In this
outing, we
will be
temporarily
leaving
Today we
will be
exploring
In the
summer of
1968, as is
fairly well
known,
Charlie
Manson and
various
members of
his
entourage
moved in
with
Dennis would
later claim
that he had
destroyed
all the
Manson demo
tapes, that
he
remembered
almost
nothing of
his time
with Charlie
and the
Family, and
that he
certainly
knew nothing
about the
Tate and
LaBianca
murders,
which were
committed in
the summer
of 1969,
about a year
after the
Family had
vacated the
At some
point in
time,
But this
story isn’t
really about
Dennis
Wilson; it’s
about
Charlie
Manson and
his alleged
motive for
allegedly
ordering the
Tate and
LaBianca
murders.
According to
the ‘Helter
Skelter’
scenario
popularized
by lead
prosecutor/disinformation
peddler
Vincent
Bugliosi,
Manson was
hoping to
spark an
apocalyptic
race war. It
is said that
Charlie
believed
that
According to
Barney
Hoskyns,
Manson began
formulating
his race war
theory
during his
stay in
Just to the
north of
Dennis
Wilson’s old
home is a
vast
wilderness
of
undeveloped
canyon
lands.
The farther
in one
hikes, the
more wild
and untamed
it becomes.
Along with
the sights
of the city,
the sounds
and the
scents
quickly
disappear as
well. Within
a very short
time, it is
surprisingly
easy to
forget that
one is still
within the
confines of
the city of
If one knows where to look, there is a narrow concrete stairway that is accessible from the fire road. This stairway descends down to the floor of the canyon, and it is a very, very long descent. Five hundred and twelve steps long, to be exact. As one makes the descent, this stairway, which seems to go on forever, seems wildly out of place. With time to kill on the way down, one finds oneself pondering (actually, most people probably wouldn’t, but I did) how many man-hours it took to set forms for 512 poured concrete steps, and how truckloads of concrete had to be poured out here in the middle of nowhere.
Reaching the canyon floor, one finds that, though the native flora has struggled mightily to reclaim the land, remnants of a past civilization can be seen everywhere. Some structures remain largely intact – a nearly 400,000-gallon, spring-fed reservoir serving a sophisticated potable water system; a concrete-walled structure that once housed twin electrical generators capable of lighting a small town; more concrete stairways hundreds of steps long, each snaking its way up the canyon walls; weathered livestock stables; professionally graded and paved roads; countless stone retaining walls; an incinerator; concrete foundations and skeletal remains of former dwellings; the rusting carcass of a Mansonesque VW bus; and, at the former entrance, an imposing set of electronically-controlled, wrought-iron security gates.
It is the kind of place that seems tailor-made for Charlie and his Family – remote and secluded, yet accessible by the Family’s custom-built dune buggies; with just enough crumbling infrastructure to provide rudimentary shelter for the clan; and with elaborate security provisions, including sentry positions and a formerly-electrified fence completely encircling the 50-acre compound (as well as, by some reports, an underground tunnel complex). And it was located just a short hike up the canyon from the place that Charlie Manson called home in the summer of 1968.
While exploring this place, obvious questions begin to come to mind (they would, that is, if I didn’t already know the answers, but try to work with me here): who developed this remote portion of the canyon? And why? Why here, in what feels like the middle of nowhere? The goal appears to have been to create a hidden and completely self-sustaining community, and an extraordinary amount of money was invested in infrastructure development … but why?
Very few
Angelenos
know of the
curious
ruins in
According to
Thirteen
years later,
in September
2005,
Cecelia
Rasmussen of
the Los
Angeles
Times
added a few
details to
the story
(“Rustic
Canyon Ruin
May Be a
Former Nazi
Compound,”
September 4,
2005): “
Herr Schmidt, needless to say, was the gentleman whose spell Winona Stephens fell under. According to Marc Norman, Schmidt “convinced her that the coming world war would be won by Germany, that the United States would collapse into years of violent anarchy and that the chosen few (read: the Stephenses, the certain gentleman and other true believers) would need a tight spot in which to hole up, self-sufficient, until the fire storm had passed. Then they could emerge not only intact but, thanks to the superiority of their politics, rulers of the anthill and, not incidentally, the origin of its new population.”
Sound familiar?
Murphy Ranch also reportedly featured a 20,000-gallon diesel fuel tank, livestock stables, and dairy and butchering facilities. Along both sides of the compound “rise eight crumbling, narrow stairways of at least 500 steps each,” as the LA Times noted. Those stairways apparently led to sentry positions high on the canyon walls (for the record, they are not actually crumbling, though most are overgrown with impenetrable vegetation). During Murphy Ranch’s years of operation, nearby residents reportedly complained of late-night military exercises and the sounds of live gunfire echoing through the canyons.
To summarize
then, it
appears that
the city of
It was all
so very
Mansonesque,
and,
ironically
enough,
Manson and
his crew
spent an
entire
summer
camped out
at a home
that was
within a
two-mile
hike of this
curious
place. It
should have
been
something of
a
In the late
1940s, after
the close of
the war,
Murphy Ranch
was
reportedly
converted
into an
artist’s
colony.
Architect
Welton
Becket, who
designed
several of
the
structures
at the
ranch, went
on to design
two of LA’s
landmark
structures:
the Capitol
Records
building and
the
* * * * * * * * * *
“Van Cortlandt and Untermyer functioned as outdoor meeting sites for the cult.”Maury Terry, referring to the cult behind the ‘Son of Sam’ murders (from The Ultimate Evil)
Just to the
west of
The massive, 46,000 square-foot edifice sits amid 22 lavishly landscaped acres of prime Hollywood Hills real estate. This rather ostentatious home was built by uberwealthy oil tycoon Edward L. Doheny as a wedding present for his son, Edward “Ned” Doheny, Jr.. If that plotline sounds vaguely familiar, it is probably because Edward Doheny was the inspiration for Upton Sinclair’s Oil, and thus for the homicidal Daniel Plainview character in There Will Be Blood (some of the interior shots near the end of that film, of expansive, marble-floored rooms, could very well have been shot in the real Greystone, though the exterior shots certainly were not).
Upon the home’s completion, in September 1928, young Ned Doheny and his new bride moved into the humble abode. Within months, the home would be bloodstained; soon after, it would be permanently abandoned.
Poor Ned,
you see, was
found dead
in the
cavernous
home on
It is
anyone’s
guess
whether or
not the two
really were
gay lovers,
but it
matters
little; the
rest of the
story was
almost
certainly a
work of
fiction. In
reality,
both men
were likely
murdered as
part of the
massive
cover-up/damage-control
operation
that
followed the
disclosure
of the
Harding-era
Some forty
years after
those
gunshots
rang out in
the opulent
Strangely
enough,
I have no idea what, if anything, any of that means, but I thought it best that I toss it into the mix.
* * * * * * * * *
Before
wrapping up
this
installment,
this seems
like as good
a time as
any to
introduce
you all to a
couple of
One of the two, whom we’ll call Jerry, had a decidedly conservative upbringing. Born into a politically well-connected Republican family, Jerry devoted his early years to pursuing a career in the Jesuit priesthood. His father, an active Republican Party operative, was an aspiring politician who initially had no luck in getting himself elected to office. Ultimately though, he succeeded in capturing the coveted California Governor’s seat in 1959, and he did it by employing a simple gimmick: he merely changed the “R” after his name to a “D.” He held the seat for two terms, through 1967, and then was replaced by a fellow who had employed a similar trick: replacing the “D” after his name with an “R.”
That gentleman, of course, was Ronald Wilson Reagan, who would govern the state through 1975, when he handed the reins over to Jerry, who, like his dad, had decided that he was a liberal Democrat. In fact, according to the media, Edmund G. “Jerry” Brown, Jr. was an ultraliberal extremist whose politics fell somewhere to the left of Fidel Castro and Che Guevara.
During
Another
figure
making the
rounds in
Mondo
Hollywood,
as I
mentioned in
a previous
installment,
was the
creation of
filmmaker
Robert Carl
Cohen, who,
as it turns
out, has an
interesting
background
for a guy
whose
destiny was
to capture
on film the
emerging
1960s
countercultural
scene. In
1954, Cohen
served in
the U.S.
Army Signal
Corps. The
following
year, he was
on
assignment
to NATO.
Following
that, he
served in
Special
Services in
Cohen has
proudly
proclaimed
that he was
the first
(or at least
among the
first)
Western
journalists/filmmakers
allowed to
enter and
shoot
footage in
each of
these
countries.
In the case
of
Have I mentioned, by the way, that Cohen is not a fan of this website? I know this because he sent a few e-mails my way in which he denounced my site as being “based on slander and third-party hearsay,” or some such gibberish, and he followed that up by issuing some empty legal threats. As it turns out though, I don’t much give a fuck what Robert Carl Cohen thinks of my website.
And now,
after that
brief
digression,
we return to
our
discussion
of
It is
unclear
whether the
paths of
this odd
couple
crossed
during
Governor
Brown,
however, had
little time
to spend on
actually
governing
the state of
These days,
Jerry Brown
maintains
little of
his liberal
façade. As
Go to
Part 11
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