Yesterday I took a stroll to
visit a location that has intrigued me for years. A few years ago I wrote a blog post about GriffithPark and in the last paragraph mentioned the ranger station.
Looks innocent enough? Just a quaint little adobe building? This quaint little adobe (which is a
reconstruction and may even have been moved north from its original location near
the Mulholland Fountain) was the end of a treasure hunt for me, because of its
importance in the story of Petranilla de
Feliz, who supposedly (in 1863) cursed the land that is now Griffith Park.
I researched Petra, and Griffith J. Griffith, who did time for
trying to murder his wife, all the way back to the Gabrielinos, the people who lived here before the Californios
arrived in the nineteenth century.
I found a 1930 book
called On the Old West Coast: Further
Reminiscences of a Ranger, by Horace Bell. Bell was an interesting
character - he'd once run a satirical paper in L.A. called The Porcupine - and he'd collected some of the oddest tales of old
L.A. Chapter Nine of On the Old West Coast is titled
"The Feliz Curse", and details the haunted history of this very spot.
It centers on an event in 1863, when - according to Bell - the 17-year-old
girl, Petranilla de Feliz, who was
set to inherit the land from the recently-diseased Don Antonio Feliz, discovers the Don has left a will giving the
large family estate to two lawyers. Imagine the adobe then, possibly looking
more like this...
Petranilla delivers this curse:
"Señor, do not dare to speak until I have finished! This is what I
hurl upon your head: Your falsity shall be your ruin! The substance of the
Feliz family shall be your curse! The lawyer that assisted you in your infamy,
and the judge, shall fall beneath the same curse! The one shall die an untimely
death, the other in blood and violence! You, señor, shall know misery in your
age and though you die rich your substance shall go to vile persons! A blight
shall fall upon the face of this terrestrial paradise, the cattle shall no
longer fatten but sicken on its pastures, the fields shall not longer respond
to the toil of the tiller, the grand oaks shall wither and die! The wrath of
heaven and the vengeance of hell shall fall upon this place and the floods -
!"
Here the inspired Petranilla
swung round and stepped to the end of the veranda until she could see the sun
sinking in the west beyond the Tejungas.
"See!" she cried with a far-flung gesture. "Behold! Cast your glance toward the
dark entrance of the great Cañon of the Tejunga, and what do you see? Ha! ha! a
myriad demons floating in air like so many vultures! They ride the storm
clouds, and ay! they are lashing the clouds as the vaqueros lash the cattle to
bring them together! Now the air darkens, the thunder rolls, the lightning
flashes, the rain falls - ha! ha! the rain falls in torrents! Bowlders grind
and crash, the demons ride the crest of the storm, they lash it into fury, it
is coming - coming - coming! Ay, see! It has struck our willow dale, my old
playground - it crumbles away into the great seething torrent! Now the royal
oak is gone! See what the lightning flashes reveal at the base of the mountains
- they reveal the oaks withering in the tongues of flame - their bright green
leaves are scorched to cinders - because they were above the reach of the
waters it is the fire from the clouds that has destroyed them. Woe, woe, woe to
you and yours, señor! The meadows are gone, only the hills remain the mere
bones of the rancho, and no man shall ever enjoy peace or profit from what is
left of this once beautiful spot! Misfortune, crime and death shall follow
those who covet these remains!"
Bell has Petranilla then collapse
and die shortly thereafter. We know that in fact Petra was real, and lived far
past 1863...but amazingly, the cursing itself may have been an actual event
(Bell's florid recreation notwithstanding), since it's been described by others
as well as Bell, including at least one person who claimed to be an eyewitness.
For the next forty years this plot of land did indeed fall victim to floods and
fires, while the owners were murdered and debt-ridden (contrary to the rosy
picture painted on the plaque, Griffith probably gave the land to the city
because it wasn't worth the property taxes he was paying on it - no one wanted
to rent or buy the land, possibly thanks to the belief that the curse was
real).
Bell goes on to describe workers
encountering the ghost of Don Antonio,
and he also describes at length a scene (probably nothing more than a satirical
fantasy) in which Griffith hands the land over to the city officials during a
party that, at midnight, is beset by demons and devils.
It's a lovely area, and one can
imagine a young woman's rage on discovering that this land - which she'd
believed would always be in her family, thanks to their status as guards of the
original settlers in Los Angeles - has been taken from her. I've always thought
the ghost stories were incorrect; it wouldn't be Don Antonio's vengeful spirit wandering the park, but Petranilla's, her fury keeping her
rooted in place for eternity.
Is it any wonder, then, that this
story and this seemingly benign little building have intrigued me?
When you next visit Griffith Park
stop by the ranger station and if you encounter any ghosts, let me know.
2 comments:
thanks for the post next time I'm in Los Angles I shall explore!
Hm, interesting we will have a grand old time when you next visit London!
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