Saturday, September 12, 2020

A Southern California Family Through the Years/ Sorting through family photos

Introduction


My maternal grandparents first settled in California in 1925. Charles Lynn Forgey and his Nicaraguan born wife Graciela del Castillo met while my Indiana born grandfather was serving in that country as a US Marine. My mother was born in Nicaragua in 1921. I was born in California in 1963 (I was my parents only child born when my mother was 42). Traces of an earlier era in California could still be seen when I was a young child. My parents also shared their stories of early days. My father's recollection of Southern California history only went back to the period just after WWII when his family migrated to Los Angeles from Chicago. 

Most of the photos below were recently sent to me by an Aunt and I’m still trying to identify some of the people in them.

My mother Edna Forgey-Kapple's memory went back to California in the 1920's. She passed away in 2015. She often shared her early memories of California. 

Her earliest memory was arriving at the port of Los Angeles in 1925. Her father was already in California and met her mother and herself at the dock with a Nicaraguan family friend. The Nicaraguan recently relocated to California and he asked my 4 year old mother if she remembered him, which she did. 

1920’s thru 1930’s

The photo below was taken of my mother Edna soon after the family arrived in California in 1925. The palm trees remind me of a song about California. The song “Home In Pasadena“ lyrics talk about being “under the palms in someone’s arms”.



Another photo my family kept shows a little girl standing in the yard of a palm lined street. This little girl is named Mary Rita and she died as a child according to the back. Unfortunately there is no surname to identify her?



There is a shadow of a palm in this photo. 



The family originally settled in bungalow court style housing in San Pedro. The photo below would have been taken in late 1926 after my aunt Grace was born. As you can see she was just learning to walk. 


The photo below was likely taken at Venice, California where canals were dug to imitate the Venetian Canals. Spending time at the beach would have been nice for the family in the hot summers in California. 



 About 1928 my family relocated from the beach area to the hot dry San Fernando Valley. Sadly I don't think we have any photos of that first house. The photo below may have been taken in the yard of the house my grandfather built in La Cresenta. 



Below is a photo of the entire Forgey brood somewhere in their new location home in the San Fernando Valley. 


When the depression hit in 1929 the family lost the house and property and began renting houses in nearby Glendale. The house below is one of the houses the family rented in the 1930's. Blue collar working class workers generally lived in 2 bedroom 1 bath houses of about 900 or 1000 sq ft. Highly skilled blue collar workers could live in larger two story houses that were probably 1400 to 2000 sq ft. It was generally white collar workers who lived in the 2 story craftsman houses however. In the 1930’s apartments began to be popular with renters from working class families. 




This photo appears to be a photo taken in front of a similar house. The rock pillars were a typical feature of California bungalows. Large rocks are numerous in the mountains near Glendale. The photo appears to be of my aunt Grace one of her twin brothers and aunt Dorothy. I enhanced the photo and colorized it at My Heritage.



Play dates were appear to have been popular with mothers and children spending time playing and chatting. 


Here my mother Edna (in the print dress) is hanging out with her fellow girls scouts and her siblings. The blonde girl far left is the troop leader Bunny's daughter. 


Friends of the Forgey family sporting the latest fashions sometimes appear in the family photos.


Someone called the "First Lady of Glendale" Dora Verdugo became a friend of the family in Glendale. Her family received a 36,000 acre Spanish land grant covering all of what today is Glendale. The photos below appear to have been given to our family by Dora. The portrait photo appears to be of her, and the group photo was likely taken near the old Verdugo homestead and adobe. Dora said her heart was always a part of that place. 



The outings the family took from home were similar to the rest of the community. In Southern California we do something called "going to the snow" in winter. In many parts of the country the snow comes to you, but in most of California we have to go to the mountains to find it.  



More snow photos from the late 1920's or early 1930's. They may have been taken at Lake Arrowhead, California?




Being a hot place in summer the family spent time relaxing away from home. Below we find the Forgey family spending the day at Big Tujunga creek not far from Glendale. 





Many years the family would pack into their old model T and head to the beach. They would camp at Laguna beach and my grandfather would fish in nearby San Clemente. 

The photos below show family and friends at the beach. Its interesting that the women are dressed up in heels on the beach.



The family would often join friends and family at the beach. The photo below appears to be of Francisco Alvarado Granizo and his wife Germaine taken in the 1920's or 1930's. Francisco was grandmother Graciela's cousin and godfather. 



The family also loved taking a boat out to Catalina Island off the California coast. 


Picnicking was a popular pastime in early to mid century California. State themed picnics drew thousands of people. The Iowa picnic in Ontario and the All States picnic in Long Beach were very popular. I'm not sure where the picnic below took  place or who sponsored it? The photo shows a typical park of that era and the Forgey children have grown from earlier photos. 


The family could also travel farther north to Sequoia.