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34°04′19″N 118°30′47″W / 34.072°N 118.513°W
The Murphy Ranch is a ranch built in Rustic Canyon, Los Angeles in the 1930s by Winona and Norman Stevens. [1] [2] According to a long-running urban legend, they were sympathizers of the fascist Silver Legion of America. [3] [4] The owner of record in 1933 was Jessie M. Murphy. [2] Supposedly designed as a base for Nazi activities in the U.S., [5] it was intended to be capable of being self-sustaining for long periods. The compound had a water storage tank, a fuel tank, a bomb shelter, and various outbuildings and bunkers. The estate's main gate was designed by Paul Williams, a well-known African-American architect in the Southern California area.
According to the legend, with no supporting newspaper accounts or other hard evidence: on Monday, December 8, 1941, the day after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, law enforcement agents raided the compound and detained members of the 50-strong caretaker force.[ citation needed]
As of 1990, it was abandoned and in a state of disrepair, and covered in graffiti. [2] The site is currently owned by the city of Los Angeles. In early 2016, many of the ranch buildings were demolished, as they were deemed unsafe. A few buildings remain, including the power house, an all-concrete building that once contained the diesel generators. All entryways have been sealed.
The ruins of Murphy Ranch are featured in Richard Kadrey's Sandman Slim series novel, Killing Pretty.
The Murphy Ranch was the featured location of the radio play [6] "Annexing the Palisades" written in 2020 by Alex Goldberg. [7] The play is set in 1939 and is about the construction of the house and its Nazi ties. [8]
This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia's
quality standards. (March 2024) |
34°04′19″N 118°30′47″W / 34.072°N 118.513°W
The Murphy Ranch is a ranch built in Rustic Canyon, Los Angeles in the 1930s by Winona and Norman Stevens. [1] [2] According to a long-running urban legend, they were sympathizers of the fascist Silver Legion of America. [3] [4] The owner of record in 1933 was Jessie M. Murphy. [2] Supposedly designed as a base for Nazi activities in the U.S., [5] it was intended to be capable of being self-sustaining for long periods. The compound had a water storage tank, a fuel tank, a bomb shelter, and various outbuildings and bunkers. The estate's main gate was designed by Paul Williams, a well-known African-American architect in the Southern California area.
According to the legend, with no supporting newspaper accounts or other hard evidence: on Monday, December 8, 1941, the day after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, law enforcement agents raided the compound and detained members of the 50-strong caretaker force.[ citation needed]
As of 1990, it was abandoned and in a state of disrepair, and covered in graffiti. [2] The site is currently owned by the city of Los Angeles. In early 2016, many of the ranch buildings were demolished, as they were deemed unsafe. A few buildings remain, including the power house, an all-concrete building that once contained the diesel generators. All entryways have been sealed.
The ruins of Murphy Ranch are featured in Richard Kadrey's Sandman Slim series novel, Killing Pretty.
The Murphy Ranch was the featured location of the radio play [6] "Annexing the Palisades" written in 2020 by Alex Goldberg. [7] The play is set in 1939 and is about the construction of the house and its Nazi ties. [8]