COMMENT: Are you a native of Malibu or the Los Angeles area - and what is your opinion on the city’s history?
@mousemd6 ай бұрын
My family goes back 3 centuries living in Massachusetts. So it is interesting to know that Malibu was started by someone from there. I'm French descent not Irish
@cliftonbowers63766 ай бұрын
Have relatives there presently...😮😊
@doreekaplan25896 ай бұрын
My kids are 4th generation L.A., San Diego. Its not about the distant past for me. I always imagined L.A. will go back to Mexico in time. Grew up in the Palisades, lived in West Hollywood then Marina Del Rey. I'm moving to the southern coast of Italy. Buying a beautiful beach house. Zero rent/ mortgage. Kids will inherit. Our older son followed an Australian gf he met teaching snowboarding in Utah to Brooklyn in his 20s. Loves it there. Never moved back to San Diego....that was 17 years ago.
@yahwea5 ай бұрын
I was born here in Los Angeles, though I was raised in Newport Beach tot he south. The most interesting thing about the daughter's house, and what it is best known for, are the orange tile color, which is a uranium salt, and the tiles are radioactive.
@LuvBluSky-we1zo3 ай бұрын
My great grandparents had a cabin on the cliffs to the north - not. a vacation home. They lived there full time.
@winnanne16 ай бұрын
You overlooked a significant achievement of the Ringes in fighting off the Union Pacific RR. I used to have a house on Broadbeach and saw sections of the Ringe's narrow gage railroad tracks get exposed when the beach erroded. That is what saved Malibu form being destroyed by the RR. They laid tracks where it was flat and easier to construct. The Ringes saved all the beaches in Malibu from being wrecked by railroad tracks by constructing their own narrow gage railroad which went from their Malibu estate to Santa Monica. The law was the Union Pacific could not lay track where there was an existing railroad. That is how the Ringes effectively fought off the powerful Union Pacific from getting the right of way through their property.
@lulumoon69425 ай бұрын
Great story about narrow gauge railroads and preservation! ✅
@wasabiginger69936 ай бұрын
EXCELLENT ... Thank You for so much info I never knew so fascinating! I was born 1950 Santa Monica and our family moved to Malibu 1953 as they loved the ocean ... bringing in speared fish, hand grabbed lobster & crowbarred abalone fresh meals ... we also took up surfing in the 50's and my mother used to surf Malibu lots. My dad used to drive to work downtown LA 5 days a week. But by the early 60's they felt Malibu & PCH was getting too crowded so we moved to North Shore Oahu 1963 to continue surfing & simple ocean lifestyle. When younger a decade later, I spent some time back in Malibu 1974, surfing and working at the now sadly gone, Malibu Drug store ... that also housed a burger & soda shop ... sort of an art deco rounded design. Have been back a few more times to visit my parents surfing friends ... but could never live there again. However, very grateful for having grown up there where surfing was life-transforming and so be-fitting of my outsider eccentric family. Back then, Malibu did not have any movie stars but was a small community of very eccentric beachy folks, as it did not cost much to purchase oceanfront property, due to no movie stars living there then. They started moving back in the 60's ... and have ruined it!
@CaptainGyro6 ай бұрын
My mother-in-law remembers taking a trolley from L.A. to Malibu in 1910. Lots on the ocean were only $25 USD. Her father passed on the deal saying that $25 USD was way too much for land that was only good for jack rabbits and rattlesnakes. However, later when she had married she bought a house on Trancas Beach in Malibu in 1968 which she later sold in 1980.
@WildWestGal5 ай бұрын
That electric 'trolley' was called the Red Line. It went from downtown LA straight down what is now Pico boulevard and ended right at the entrance to the Santa Monica pier. 🚎 ⛱️
@SandraGoff-t9c5 ай бұрын
My father bought one of the newly available subdivided lots in about 1950, one mile into the hills above Zuma Beach. It was a 1.5 acre lot with a clear, magnificent view of the ocean on one side, and the hills on the other. He paid $2,000 for it. He built a house for his very young family, but died after just two years. At least he had that. We later experienced the Malibu fire of December 26, 1957, which started in the early morning hours when the dreaded Santa Ana winds blew it over the ridge. There was no water for the firefighters to use, so we kept our roof wet using the garden hose for as long as possible. We lost a shed to the fire that passed by. Malibu hills were very rural then, everyone was spread out. We had to go to Santa Monica for groceries, a 13 mile drive. We were bused to Webster school until Juan Carrillo school was built.
@lulumoon69425 ай бұрын
Thanks for your memories, bet it was lovely.
@WildWestGal6 ай бұрын
I was born in Santa Monica in 1949. It was a sleepy seaside resort for the wealthy and a beach colony for the Hollywood set. The Rindges Santa Monica 'beach cottage' (not as stated in this video) was located on Ocean Avenue across from Palisades Park overlooking Santa Monica Bay. The beach cottage, as they were called, was not a mansion but a good sized home. I was living four blocks north of there in the early 1970s when the Historical Society of Santa Monica had to fight to keep it from being demolished and succeeded in getting it listed. Then, with great fanfare, it was moved a few miles down the road to Venice where it was initially used as a museum. The Rindges only lived in the SM house for a few years while they built a HUGE mansion in the style of the wealthy of that era in the West Adams District. The Ringes lived there full-time, using their other houses during the summer. Rhoda lived in the Adams District mansion for 36 years until she died. The Malibu mansion was never the primary residence and was eventually donated to the Catholic Church as was the Adams District House (it is now in private ownership). Rhoda's daughter,, also named Rhoda, married into the Adamson family, and the beautiful Spanish-style house on the beach, Adamson House (now a museum), was built for her by her parents. The Adamsons also owned a big dairy farm in Tarzama in the San Fernando Valley. When I was four years old, my family bought a small ranch in Tarzana, or my siblings and I grow up, not far from both the Adamsons and E.R. Burroughs. And due to my family's show business connection, I spent my summers at Maliu Colony. The Adamsons started a dairy and called it Adohr Farms (Rhoda spelled backward). They had little drive-thru kiosks in the early days, and we would pull up, give the milk/cream/butter order, and they would bring it out, and away we'd go! Eventually, they started selling it in markets and made home deliveries. In the late 60s, I moved back to my hometown and lived in a sweet cottage on Palisade Ave. for 20 years until the 1994 earthquake took me out. What memories of a time long past!
@renesteitz86135 ай бұрын
Very interesting. Thank you for sharing. This added so much more to the already fascinating history.
@WildWestGal5 ай бұрын
@@renesteitz8613 You're very welcome. I'm glad you enjoyed my little stroll down memory lane!
@renesteitz86135 ай бұрын
@@WildWestGal ⚘️
@joetanaka64465 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your history. I was born in St. John's Hospital (my middle name) in Santa Monica. A 4th generation Californian (now we're 5) who went to UCLA in the 80s, such a wonderful university at the time.
@WildWestGal5 ай бұрын
@@joetanaka6446 That's wonderful, Joe! Thank you for sharing, too. I was the first born in California on either side of my family. They were from the Dakotas, Norwegians and Irish on my mom's side and French and Bavarian on my dad's. Got my AA degree at SMCC and then transferred to UCLA in the early '70s, it was wonderful. Blessings to you and your family.
@aliceputt31336 ай бұрын
Born in L.A. and moved to Santa Monica in 1950 where I went through the entire S.M. School System to SMCollege and after UCLA. I currently avoid going to Santa Monica because they have torn down everything I loved and it’s like walking through a ghost town to me, although I loved it a lot.
@janmichaels85506 ай бұрын
I can’t thank you enough for sharing the history of Malibu and the family what an extraordinary family and the accomplishments of the family. I owned a home on Malibu Road. I came from Toledo Ohio. My name is Jan Michaels and my partner Jeff Kerr created a beautiful home on Malibu Road And I want to think you for this video and what it it has met to Jeff and myself….. much aloha. Yes I live in Hawaii now God has blessed me tremendously. Thank you……….😘👍😉
@MissBabalu1025 ай бұрын
Do you remember the Colony coffee shop? I miss it.
@douglasthompson94826 ай бұрын
The entire California coast is exquisite to say the least. The best in North America. Gorgeous in so many ways.
@Maybe1Someday6 ай бұрын
Tell me you havent been to Florida without telling me you havent been
@calartian855 ай бұрын
Southern California is a dump from end to end
@toniadugger39545 ай бұрын
Im a native of Orange county California.....thank you for the History of Malibu. ❤
@rebeccalowe-hodges81625 ай бұрын
i was born at Redondo Beach in 1968. I grew up going to the beach. My dad had a catamaran boat we would sail all over there. Our family lived in Santa Clarita - Canyon Country. Malibu is a gem.. loved it. we went to Santa Monica or Ventura as well. the WHOLE coastline is just gorgeous. I LOVED this documentary . I had no idea how integral The Ringes family was in all of this. I do remember the tiles. : )
@oldmoneyluxury5 ай бұрын
Wow! Thanks for the kind words, Rebecca, and we are glad you liked it!
@levik126 ай бұрын
I very much enjoyed watching this informative episode on Malibu as I recently moved here near the Colony and made my 35 plus years dream of mine a reality! Couldn’t be more happier. Thanks!😎
@oldmoneyluxury6 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@titizroyal86696 ай бұрын
Very interesting story. Malibu is a luxury place. Thank you for your video.
@renesteitz86135 ай бұрын
The tiling in some of the homes shown here reminds me of Hearst Castles opulent tiling. Astonishing ⚘️
@maryannjensen48666 ай бұрын
Was blessed to live there four years. So interesting to hear this history.
@mikekrpan5 ай бұрын
I was there today. Malibu is about a 30min drive from my home. Pacific Coast Hwy is a particularly dangerous route with many deaths due to reckless driving.
@martinphillips72216 ай бұрын
that barron coastline you refer to was once pristine before those civic innitiatives
@doreekaplan25896 ай бұрын
barren
@petervollers5 ай бұрын
Utterly fascinating. Great work.
@oldmoneyluxury5 ай бұрын
Many thanks!
@paulvon23785 ай бұрын
Thank you, Fred Ringe!
@laurastewart34862 ай бұрын
I live in L.A. suburb. My home is a 1928 Spanish revival casa. I adore the old world decorative titles. Thank you for the history 😊
@oldmoneyluxury2 ай бұрын
Our pleasure!
@aliceputt31336 ай бұрын
The Ringe Ranch was a cattle/dairy ranch and they had Adohr Milk. Adohr was Rhoda spelled backwards. They used to have armed cowboys riding the border with Santa Monica stopping people from going up the coast and Pacific Coast Highway didn’t exist and they tried to keep it that way.
@songman20005 ай бұрын
in 1993 My wife and I moved into a small old cottage on the Adamsons ranch in Serra Retreat. Grant Edmonton owned the last remaining parcel of land from the Range ranch. There were lots of horses back there, Mel Gibson and other famous actors were our neighbors. One day I found a secret panel in the house and opened it and it had newspapers from the 1800's with articles talking about Fredrick Ridge. On another occasion we saw workers digging something up in a horse stall across the street. We went there and found out there used to be a wooden shack there that had burned down. In that check was ll the remaining tile from the Malibu tile company. It was put there when the tile company burned down. I think it was in the late 30's or early 40's. I still have a bag of that tile. I remember grant Adamson dumped all the remaining tile in an Avocado orchard on the ranch. A few years after We moved away I called Grant and asked him if I could buy the tile. He said no.
@jodiburnett62113 ай бұрын
LA Native…. great piece. I learned a lot!
@oldmoneyluxury3 ай бұрын
Excellent!
@jennyandrievna46276 ай бұрын
What a wonderful! video! A lovely education to many of us who live in California, no doubt.
@oldmoneyluxury6 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@Dwayne-mb2uj6 ай бұрын
I met my Wife at point Dume and married her there too. Her Mother lives in Malibu Park one mile from the ocean.In 2018 her Mother house burned and the electric company bought a new house but all the trees are gone now. My Dad was IATSE union member and he worked on tv shows his whole life.
@MissBabalu1025 ай бұрын
Interesting to me that Frederick was director of the Edison Electric Light Company. My Grandpa Bryant became Chief Electrical Supervisor of DWP in SOCAL and Hoover Dam, replacing Ezra Scattergood in 1945 when he got sick. Small world. Sometimes magical. They all knew each other, going back to St Francis Dam eve, which fortunately they left before the sad collapse. I'm over Edison, now that I know more, but he introduced June Lockhart's parents to each other. My parent's first date was at the Malibu Sea Lion, and I just happened to move right there at 21.... and so on and so on.
@VansHalham5 ай бұрын
The landscape is the real star, if you want to get down to it. Palisades, Zuma are an amazing build up to Malibu, geographically. The weather is consistently awesome. Peace
@tipsterbl2 ай бұрын
I was born at St. Vincent Hospital in Los Angeles in 1961 and my family moved to Orange County a year later. I grew up in Orange and Villa Park and have lived in Dana Point for 40 years.
@vickiadams1866 ай бұрын
Very interesting life details. I recently saw a short done on the local morning news station where they featured the Rindge famly so I found this very interesting Thank you.
@jimparsons43126 ай бұрын
My family had a chicken farm in downtown LA in the 30’s
@MrOso366 ай бұрын
My great uncle had a chicken farm in the San Fernando valley.
@BarbaraCowdery5 ай бұрын
Now I’m hungry for 🐔 chicken!! 😂😊
@MissBabalu1025 ай бұрын
I adore the Malibu Art tile!
@7777voyles5 ай бұрын
Another great documentary very informative thank you
@oldmoneyluxury5 ай бұрын
Our pleasure!
@Lambert77855 ай бұрын
malibu colony is indeed a wonderful place where movie stars and their families can play together freely without worrying about privacy, because they are protected by the colony security gate, and can enjoy the marvelous and pleasant beachfront homes that share ocean in that area :)
@BarbaraCowdery5 ай бұрын
Interesting video! I live in LA & never knew about this history! Thanks for your video!
@oldmoneyluxury5 ай бұрын
Our pleasure!
@marleneyoung65756 ай бұрын
Very interesting. Enjoyed.
@christophers7965 ай бұрын
Old money rich affluent family in California came up with the idea of making wonderful houses for the super rich
@gabegaldos31446 ай бұрын
Newport Beach, for sure!
@annenelson516527 күн бұрын
I'm a native of Los Angeles, born in Santa Monica, raised in the San Fernando Valley.
@AvocatDude5 ай бұрын
I went to Our Lady of Malibu middle school with a guy named Danny Ringe in the late 70’s. I wonder if there;s a connection.
@kdawgtv13335 ай бұрын
Why is everyone hating on malibu and these people ?
@HighlimitSR6 ай бұрын
My minds jumps to “malibus most wanted” 😂😂
@oldmoneyluxury6 ай бұрын
😂
@ralphramirez19796 ай бұрын
Any history of Ramirez family in Malibu?
@donerickson73056 ай бұрын
Wonder how Frederick's dad got the original 2 million. And many mentions of financial problems of May, even though she got all that money from her husband
@kathymateer5 ай бұрын
Great Depression and fires hurt a lot of people at that time.
@phillipharris68615 ай бұрын
I surfed in malibu in 1957 for years and i lived in Manhattan beach in 1967 i purchased property in malibu canyon my son inlaw family had a home on broad beach road my nest Philo
@forward_ever_ever25956 ай бұрын
Do they have aany decendants carrying on any businesses still today
@Odo555 ай бұрын
The Ringes and now the duke and duchess of Cringes, American Riviera Orchard, where apparently strawberries grow on trees. Maybe a nice big tsunami to cleanse those shows of all the decadence. Interesting that a Brit is narrating this saga.....
@waynez55356 ай бұрын
If you give Baja California, Mexico to China, I assure you, it will turn into the next Shenzhen or Hong Kong
@jamesharris400016 ай бұрын
What about Pepperdine
@caligirlsns6 ай бұрын
8:01 William Russell.
@9fournine6 ай бұрын
Which is nicer, malibu or newport?
@FishizzleBoy6 ай бұрын
Malibu. Though a sleeper contender would be Laguna and Pelican bay.
@youtubecarspottersguide16 ай бұрын
@@FishizzleBoy laguna beach -dana point
@NBportofino6 ай бұрын
Newport is nicer. Cleaner, more manicured, more conservative and family focused with a beautiful harbor and lots of boating, yacht clubs. Malibu doesn’t have boating and is more expensive. Because Malibu is LA County it get lumped in with the bad governance of LA. And it’s BAD.
@t.b.15966 ай бұрын
Newport Beach...very classy, manicured, and super clean.
@WLM5966 ай бұрын
❤
@rollsgracie2686 ай бұрын
I’m a native that’s what happens with the rising of the tide
@Maybe1Someday6 ай бұрын
$140M is a pretty nice batton pass if I do say so myself
@Money8OOST6 ай бұрын
👍
@vasil123616 ай бұрын
Loka ku 'an kałnuna Humaliwo.
@misstoasted25255 ай бұрын
Aw you know your not from LA bc you called it THE PCH... which is true for all the other frwys we have example "the 405" "the 101" but Pacific Coast Highway my friend is simply... PCH. 😊
@markw9996 ай бұрын
Pepperdine University looks God-awful. Who designed that? Looks like a strip mall architect designed a university for 30% off his usual rate. LOL. Cheap, gawdy architecture in beautiful spaces is always appalling.
@vmoses19795 ай бұрын
Haha - the setting is gorgeous but yeah the architecture is not up to the location. If they had the lonely of Harvard - it may have been different.
@6582rg6 ай бұрын
The vandalism is really cosmopolitan. It's a dump.
@doreekaplan25896 ай бұрын
Like most California beaches, Malibu is unattractive. Nothing to write home about like many gorgeous beaches worldwide.
@Dwayne-mb2uj6 ай бұрын
Sour grapes ! I am used to those comments from people who never lived there.
@Dwayne-mb2uj6 ай бұрын
@@doreekaplan2589 Had an Uncle who lived in IB till be died.
@vmoses19795 ай бұрын
Yeah Cali beaches are not much to write about but the climate is awesome barring the May/June gloom.
@chriscochrane-m7w5 ай бұрын
the Malibu splasher in full form GO Mohammed! Haha- I'm sure she deserved it - I know you can surf in front and make room!