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Almanac note · History and culture

El Monte still keeps the Gay's Lion Farm story

El Monte's Historical Museum keeps photos and artifacts from Gay's Lion Farm, a once-famous local attraction that brought lions and visitors to town.

El MonteGay's Lion FarmHistorical Museumlocal history

El Monte has one of the more surprising old attraction stories in Southern California. Gay’s Lion Farm opened in the 1920s and brought real attention to the city. Charles and Muriel Gay raised lions there, and people came from well beyond town to see them.

The story had a bit of old-Hollywood flash. The farm drew famous visitors, including Eleanor Roosevelt and her son in 1933. It also gave El Monte a strange kind of local fame: a suburban place that once had a large lion attraction near the road.

World War II changed the picture. The farm closed in 1941, when food for the lions became hard to get. The animals were sent to zoos, circuses, and shows.

Today the best doorway into that story is the El Monte Historical Museum. Its collections include Gay’s Lion Farm pictures and artifacts, plus rooms for early residents, merchants, police, fire, school life, tools, and household objects. It turns a wild old headline into a local story you can actually see.

Where to see it

El Monte Historical Museum, 3150 Tyler Ave. Use the museum page for hours, collections, and tour details.

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Reviewed July 6, 2026

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