HISTORY

PDFPrintE-mail
grid_history

Andres_PicoDid giant mastodons once lumber through the San Fernando Valley? Did saber-toothed cats await their prey along the banks of an ancient Los Angeles River? These, and questions like the location of Michael Jackson’s last rehearsal space in Burbank and the routes across the Valley of the legendary Butterfield Stagecoaches, all deserve to be answered – and, are the great fun of creating a Museum of history and culture for our part of California.

The San Fernando Valley has an endlessly interesting story to tell. It is the responsibility of your Museum to study complex political issues related to the lives of the Valley’s 1,800,000 residents, as well as where the lumber came from to build the Pioneer Church in Chatsworth.

As we amass more documents and artifacts, The Museum receives more and more telephone and email inquiries about things, such as the location of film composers’ homes and details about the great floods of the Los Angeles River in the 1930s.

Still in our fledgling stage, our efforts today depend today on volunteers and are a labor of love, but very soon we will be building a professional museum staff to oversee the growth of our research library, respond to the inquiries of scholars and do the never ending job of protecting and documenting our many treasures.

History doesn’t generally arrive in neat little packages. Photographs frequently arrive boxed without names or dates. Not thinking of the future, letters are simply signed, “love Betty” or newspaper clippings come without dates and sources. Please be patient with us as we add to this section of The Museum’s website.

To make your exploration of San Fernando Valley history and culture easier, we’ve broken down your journey into major categories such as: Aviation and Aerospace, Community and Communities, and Natural History. Here’s what to expect in this section:

•  San Fernando Valley in Pre-History
•  Early Native Americans
•  The Era of Spanish Colonialism
•  The Era of the Ranchos and Californios
•  Campo de Cahuenga and Arrival of Americans
•  Pioneer Towns and Ranches
•  Farms and  Farm Living
•  Valley Life Before and During World War II
•  Valley Industries and Entrepreneurs
•  Post WWII Population Explosion & Suburbs
•  The 1950s and Early 1960s
•  Vietnam War and Era of Social Changes
•  The Modern Era
•  Shaping the Future
 

Here is a sampling how history has been shaped by events based in the San Fernando Valley.

January 13, 1847 is likely the most monumental day in San Fernando Valley’s modern-era beginnings.

John_C._Fremont-_First_Gov_of_CAOn this date, General Andres Pico of the California people and Lt. Col. John C. Fremont representing the United States forces met at a decaying adobe in the Cahuenga Pass. Here, they jointly signed an agreement that peacefully ended the Mexican-American War in California. This document, the Articles of Capitulation, became known as the Treaty of Cahuenga. It is, effectively, California’s Birth Certificate.

Here, on San Fernando Valley soil, is where the United States had, at long last, achieved its goal of Manifest Destiny, for as soon as California became a state just two years later, we were one nation coast to coast.

The occasion of this treaty is re-enacted annually at this very site every January, the Campo de Cahuenga, which today stands in the shadow of another historic Valley treasure, NBC Universal Studios.

History is still being made at the site. When the construction of the Red Line and metro stop adjacent to the Campo prompted an archaeological dig, the foundation of the original adobe was discovered, leading historians to new thoughts of its origins.

For more information about The Museum of the San Fernando Valley, please contact us at (818) 347-9665 PST or history@TheMuseumSFV.org or visit the Contact page.

Please also join us on our blog at http://museumsanfernandovalley.blogspot.com.

 

Donate to the MSFV

To make a donation, sign up for an event or become a member, please click the donate button. Credit cards and PayPal are accepted.

Connect with the MSFV (RIGHT)

FacebookBloggerTwitterYoutube

Random Images

Latest Blog Entry What's New? Resources & Links The MSFV Store
  • NEW LEADERSHIP FOR THE CITY AND THE MUSEUM

    CHERISHING OUR VALLEY                 2013Newly elected President of The Museum of the San Fernando Valley, Scott Sterling greets incoming  Eric Garcetti the Mayor of Los Angeles.  Sterling was attracted to Museum involvement through an abiding interest in historic architecture and public[…]

    Read more...

Please visit this area again soon for the latest MSFV updates.

The Museum has opened an Amazon store!

Please visit the store and browse our collection of interesting Valley-related products.

shop_then_now shop_tarzan visit the amazon store