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Mentryville, California
Mentryville, California
Mentryville
Ghost Town
Mentryville
Coordinates: 34°22′44.97″N 118°36′39.62″WCoordinates: 3
4°22′44.97″N 118°36′39.62″W
District Newhall
Website www.scvhistory.com/mentryville/
Reference no. 516-2[1]
Contents
1History
2Preservation
3Film and television productions
4California Historical Landmark Marker
5See also
6References
7External links
History[edit]
"Pico Number 4", a short distance up the canyon from Mentryville, was the first
commercially successful oil strike in California [1], and the longest running well
on record [2], finally being capped in 1990. The Pico Canyon oil field proved to
be the richest in the state's history to that time, and Mentryville became a
boomtown from 1876 to 1900. The town was named after the superintendent
who was in charge of the oil field, Charles Alexander Mentry. Mentry lived in the
town until his death in 1900 and built the 13-room mansion that still stands there.
[2][3]
In 1900, the Los Angeles Times described Mentryville as "an ideal community
of modest homes," where families were reared and a schoolhouse, social hall,
bakery, boarding houses, bunkhouses, blacksmith shop and machine shop were
built.[2][3] There was also a gas-lighted tennis court, croquet fields, and a main road
paved with local asphalt.[4][5] One thing the town lacked was a bar. Mentry had
reportedly "imbued the town with his puritanism as well as his name," prohibiting
drinking and the use of foul language.[4] When Mentry died, the entire town of
more than 200 people,[6][7] except for three individuals left behind in Mentryville,
traveled to Los Angeles for his funeral, bringing with them a large floral
arrangement in the shape of an oil derrick. [2]
Mentryville was eventually abandoned, partially because the amount of oil
slowed over time, and partially because of changes to the oil industry. During the
1930s, most of Mentryville's remaining residents left, many tearing down their
houses board by board and nail by nail, and taking it all with them. [7] By 1962,
Mentryville had become a ghost town, with only a caretaker family living in
Mentry's old 13-room house. A visitor to the camp that year reported that "rusted
oil equipment cluttered the canyon," toppled derricks lay rotting, and the
cemetery was "choked with weeds, hidden and forgotten." [6]
Charles Alexander Mentry was born in France on March 27, 1847. In November,
1873 moved to San Francisco with his father, Peter Mentry. He moved to San
Bernardino County to work at the Holcomb Valley Gold Mining Company. He
moved back to San Francisco in 1874 for one year as a stock broker. In 1875
move to Grapevine Canyon and worked for Los Angeles Oil Company, drilling an
oil well. He then went to work with J.G. Baker and D.C. Scott the Pico Oil claim.
Mentry died in 1900 in Newhall. [8] D. G. Scofield Mentry and financing oil well of
the Pico Canyon Oilfield.[9][10] In 1875 Mentry partnered with Sanford Lyon, Henry
Clay Wiley and Los Angeles lawman William Jenkins. [11]
Preservation[edit]
Felton Schoolhouse in 2008. The school was named in honor of Senator Charles N. Felton.
The last caretaker of Mentryville was Francis "Frenchy" Lagasse, who moved
into the old Mentry mansion with his wife and children in 1966. The property's
owner, Standard Oil of California, wanted to raze the remnants of the ghost town,
but Lagasse persuaded the company to allow him to restore the town. With help
from the Santa Clarita Historical Society, Lagasse eventually began offering tours
of Mentryville.[7] Lagasse was forced to leave Mentryville after the 1994
Northridge earthquake damaged the house,[4] and in 1995, Chevron (which had
become the owner upon its acquisition of Standard Oil of California in 1977)
donated the Mentryville site and the surrounding 800 acres (3.2 km2) in Pico
Canyon to the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy.[12] A group called the
Friends of Mentryville was organized to restore the buildings and open the old
town as a historic park with docent-led tours.[4]
The site is now registered as California Historical Landmark #516-2.[1]
A fire nearly destroyed Mentryville's historic structures in 2003, and a storm in
2004 washed out the visitors' parking lot and also flooded the historic buildings. [4]
See also[edit]
List of ghost towns in California
Pico Canyon Oilfield – includes information on history of Mentryville.
Santa Susana Mountains