CA California Porch

Almanac note · History and culture

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.

Sierra MadreWistariaSan Gabriel Mountains

Sierra Madre has a foothill story that mixes town-building, mountain trails, and one very persistent plant. Nathaniel Carter bought the original 1,103 acres of Sierra Madre in 1881, and the town grew at the base of the San Gabriel Mountains.

Then came the small detail people still talk about. In April 1894, Mrs. Brugman bought the now famous wistaria vine from a Monrovia nursery for 75 cents. What began as a little plant became one of Sierra Madre’s best-known local symbols.

The town kept growing around it. Pacific Electric Red Car service reached Sierra Madre in 1906. Residents voted to incorporate in 1907. The wistaria grounds opened for public viewing in 1918, with the first Wistaria Fete sponsored by the Sierra Madre Chapter of the American Red Cross.

That is why the vine feels tied to the whole town instead of one garden alone. It sits inside a larger foothill memory: early land buyers, mountain access, streetcars, local festivals, and a town that still likes being tucked against the hills.

Where to see it

Downtown Sierra Madre, Kersting Court, Sierra Madre Boulevard, and the annual Wistaria viewing area.

Official sources

Official source trail

Reviewed July 2, 2026

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