DiscoverThe California Report MagazineAltadena's Lost Treasures Returned; Gathering at the Grange
Altadena's Lost Treasures Returned; Gathering at the Grange

Altadena's Lost Treasures Returned; Gathering at the Grange

Update: 2025-06-13
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Meet the Woman Reuniting Eaton Fire Survivors With Lost Treasures


The fierce Santa Ana winds that whipped the Palisades and Eaton fires into deadly infernos also spared precious things you’d think would have been the first to burn: old family photos, children’s art work, postcards, even pages of old sheet music. Those things sometimes blew across neighborhoods, and people are still finding them as fire cleanup continues. Reporter Steven Cuevas introduces us to an Altadena resident who has made it her mission to return these fragile paper keepsakes to their owners.


Home on the Grange: In Anderson Valley, Hippies, Old-Timers Return to Farming Roots


Grange halls have been around for more than 150 years, and today there are more than100 of these meeting places in California alone. The Grange began as a fraternal organization for farmers. Even though farming and Grange membership are down to a fraction of what they were decades ago, many rural towns still rely on Grange halls as community centers. For her series California Foodways, Lisa Morehouse visits the Anderson Valley Grange, where many residents credit this place for bringing together groups of people that were once divided.





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Altadena's Lost Treasures Returned; Gathering at the Grange

Altadena's Lost Treasures Returned; Gathering at the Grange

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