Almanac note · History and culture
Lanterman House holds a La Canada Flintridge valley story
Lanterman House connects La Canada Flintridge to early settlers, health seekers, reinforced concrete design, family life, gardens, archives, and local preservation.
La Canada Flintridge sits in the foothills, and Lanterman House helps show the older valley under the modern city. The local story includes Native communities, Rancho La Canada, health seekers, homesteads, schools, churches, orchards, and water problems.
The Lanterman family became one of the lasting threads. In 1875, Dr. Jacob Lanterman and Colonel Adolphus Williams bought Rancho La Canada. They hoped to divide land and build a future for their families. Later Lantermans helped shape roads, real estate, civic life, and local institutions.
The house adds a strong detail. It was built in 1915 for Dr. Roy Lanterman and his family. It used reinforced concrete, in part because fire was a real worry in chaparral country. The family also remembered the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire. Inside, the house keeps original furnishings, painted details, French doors, gardens, and the feel of an early foothill home.
This stop makes La Canada Flintridge easier to picture. Beyond quiet streets and mountain views, you get a family house, a valley archive, and a reminder that foothill towns grew through land, water, schools, gardens, and long local memory.
Where to see it
Lanterman House at 4420 Encinas Drive in La Canada Flintridge.
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.
Mentryville gives Santa Clarita an old oil-canyon story
Mentryville and Pico Canyon add an early California oil layer to Santa Clarita, with trails, old buildings, and the story of Pico No. 4.
Read next →The Museum of Neon Art gives Glendale a glow-in-the-dark art stop
Glendale's Museum of Neon Art preserves historic neon signs and electric art, adding a bright Los Angeles County story to Brand Boulevard.
Read next →A Playhouse mural turns Palmdale's stage into a city story
The 152-foot mural on the Palmdale Playhouse blends theater scenes with local details, including the old schoolhouse, Joshua trees, and a small B-2 silhouette.
Read next →