California State Parks Director Armando Quintero acknowledged Wednesday the total loss of Will Rogers' historic ranch house and the Topanga Ranch Motel built by newspaper baron William Randolph Hearst.
Those structures included about 40% of the schools' facilities, Pamela Magee, principal of Palisades Charter High School, wrote in a letter to the community Saturday. "As you know, the school is ...
California wildfires damaged or destroyed iconic sites like Palisades Charter High, Will Rogers' ranch ... and a motel once owned by William Randolph Hearst. While some iconic landmarks, such ...
Schools in Los Angeles and Santa Monica are slowly reopening but Palisades Charter High School is far from welcoming back students. The school is urgently looking to secure a temporary campus for ...
A growing list of restaurants and landmarks are among the thousands of buildings destroyed by the Palisades Fires, which continues to burn along the Los Angeles County coastline as of Thursday morning.
The high school where Brian ... “Funny Lady.” The Palisades Fire also destroyed the Topanga Ranch Motel, a 30-room, bungalow-style motel built by William Randolph Hearst in 1929.
The famous school, which has served as a filming location for Teen Wolf, Carrie, Freaky Friday and Project X, was "badly damaged," per the Los Angeles Times. The outlet reported on Jan. 8 that at the moment, 70 percent of the campus had survived.
The high school where Brian De Palma brought Stephen King’s “Carrie” to life, Will Rogers’ ranch house, and a motel owned by William Randolph Hearst are among some of the famous structures that
The Palisades Fire between Malibu and Santa Monica has destroyed more than 1,200 commercial and residential structures, according to Cal Fire’s estimates. At least 200 additional homes, businesses and other structures have been damaged. The fire was 19% contained as of Wednesday.
Damage from the massive Palisades Fire could send students back into remote learning, but administrators are seeking an alternative.
For Emmeline Summerton, a self-taught social historian whose Instagram account, Lost Canyons LA, has become an addictive source of Los Angeles history and lore, the story of Topanga Canyon is one of improbable survival — a thoroughly wild place less than an hour’s drive from the city’s business center.
At least 27 people are believed to be dead. At least 27 people have died as multiple wildfires, fueled by severe drought conditions and strong winds, rage across the Los Angeles area. Thousands of ...