HomeMy WebLinkAbout1924 S. 6th Avenue
COD_____________
CERTIFICATE OF DEMOLITION
COD -1- 7/25
PLEASE COMPLETE THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION (REQUIRED):
PROJECT ADDRESS
DATE STRUCTURE BUILT ZONE CLASSIFICATION
NAME OF HOA:PROJECT FILED WITH ARB (DATE):
APPLICANT(S) NAME
MAILING ADDRESS
CITY STATE ZIP
E-MAIL ADDRESS
TELEPHONE NO.
PROPERTY OWNER(S) NAME
MAILING ADDRESS
CITY STATE ZIP
E-MAIL ADDRESS
TELEPHONE NO.
THE APPLICANT AND PROPERTY OWNER HEREBY DECLARE UNDER PENALTY OF PERJURY THAT ALL
THE INFORMATION SUBMITTED FOR THIS APPLICATION IS TRUE AND CORRECT.
APPLICANT’S SIGNATURE DATE
PROPERTY OWNER’S SIGNATURE DATE
ACTION TAKEN APPROVED DENIED CONDITIONALLY APPROVED
NOTE:A DEMOLITION PERMIT WILL NOT BE ISSUED PRIOR TO ISSUANCE OF A BUILDING PERMIT FOR A
NEW RESIDENCE.
BY:DATE:EXPIRATION:
THERE IS A TEN (10)CALENDAR DAY APPEAL PERIOD FOR THIS APPLICATION. APPEALS MUST BE SUBMITTED IN WRITING TO THE
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DIVISION WITH A $772.00 APPEAL FEE BY _______________ P.M.ON _______________________.
DATE FILED RECEIPT NO.PAID RECEIVED BY
PLICANTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT’’’’’’’’’’’’’’’’’’S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S SIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGIGNATU
THE INFORMATION SU
ROPERTY Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y OWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNWNER’S
1924 S 6th Ave.
1950 R1
Kenny Yu
5917 Oak Ave #317
Temple City CA 91007
starmankenny@yahoo.com
626-315-2559
Kenny Yu
5917 Oak Ave #317
Temple City CA 91780
starmankenny@yahoo.com
626-315-2559
12-9-25
12-9-25
11/25/25 (P:\2025\20252614-1924 S. 6th Ave\Memo-1924 S. 6th Ave REV.docx)
CARLSBAD
CLOVIS
IRVINE
LOS ANGELES
PALM SPRINGS
POINT RICHMOND
RIVERSIDE
ROSEVILLE
SAN LUIS OBISPO
1500 Iowa Avenue, Suite 200, Riverside, California 92507 951.781.9310 www.lsa.net
MEMORANDUM
DATE: November 25, 2025
TO: Kenny Yu, Property Manager
FROM: Casey Tibbet, M.A., Associate Cultural Resources Manager/Architectural Historian
SUBJECT: Historic Resources Evaluation – Primary Record and Building, Structure, and Object
(BSO) Form for 1924 S. 6th Avenue in the City of Arcadia, Los Angeles County,
California (LSA Project Number 20252614)
LSA Associates, Inc. (LSA) completed a historical evaluation of the property at 1924 S. 6th Avenue
(Assessor Identification Number 5791-019-018) in the City of Arcadia. The property includes a primary
residence, a secondary residence with an attached garage, and a workshop/storage building. In
support of this effort, LSA conducted research and an intensive-level field survey. The evaluation was
documented on Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR) 523A (Primary Record) and 523B (Building,
Structure, and Object Record) forms and the property was identified on a DPR Location Map.
As a result of LSA’s evaluation of this property, it was determined that the property does not appear
to be eligible for listing in the California Register of Historical Resources under any criteria or
designation under the local ordinance. In summary, the primary residence has sustained fire damage,
a portion of the roof has partially collapsed, and almost all the façade windows are boarded up. Based
on photographs provided by the owner, the rear and interior of the residence are severely damaged.
No evidence was found that the residence is associated with historically important people or the work
of a master architect or builder. It is not iconic.
For these reasons, the property at 1924 S. 6th Avenue does not qualify as a “historical resource” as
defined by the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) and, for purposes of this project, the City
may make a finding of “no impact” regarding built environment historical resources.
Attachment: DPR Forms
DPR 523A (1/95) *Required information
State of California The Resources Agency Primary #
DEPARTMENT OF PARKS AND RECREATION HRI #
PRIMARY RECORD Trinomial
NRHP Status Code 6Z
Other Listings
Review Code Reviewer Date
Page 1 of 8 Resource Name or #: 1924 S. 6th Avenue
P1. Other Identifier:
*P2. Location: Not for Publication _ Unrestricted *a. County: Los Angeles and (P2b and P2c or P2d. Attach a
Location Map as necessary.)
*b. USGS 7.5' Quad: El Monte, CA Date: 1994 T1S; R 11W; Section: 3; S.B.B.M.
c. Address: 1924 S. 6th Avenue City: Arcadia Zip: 91006
d. UTM: Zone: 11; mE/ mN (G.P.S.)
e. Other Locational Data: (e.g., parcel #, directions to resource, elevation, etc., as appropriate) AIN: 5791-019-018
*P3a. Description: (Describe resource and its major elements. Include design, materials, condition, alterations, size, setting, and boundaries)
This fire damaged, one-story, Minimal Ranch style residence is on the east side of S. 6th Street in a residential neighborhood. It is
irregular in plan and rests on a raised foundation. The low-pitched, cross-hipped roof is sheathed with composition shingles and
has moderate eaves and two brick chimneys. The south end of the roof has partially collapsed from fire damage and smoke and
burn marks are visible under the eaves. The exterior walls are clad with horizontal boards, stucco, and brick skirting. Most of the
windows are boarded up. The west-facing, asymmetrical, articulated façade is largely obscured from view by vegetation but
includes a bay window with a multi-paned fixed window flanked by what appear to be single-hung windows, a recessed entry with
the original wood and glass door, and several boarded-up windows. Based on photographs provided by the owner, the rear and
interior of the residence have been severely damaged by fire. Based on aerial photographs, the property also includes a garage
attached to a secondary residence and a freestanding workshop/storage building, neither of which were visible from the public
right-of-way during the field survey.
*P3b. Resource Attributes: (Original uses) HP2-Single-family property
*P4. Resources Present: _Building Structure Object Site District Element of District Other (Isolates, etc.)
P5b. Description of Photo: (View,
date, accession #) View of the
property from the street, view east
(10/17/25).
*P6. Date Constructed/Age and
Sources: _Historic Prehistoric Both
1950 (Building permit)
*P7. Owner and Address:
Susan Artin Daniel
C/O Robin Artin
1924 S. 6th Avenue
Arcadia, CA 91006
*P8. Recorded by: (Name,
affiliation, and address)
Casey Tibbet, M.A.
LSA Associates, Inc.
1500 Iowa Avenue, Suite 200
Riverside, CA 92507
*P9. Date Recorded: October 17, 2025
*P10. Survey Type: (Describe) Intensive-level CEQA compliance
*P11. Report Citation: (Cite survey report and other sources, or enter "none.") None.
*Attachments: NONE _Location Map Sketch Map _Continuation Sheet _Building, Structure, and Object Record Archaeological Record District Record Linear Feature Record Milling Station Record Rock Art Record Artifact Record Photograph Record Other (List):
P5a. Photo or Drawing (Photo required for buildings, structures, and objects.)
See Continuation Sheet
DPR 523B (1/95) *Required information
State of California The Resources Agency Primary #
DEPARTMENT OF PARKS AND RECREATION HRI#
BUILDING, STRUCTURE, AND OBJECT RECORD
Page 2 of 8 *NRHP Status Code 6Z
*Resource Name or # (Assigned by recorder) 1924 S. 6th Avenue
B1. Historic Name:
B2. Common Name:
B3. Original Use: Single-family residence B4. Present Use: Single-family residence
*B5. Architectural Style: Minimal Ranch
*B6. Construction History: (Construction date, alterations, and date of alterations)
1945 – Permit issued to owner/builder John Ekkens for a residence, feed room, and shop.
1948 – Permit issued to owner/builder John F. Ekkens for brooder house.
1949 – Permit issued to owner J. F. Ekkens for sewer hookup.
1950 – Permit issued to owner John Ekkens for a dwelling at the front of 1924 S. 6th Avenue.
1956 – Permit issued to owner/builder John Ekkens for an addition and remodel at the rear of 1924 S. 6th Avenue.
1968 – Permit issued to owner Edgar Roginson to reroof with composition over existing wood shingles.
1984 – Permit issued to owner Edward L. Artin to reroof main house with fiberglass shingles.
2004 – Permit issued to owner Edward and Dorothy Artin Trust to upgrade the electrical service.
2007 – Permit issued to owner Dorothy Artin to change out the water heater in the same location.
*B7. Moved? _No Yes Unknown Date: Original Location:
*B8. Related Features:
B9a. Architect: None found b. Builder: None found
*B10. Significance: Theme: Not Applicable (NA) Area: NA
Period of Significance: NA Property Type: NA Applicable Criteria: NA
(Discuss importance in terms of historical or architectural context as defined by theme, period, and geographic scope. Also address integrity.)
This 1950, fire-damaged Minimal Ranch residence does not meet the criteria for listing in the California Register of Historical
Resources (California Register) or designation under the local ordinance. It is not a “historical resource” for purposes of the
California Environmental Quality Act (CEQ).
Historic Context: Originally owned by the San Gabriel Mission and then a part of Rancho Santa Anita, the land that includes
present-day Arcadia was also owned by Scottish immigrant Hugo Reid (Architectural Resources Group 2016). Reid was the first to
make a modern impact on the land, raising cattle and building the first structure. After a succession of owners, in 1875 Elias J.
“Lucky” Baldwin purchased 8,000 acres of the rancho along with much of the surrounding area (Ibid.). He established the Baldwin
Ranch in the area that now contains the Los Angeles County Arboretum in what would become Arcadia (Ibid.). Residential
development from 1875 to 1909 is one of the first important themes in the City’s history (Architectural Resources Group 2016). See
Continuation Sheet
B11. Additional Resource Attributes: (List attributes and codes)
*B12. References:
Ancestry.com
Var. A variety of records were accessed online in October 2025 at: http://home.ancestry.com/. These include city directories,
voter registration records, and United States Census Data.
Arcadia Historical Society
2021 Arcadia History. Our History. Accessed online in September
2021 at: https://arcadiahistoricalsociety.org/arcadia-history/
Architectural Resources Group
2016 “City of Arcadia Citywide Historic Context Statement.”
Accessed online at:
https://www.arcadiaca.gov/government/city-
departments/development-services/historic-preservation
See Continuation Sheet
B13. Remarks:
*B14. Evaluator: Casey Tibbet, M.A., LSA Associates, Inc., 1500 Iowa
Avenue, Suite 200, Riverside, CA 92507
*Date of Evaluation: October 2025, updated November 2025
(This space reserved for official comments.)
(Sketch Map with north arrow required.)
Refer to Location Map
DPR 523L (1/95) *Required Information
State of California - The Resources Agency
DEPARTMENT OF PARKS AND RECREATION
CONTINUATION SHEET
Primary #
HRI #
Trinomial
Page 3 of 8 *Resource Name or #: (Assigned by recorder) 1924 S. 6th Avenue
*Recorded by LSA Associates, Inc. *Date: November 2025 X Continuation Update
P5a. Photo (continued from page 1)
Façade, view from front yard looking east (10/17/25). Windows are boarded up and fire damage is evident under the
eaves. The south end of the roof (right side of photo) has collapsed from fire damage.
Rear of residence, view west-northwest. Photo provided by property owner in December 2025.
See Continuation Sheet
DPR 523L (1/95) *Required Information
State of California - The Resources Agency
DEPARTMENT OF PARKS AND RECREATION
CONTINUATION SHEET
Primary #
HRI #
Trinomial
Page 4 of 8 *Resource Name or #: (Assigned by recorder) 1924 S. 6th Avenue
*Recorded by LSA Associates, Inc. *Date: November 2025 X Continuation Update
P5a. Photo (continued from page 3)
The following photographs were provided by the owner in November 2025.
Garage and secondary residence, west elevation, view
southeast.
Secondary residence, west elevation, view northeast.
Secondary residence, portion of the south elevation, view north.
Storage building, north elevation, view south.
*B10. Significance: (continued from page 2)
In 1883, Baldwin subdivided 3,000 acres into the Santa Anita Tract (Architectural Resources Group 2016). The townsite included
“town lots, villa sites, and larger 30-acre farm parcels (Architectural Resources Group 2016:27). Despite the construction of the Los
Angeles & San Gabriel Valley Railroad (LA&SGVR) and one of its depots in the new townsite, sales were slow and “Baldwin deeded
the remaining acreage of the Santa Anita Tract to his ranch manager Hiram Unruh” who had much greater success selling the lots
(Ibid.). By 1887, the townsite was known as Arcadia and the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad (ATSF) had gained control of the
LA&SGVR, bringing more traffic through the area (Ibid.).
The densest development occurred in the core of the town around the intersection of 1st Avenue and Santa Clara Street, where the
ATSF and Southern Pacific railroads intersected (Architectural Resources Group 2016:33). The term “dense” is used loosely as the
1908 Sanborn maps show only one or two residences per block (Ibid.). Residential development in this part of town was on small lots,
while development further south was on multi-acre parcels (Ibid.). As late as 1903, when a census was taken to ascertain the
population of the proposed City of Arcadia, the area only had 642 residents, and many lived and worked on the Baldwin Ranch or were
temporary residents working for the railroads (Ibid.). Regardless, with a booming economy increasingly based on entertainment, horse
racing, hospitality, and gambling, Arcadia was incorporated in 1903, with Baldwin as its first mayor (Arcadia Historical Society 2021). In
1907, Baldwin established the first Santa Anita Park, a horse racetrack that was “billed as the most modern and beautiful in the nation”
and quickly became the biggest attraction to the new city (Architectural Resources Group 2016:31). However, the track’s success was
short-lived, as California banned horse racing in 1909 resulting in the closure of Santa Anita Park (Ibid.).
Moving into the 1910s, Arcadia’s growth remained slow and steady (Architectural Resources Group 2016). However, the city began
shifting away from “its sporting days to more respectable pursuits, as it outlawed liquor licensing in 1912 and embarked on a series of
civic improvements” (Architectural Resources Group 2016:44). By 1915, electric streetlights had been (see Continuation Sheet)
DPR 523L (1/95) *Required Information
State of California - The Resources Agency
DEPARTMENT OF PARKS AND RECREATION
CONTINUATION SHEET
Primary #
HRI #
Trinomial
Page 5 of 8 *Resource Name or #: (Assigned by recorder) 1924 S. 6th Avenue
*Recorded by LSA Associates, Inc. *Date: November 2025 X Continuation Update
*B10. Significance: (continued from page 4)
installed in some areas and streets were graded and oiled (Ibid.). Residential development in the 1910s saw the subdivision of larger
parcels into smaller ones (2.5 to 5 acres) that attracted a wider variety of buyers who were interested in a more suburban lifestyle with
room for some agricultural pursuits (Architectural Resources Group 2016:49). Most of the 1910s subdivisions followed a grid pattern
with graded and sometimes paved roads without curbs or sidewalks (Architectural Resources Group 2016). In 1917, Anita Baldwin sold
the old 185-acre Santa Anita Park property to the County who deeded it to the federal government for use as a balloon training school
(Architectural Resources Group 2016). Known as Ross Field, the facility included storehouses, barracks to house approximately 3,500
men, and enormous hangars for the hydrogen balloons, as well as many other buildings (Ibid.). This property later became Arcadia
County Park.
After World War I, the region thrived and the 1920s were a transformative period in Arcadia’s development (Ibid.). Residential
subdivision accelerated with tracts designed in grid patterns like those of the 1910s, but with smaller lots (Architectural Resources
Group 2016:36). Single-family residential construction dominated the period (Ibid.). Most of these were modest in size and the earliest
were constructed in the Craftsman style, with Period Revival styles becoming dominant in the mid-1920s and into the 1930s (Ibid.). The
smaller lot subdivisions were located closer to the original town center, Pacific Electric lines, and the commercial district at Huntington
and First, while the larger multi-acre lots were in what was then the southern part of town (Ibid.).
The 1929 to 1941 period was characterized nationally by massive unemployment and economic uncertainty, but Arcadia was one of
the few places that did not experience a near cessation of construction (Architectural Resources Group 2016:65). The major factors for
this were Anita Baldwin selling off the remaining approximately 1,300 acres of the Baldwin Ranch; establishment of military facilities and
the related increase in demand for commercial businesses; and construction of a county park, which was a large Works Progress
Administration (WPA) project (Ibid.). “In 1933, California re-legalized horse race betting, and Anita Baldwin seized her opportunity to
revive her father’s racetrack dream” (Architectural Resources Group 2016:55). She sold 214 acres to a group of investors who hired
Gordon Kaufman to design the grandstand, Turf Club, and clubhouse and landscape designer Tommy Tomson to design the park’s
lush landscaping (Ibid.). “Santa Anita Park opened on Christmas day, 1934, and quickly became Arcadia’s signature landmark” (Ibid.).
Other Baldwin acreage was parceled out into several residential subdivisions that jumpstarted construction between 1936 and 1941
(Ibid.). Also in the late 1930s, Havenhurst, a development of modest homes on what was once rocky land east of Santa Anita Wash,
was “the first project of mass production of houses in Arcadia” (Architectural Resources Group 2016:70). The Baldwin developments
and Havenhurst were all located in the northern half of the city.
With the end of World War II (WWII) and the return of thousands of veterans, Arcadia and the greater Los Angeles area saw an
enormous increase in the development of affordable housing. Much of this development took the architectural vocabulary of the pre-war
years and combined it into simplified styles suitable for mass developments and small-scale apartments (City of Los Angeles 2011).
Development during the 1945-1970 period transformed the city from semi-rural to suburban, earning it the nickname a “Community of
Homes” (Architectural Resources Group 2016).
People Associated with this Residence. According to building permits, in 1945 John F., a poultryman, and his wife Myrna M. Ekkens
obtained a permit to build a residence, feed room and shop on this property; this was followed by a brooder house in 1948 (City of
Arcadia var.). In 1950, Mr. Ekkens built the front house (Ibid.). In 1956, he remodeled and added onto the rear building (Ibid.). John
Frederick Ekkens was born in 1916 in Michigan and was listed as a general contractor in 1959 (Ancestry.com var.). He died in 2002 in
Santa Barbara (Ibid.).
In 1960, the three-bedroom home with a guest house was listed for sale (Los Angeles Times 1960). From 1962 to 1968, Edgar A.
Rogison, a salesman at Conlin Brothers, and his wife Anna L. lived at this address (Ancestry.com var.). Edgar was born in Fresno in
1925 and died in Los Angeles in 2006 (Ibid.). In 1969, the Rogisons were followed by Richard E., a painting contractor, and his wife
Edith Staggers (Ibid.). According to building permits, the Edward L. Artin family owned the residence from at least the 1980s into the
2000s (City of Arcadia var.). In 1969, Mr. Artin owned a store at 836 S. Baldwin Avenue (Daily News-Post 1969). A real estate
advertisement states the property has not been on the market since 1969 (Redfin 2025).
Significance Evaluation. In compliance with CEQA, this property is being evaluated under the California Register criteria and the City
of Arcadia criteria for Landmarks (Chapter 1, Section 9103.17.060 of the City’s Municipal Code). The California Register criteria and 1-4
of the local criteria are identical, however, in addition to meeting one of the first four criteria, the local criteria also requires that the
property either be listed in the National Register of Historic Places or California Register (criterion 5) or be an iconic property (criterion
6). Because of this additional requirement, the local criteria are more restrictive than the California Register criteria. Therefore, it is
possible for a resource to meet the California Register criteria, but not the local criteria.
See Continuation Sheet
DPR 523L (1/95) *Required Information
State of California - The Resources Agency
DEPARTMENT OF PARKS AND RECREATION
CONTINUATION SHEET
Primary #
HRI #
Trinomial
Page 6 of 8 *Resource Name or #: (Assigned by recorder) 1924 S. 6th Avenue
*Recorded by LSA Associates, Inc. *Date: November 2025 X Continuation Update
*B10. Significance: (continued from page 3)
Criterion 1 - Associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of local or regional history
or the cultural heritage of California or the United States. This residence is associated with the post-WWII residential boom that
made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of local, regional, and even national history. “More than 40 million housing units
were built in the United States during the 30-year period following the end of World War II, and at least 30 million of these were single-
family houses” (California Department of Transportation 2011:2). These homes were typically modest in size and style and constructed
in a short time as part of large tracts marketed to the working class. “The fundamental unit for postwar housing is not the individual
house, but the tract, or a single construction phase within a larger tract or new community” and typically a single home would not be
individually significant in this context (California Department of Transportation 2011:121). As with most homes associated with this
historic context, individually this residence is unimportant and insignificant. It is not significant under this criterion.
Criterion 2 - Associated with the lives of persons important to local, California or national history. Based on the research
discussed above, the residence does not appear to be associated with persons important in history. It is not significant under this
criterion.
Criterion 3 - Embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, region or method of construction or represents the
work of a master or possesses high artistic values. Although this Minimal Ranch house has been severely damaged and most of
the façade windows are boarded up, it exhibits some characteristics of the style such as the wood and glass door with diamond panes,
the low-pitched, hipped roof with moderate eaves, and the combination of wall cladding materials (stucco, wood, and brick). However, it
is a common type and style and there are numerous better examples than this fire damaged and partially boarded up residence. It is
not the work of a master architect or builder and does not have high artistic values. It is not significant under this criterion.
Criterion 4 - Has yielded, or has the potential to yield, information important to the prehistory or history of the local area,
California or the nation. A built environment resource may be significant if important research questions can only be answered by the
actual physical material of the resource. This residence was built in 1950 using common materials and construction practices. It does
not have the potential to yield information important to the history or prehistory of the local area, California, or the nation. It is not
significant under this criterion.
In addition to meeting one or more of the above criteria, the local ordinance requires that one of the following criteria be met.
Local Criterion 5 – Is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and/or California Register of Historical Resources. The
online National Register database (current through 2012) and the National Register weekly lists from 2013 through the present, were
searched, but no listings for this property were found (National Park Service n.d.a and n.d.b). In addition, the California Office of Historic
Preservation’s (OHP) Built Environment Resource Directory (BERD) was reviewed to determine whether this property is listed in or is
eligible for listing in either the National Register or California Register (California Office of Historic Preservation 2022). It is not
significant under this criterion.
Local Criterion 6 – Is an iconic property. According to the City’s ordinance, iconic means a property that “exhibits the City’s unique
character, history, or identity and/or has been visited and photographed so often by residents and visitors to the city that it has become
inextricably associated with Arcadia” (9103.17.160 Definitions). This residence is a common type and style and does not exhibit the
City’s unique character, history, or identity. It is not iconic. It is not significant under this criterion.
*B12. References: (continued from page 2)
California Department of Transportation
2011 Tract Housing in California, 1945-1973. A Context for National Register Evaluation. Caltrans Division of Environmental
Analysis, Sacramento.
California Office of Historic Preservation (OHP)
2022 Built Environment Resource Directory for Los Angeles County. Accessed online in October 2025 at:
https://ohp.parks.ca.gov/?page_id=30338
City of Arcadia
Var. Building permits for 1924 S. 6th Avenue. Accessed online in October 2025 at:
https://laserfiche.arcadiaca.gov/WebLink/Browse.aspx?startid=537578&cr=1
See Continuation Sheet
DPR 523L (1/95) *Required Information
State of California - The Resources Agency
DEPARTMENT OF PARKS AND RECREATION
CONTINUATION SHEET
Primary #
HRI #
Trinomial
Page 7 of 8 *Resource Name or #: (Assigned by recorder) 1624 S. 6th Avenue
*Recorded by LSA Associates, Inc. *Date: November 2025 X Continuation Update
*B12. References: (continued from page 6)
City of Los Angeles
2011 Jefferson Park HPOZ Preservation Plan, City of Los Angeles. On file at the City of Los Angeles.
Daily News-Post
1969 TV set taken away. August 22, page 2.
Los Angeles County Office of the Assessor
n.d. Property information accessed online in October 2025 at: https://maps.assessor.lacounty.gov/m/
Los Angeles Times
1960 Real estate advertisements. October 2, page 228.
National Park Service
n.d.a National Register Database and Research. Accessed online in October 2025 at:
https://www.nps.gov/subjects/nationalregister/weekly-list.htm
n.d.b Weekly Lists Previous Years. Accessed online in October 2025 at: https://www.nps.gov/subjects/nationalregister/weekly-lists-
previous-years.htm
Redfin
2025 1924 S. 6th Avenue, Arcadia. Accessed online in October 2025 at: https://www.redfin.com/CA/Arcadia/1924-S-6th-Ave-
91006/home/7240973
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