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-Historic Survey-
VI. Historic Context Statement
Introduction
The purpose of this context study is to provide a historical narrative and
context for an architectural survey for the City of West Covina. A historic
context, as defined by the National Register's Guidelines for Local Surveys,
"is a broad pattern of historical development in a community or its region,
that may be represented by historic resources."10 This context statement's purpose and application will be to assist in the assessment of historic resources by providing categories of significant periods of development within the city.
A historic context is often the first major survey task as it provides an
organizational framework of information that is based on a specific area,
theme, and period of time. This framework is recommended as a way to
organize information that is pertinent to survey results.11
The Mission Era (1771-1845)
The archeological record shows that the eastern San Gabriel Valley was
populated by the Tongva-Gabrielino Indians prior to the entry of the Spanish
into California.12 It is believed that these native people lived in villages and occupied round frame structures that were covered with native grasses and other plant material. These structures are often referred to as "jacales," which is a Spanish word meaning "huts with thatched roof." The jacales are very similar in structure to the wigwam, which was a portable structure used by Indian tribes throughout the East Coast and Mid-west (See Fig. 1).
Figure 1. Wigwam, Source: Mark Gelernter
The San Gabriel River and its ecosystem was a critical sustaining factor for
these villages whose subsistence was based on acorns, roots and berries that
were collected in the area.
In 1771 the Mission at San Gabriel, called San Gabriel Arcangel, was
established in present-day El Monte and was given jurisdiction by Spain over
the entire San Gabriel Valley, this included the area where West Covina was
eventually realized.13 During the Mission period, the Indian tribes of the San
Gabriel Valley lived under the administration of the Mission priests. The
Mission lands remained under Spain's control until 1810 when Mexico gained
its independence. The Spanish lands in California transferred to Mexican
sovereignty. Land grants were granted preferentially to Mexican Citizens.
Non-citizens often got around this barrier by marrying into Spanish
landholding families. The largest land grant at the time was The Rancho La
Puente that measured approximately 48,000 acres.
The Rancho La Puente (1842-1902)
The Mission lands of present-day West Covina were divided into Rancho La
Puente in 1842. The Rancho encompassed approximately 48,000 acres east of
the river and south of San Bernardino Road.14 Governor Don Pio Pico owned
the land until 1845 when he sold it to William Workman and John Rowland.
John Rowland was a trapper and surveyor born in Maryland and William
Workman was a British fur trader. The two men enjoyed a long friendship
and close business relationship after meeting in New Mexico in the 1820s.15
Workman and Rowland arrived in Santa Fe, New Mexico in 1823. They both
married daughters of Spanish land holders and in 1841 they headed west to
California together.16 Enticed by the opportunity for land and a fresh start on
the frontier, they traveled the difficult journey of 1,200 miles to California.
Once in California, they explored the San Gabriel Valley and found that its
soil, water supply, and terrain would fit their needs nicely.17
Discovery of Gold
Beyond the area's agricultural potential, mineral resources also led to
settlement in the San Gabriel Valley by Americans. The discovery of gold in
1849 was a driving force behind a sudden influx of population. Although not
as frantic as northern California's gold rush, the San Gabriel Valley saw its
fair share of prospecting. A small mining town called Eldoradoville sprang
up in the hills above the present-day City of Azusa.
Initially this town was established by individual miners, some of whom, it is
speculated did not have enough funds to make the trip all the way to
northern California. Eventually, though, these miners were replaced by
larger mining operations that used machine technology to mine the ore. By
1870 these large mining companies had mined all the easily accessible gold
and Eldoradoville was abandoned.18
Rise of Agriculture
The 1850s was a time of growth and experimentation on the La Puente
Rancho. Workman and Rowland planted vineyards and wheat, tended cattle,
and improved the irrigation systems. Their original homesteads can be found
in the present day city of La Puente.
Figure 4. The Workman Adobe after its remodel (1875), Source: Leonore Rowland
Figure 5. Rowland's Home (1870), Source: Leonore Rowland
Agricultural development of the area was difficult. Environmental conditions
often complicated early settlement. For example, in the summer of 1859 the
region experienced a severe drought. This drought did significant harm to
the region's agricultural economy. The 1859 drought was followed by floods
in the winter of 1861-1862. A history of the area documents these events.
The San Gabriel River became a raging torrent, much damage was done to crops, and
many cattle were either drowned or killed by exposure. The worst flood season in the history of the valley was in the winter of 1861-62, when the total rainfall reached fifty inches...the Arroyo Seco became a mighty river, over-flowing its banks and cutting new channels as the water tore on its fury. Many cattle and horses were lost.19
Despite these difficulties, Workman and Rowland remained co-owners of the
Rancho for over twenty years. In 1868, they agreed to divide up the land.
Workman, who by then was a wealthy Los Angeles banker, took the western
section of the lands and the remaining eastern portion was deeded to
Rowland.20
The 1870s was a time of economic depression in California. The completion
of the transcontinental railroad was widely anticipated. The rail, however,
led to an increase in competition for western merchants. Overestimating the
demand for goods and land led to the decade-long depression that began in
1869. Labor was also at a surplus and many faced unemployment.21
In 1876, Workman's business went bankrupt and his portion of the Rancho
La Puente was mortgaged to Elias "Lucky" Baldwin, one of the San Gabriel
Valley's early real estate developers. Subsequently, Workman committed
suicide and Baldwin foreclosed on the land. A savvy early entrepreneur,
Baldwin's land holdings eventually grew to become the single largest rancho
in Southern California.22 Until the turn of the century, Baldwin used the land
acquired from Workman for cattle ranching and also leased portions of it to
wheat farmers.
Influence of the Railway
In 1869, the Southern Pacific Railroad came to Los Angeles and was later
joined by the Santa Fe Railroad in 1886. Fierce competition between the
Santa Fe Railroad and the Southern Pacific led to a rate war: "the result of
this war was to precipitate such a flow of migration, such an avalanche
rushing madly to Southern California as I believe has no parallel."23 This
rate war triggered large-scale migration to the area by lowering the costs of
bringing agricultural products to markets in both California and the rest of
the US. Much of this growth was driven by immigration from the Midwest.
For example, McWilliams notes: "Learning of the great boom in Southern
California, the town-site sharks of the Middle West began to descend on the
region in droves."24
While much of Southern California was experiencing a boom in the 1880s, the
area of West Covina experienced more subdued growth. Local growers lived
in large residences surrounded by expansive crops and orchards. During this
time, West Covina was not yet a city. The nearest early town was Covina.
In the 1880s, Joseph Swift Philips helped Covina grow when he bought 2,000
acres of land in the area and started to subdivide it. Fred Eaton, Phillips'
surveyor, coined the term "Covina." Phillips recognized that water was one of
the area's main obstacles to growth. The water that had been sufficient in
early years was no longer adequate to serve a growing population. Fights
over water rights were a commonplace challenge for early developers of the
valley.25
Agriculture and Community Building (1903-1920s)
In the early nineteenth century, the warm, dry climate of the area proved to
be a fertile environment for the growth of an agricultural industry. The
beginnings of Southern California's citrus culture can be traced to the
Mission San Gabriel; an orange grove encompassing six acres was planted on
mission lands in 1804. In 1841, William Wolfskill used seedlings from the
San Gabriel orchard to plant his own larger orchard. Wolfskill is credited
with establishing citrus commercially. By the late nineteenth century, citrus
was a thriving Southern California enterprise.26
Agriculture was a prominent feature and way of life for the area in the early part of the century. The first settlers cleared the land and planted a variety of crops. Large floods in 1913 and 1914 greatly affected the wheat fields, which were then the area's main crop. But West Covina survived and farmers in the area continued their agricultural pursuits along with efforts to strengthen the community support system. By 1908, West Covina had its main streets laid out - Cameron, Vine, Merced, Service, Orange, and Irwindale (now Sunset) Avenues. Early photographs of main streets show wide boulevards lined with trees.
By 1909, West Covina had its own one-room school on South Sunset Avenue
with an enrollment of eleven students.27 In 1916, a community group called the West Covina Improvement Association was founded and eventually
became the West Covina Chamber of Commerce.
The introduction of the streetcar in 1887 influenced the development of many
of the country's suburbs. This effect was felt in Southern California later than in the rest of the country. It allowed for people to travel much further in a more reasonable amount of time, making it easier to live farther from city
centers. The Pacific Electric Railway reached the Covina area in July of 1907 and ran until after World War II. Its presence helped to foster continued
suburban development in the area.
One of West Covina's strongest crops in the early part of the century was the
walnut. West Covina had a strong contingent of walnut growers and the area
was referred to as "Walnut Center" until 1909 when it became known as
West Covina. It grew as an attractive agricultural area. In fact, a
contemporary publication called the area "one of the loveliest valleys in all
the country."28 Walnuts grew especially well and the 1920 crop was a landmark year for walnuts.
San Gabriel Valley walnut growers, in conjunction with the balance of the members of the California Walnut Growers' Association, report that their 1920 crop, second largest in the history of the industry, is sold out slick and clean.29
By 1922, the walnut industry in the valley was at its maximum and the crop
that year totaled 25,000 tons. Mayor Benjamin Maxson and others became
part of the California Walnut Growers Association, which marketed local
walnuts under the "Diamond" brand name. A large packinghouse was built
to accommodate the burgeoning industry next to the Southern Pacific
Railroad tracks. This packinghouse was the largest walnut packing house in
the state. Built by the areas local growers, at a cost of almost $200,000.30
Unfortunately, by the late 1920s walnut crops were not doing so well.
Disease and other circumstances encouraged local growers to switch from
walnuts to oranges. The orange groves persisted until the 1940s.
West Covina Incorporates (1923-1940)
West Covina was incorporated February 5th of 1923 to escape being used as a
"sewer farm" for the City of Covina. The area referred to as West Covina was
not heavily populated, with only 535 residents at the time, but they organized
to prevent the construction of a sewage treatment facility that they felt would
ruin their community. Prominent citizens like Benjamin Maxson and C.J.
Hurst canvassed the City to gain support for the cause. The City of Covina
sold the land in question to West Covina, but continued to seek an
appropriate location for the wastewater facilities. West Covina continued to
expand its borders via annexation in the subsequent years to avoid giving up
control over adjacent land to Covina.31
Population growth was relatively slow for the new city. By 1929, the
population had reached 800 people, but was still quite small compared to
surrounding cities. Economically, West Covina did not feel the sting of the
stock market crash of '29 the way many cities did. Newspapers of the time
neglected to even mention it in great detail. However, by the early 1930s the
effects of the economic downturn were beginning to show.
A major change occurred to West Covina in 1935 when US Highway 99 (also
known as Garvey Blvd.) was cut through the small city.32 Before the addition
of the highway, West Covina was considered a very rural place, without much
noise or traffic. The new highway had no stop signs, no lights, and traffic
speeded unimpeded through the previously quiet landscape. The City hired
police officers to patrol and give speeding tickets, of which they gave many.
The City developed the reputation as a speed trap. But, the strict
enforcement of the traffic laws led to an increase in the City coffers. The
money was used to maintain the roads and other community needs.33
West Covina Families
West Covina's early families were politically active and community oriented.
The names Maxson, Hurst and Jobe are consistently prominent in the history
of the City. As community leaders, they tended to be less focused on
development of the City itself, and more on farming the land and supporting
the new school system.
Maxson Family
One of the first families to settle in West Covina was the Maxsons, who
arrived in 1905. The Maxsons contributed greatly to West Covina's school
system over the years by donating land for schools and by being actively
involved as educators in the classroom as well. Benjamin Maxson was a very
influential and community-minded citizen. He was among the first to plant
walnut trees and was instrumental in organizing the La Puente Valley
Walnut Grower's Association and the West Covina Improvement Association.
He also worked as the general manager of the packinghouse and even served
as the city's mayor.
The Maxson residence was located at 1541 Sunset Avenue. It was a two-story Craftsman-style building.
Figure 7. Maxson Home in 1939, 1541 Sunset Avenue, Source: "Our Town"
Community News Demolished
Hurst Family
In 1906, the Hurst Family purchased fifty acres of land on the corner of
Orange Avenue and Merced Avenue. Commonly referred to as "The Hurst
Ranch," the property included a barn, pump house, engine house and the
family home. The house also included a swimming pool (built 1924) that was
open to children in the community during the summer months. This pool was
also the site of numerous community events.
Charles Hurst, like many West Covina landowners, grew walnuts and
eventually diversified to oranges and seasonally rotated crops. He was also a
member of the La Puente Walnut Growers Association and served on the City
Council in the 1940's. Mr. Hurst also served as mayor from 1952-56, which
was one of West Covina's most transformative periods.34
In the short four-year period from 1952 to 1956 more than 25,000 people moved into West Covina - more than six times as many people as the city had acquired in it's 27 year history prior to 1950".35
Figure 8. West Covina prior to WWII showing acres of orange groves, Source: Los
Angeles Herald
Figure 9. West Covina in the mid-1950s after its population boom, Source: Los Angeles Herald
The Hurst Family was therefore in the unique position to witness the
city's dramatic transformation from rural agricultural lands to bustling
suburban development.
The Jobe's
Edwin Jobe, veteran citrus grower, came to West Covina with his family in
1913. The Jobe family, like others in the area, focused their lives on
agriculture and education. Edwin Jobe left West Covina in the 1950s when
the rampant growth of subdivisions infringed on his ranch lands. A newspaper article entitled "Quick Decline, Subdivisions Too Much for Covina Rancher, 80" captures the feeling of ranchers in this time period.
The inroads of 'quick decline' and 'creeping subdivisions' on the Jobe citrus lands are driving the venerable rancher, like so many of this area's veteran citrus growers, to seek greener pastures. 'Valencia Park,' the pleasant old house...may soon be standing empty watching the bulldozers, push down the surrounding orange grove.36
The Jobe house still stands at 1440 E. Rowland Avenue and is an example of ranch homesteads that were once the norm in the area-large residences surrounded by acres of crops or orchards.
Figure 10. The Jobe House at 1440 E. Rowland Avenue (present day)
Early Suburbs (1941-1950)
This era marked the beginning of an identity change for West Covina. With
the establishment of Highway 99 and with the walnut groves overrun with
pests and disease, West Covina began to shift from an agricultural center of
rural farmsteads to an opportunity for real estate speculation. By this time,
the walnut industry was in decline and ranchers began to look for other
crops. Many abandoned agricultural production and switched their efforts to
real estate development and speculation in anticipation of future demand for
housing.
George Meeker developed one of West Covina's first large residential
subdivisions in 1941. The development was named Sunkist Village and
occupied a western portion of the City, now just south of the I-10 Freeway.
The subdivision was marketed as affordable family homes with large
backyards. Many of the new residents of the subdivision commuted to Los
Angeles.
The end of World War II had initiated a population increase and demand for
housing across California. "Hundreds of thousands of California veterans and
those who had chosen to become Californians were flooding back into the
Golden State, anxious to restart, repossess, reinvigorate, or, if need be,
reinvent their lives."37 West Covina was located at a strategic point and had the ability to offer easily covetable agricultural land and was therefore able to capture much of this development.
Tremendous Growth (1950-1960)
Like much of the rest of Southern California, West Covina experienced
significant growth in the post-war era. The city's location in the eastern San
Gabriel Valley and the availability of developable agricultural land made the
community an attractive location for new residential development. West
Covina itself experienced rates of growth that were significantly greater than
Los Angeles County as a whole during this time period. Between 1950 and
1960, the city's population grew from 4,499 to 50,645 persons. West Covina's
population growth was so exceptional during this period that it was identified
as one of the nation's fastest growing communities in 1955.38 This
represented an order of magnitude in growth, which required additional
infrastructure, public services and commercial development to support the
new population.
By 1950, the area's walnut groves were in steep decline due to an outbreak of
a blight that was killing the trees. Some farmers attempted to switch their
groves over to oranges during this period, but in general most landowners
opted to convert their holdings from agricultural to residential use. There
was strong market demand for new housing throughout Southern California
at this time and the availability of developable land in West Covina
reinforced the conditions that led to the community's rapid growth during
this era. New infrastructure that was required to meet the requirements of
the growing community also supported additional rounds of growth and
development. In 1955, the San Bernardino Freeway was constructed through
West Covina, which facilitated commuting from the city to employment
centers through the San Gabriel Valley and beyond.
It was during this era that West Covina developed its first commercial
district. The first major commercial development was the West Covina
center, which was completed in 1952. The center originally contained a grocery market, a pharmacy, a liquor store, a shoe store, a bakery and a TV
and radio shop39. The center was located on Glendora Avenue.
The next major phase of commercial development was oriented towards the
then new San Bernardino Freeway. The primary catalyst for this
development was the Batchelder family who had operated a 47-acre ranch in
the area from the 1930s. Their home "Valley Vaquero" was a noted local
property, which included five bathrooms, a ballroom and many other estate-
type amenities. With the arrival of the freeway, the Batchelders sought to
convert their land into a site for a large-scale commercial development and
petitioned to have their land annexed into West Covina. The West Covina
Center merchants, concerned about the ability of a new development to
overwhelm their new town center, opposed this. Nevertheless, the
Batchelder's land was annexed into the city and by 1955 their home was
demolished as part of a firefighting exercise, and construction began on the
Eastland Center. The mall was anchored by a May Co. Department Store.
This project established the freeway corridor and the frontage along Garvey
Street as West Covina's commercial core.
________________________________________
10 Derry, "Guidelines for Local Surveys: A Basis for Preservation Planning"
11 Derry, "Guidelines for Local Surveys: A Basis for Preservation Planning"
12 Carey McWilliams, Southern California: An Island on the Land (Layton: Gibbs-Smith, 1973) 25 and William McCawley, The First Angelinos: The Gabrielino Indians of Los Angeles (Banning: Malki Museum Press/Ballena Press, 1996).
13 The San Gabriel Mission was established on September 8, 1771 according to Rexford Newcomb, The Franciscan Mission Architecture of Alta California (New York: The Architectural Book Publishing Co., 1916) n.p.
14 Harry Peacock, West Covina 1771-1969 and Leonore Rowland, The Romance of La Puente Rancho (Covina: Neilson Press, 1958) 8-9.
15 Leonore Rowland, The Romance of La Puente Rancho (Covina: Neilson Press, 1958)
16 James J. Rawls and Walton Bean, California: An Interpretive History (Boston: McGraw Hill) 80.
17 Leonore Rowland, The Romance of La Puente Rancho (Covina: Neilson Press, 1958)
18 Barbara Pronin, West Covina: Fulfilling the Promise (Windsor Publications, 1989)
19 Carew, History of Pasadena (Vol. 1) 341.
20 Rowland, The Romance of La Puente Rancho, 41.
21 Kevin Starr's lecture on the History of California
22 Kevin Starr, Inventing the Dream: California Through the Progressive Era (New York: Oxford University Press, 1985) 38.
23 Local historian quoted in McWilliams, Southern California 118.
24 McWilliams, Southern California 118.
25 Barbara Pronin, West Covina: Fulfilling the Promise (Windsor Publications, 1989)
26 Starr, Inventing the Dream 140.
27 Carol Lundstrom, 75 Years of Education in West Covina (West Covina, n.p.) n.p.
28 Historical Society of Southern California Pub. Vol. 14, 1929
29 "Walnut Growers in Splendid Shape," (1920 newspaper article)
30 Pronin, West Covina: Fulfilling the Promise, 45.
31 Pronin, West Covina: Fulfilling the Promise
32 Harry Peacock, West Covina 1771-1969 (n.p.)
33 Pronin, West Covina: Fulfilling the Promise, 43.
34 Hurst Ranch History on West Covina City website
35 Clyde Leech, "West Covina 'Explodes from Orange Groves," Los Angeles Herald & Express, (Feb. 10, 1961)
36 Dorothy Emmons, "Quick Decline, Subdivisions Too Much for Covina Rancher, 80," The Progress Bulletin: Sunday Review (July 12, 1953)
37 Kevin Starr, Embattled Dreams: California in War and Peace 1940-1950 (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2002) 185.
38 Leech, "West Covina 'Explodes from Orange Groves"
39 Pronin, West Covina: Fulfilling the Promise, 72.
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