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ANDRES PICO ADOBE
10940 Sepulveda Blvd.
Mission Hills, CA 91345
DRIVING DIRECTIONS
Phone: (818) 365-7810

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The Andres
Pico Adobe is the second oldest Adobe home in the City of Los Angeles!
First were the Fernandenos,
Shoshonean Indians, who were the original inhabitants. The Fernandenos
were famed for their basket making, peaceful temperaments and ingenuity
in utilizing the native plants. In later years they were converted
by the padres and lived at the mission, from which there name is
derived.
Spain, of course, claimed the Valley from 1769 on, when Portola
discovered the area en rout to the north. Spain established the
mission chain and ceded land grants to the favored.
In 1822 Mexico secured her independence, and it was this government,
which secularized the missions in 1834. No later than this date
a one-room structure was built, now the sala (living room), with
the Indians from the Mission doing most of the work. It is not known
for what use it was built - a home?, for storage? It could have
been part of the Mission complex. During the Mexican regime, wars
were being waged between the north and south of California, against
the Mexican government, and ultimately against the United States.
In 1845, Andres Pico and Juan Manso were granted a nine-year lease
for the San Fernando Valley. Pico, at that time a 35-year old rancher,
lived at the Pueblo of Los Angeles. He ran cattle on his Valley
ranch and made the Mission his rancho home. His brother, Pio, was
governor in 1845, and one year later it was Pio, that negotiated
an agreement with Eulogio de Cells, a Spaniard, which has to be
the best real estate transaction ever consummated! Mexico at that
point needed money to finance the war against the United States,
and Pio was authorized to borrow $14,000 from de Celis with the
understanding that if the money were not repaid in eight months,
de Celis would own the San Fernando Valley. And so it was! De Celis
foreclosed, and all 116858 acres of the Valley were his, except
Rancho Encino and Rancho El Excorpion, which had been previously
given to Indians. In 1854, Andres paid de Celis $15,000 for an undivided
one-half interest in the Valley (no-boundaries).
Sometime between 1846 and 1860, the diving room and present library
were added to the Adobe, by whom we are not aware, perhaps by de
Celis himself. Andres never lived in the Adobe, as far as history
reveals, but rather chose to live in the long building at the Mission.
He was a gregarious, social man who loved to entertain, and the
Mission provided the space he needed.
In 1862 President Abraham Lincoln returned land to the Missions
and the San Fernando Mission received 170 acres. The same year Andres
sold his interest in the Valley to his brother Pio, who kept the
land until 1869, when he sold the undivided one-half interest to
the San Fernando Farm Homestead Association, whose leaders were
Isaac Lanker shim and Isaac Van Nuys. They raised wheat, with success;
so they turned to the dry farming of what on a large scale. The
boundaries having been settled, they planted the whole south half
of the Valley in wheat (except Encin0 and El Excorpion) containing
seven large ranches. They were so successful that they were even
shipping wheat to Liverpool, England. In 1874 Catarina and Romulo
Pico, adopted children of Andres, married and moved into the Adobe.
They modernized it by adding a kitchen and two wings and the second
floor. A wooden floor was laid atop the Mission tile floor, and
other "Yankee" improvements were made. Catarina and Romulo lived
in the Adobe until the late 1800's and then was sold several times,
rented and finally stood vacant. By 1925 it was in total dis-repair,
vandalized and near total destruction.
Enter our 'hero', Dr Mark Harrington, curator of the Southwest
Indian Museum and the famous archeologist! He and his wife had been
searching for an adobe to restore and when they discovered the Andres
Pico Adobe they knew that it was just what they had been seeking.
Finally able to persuade the Lopez family who then owned it to sell
the property, Dr. Harrington painstakingly and authentically began
to restore the Adobe. It was he who discovered the old mission tiles
under the rotted wood flooring and who, because of his experience
and knowledge, was able to date the tiles to 1834 or before. The
Adobe and the grounds became an oasis of beauty and color and peace,
and the Harrington's enjoyed it until 1845 when again it was owned
or rented by several families in subsequent years.
In 1857 the North Valley Y.M.C.A. purchased five acres including
the Adobe, which was used for its offices, until 1965 when it was
put up for sale. Enter our second 'hero' the San Fernando Valley
Historical Society. Fearing this precious old landmark would be
demolished, the Society tried unsuccessfully to raise money to purchase
it. At the last moment, the City of Los Angeles purchased the property
and saved the Adobe from destruction. The property is administered
by the Department of Recreation and Parks who maintain the grounds
and exterior of the buildings.
The Adobe itself is managed by the Society, which restored the
interior and operates a multi-program to form an active life for
the Adobe. The Adobe is unique - a "living museum" - since besides
its regular open hours, it is used for many affairs: the Society's
monthly meetings (open to all), weddings, receptions, breakfasts,
dinners, picnics, etc. Two special affairs are "Rancho Days", depicting
early California living by exhibit, demonstrations, food, etc.,
held on the third Sunday of September; and Las Posadas, the enactment
of the Mexican Christmas procession on the Saturday before Christmas.
: The
original house was a one-story building 45 feet long. The main foundation
was of water worn boulders, the northwest wing foundation of boulders
and mission tiles and the north wing of the mission tile only. Although
the southwest wing is not as old as the main building it may have
been build before the Pico restoration.
The objective of the Pico restoration had been to produce an up-to-date
residence of the mode of 1873. The Harrington's proposed to restore
the home in truce adobe style, crating as much early California
atmosphere as possible. In doing so, they set the character of the
Adobe back fifty years before the "Pico Restoration."
The Adobe walls were repaired with bricks made from soil on the
property. The wooden joists, rafters, the wooden plated they rest
on and the ridgepole were made extra heavy and all tied together
securely. The original floors of the main room were large squares
of Mexican paving tiles found buried about 10 inches below the wooden
Pico floor. Other floors were found to be tile of a different vintage
or wood on adobe. This and the various types of foundation are evidence
of the rooms having been added on at different times.
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