The Oaks of Santa Paula


Book Description

The Oaks of Santa Paula, A History of Santa Paula Canyon and the Oaks Neighborhood, offers a detailed look at the history of this distinctive part of the city, as set within the history of lower Santa Paula Canyon and the city as a whole. The narrative begins with the pioneering settlements of the 1870s, and the key role the canyon played in the successful establishment of the town, and carries though to the transforming events of the 1920s, as the canyon began to be converted into the city's first suburb and beyond to its building out in the postwar years to become the neighborhood we know today as the Oaks.




Santa Paula


Book Description

Santa Paula was built on the foundations of citrus cultivation and oil production. Ventura County's first irrigated 100-acre orange and lemon orchard was planted at Santa Paula in 1874, and the original 1888 harvest was so plentiful and delicious that the Limoneira Ranch Company was incorporated in 1893 and continues to thrive. Oil seeps brought wildcatters, and California's first gusher came in at Santa Paula in 1888. The town's twin notorieties through the 20th century were its designation as the “citrus capital of the world” and as the birthplace of the Union Oil Company of California (UNOCAL). Lemons and avocados remain the primary tree crops, the oil fields still produce, and the small-town character of bygone days has been preserved—Santa Paula has the largest concentration of vintage structures in the county. Santa Paula was built on the foundations of citrus cultivation and oil production. Ventura County's first irrigated 100-acre orange and lemon orchard was planted at Santa Paula in 1874, and the original 1888 harvest was so plentiful and delicious that the Limoneira Ranch Company was incorporated in 1893 and continues to thrive. Oil seeps brought wildcatters, and California's first gusher came in at Santa Paula in 1888. The town's twin notorieties through the 20th century were its designation as the “citrus capital of the world” and as the birthplace of the Union Oil Company of California (UNOCAL). Lemons and avocados remain the primary tree crops, the oil fields still produce, and the small-town character of bygone days has been preserved—Santa Paula has the largest concentration of vintage structures in the county.




Heritage Valley


Book Description

"Foreword by Betsy Blanchard Chase"--Cover.




The Auk


Book Description




Report


Book Description