When the Eaton fire raced through Altadena and surrounding areas in January, the unimaginable disaster killed 17 people and destroyed 9,400 homes, businesses, schools and houses of worship. While ...
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Dwell on MSNThe Grassroots Race to Save Altadena’s Historic Batchelder Tiles—Before the Bulldozers Move InIn the Eaton Fire burn zone, fireplaces adorned with Arts and Crafts tiles are among the sole surviving relics of the town’s ...
Situated near the base of the San Gabriel Mountains northeast of downtown L.A., Altadena was known for ... It is one of the deadliest fires in California history. The cause of the blaze is still ...
A Washington Post analysis shows that some officials knew of the fire’s westward spread hours before evacuation orders were sent to residents in western Altadena. A shortwave infrared satellite ...
Less than a month before the Eaton Fire engulfed Altadena, longtime residents thought they’d finally resolved a bruising debate over the California suburb’s future. For months they’d debated ...
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Business owners in Altadena hope to see the diverse community that their organizations thrived in rise from the ashes.
The fires that burned parts of Southern California will likely become the most expensive wildfires in U.S. history. They also burned a scar through historically Black neighborhoods in Altadena.
Some had escaped segregation in the South and took refuge in a place that did not subscribe to the racist criteria of the era for land ownership, an anomaly even in California. Altadena's Black ...
Shortly after the Eaton Fire devastated Altadena, California, burning more than 6,000 homes and 3,000 additional structures, local resident Eric Garland took a walk around his neighborhood with ...
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