Ventura County Historic Landmarks & Points of Interest
The Ventura County Historic Landmarks & Points of Interest consist of buildings, sites, and neighborhoods designated by Ventura County Cultural Heritage Board as historic landmarks and points of interest in Ventura County, California. The county board of supervisors created the Cultural Heritage Board in 1966 and in August 1968, two sites were designated: the Faulkner House (VCHL No. 1) near Santa Paula; and the Edwards Adobe in Saticoy (VCHL No. 2).[1] The scope was established to include the entire county: both cities and the unincorporated areas. The cities of Fillmore, Oxnard, Port Hueneme, Simi Valley, and Thousand Oaks have the county Cultural Heritage Board advise them and those designations are listed here.[1] The cities of Moorpark, Ojai, Santa Paula, and Ventura established their own separate historic designation systems with the City of Ventura Historic Landmarks and Districts developing into an extensive list. The Port Hueneme Historical Society Museum houses historical artifacts, photographs and information on the history of the Hueneme area. The museum is in the Hueneme Bank Building (VCHL No. 32).[2]
Historic Landmarks
[edit]VCHL No. | Name | Image | Address | City | Date listed | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Faulkner House | 14292 West Telegraph Rd. 34°19′36″N 119°06′25″W / 34.326686°N 119.107079°W |
Santa Paula | 8/68 | Queen Anne style farmhouse with three-story octagonal tower built 1894; also listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1991; now operated as the Hansen Trust Agricultural Learning Center[3] | |
2 | Edwards Adobe | West of Edwards Ranch Road 34°18′40″N 119°08′00″W / 34.311209°N 119.133407°W |
Saticoy | 8/68 3/90 |
Two-story house built in 1860 for William Dewey Hobson; it combines Mexican and "Yankee clapboard" styles; designation revoked in 1977, then restored in 1990[4] | |
3 | Row of eucalyptus trees | Highway 101, east of Lewis Road | Camarillo | A row of 1,000 eucalyptus trees planted in 1892 for Don Adolfo Camarillo's ranch[5] | ||
4 | Cook Mansion | 829 North Park Street 34°25′05″N 118°47′42″W / 34.418141°N 118.795122°W |
Piru | 1/69 | Queen Anne style mansion built in 1886, destroyed by fire in 1981 and then rebuilt in 1983; also known as the Newhall Mansion and the Piru Mansion[6] | |
5 | Rancho Arnaz Adobe | 9504 North Ventura Avenue 34°24′31″N 119°17′49″W / 34.408578°N 119.296843°W |
Oak View | 1/69 | Built in 1863, it was the home of Don Jose Arnaz who leased and then purchased the 50,000-acre Mission San Buenaventura property from the Mexican government; also known as the Stage Route Half-Way House; it is the oldest continuously-occupied residence in the county[7] | |
6 | Simi Adobe–Strathearn House | 137 Strathearn Place 34°16′28″N 118°48′05″W / 34.274435°N 118.801291°W |
Simi Valley | 1/69 | Built in 1810, also known as the de la Guerra Adobe; part of the Strathearn Historical Park; also designated as California Historical Landmark No. 979 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978[8] | |
7 | Sanchez Adobe | 2317 Los Angeles Avenue | Saticoy | 4/69 | Built with one story in 1838, second story added c. 1900 [not found at designated location; moved?] | |
8 | Don Adolfo Camarillo House | 201 Camarillo Ranch Rd. | Camarillo | 4/69 | Built in 1893 | |
9 | Santa Clara Schoolhouse | 20030 Telegraph Rd. | Santa Paula | 4/69 | Colonial style one-room schoolhouse with high tower, built 1896–97, also known as Little Red Schoolhouse[9] | |
10 | Tapo Adobe Ruins | 4651 Tapo Canyon Rd. 34°19′24″N 118°42′37″W / 34.323414°N 118.710194°W |
Simi Valley | 12/70 | Sections of adobe walls can be seen at the Tapo Canyon Regional Park[10] | |
11 | Santa Gertrudis Asistencia (Chapel) Monument | N. Ventura Ave. | Ventura | 12/70 | The original chapel was built in 1809 and ceased operation around 1840. The site was in the path of the Ojai freeway, and the remains were moved in 1968 with several foundations stones being used to create the monument. Located 0.3 miles north of the Ventura Avenue Water Purification Plant on the east side of the road, flanked by two cypress trees that were scorched in the Thomas Fire.[11] | |
12 | Ventura County Courthouse | 501 Poli St. 34°16′56″N 119°17′35″W / 34.282352°N 119.293036°W |
Ventura | 12/70 | Neoclassical courthouse built in 1912, designed by Albert C. Martin Sr.; became Ventura City Hall in 1972; terra cotta exterior decorations, friars' heads, and copper-sheathed dome; listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1971 (first site in City of Ventura to be so designated) and designated as California Historical Landmark No. 847 and Ventura City Historical Landmark No. 4 | |
13 | Oxnard Carnegie Library | 424 South C St. | Oxnard | 2/71 | Neoclassical public library built 1906–07 with funding from Andrew Carnegie; converted into an art museum; also listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1971, the first site in Ventura County to receive the designation | |
14 | Point Mugu Recreation Area/State Park | Point Mugu | 2/71 | Archeological site with remains of a Chumash village (Satwiwa) occupied for 6,000 years until 1850; also the largest remaining grassland in California; extends from Mugu lagoon southeast to Sycamore Canyon and northeast to Potrero Road | ||
15 | Naumann Giant Gum Tree and Eucalyptus Rows | East of Pleasant Valley and Etting Rds. 34°09′45″N 119°08′56″W / 34.162457°N 119.148838°W |
Oxnard | 6/71 | Row of eucalyptus trees planted c. 1900 stretching 1/4 mile for the Hueneme Masonic Cemetery | |
16 | Sugar Beet Factory site | North of Wooley Rd. and east of Oxnard Blvd. | Oxnard | 6/71 | Site of second largest sugar beet factory in US, built 1898, manufactured sugar out of beets and played a central role in development of Oxnard; operated 1899–1959[12][13] | |
17 | Oxnard Plaza Park Pagoda | Fifth and C Street | Oxnard | 6/71 | Octagonal pagoda built in 1910 for well used to irrigate the surrounding park[14][15] | |
18 | Japanese Cemetery | East of Etting and Pleasant Valley Road | Oxnard | 6/71 | Adjacent to Masonic cemetery; markers are wooden boards with inscriptions; last burials c. 1960[16] | |
19 | Port Hueneme Women's Improvement Club | 239 Scott St. | Port Hueneme | 11/72 | Built in 1915; listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989 | |
20 | Thomas R. and Mary Bard Memorial | West corner of Ventura Rd. and Park Ave. | Port Hueneme | 11/71 | Memorial to Thomas R. Bard, an oil pioneer and U.S. Senator, and his wife Mary; dedicated 1958 | |
21 | Rafael Reyes Adobe | Lockwood Valley Road, 2 miles east of Highway 33 at Reyes Creek | Lockwood Valley | 11/71 | One-story adobe house built in 1854 with wood and concrete block additions the 1920s and 1940s; fighting bulls were raised on the ranch[17] | |
22 | St. Mary Magdalen Church | 2532 Ventura Blvd. | Camarillo | 3/72 | Spanish Neo-Classic built in 1913 as a private chapel for the Camarillo family; became a parish church in 1940; designed by Albert C. Martin Sr.[18] | |
23 | Southern Pacific Railroad Depot | 963 E. Santa Barbara St. | Santa Paula | 4/72 | First train depot in Ventura County, built in 1887[19] | |
24 | Hueneme Wharf (original site) | Corner of Seaview St. and Hueneme Rd. | Port Hueneme | 3/72 | Thomas R. Bard built the county's first wharf, 900 feet long, at this location in 1871; destroyed by storm in 1938[20] | |
25 | Matilija Hot Springs | 788 West Hot Springs Rd. | Ojai | 8/72 | Camp site established in 1871 in Matilija Canyon; cabins and hotel added in 1873; popular for its hot springs and for bear hunting | |
26 | Post Office Tower and Portico | SE Corner of Ojai and Signal Streets | Ojai | 6/75 | Three-story tower with domed top covered in Spanish tile, built in 1916 | |
27 | Libbey Park Bowl Sycamore Tree | 650 feet south of post office at Ojai Ave. and Signal St. | Ojai | Sycamore tree over 200 years old used in Chumash ceremonies | ||
28 | San Buenaventura Mission Aqueduct | Cañada Larga Rd. (south side), 1/4 block east of Highway 33 | Ventura | 1/76 | Seven-mile long aqueduct built starting in 1792 to supply water to the Mission San Buenaventura and local farms; the aqueduct began at the convergence point of San Antonio Creek and the Ventura River. The section of the aqueduct in the photograph is located at 234 Cañada Larga Road (south side), 1/4 block east of Highway 33, and has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places | |
29 | Santa Susana Depot | 6503 Katherine Rd. | Simi Valley | 1/76 | Railroad depot built in 1903 by the Southern Pacific Railroad; now houses a railroad museum | |
30 | Stagecoach Inn | 51 South Ventu Park Road | Newbury Park | 5/76 | Grand Union Hotel built in 1876; moved in 1965 due to freeway construction, destroyed by fire in 1970 and rebuilt | |
31 | Thomas R. Bard Mansion | Guadalcanal St. at Bard Lane | Port Hueneme | Italian Mediterranean style built in 1915 for Thomas R. Bard, an oil pioneer and U.S. Senator; purchased by the U.S. Navy in the 1950s and now serves as the base officer's club at the U.S. Naval Construction Center | ||
32 | Hueneme Bank Building | 220 North Market St. | Port Hueneme | 3/77 | Built in 1925 in Neoclassical style, designed by Myron Hunt; served as Port Hueneme City Hall from 1959–1973; later operated as a historical museum | |
33 | Josiah Keene House | 41 Bell Way | Ventura | 7/77 | Second Empire/Victorian house with steep mansard roof built in 1872; also designated as City of Ventura Historical Landmark No. 68.[21][22] | |
34 | Foster Park Lion Entrance Markers | Casitas Vista Road at the east end of Foster Park Bridge | Ventura | 7/77 | Two large sandstone lions erected 1908 at entrance to Foster Park, a county park | |
35 | W. L. Hardison House | 1226 Ojai Rd. | Santa Paula | 12/77 | Victorian era, California eclectic farmhouse built in 1884[23][24] | |
36 | Union Oil Company Building | 1003 E. Main St. | Santa Paula | 12/77 | Queen Anne style office building with Italianate influences, served as the first headquarters of Union Oil Co.; now the California Oil Museum; also listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986 and designated in 1991 as California Historical Landmark No. 996[25] | |
37 | Hueneme Slough Site | Surfside Dr. and Moranda Pkwy. | Port Hueneme | 11/77 | Now operated as Moranda Park, the site was originally a slough or tidal basin that was filled in 1938 with material dredged up to build the Port Hueneme Harbor. | |
38 | Universalist Unitarian Church Building | 740 E. Main St. | Santa Paula | 3/78 | Built in 1892 with local brick and river rock, it was designed by architects Seymour Locke and Frederick Roehrig; the oldest standing church in Santa Paula and one of the first Universalist churches on the west coast. Constructed of local brick and river rock[26][27] | |
39 | Mill Park | 736 Santa Paula/Ojai Rd. at Bedford | Santa Paula | 8/78 | Grist mill built on the site in 1871[28] | |
40 | Simi Library Building (original) | 137 Strathearn Place | Simi Valley | 5/78 | One-room library built in 1930; ceased operation in early 1960s and was moved in 1971 to Strathearn Historical Park | |
41 | Haigh/Talley Colony House | 137 Strathearn Place | Simi Valley | 5/78 | ||
42 | Tapo Citrus Association Packing House Site | Simi Valley | ||||
43 | Hill Ranch Brick Cistern | Thousand Oaks | ||||
44 | Sycamore Tree near Stagecoach Inn | Newbury Park | ||||
45 | Pederson House and Water Tower | Thousand Oaks | ||||
46 | Tanner Homestead | 18492 E. Telegraph Rd. | Santa Paula | 8/78 | Queen Anne style house built c. 1885 | |
47 | Fillmore State Bank | 316 Central Ave. | Fillmore | 5/79 | Mediterranean/Italian Renaissance brick and terra cotta building built in 1917, designed by Albert C. Martin Sr. | |
48 | Southern Pacific Railroad Depot | 447 Main St. | Fillmore | 5/79 | Prefabricated railroad building built 1887 | |
49 | Trinity Episcopal Church | Corner of Saratoga and Second Streets | Fillmore | 5/79 | English gingerbread Craftsman style church built in 1901 in Hueneme; moved to Fillmore in 1933 | |
50 | Bardsdale Methodist Church | 1498 Bardsdale Avenue | Fillmore | 4/79 | Carpenter Gothic church built in 1898; listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986 | |
51 | Piru Methodist Church and Organ | Piru | ||||
52 | Grandma Prisbrey's Bottle Village | Simi Valley | ||||
53 | Brandeis-Bardin Institute, House of the Book | Simi Valley | ||||
54 | Charles Collins Teague House (1924) | McKevett Heights Rd. | Santa Paula | 11/79 | English Tudor Revival mansion built 1923–1924[29] | |
55 | Methodist Church (former) | Moorpark | ||||
56 | Bank of A. Levy | Oxnard | 11/79 | |||
57 | Lightworks in the Hueneme Lighthouse | Port Hueneme | 1980 | |||
58 | Arundell Adobe | Three miles up Pole Creek Canyon | Fillmore | 7/80 | Built in 1885 for proximity to purple sage used in Thomas Arundell's honey business | |
59 | Hinckley's Artists' Barn and grounds, including pepper tree | 416 Bard St. | Fillmore | 7/80 | Barn converted to residence and studio in 1936, featured in Life magazine in 1936; 10-inch square areas painted on one wall by visiting artists; 100-year-old pepper tree is part of the designation | |
60 | Church of Christ Scientist | 461 Third St. | Fillmore | 7/80 | English Tudor style stucco church built in 1929 with winding flagstone path; designed by architect H. Roy Kelley | |
61 | Odd Fellows' Town Clock | 868 E. Main St. | Santa Paula | 7/80 | Four-faced Seth Thomas clock above the lodge's hall installed in 1905[30] | |
62 | County Fire Station No. 21 (former) | Ojai | ||||
63 | Goebel's Lion Farm Site | Thousand Oaks | ||||
64 | Hunt Olive Tree | Thousand Oaks | ||||
65 | Glen Tavern Inn | 134 N. Mill St. | Santa Paula | 7/81 | Craftsman/English Tudor hotel built c. 1910; designed by Hunt & Burns; also listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984[31] | |
66 | Saint Rose of Lima Catholic Church | Simi Valley | ||||
67 | Simi Valley Community Methodist Church (former) | Simi Valley | ||||
68 | Brandeis/Bardin Institute, Main House | Simi Valley | ||||
69 | The Mill | 926 Railroad Ave. | Santa Paula | 9/82 | Built c. 1890, now occupied by the Ventura County Agricultural Museum | |
70 | First Church of Christ Scientist | 731 South A St. | Oxnard | 3/82 | Mission Revival church built 1906–08; moved to Heritage Square in 1989 and remodeled as a town hall facility | |
71 | Patterson Ranch Buildings | Simi Valley | ||||
72 | High Street Pepper Trees | Moorpark | ||||
73 | Murphy House | 205 South F St. | Oxnard | 4/91 | California style bungalow built in 1911 | |
74 | Henry Levy House | 155 South G St. | Oxnard | 12/82 | Craftsman house with English Tudor details built in 1914 | |
75 | Achille Levy House | 201 South D St. | Oxnard | 12/82 | Shingle style house with Craftsman influences built in 1912 | |
76 | Ebell Club of Santa Paula | 125 South Seventh St. | Santa Paula | 9/82 | Craftsman mansion built in 1917 as a women's club, now operated as the Santa Paula Theater Center[32] | |
77 | Charles Collins Teague House (1900) | 805 Santa Paula St. | Santa Paula | 9/82 | Colonial Revival house built in 1900; designed by Greene and Greene[33] | |
78 | Underwood House | 715 E. Santa Paula St. | Santa Paula | 9/82 | Queen Anne style house built in the mid-1890s[34] | |
79 | Moreton Bay Fig Tree | Corner of Tenth and Santa Barbara Streets | Santa Paula | 9/82 | Tree planted in 1879[35] | |
80 | Rice House | 928–930 Yale St. | Santa Paula | 9/82 | Queen Anne style cottage with Eastlake detail built in 1880s[36] | |
81 | First Christian Church | 829 Railroad Ave. | Santa Paula | 9/82 | Carpenter Gothic style church built in 1900 with a square bell tower and high-pitched pyramidal roof[37] | |
82 | Balcom House | 933 Pleasant St. | Santa Paula | 9/82 | Italianate style house built in 1885; gutted by a fire in the 1950s[38] | |
83 | Baker House | 525 East Main St. | Santa Paula | 9/82 | Queen Anne style house built in 1890 with French Mansard tower[39] | |
84 | Anna M. Logan House | 123 North Mill St. | Santa Paula | 9/82 | Eastlake style house built c. 1888–1890[40] | |
85 | Somis Thursday Clubhouse | 5380 Bell St. | Somis | 7/91 | One-room schoolhouse built in 1895; sold to a social club in 1924 and substantially remodeled in 1939 and after | |
86 | Gerberding/Moranda House | Port Hueneme | ||||
87 | Farrell House | Port Hueneme | ||||
88 | Richard Bard House | Port Hueneme | ||||
89 | Chumash Park "Indian Hills" | Simi Valley | ||||
90 | Oakbrook County Park Archaeological Area | Thousand Oaks | ||||
91 | Chumash Village of Shimiji | Simi Valley | ||||
92 | Ramelli/Willett House | 51 Sulphur Mountain Rd. | Oak View | 7/83 | Mediterranean style 26-room house built in 1926, designed by Roy Wilson | |
93 | Wood Ranch Barns | Simi Valley | ||||
94 | Lathrop Camp | Ojai | 7/84 | |||
95 | Pratt House | 1330 North Foothill Road | Ojai | 11/85 | Craftsman bungalow built in 1909, designed by Greene and Greene, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2002 | |
96 | Dent Ranch House | Ojai | ||||
97 | Santa Paula Union High School | 404 North Sixth St. | Santa Paula | 1/86 | Spanish Colonial school built in 1936 by Works Progress Administration[41] | |
98 | Wiltfong House | Port Hueneme | ||||
99 | Dos Vientos Ranch Buildings | Newbury Park | 1986 | Two large barns built by Malcolm Clark in the 1930s. Both were dismantled in the 1990s; the lumber was cataloged and is stored with the Conejo Recreation and Park District.[42][43] | ||
100 | Justin Petit Ranch House | 730 S B St. | Oxnard | 4/86 | Queen Anne Victorian-style house built in 1896; relocated to Heritage Square | |
101 | Piru Train Bridge | Piru | ||||
102 | Sacred Heart Mission Church | Darling Rd., east of Wells Rd. | Saticoy | 6/86 | Burned down in August 2005 | |
103 | Whale Rock Ranch House | Ojai | ||||
104 | Stagecoach Road | Simi Valley | ||||
105 | Freight Road | Simi Valley | ||||
106 | Mount McCoy and Cross | Simi Valley | ||||
107 | Montgomery House | Simi Valley | ||||
108 | King/Harris House | 1420 Grimes Canyon Rd. | Fillmore | 10/86 | Two-story white frame house built in 1910; later used as the Conejo Recreation and Parks District sports office | |
109 | Crowley House | Thousand Oaks | ||||
110 | Five Trees | Ventura | ||||
111 | McKevett School (North Grammar School) | 955 E. Pleasant St. | Santa Paula | 5/87 | Mission Revival style school built in 1910 with each classroom opening onto a veranda and courtyard[44] | |
112 | Edwin Janss Sr. House | Thousand Oaks | ||||
113 | Charles L. and Nellie Sheldon House | 701 East Santa Paula St. | Santa Paula | 9/87 | Neo-Classic Row House built in 1900 | |
114 | James M. Sharp House | 11840 Telegraph Rd. | Santa Paula | 11/87 | Italianate style house built in 1890[45] | |
115 | Hueneme Elementary School | Port Hueneme | ||||
116 | Whiteside House and Barn | Thousand Oaks | ||||
117 | Saticoy Walnut Growers Association Warehouse | 1235–1255 East Wells Rd. | Saticoy | 6/88 | Warehouse built in 1917 for drying and shipping | |
118 | Saticoy Bean Warehouse | 10995 Azahar St. | Saticoy | 6/88 | Warehouse built in 1917 for lima bean growers | |
119 | Farmers & Merchants Bank of Santa Paula – Saticoy Branch | 1203 Los Angeles Ave. | Saticoy | 6/88 | Neo-classical bank built in 1911 | |
120 | Lake Eleanor Dam | Thousand Oaks | ||||
121 | Foster Park Bowl | 438 Casitas Vista Road | Ventura | Outdoor theater located in Foster Park | ||
122 | Palm Trees along Chambersburg Road | Bardsdale | ||||
123 | Sanitary Dairy/Clifford Hardison House | 1680–1686 Old Telegraph Rd. | Fillmore | 2/89 | ||
124 | Piru Hotel | Piru | ||||
125 | Lechler House/Museum | Piru | ||||
126 | Stutsman/Hall Ranch | Ojai | 9/89 | |||
127 | Pioneer Section of Simi Valley Public Cemetery | Simi Valley | 1/90 | |||
128 | Fulkerson Hardware Store | 3403 Somis Rd. | Somis | 7/91 | Stucco structure built in 1925 | |
129 | Masonic Temple Building Site | 402 Central Ave. | Fillmore | 6/90 | ||
130 | Farmers & Merchants Bank | 364 Central Ave. | Fillmore | 4/90 | ||
131 | Sespe School | 627 Sespe Ave. | Fillmore | 4/90 | ||
132 | Familia Diaz Cafe | 249 S. Tenth St. 34°21′03″N 119°03′30″W / 34.350914°N 119.058253°W |
Santa Paula | 10/90 | Operated as a family since 1936; built in 1919, rebuilt 1928, remodeled 1980[46] | |
133 | Somis School | 5268 North St. | Somis | 7/91 | Schoolhouse built in 1924 | |
134 | Coast Live Oak Tree | Simi Valley | ||||
135 | Spalding house, guest house, stone wall | 3095 West Telegraph Rd. | Fillmore | 5/92 | ||
136 | Elephant Rock | Simi Valley | ||||
137 | Palm Trees along Alamo Street | Simi Valley | ||||
138 | Sycamore Tree along Wood Ranch Parkway | Simi Valley | ||||
139 | Simi Elementary School and Bungalows | Simi Valley | ||||
140 | Scott/Cameron House and Aged Olive Tree | Simi Valley | ||||
141 | Ventura County Railway | 250 East Fifth St. | Oxnard | 2/92 | 13-mile railroad built in 1905 | |
142 | Barbara Webster School | 1150 Saticoy St. 34°21′35″N 119°03′34″W / 34.359697°N 119.059562°W |
Santa Paula | 2/92 | Built in 1925 to serve the educational needs of the children of Mexican itinerant citrus and walnut workers | |
143 | Olive Mann Isbell School | 221 South Fourth St. 34°20′57″N 119°03′58″W / 34.349176°N 119.066084°W |
Santa Paula | 2/92 | Built in 1926; designed by Roy C. Wilson | |
144 | Scarlett/McGrath Ranch House | 5011 West Gonzales Rd. | Oxnard | 9/92 | Queen Anne/Eastlake residence built in 1889 | |
145 | Perkins/Claberg House | 721 South A St. | Oxnard | 6/92 | Queen Anne and Stick style house built in 1887; relocated in 1989 to Heritage Square | |
146 | Wineman/Lehmann/Miller House | 101 South D St. | Oxnard | 10/93 | Colonial Revival and California Bungalow styles, built in 1903 | |
147 | Staire/Diener House | 235 South D St. | Oxnard | 10/93 | House with Craftsman influences built in 1911 | |
148 | Palm Trees along "C" Street | C Street between Magnolia and Wooley | Oxnard | 10/93 | Mexican Fan Palm Trees planted in 1903 | |
149 | Japanese Nisei Methodist Episcopal Church | 630 South A St. | Oxnard | 10/93 | Church built in 1908 for Japanese farm workers | |
150 | Corriganville | 1601 Kuehner Dr. | Simi Valley | 8/95 | Movie ranch opened in 1937; opened to public in 1949 as a western-themed amusement park; became known as Hopetown after Bob Hope purchased it in 1965; closed in 1966 and damaged by fire in 1967; it is now a park operated by the City of Simi Valley | |
151 | Fillmore Sign | Northeast corner Highway 126 (Ventura St.) and Central Ave. | Fillmore | 9/94 | Lozenge-shaped, Streamline Moderne style sign installed in 1940 with "Fillmore" in 12-inch white neon letters; a neon arrow points to downtown | |
152 | Rancho Camulos | 5164 E. Telegraph Rd. | Piru | 11/95 | Ranch used by Helen Hunt Jackson as a setting for her 1884 novel Ramona | |
153 | Bard/Prescott House | Port Hueneme | 12/95 | |||
154 | First Church in Piru/Sullivan House | Piru | 12/95 | |||
155 | Briggs School | 14438 W. Telegraph Rd. 34°17′53″N 119°09′21″W / 34.298166°N 119.155847°W |
Santa Paula | 3/94 | Mediterranean school with an Italian influence and central courtyard built in 1925[47] | |
156 | Arts and Science Buildings, Fillmore Senior High School | 555 Central Ave. | Fillmore | 9/94 | Two Mediterranean style buildings, built 1937–38 with Moorish arched entrances and Churrigueresque relief; designed by architects John C. Austin and Frederick M. Ashley | |
157 | Sespe Bunkhouse | 2896 Telegraph Rd. 34°19′05″N 119°07′20″W / 34.318165°N 119.122313°W |
Santa Paula | 2/24/98 | Built in 1910 or 1911, it housed unmarried white workers on a citrus ranch from the 1920s to 1940s | |
158 | Swift Residence and Lying-In Hospital | 838–840 West Fifth St. | Oxnard | House built about 1926 for Dr. Floyd J. Swift and a small office/hospital built in 1928 | ||
159 | People's Lumber Company Building | 216 N. 8th St. | Santa Paula | Neoclassical masonry building built c. 1890 | ||
160 | Knolls Rock | Simi Valley | 7/26/99 | |||
161 | Henry T. Oxnard Historic District | Oxnard | 9/14/99 | Subdivision created in 1911 recognized in 1999 as a historic district on the National Register of Historic Places; bounded by Fifth Street, Magnolia Avenue, the alley between E and F Streets to the east, and the alley between G and H Streets to the west. | ||
162 | Fillmore Ebell Club | 407 Second St. | Fillmore | 11/13/01 | Women's club and cultural center built in the 1930s | |
163 | Rose/McGrath Ranch | 228 Loma Dr. | Camarillo | 6/10/02 | ||
164 | Selby/Roberts Residence and Site | 11795 Santa Ana Rd. | Lake Casitas | 2/28/05 | ||
165 | Gottfried Maulhardt/Albert Pfeiler Farm Site | 1251 Gottfried Place | Oxnard | 3/31/04 | ||
166 | Timber School House and Auditorium | 1872 Newbury Rd. | Newbury Park | 7/13/04 | Mission style two-room school built c. 1924 (with addition from 1955) and auditorium structure built in 1948; designed by architect Roy C. Wilson | |
167 | Edward Tobin Residence and Site | 4440 Grand Ave. | Ojai | 10/27/08 | Craftsman bungalow moved to its present location in 2005 | |
168 | School Street Historic District | Simi Valley | Designation revoked | |||
169 | William Ford Residence | 1015 Amber Lane | Ojai | 10/25/10 | Spanish Colonial Revival house built in 1929 with a Mexican hacienda layout; designed by the noted African-American architect Paul Williams | |
170 | Acacia Mansion | 205 S. Lomita Ave. | Ojai | 11/8/10 | Spanish Colonial Revival house built in 1929 with Moorish influence; Uno John Palo Kangas, who sculpted the Ventura Father Serra statue, was hired to do much of the work | |
171 | Bon Ton Court | 531 South F St. | Oxnard | 12/7/10 | Spanish Revival bungalow court apartment complex built in 1926 to provide housing for working class residents | |
172 | Ventura County Agricultural Buildings | 815 and 845 East Santa Barbara St. 34°21′32″N 119°03′53″W / 34.358999°N 119.064584°W |
Santa Paula | 5/14/12 | Spanish Revival office and garage buildings constructed in 1929; also a fumigation plant built 1938–39 in utilitarian industrial style with Streamline Moderne venting | |
173 | McColm Manor Apartments | 534–542 South F St. | Oxnard | 12/8/14 | 12-unit courtyard apartment complex built in 1950 | |
174 | Preston-Butler Residence | 1190 El Toro Rd. | Ojai | 8/25/14 | Two-story Spanish Revival house built in 1926 | |
175 | J.A. Swartz Residence | 636 West Fifth St. | Oxnard | 2/23/16 | Spanish Colonial Revival house built 1929–30 | |
176 | Saticoy Southern Pacific Railroad Depot | 11220 Azahar St. | Saticoy | 05/2016 | [48] |
Points of Interest
[edit]POI No. | Name | Image | Address | City | Date listed | Description |
1 | Corriganville | 1601 Kuehner Dr. | Simi Valley | 1/82 | Redesignated in 1995 as VCHL No. 150 (see description above) | |
2 | Butterfield Stage Route | Santa Rosa Valley | 1/82 | Route used by the Butterfield Overland Mail in California to deliver mail between San Francisco and Los Angeles; the designation covers the portion of the route running from west of the Santa Rosa Technology Magnet School (13282 Santa Rosa Rd, Camarillo) over the hills to the intersection of Moorpark and Olsen Roads in Thousand Oaks; the Norwegian Grade was later built between 1900 and 1911 | ||
3 | Oxnard Pest Control Insectary Site | Eastern half of block bounded by Scott St., Fifth St., Port Hueneme Rd., and Fourth St. (Ventura Rd.) | Port Hueneme | 6/85 | Buildings originally used to house season workers of a tomato cannery, moved to Fifth St. after WWI and used to breed the Australian ladybug, a natural predator of the mealybug then threatening the county's citrus orchards | |
4 | Santa Rosa School (original site and school bell) | 13282 Santa Rosa Rd. | Camarillo | 2/87 | School built in 1912 by Norwegian Colony farmers | |
5 | Hueneme Grammar School (original site) | 344 North Third St. | Port Hueneme | 1/88 | School built in 1885 by Norwegian Colony farmers | |
6 | Saticoy Springs and Chumash Indian Village Sa'aqtik'oy Site | Bounded by Saticoy Ave., Telephone Rd., Wells Rd, and railroad tracks | Saticoy | 5/88 | Site of a Chumash settlement dating to 5,500 B.C.; ceremonial gathering at the site in 1869 drew Chumash leaders from the region | |
7 | Simi School/Simi Library/Ortega Saloon Sites | 1958 Third St., 137 Strathearn Place | Simi Valley | 1/89 | School built on Third Street in 1890, torn down in 1926; library built in 1930 and moved to the Strathearn Historical Park in 1971 | |
8 | Santa Clara Chapel Original Site | 301 Esplanade Dr. | Oxnard | 11/89 | Moved in 1954 to 1333 East Ventura Boulevard, El Rio; original site later became a Sears store | |
9 | Cesar Chavez Childhood Home Site | 452 North Garfield | Oxnard | 10/93 | The Chavez family lived in a shed or small barn in the rear of the property in 1939[49][50] | |
10 | Colonial House Restaurant | 701–747 North Oxnard Blvd. | Oxnard | 12/13 | Restaurant on this site was the most popular restaurant in Ventura County in post-WWII era, frequently visited by movie stars, including Marilyn Monroe, Bing Crosby, and Clark Gable; demolished in 1988 but brick fireplace remains Oxnard Boulevard | |
11 | Former Fillmore Refinery | 67 E. Telegraph Rd. | Fillmore | 12/15 | Ventura Refinery built on the site in 1915, later known as the Fillmore Works; operations ended in 2002 and were followed by remediation of soil and groundwater contamination |
See also
[edit]- National Register of Historic Places listings in Ventura County, California
- California Historical Landmarks in Ventura County, California
- City of Ventura Historic Landmarks and Districts
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Ventura County Historical Landmarks & Points of Interest" (PDF). Ventura County Cultural Heritage Board. May 2016. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 31, 2019.
- ^ "Port Hueneme Historical Society Museum". City of Port Hueneme. Retrieved August 18, 2021.
- ^ "Faulkner House". Santa Paula Historical Society. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ Peggy Lee (March 19, 1990). "Saticoy: House Regains Landmark Status". Los Angeles Times (Ventura County edition). p. B2 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ James Quinn (February 4, 1982). "Hopes Fade for Saving Landmark Stand of Eucalyptus Trees". Los Angeles Times. p. IX-2 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Joan Sweeney (February 25, 1981). "Historic Mansion to Be Rebuilt". Los Angeles Times. p. I-3 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Rancho Arnaz stands as monument to builder – Don Jose Arnaz". Los Angeles Times. May 2, 1981 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "home page". Strathearn Historical Park and Museum. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ Psyche Pascual (February 15, 1990). "A Little Red School: Landmark: Santa Paula's one-room schoolhouse has graduated generations of local students, some of whom are now trustees of the tiny school district". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ Stephanie Stassel (October 10, 1990). "Landmarks: County Historical Sites; The Tapo Adobe Has a Sad Story to Tell". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ Perry Van Houten (February 14, 2018). "Oak View group reviving interest in historic location". Ojai Valley News.
- ^ Josef Woodard (March 28, 1991). "Sweet History: Oxnard owes its birth to a sprawling turn-of-the-century sugar beet factory, which is highlighted in a museum exhibit". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ Mike Nelson (January 13, 2017). "Oxnard's sweet history often unknown". The Ventura County Star.
- ^ Carol Weinstock (January 2, 1991). "Landmarks County Historical Sites: Oxnard's Plaza Park Pagoda". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ "Oxnard Old-timers Rally to Defense of Famed Pagoda Bandstand in Plaza". Los Angeles Times. September 27, 1951. p. 25 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Wendy Leung (July 3, 2017). "Japanese cemetery restored in Oxnard but fundraising efforts continue". The Ventura County Star.
- ^ Reyes Adobe video
- ^ "Home page". St. Mary Magdalen Church. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ "Southern Pacific Railroad Depot". Santa Paula Historical Society. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ "Port Hueneme, California's 'Friendly City by the Sea,' turns 70". The Ventura County Star.
- ^ "Keene House Has Rare Architecture". Los Angeles Times. September 15, 1990. p. B3 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Josiah Keene House". Circa Old Houses. Retrieved April 29, 2018.
- ^ "Hardison (W.L.) House". Santa Paula Historical Society. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ Claudia Boyd-Barrett (March 22, 2017). "Developer alters plans for Santa Paula farmstead". The Ventura County Star.
- ^ "Home Page". California Oil Museum. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ "Unitarian Universalist Church". Santa Paula Historical Society. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ "Universalist Unitarian Church of Santa Paula". uucsp.org. Retrieved April 29, 2018.
- ^ "Mill Park (Blanchard & Bradley flour mill)". Santa Paula Historical Society. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ "Teague (Charles Collins) House". Santa Paula Historical Society. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ Peggy Kelly (January 4, 2012). "Odd Fellows Clock Tower repairs returning Main Street landmark to glory". Santa Paula Times.
- ^ "Home page". Glen Tavern Inn. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ "Santa Paula Theater Center (Ebell Club)". Santa Paula Historical Society. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ "Teague (Charles Collins) House". Santa Paula Historical Society. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ "Underwood House". Santa Paula Historical Society. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ "Moreton Bay Fig tree". Santa Paula Times. July 4, 2001.
- ^ "Rice House". Santa Paula Historical Society. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ "First Christian Church Centennial celebration". Santa Paula Times. September 29, 2000.
- ^ "Balcom House". Santa Paula Historical Society. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ "Baker House". Santa Paula Historical Society. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ "Logan (Anna M.) House". Santa Paula Historical Society. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ "Santa Paula Union High School". Santa Paula Historical Society. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ BUSTILLO, MIGUEL (July 20, 1996). "Endangered Landmarks : Dos Vientos Barns, Link to Area's Past, Face Uncertain Future" – via LA Times.
- ^ "History – Thousand Oaks, CA". www.toaks.org.
- ^ "McKevett School". Santa Paula Historical Society. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ "Sharp (James M.) House". Santa Paula Historical Society. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ "Familia Diaz Cafe". Santa Paula Historical Society. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ "Briggs School". Santa Paula Historical Society. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
- ^ Carlson, Cheri (May 15, 2018). "California board to decide on historic status for Saticoy Depot, Top Hat burger stand". VC Star. Retrieved December 22, 2020.
- ^ Gretchen, Wenner (October 29, 2011). "Oxnard sites on list of historic places linked to Cesar Chavez". Ventura County Star. Archived from the original on March 31, 2019.
- ^ Alvarez, Fred (May 28, 1993). "Chavez Home In Oxnard Was Razed Years Ago : La Colonia: Mourners mistakenly visited a dwelling next to the site where the late labor leader lived as a boy". Los Angeles Times.