DIVISION TWO — COLONIAI,. IO9 



and the Lutheran church are on this selection. Baker's was the second 

 house built in the colony. 



W. J. Barcus, fifteen acres. South Pasadena— West Columbia to Her- 

 mosa street, and Palm Avenue to Arroyo Drive. He resides there yet — 



1895- 



Alf. W. Dana, fifteen acres. Fair Oaks to Vernon Avenue on south 

 side of Mary street — afterward the B. F. Ball home place, and on which Mr. 

 Ball built the first brick house ever erected in Pasadena. 



Jesse Yarnell, fifteen acres. Orange Grove Avenue and Kensington 

 street — now W. U. Masters 's home place. 



A. O. Bristol, thirty acres. Lincoln Avenue [Old Fair Oaks] and 

 Cypress Avenue, and from North Orange Grove Avenue down to Walnut 

 street. Mr. Bristol built the first house in Pasadena, 20x22, one-story, and 

 it stands there yet, near his present dwelling, at S. W. corner of North 

 Orange Grove and Lincoln Avenue. He had by general consent chosen his 

 lot several days previously and planned work on it, so that was really the 

 first choice announced. [This special favor was a ' ' thank you ' ' for his 

 buckskin ponies' services in the surveying work.] 



I. N. Mundell, thirty acres. N. E. corner North Orange Grove and 

 Walnut street, where he resided till 1894, then moved to Orange county. 

 This was the second choice announced. 



A. W. Hutton, thirty acres. Each side of Arlington Drive from Or- 

 ange Grove to Fair Oaks Avenue. This was Judge Hutton of Los Angeles. 



T. J. AND L. J. LoCKHART, thirty acres. Orange Grove Avenue and 

 Arlington Court down to Arroyo Drive. (Now the McGregory place.) 



E. J. Vawter, per D. M. Berry, sixty acres. North of Reservoir Hill 

 and west of North Orange Grove Avenue down into the Arroyo. 



T. E. LiPPiNCOTT, per D. M. Berry, sixty acres. From Walnut street 

 to North Orange Grove Avenue where the Terminal railroad now runs, and 

 also Pasadena and Winona Avenues running northwest. He also took an- 

 other lot north of North Orange Grove Avenue. 



Ney Strickland, sixty acres. West of Lincoln Avenue and north of 

 North Orange Grove Avenue — the Joseph Wallace place. Mr. Wallace 

 started here the first fruit canning enterprise in Pasadena, in 1881, and con- 

 tinues it yet. 



Mrs. C. a. Vawter, per D. M. Berry, sixty acres. North side of 

 Colorado street from Fair Oaks to Orange Grove Avenue — afterward the Dr. 

 Carr place.* The First National Bank, the Arcade building, the City Hall 

 [White's block], the Los Angeles House, the Terminal R. R. depot, etc., are 

 on this tract, 



Elliott and Berry (Dr. T. B. Elliott, D. M. Berry), per D. M. 

 Berry, 180 acres. (Dr. Elliot had not arrived yet from Indianapolis.) From 



L 



*Mrs. Vawter sold forty-two acres to Mrs. Jeannie C. Carr, February 14, 1877. 



