Skip to main content
brightcove-5359630806001.jpg
Back to Show
SoCal Connected

Los Angeles Had an Alligator Farm?

Vintage postcards and black and white photographs reveal a forgotten era when alligators once slid down chutes and young kids rode the backs of large reptiles outfitted with a saddle.

These rare images, recovered from the USC Libraries collection, were taken at the California Alligator Farm, once dubbed the world's largest alligator farm. Originally located next to an ostrich farm in Lincoln Heights, the California Alligator Farm opened in 1907 near Mission Road and Lincoln Park Avenue.

With an admission fee of 25 cents, the alligator sanctuary soon became a tourist and local attraction which housed thousands of snakes, lizards, alligators, and other reptiles. The farm also included a gift shop that carried a variety of trinkets and items made out of alligator skin. Owned by Francis Earnest and Joe Campbell, the farm relocated to Buena Park, Calif., in 1953, across the street from Knott's Berry Farm. It eventually closed down in 1984 after attendance plummeted.

Some of the farm's most popular alligators, most notably Billy the alligator, even managed to land a few seconds of stardom in Hollywood feature films. Were you lucky enough to witness the wonders of the California Alligator Farm? Anchor Val Zavala tells the story of a forgotten landmark in the Lincoln Heights neighborhood of Los Angeles and interviews public historian and writer Nathan Masters.

Photo Courtesy of the Los Angeles Public Library Photograph Collection.

Featuring Interviews With:

  • Historian Nathan Masters
Support Provided By
Season
Pharmacy counter in Los Angeles
25:42
A look at the profiteering behind two of America's fastest growing diseases affecting millions of Californians.
la county districts
25:30
"SoCal Connected" profiles how some local governments have used political borders to dilute minorities' power, and what is being done about it.
Out Of Bounds Still
27:17
One of the nation's top high school athletes was on a path to the NFL, but instead became the poster child for what's wrong with L.A.'s mental Health system.
News Blues - LA News
27:34
The LA Times may have found its savior in Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong, but how will the other local newsrooms in LA be rescued?
The People Vs. Kiera Newsome
27:10
One woman strives to prove her innocence from behind bars.
30 Years with Val Zavala
26:59
This half-hour retrospective reviews Zavala's role in covering some of the region's most critical events and key influencers.
Hands of an Undocumented Immigrant
26:59
A look at the spike in the number of employers retaliating against undocumented workers when they complain of stolen wages. What is the legal loophole that transforms neighborhoods and gets developments built without consent from the community?
A Worker At Cisco Pinedo's Furniture Business
27:59
With the rise of the super-temp, comes the increase income inequality. What happens when half the workforce are gig workers? SoCal Connected follows an Uber driver who lost his job and is struggling to support his family as an independent contractor. Ho
'Who Approved That?,' 'Super Soil,' and 'Oil Activist'
27:50
SoCal Connected takes a deep dive into L.A.'s housing, the idyllic Apricot Farms and the Los Angeles teenager who took on the oil industry, city hall and the Catholic Church to curb urban oil drilling in her neighborhood - and won.
'Maybe Babies' and 'Patagonia's Workplace Paradise'
25:45
Nearly a million frozen embryos are stored in labs across the nation.
Man Looks at Housing Development in his Backyard in Westchester
28:29
As new developments pop up all over L.A., many are asking, 'Who approved that?'
Bail Screen Grab
26:59
The price of freedom for some in the L.A. County Jail system is simply to high a cost. As much as a quarter of the 17,000 in LA's jails are there simply because they cannot make bail. Condors were close to extinction when officials took an aggressive appr
Active loading indicator