington House in North Hollywood. There are two structures in the above photo. Having just visited green San Elijo center, I assumed that someone was instralling sky lights. I was wrong!
Uninhabited and unsecured, the houses were recently set afire by two young girls. You'll have to watch Cops to figure out their motives, but whatever reason, the houses could have been lost forever in the blinking of an eye!
Irrespective if The Museum of the San Fernando Valley is chosen to be the stewards of the Weddington House, our Museum community needs to urge all parties to protect the old Weddington structure and to get it secured in North Hollywood Park as soon as possible. Those aren't skylights!

Friday, April 25, 2008

GUY WEDDINGTON McCREARY

Guy Weddington McCreary - Photo in the Archives of The Museum of the San Fernando Valley - 2008

Valley activist-businessman Guy Weddington McCreary stands at the site of proposed re-location of the "Mother House of North Hollywood". A direct descendent of the Weddington family who founded the city of Lankershim/Toluca, Guy's ancestors donated lands for the North Hollywood Fire Department and Federal Post Office. He also sold what is now North Hollywood Park to our city for the token sum of $10.
Saving the historic Weddington House for the San Fernando Valley has been Guy McCleary's focus for the last year. He and his wife Diane have created the Weddington Heritage Trust to make sure that the gramd old house is kept in the great condition it deserves as the "Mother House" of our Valley.
Guy and Diane are both members of the Board of the Friends of Campo de Cahuenga Historical Memorial Association, and are advisors to The Museum of the San Fernando Valley.

Thursday, February 14, 2008

THANKS! MARY MALLORY - FOR LA TIMES LETTER SUPPORTING WEDDINGTON HOUSE

Plum Tree in Bloom - Tarzana, California - February 14, 2008
Keep History in Mind
Letter to the Los Angeles Times in Response to an Article Entitled
"They Want This Place to Stay Put" Feb. 8, 2008

The Weddington House belongs in North Hollywood, as one of the last vestiges of the San Fernando Valley/s early farming community. It should form a historic district with the 1895 train station, the North Hollywood Library and the Fire Station, all of which stand on land formerly owned by the Weddingtons.
Guy Weddington McCreary's pledge of $100,000 if it remains in North Hollywood would provide much security, restoration and upkeep, something that Heritage Square can't match. We in North Hollywood, Toluca Lake and Studio City are passionate about preserving our history and buildings where they are, and using the Weddington House as the home for a museum of the San Fernando Valley."
Mary Mallory Studio City Feb. 14, 2008

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

THE WEDDINGTON PLATE


Diane McCleary holds 99 year old Weddington Plate - Photo by Gerald Fecht for the Museum of the San Fernando Valley 2008

in 1909, the Weddington Brothers General Merchandizing and Farm Products Company presented their customers with this splendid commemorative calendar plate. Want to give the Brothers a telephone call? The number is Glendale 001.
Just ask anybody in Lankershim, California and they will know where the Weddington Brothers General Merchandizing store is located.
The Museum Community, working to make a great Museum of history and culture for the San Fernando Valley a reality, believes that the historic Weddington House should stay right where it belongs in North Hollywood (once Lankershim Toluca) California.

Friday, February 8, 2008

WEDDINGTON HOUSE ISSUE IN LOS ANGELES TIMES


There is an extensive article about the attempt to save the Weddington House in today's Los Angeles Times.
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-house8feb08,1,6059173.story
The goals Weddington House Committee and The Museum of the San Fernando Valley are simple:
1) keep the house in the San Fernando Valley
2) keep the house in North Hollywood
3) move the house to a transportation-friendly site
4) restore the house for the purposes of history and culture, not as
administrative center for other uses.

Tom LaBonge's office got over 50 emails from us! Keep him informed of your wishes.

Monday, February 4, 2008

WEDDINGTON CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE HISTORY OF THE SAN FERNANDO VALLEY

Just some of what the Weddington family did…..

· Came to North Hollywood in 1880’s as ranch managers for the Lankershim/Van Nuys family
· Bought and begin farming their own land at Lankershim and Chandler
· Wilson Weddington serves as Sheriff of our community
· Begin operation of Weddington Brothers General Store
· 1892 Petition for a U S Post Office and Official recognition as the “Town of Toluca ”. Wilson Weddington is named first Postmaster for the town and the first U S Post Office is set up in the living room of the Weddington House.
· 1892 Fight to bring Southern Pacific Railroad to Valley. While they succeed, the railroad names the new station “Lankershim”. Area farmers, thanks to the Weddingtons – can now ship their crops across the country and beyond.
· Weddington family manage and then purchase the Bonner Packing Company. The largest and most advanced fruit packing and canning company in the region. Agriculture now booms.
· Weddington builds the first theater in the community – the El Portal Theater. They build the theater on the site of their house.
· The Weddington House is moved 300 feet north, just across from the train station and town square.
· Recognizing that farmers need capitol to be successful, the Weddington’s form the first local bank. That bank will become Secuity Bank, and continues to stand on the Weddington’s old homestead property at Lankershim and Chandler . Weddington manages that bank for more than 30 years.
· The Weddington House is moved again (to the present site) to make room for the bank building.
· The Weddington family makes a gift of the first fire station to the community, which still stands today, on Weddington Street – just behind the El Portal Theatre. Later, when that station becomes two small, they build a second larger station, which still stands today as Fire Station Number 60, at the corner of Chandler and Vineland.
· Knowing that a growing community needs open space, the Weddington family leads an effort to build North Hollywood Park . Later, Weddington will fight to build the North Hollywood Library, which still stands in the Park.
· Weddington family later extends their commitment to open space by donating farm land for the creation of both North and South Weddington Parks .
· When Hollywood would “boom” with studios, the Weddington family would argue to change the name of Lankershim to North Hollywood – hoping to encourage studios to expand to the Valley.
· The Weddington family would create the first North Hollywood Chamber of Commerce and the first North Hollywood JayCee’s.
· The Weddington family would help in the fight to bring water from the Owens Valley to Los Angeles , and later argue for the creation of the 101 Freeway, to create a direct transportation link from Los Angeles to the San Fernando Valley

These are just some of the things the Weddington family did for our community. Please help us preserve their heritage.

Saturday, February 2, 2008

SAVING THE HISTORIC WEDDINGTON HOUSE FOR THE SAN FERNANDO VALLEY

SAVING THE HISTORIC WEDDINGTON HOUSE FOR THE SAN FERNANDO VALLEY


Dear concerned residents of the San Fernando Valley.

I am writing to you on an urgent matter. The priceless old Weddington Home, the mother-house of North Hollywood and Toluca Lake is about to be moved miles from the Valley to the Arroyo Seco off of the Pasadena Freeway.
It is our understanding JSM Capital, LLC, a responsible Valley area developer who owns the property on which the house presently stands, plans to pay for its removal, a new foundation and reasonable restoration. The house was moved years ago to its present site, therefore the land on which it stands does not have historic significance. We salute JSM Capital for its respect for our community's heritage. However, moving the Weddington House from the San Fernando Valley is a tragic mistake.
Over 1,800,000 people make their homes and living in the San Fernando Valley. Unfortunately little regard has been demonstrated to the preservation of our history until recent years. The Museum Community believes that with so very few historical homes left in the Los Angeles suburbs in the Valley, that important structures such as the Weddington House must be preserved and left in the places where their historic impact was made.
The Weddington House is the last surviving original farm house, and the last surviving building owned by a great family who contributed so much to the creation and success of our community. The family of Wilson C. Weddington established North Hollywood, Toluca Lake and impacted the development of the entire San
Fernando Valley. They opened our first banks, post office, and helped develop the North Hollywood Fire Department as well as North Hollywood Park.
Valley school children, teachers and other residents should have access to the Weddington house. The structure should be relocated near where the Orange Line Busway and Red Line Subway meet.
The Museum of the San Fernando Valley is prepared to step forward to manage the Weddington House in exchange for the structure's accessibility to the public for cultural and historical exhibits and a headquarters from which to plan and develop a great museum of history and culture to serve the entire San Fernando Valley. However, irrespective of the Museum's possible stewardship of the house, we believe that it should remain where it belongs in the NoHo district of Los Angeles.
We understand the urgency that the developers feel about getting their investment project underway. But, now is a "how to" time, rather than "why we can't do it" time. The house can still be moved in a timely manner, (actually saving the developer money, if it is moved locally) at the unused edge of a local park or other city-owned land.
Thank you for your time and consideration.

Gerald R. Fecht Ph.D.
President The Museum of the San Fernando Valley
21031 Ventura Boulevard
Suite 419
Woodland Hills, CA 91364

Thursday, January 31, 2008

WILL THE WEDDINGTON HOUSE BE NEXT TO DISAPPEAR?

Valley Music Center - Now Demolished - Postcard in the collection of The Museum of the San Fernando Valley - gift of Gary Fredburg - 2008

Don't you just love it, when the media announces that priceless artifacts or art from the American West has been transferred to the Smithsonian or a New York museum? If you are like most of us, in this era of carbon footprints, getting back east may be at best a very rare occasion!
Well meaning people often remark about how there is no culture in the San Fernando Valley. Could it be that's because its been shipped away - or worse yet simply demolished. As a youth, I saw the great Dame Judith Anderson perform Media in the Valley Music Center, but the great performances there have been silenced forever.

Now, a move is afoot to move the historic Weddington House, out of the community that the Weddington familly founded, across our city. Some are saying that this expensive move will occur in a matter of weeks. For children studying local history in Valley schools, the mother house of North Hollywood might as well be moved to Mars.
Historical buildings belong in the communities where their impact was made! How many historic Valley buildings are within a mile or two of your home?
We need every inch of open parkland we can manage to keep in Los Angeles, but in the San Fernando Valley we desperately need our few remaining historic structures available to the public - especially teachers and students.
It is not good enough to sigh, after the fact, and say "oh well, at least the Weddington House didn't get destroyed." Inaccessibility might as well mean destruction.
Our political representatives need to step up to this matter. Ask them to consider the possibilities for the Valley communities they represent.
Help KEEP THE WEDDINGTON HOUSE IN THE VALLEY WHERE IT BELONGS.
Contact your city council person right away!

Thursday, January 24, 2008

JAN. 2008 - BOARD MEETING - THE MUSEUM OF THE SAN FERNANDO VALLEY

Garden Door - The Schindler House - Photo for The Museum of the San Fernando Valley by Gerald Fecht - 2008

The Monthly Board Meeting of The Museum of the San Fernando Valley will take place on Wednesday January 30th.

Location: Lankershim Arts Center
5108 Lankershim Boulevard
North Hollywood (NoHo Arts District)

Time: 6:30 PM until 8 PM

Major Topics: Saving the Weddington House for North Hollywood, Establishment of The Museum's Endowment Fund, and the Town Hall Forum in Northridge on February 15th.

One of the most important architects of the 20th century was Austrian-born Rudolph Schindler. Fortunately, the San Fernando Valley has several structures designed by Schindler, now considered one of the most significant architectural innovators of his era.
In the next few months, The Museum of the San Fernando Valley will use this journal-blog site to tell more about Schindler and his contributions to our lives in Southern California.