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Old Posted Jun 19, 2017, 11:20 PM
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odinthor odinthor is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Flyingwedge View Post
I was leafing through a book today and learned about this tree for the first time. The Eagle Tree, a sycamore, was used
as a landmark in surveying the boundary of Rancho San Pedro in 1857. Here is a 1952 photo of the Eagle Tree, which got
its name because eagles nested in it:



Cal State Dominguez Hills Digital Collections


In the mid-1940s oil pipelines threatened the tree, but due to its history, it was preserved and marked with a plaque
in 1947 (I looked at a 1943 map of Compton, and I didn't see an Electric Avenue, so I think that reference below is
an error):



April 17, 1947, Los Angeles Times @ ProQuest via LAPL


In 1954, a local oldtimer recalled the tree from the days of his youth:






Here is Mr. Gaines, who lived until 1962, posing next to the 1947 plaque. There is a Wesley Gaines Elementary School
in Paramount that may be named for him (his dad had the same name):



October 17, 1954, Los Angeles Times @ ProQuest via LAPL


Since then, the Eagle Tree has not been entirely forgotten. It was the subject of a November 15, 1987, Los Angeles Times
article, the Dominguez Rancho Adobe Museum's website has a page on the tree, and Nathan Masters has mentioned it.


I wanted to see what the tree looked like now. This is the tree, at Poppy and Short in Compton, on the September 2014 GSV:




Here's the Bing Streetside view from February 15, 2015:




And, finally -- perhaps in more ways than one -- the Eagle Tree on the most current GSV, July 2015:




It's like El Aliso all over again!
Someone competent at propagating Sycamores should take cuttings and preserve the tree (via pieces of it)!

It would have been the "only tree" likely because of the several floods (1815, 1825, 1833, 1838-1839, 1848, 1858, 1859, 1860, winter 1861-1862) which probably carried away the other old ones around. For the 1838-1839 one, Michael White, whose house was where Compton was to be, wrote “The water was in the house waist deep for 6 weeks.”

Edit: Not sure why it was used for surveying purposes in 1857. There was a lawsuit in 1855, hearing of which lasting 11 days, outcome favorable to defendant Manuel Dominguez; then in 1862, partition was looming; but I don't know what was up in 1857 (Rancho San Pedro was "laid out" long before that).

Last edited by odinthor; Jun 19, 2017 at 11:27 PM. Reason: Dubiety about 1857.
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