
by Julie Lugo Cerra, a sixth-generation Californian who has written extensively on area history.
allona Creek, originally,
was a picturesque natural waterway fed by runoff. The creek collected
the water from cienegas (swamps) and the rains. The banks of Ballona Creek
were lined with trees, like sycamores, willows and tules, and even in
my dad's time, (1908-1987), he remembered the watercress growing at its
edge.
The creek was a natural resource for the indigenous people. The Native
Americans in this area made board boats, which they waterproofed with asphaltum
from nearby La Brea Tar Pits. They used the waterway for transportation and to
fish for their food. From accounts of these people, who were called the
Gabrielinos, they used the tules along the creek to make huts for shelter,
and they knew of the rising water and the danger it could present.
 | | 1902 United States Geological Survey Map |
When Agustín Machado took his legendary dawn to dusk ride from the Playa del Rey
foothills to claim the 14,000-acre Rancho La Ballona, the creek cut through it.
We know that Ballona's owners, Agustín Machado, his brother Ygnacio, and father
and son, Felipe and Tomas Talamantes, named their rancho "La Ballona"--Paso de las
Carretas. The origin and meaning of "Ballona" remains uncertain. Prevalent
theories suggest that it was a misspelling. One school thinks the intended name
was Ballena, which means whale in Spanish, and that at the edge of Ballona, where
the creek empties, one could watch the migration of the whales. Others differ,
and hold the opinion that the Talamantes ancestors came from Bayona, Spain, so
they named it for their early heritage.
Eventually, Agustín Machado built an adobe house near the edge of Ballona
Creek, on today's Overland Avenue. That first adobe washed away in floodwaters.
The Machados rebuilt further away from the waterway. Because the creek often
changed its course, it separated some of the partitioned Machado property, which
had originally been only on one side of the creek.
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Ballona Creek, early 20th century |
To the early settlers, the creek was a source of irrigation water as well.
My grandfather, Mercurial Lugo, the son of Vicenta Machado de Lugo, (one of Agustín
Machado's children), farmed his 18 acre Lugo Ranch, generally where the Roll 'n Rye
stands today. He was also the "zanjero" (sanjero), or water overseer of Ballona.
It was his job to ensure that the local ranchers received their fair share of water
for their crops. I learned some time ago from the City's Engineering Department,
(Sam Cerra), that on Cota Street, near the creek, old pipes for that purpose were
occasionally unearthed.
 | | mgm studio still showing the creek |
When Harry Culver saw filmmaker Thomas Ince shooting one of his famous
western movies "on location" on Ballona Creek, he enticed Ince to move his
studio to Culver City. Ince normally used the Los Angeles River, but this
film required a smaller waterway for his painted Indians in a canoe.
The creek was a source of frustration for the early city Trustees. On
October 2, 1922, by Resolution Number 250, the governing body directed
the City Attorney, to "take immediate legal steps to secure relief from
the nuisance from the intolerable condition caused by failure of the city
of Los Angeles to abate the nuisance in Ballona Creek." Jose de la Luz Machado,
(Agustín Machado's youngest son), lived on Overland Avenue between Jefferson
and Farragut. His wife found it necessary to attend what we now call council
meetings, and complain, rather pointedly, of the same raw sewage. In later days,
concerns included chemicals.
Ballona Creek served the Gabrielinos for
transportation and as a source of food. The Early Settlers used the creek to
irrigate their crops. But La Ballona Creek's meandering ways eventually
enlisted the help of the Army Corps of Engineers. The Corps came in,
straightened it, and made its course permanent by paving the sides of Ballona
Creek in 1935. No more homes were lost.
As a child, Fred Machado swam in what he remembers as the clear waters of
Ballona Creek. He can still picture the sides of it, lined with trees and
tules, the creek water a home to ducks and small fish. This past month, he
talked about their ranch house near Centinela and Jefferson, imparting that
it was "built so high, you could walk under it." This ranch was just
outside what became Culver City, on a Machado portion of Rancho La Ballona.
Fred Machado is a direct descendant of Ballona founder, Agustin Machado
through the eldest son, Juan Bautista. Fred likened this accommodation for
flooding and subsequent use of the rich silt deposits for farming, to the
rich soil provided along the banks of the famed Nile River. He recalled the
flooding of the creek on New Year's Day, 1934. That 1934 flood exceeded
helpful silt deposits. It kept the family from tilling some of their ranch
land ever again. It was impossible from then on, to grow castor beans, and
according to Fred, the wild doves and rabbits never returned.
Fred's father worked as a mechanic on the drag line equipment that dug out
the soil, to straighten the creek. He was impressed by the crane with a 16
cubic yard bucket on a drag line which moved on pontoons at one and a half to
two miles an hour. He liked to go to work with his father at night and watch
the operation.
Sometime after the creek was stablilized at the bottom, it was lined with
large rocks. The rocks were quarried on Catalina Island, and brought by
barge to the creek. The concrete was applied after the rocks were in place.
Today, the creek falls under the jurisdiction of the Army Corps of Engineers,
Los Angeles Flood Control, Los Angeles County Public Works among other
jurisdictions.
The creek has become the largest storm drain in the Santa Monica
watershed. Today, it begins as a creek at Cochran, south of Venice Blvd.,
and ends at the Pacific Ocean.
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