The devastation so far includes Will Rogers’ ranch house, Topanga Ranch Motel and numerous homes, businesses and community structures.
The iconic Eames House, Getty Villa, and other Los Angeles ... director Armando Quintero said in a statement. Built by William Randolph Hearst in 1929, the California Parks Service also confirmed ...
Among the destroyed structures are the ranch established by comedian Will Rogers and a motel owned by notorious publisher William Randolph Hearst Sonja Anderson ... Fire also brushed the grounds of the Getty Villa—an art museum founded by oil tycoon ...
Will Rogers built a ranch in what is now Pacific Palisades around a century ago. It was destroyed by the Palisades Fire on Tuesday night.
The iconic Eames House, Getty Villa, and other Los Angeles landmarks are still at risk of destruction amid raging wildfires across Southern California. But what are the other buildings impacted by the Palisades fires?
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.
The parks are home to iconic historical homes, including Will Rogers’ ranch house and the Topanga Ranch Motel, once owned by William Randolph Hearst.
The iconic Eames House, Getty Villa, and other Los Angeles landmarks are at risk of destruction following a series of fires that have ravaged Southern California since Tuesday. As of publication time,
The losses that have gut-punched Los Angeles’ art-and-culture community are staggering. Historic homes, cultural institutions and creative studios are gone.
Some posts sharing the video of Villa Leon in flames include a resurfaced narrative about the existence of tunnels used for child trafficking beneath the Getty sites. Other posts include a Google ...
The William Randolph Hearst Foundation and the Hearst Foundation Inc. are independent private philanthropies that operate separately from the Hearst Corporation. Since their inception in the 1940s ...
It happened. William, Prince of Wales, the next in line to the throne, asked to meet a group of Villa supporters for a midweek pint. It was Steve Jones, the chairman of Chasetown Football Club ...