Almanac note · History and culture
Bradbury stayed small on purpose in the foothills
Bradbury is a small foothill contract city named for Louis Leonard Bradbury, with a long effort to keep a rural, equestrian feel below the San Gabriel Mountains.
Bradbury is one of those Los Angeles County cities that can be easy to miss unless you are looking closely at the foothills. It sits below the Angeles National Forest, between Monrovia and Duarte, with a rural and equestrian feel that was protected on purpose.
The name goes back to Louis Leonard Bradbury. He acquired 2,750 acres of the Rancho Azusa de Duarte, a Mexican land grant once awarded to Andres Duarte. Bradbury built a large home on the land and surrounded it with a notable garden.
The modern city story came later. In 1957, as Duarte was moving toward incorporation, Bradbury-area residents worried that faster development would change the foothill area. They valued the quiet setting, the rural feel, and the ability to guide local growth. Bradbury incorporated on July 26, 1957.
Today the city is still small. Its own About page calls it a residential and equestrian-oriented community of about 1,000 people. It also calls Bradbury a true contract city. That means it keeps a small full-time staff and contracts for many services.
That is why Bradbury feels different from nearby cities. It is not built around a downtown shopping strip. It is built around foothill homes, horses, small local government, and the wish to keep a quieter edge below the mountains. If you are passing through, use public streets and respect private gates and property lines.
Where to see it
Bradbury City Hall on Winston Avenue, the public streets near Duarte and Monrovia, and the foothill edge below Angeles National Forest.
Official sources
Official source trail
Reviewed July 2, 2026
California Porch explains the path. The official source is still the place to confirm the current rule, fee, form, map, deadline, or office decision.
Use the official page before you spend money, file paperwork, rely on a deadline, or change a property.
Connected places
Where it fits on the map
Open a place page for the county layer, nearby places, and other California entries tied to that local page.
Related notes
Keep following this thread.
These are picked from nearby places, shared tags, and the same California topic shelf.
Sierra Madre's famous wistaria vine began as a tiny purchase
Sierra Madre's foothill story includes Nathaniel Carter's town site, Red Car service, a 75-cent wistaria vine, and a long-running public viewing tradition.
Read next →The San Gabriel Mountains are close enough to feel local
The national monument north of the Los Angeles basin protects more than 452,000 acres of mountains, canyons, history, habitat, and recreation land.
Read next →Redondo Beach keeps local history in a Queen Anne house
Redondo Beach Historical Museum sits in the 1904 Queen Anne House at Heritage Court, with local artifacts, photographs, school annuals, documents, and two historic houses near Dominguez Park.
Read next →