Farming in Torrance and the South Bay

Gerber, Judith

Description

Jared Sydney Torrance originally founded Torrance in 1912 as an industrial city. But the land and its surrounding South Bay region thrived through agricultural activities, beginning in 1784 on the Rancho San Pedro. Farming activities continued after Ben Weston became the first one to buy land from the Dominguez family's rancho in 1847. Farming remained an important part of city commerce in the transition to a thriving Los Angeles County suburb in the late 1950s. Throughout those early years, family farmers contributed to the city's economy by raising cattle, pigs, and turkeys, as well as sugar beets, alfalfa, beans, hay, oats, barley, and flowers, and operating dairy farms. Other South Bay cities also relied on agriculture for economic growth, including Carson, once home to a thriving cut-flower farm industry, and Gardena, the one-time berry capital of Southern California, as well as the Palos Verdes Peninsula, where dry farming was a successful industry.
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Writer
Gerber, Judith
Title
Farming in Torrance and the South Bay
Publisher
Arcadia Publishing Library Editions
Year
2008
Language
English
Pages
130
Weight
413 gr
EAN
9781531638245
Dimensions
244 x 170 x 10 mm
Binding format
Hardback

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