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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Entertainment > Column: Did a well-known grave within the Altadena hills survive the fires?
Column: Did a well-known grave within the Altadena hills survive the fires?
Entertainment

Column: Did a well-known grave within the Altadena hills survive the fires?

Last updated: January 28, 2025 1:32 pm
Editorial Board Published January 28, 2025
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On a hill above Altadena named Little Spherical Prime, a grave stood for 136 years because the neighborhood beneath it blossomed.

Right here lay the stays of Owen Brown, son of the legendary abolitionist John Brown. Owen moved to Pasadena within the Eighties and was greeted by locals as a hero for combating alongside his father within the Bleeding Kansas wars and Harper’s Ferry raid. His funeral in 1889 attracted hundreds of mourners, and he was put to relaxation close to a cabin the place he and a brother spent his final years.

The grave turned a spot of veneration, then a website of controversy within the early 2000s when Little Spherical Prime’s proprietor started to shoo away the curious. Lawsuits had been filed to push for public entry. Brown’s tombstone disappeared for a decade earlier than being discovered tons of of toes down the hill.

His closing resting place is now open to the general public. A brand new proprietor gave an area group $300,000 to revive it in 2018, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors designated it as a historic landmark in December, and the positioning is now underneath the care of the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy.

The saga was speculated to get its most distinguished airing but on Wednesday at Mountain View Cemetery, the place two of Owen’s siblings are buried and the place a plaque is inscribed along with his title and picture. Altadena resident and filmmaker Pablo Miralles had been scheduled to debut a 20-minute documentary on Owen’s life.

Fb is the place I realized concerning the screening. Fb can also be the place I realized that Miralles and his household misplaced their dwelling within the Eaton hearth.

He and his son fled with vital paperwork, photographs and a portray his grandmother took together with her as she escaped the Nazi invasion of the Netherlands. Gone are Miralles’ manufacturing pocket book and the ultimate paychecks for his crew. The documentary was already saved on-line, although Miralles has no concept when it can display.

“People need to find places to live — we need to find a place to live,” mentioned Miralles final week at Stumptown Espresso in Pasadena. “I’m proud of my film, but it can wait.”

Few had been higher certified to make a documentary about Owen Brown than Miralles. His dad and mom, immigrants from Argentina, moved from Eagle Rock to Altadena within the Seventies after discovering a house massive sufficient for them and their seven kids. They ignored pals who mentioned Altadena was “dangerous” and financed the acquisition by a Black-owned financial institution. Their common financial institution had refused “because they told my father that our house would be on a Black street,” Miralles mentioned.

He remembers a bucolic upbringing in a multiracial paradise that knowledgeable the remainder of his life and finally turned his muse. The 60-year-old created a well-received documentary about how his alma mater, John Muir Excessive in Pasadena, resegregated as white households enrolled their kids in non-public and constitution faculties. Final yr, Miralles wrote and directed a play that imagined a friendship between two of the Metropolis of Roses’ most well-known natives, Julia Baby and Jackie Robinson. (I appeared in his 2012 documentary concerning the intense soccer rivalry between the U.S. and Mexico).

“I didn’t know I would cover Pasadena like I have,” he mentioned, “but when you recognize that you came from a place with a history of struggle, you kind of have to.”

Pablo Miralles, a documentary filmmaker who misplaced his dwelling within the Eaton hearth, hikes to the grave of Owen Brown, son of abolitionist John Brown. Miralles is finishing a documentary about Owen and the way he ended up within the Pasadena space.

(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Instances)

Altadena’s attraction lured Miralles again as a resident in 2019. By then, he had made a four-minute quick for the Owen Brown Gravesite Committee about their trigger.

“You learn about [John Brown] in school, that he’s a maniac and a madman intent on killing white slave owners,” mentioned Miralles, who had hiked as much as Owen’s grave however in any other case didn’t know a lot about him on the time. “But when you read his papers, he wasn’t that at all.”

Miralles’ quick movie impressed committee chair Michele Zack. She requested Miralles to make an extended movie that the Pasadena Unified College District might present in lecture rooms.

Owen joined his father within the armed conflicts that made John Brown such a divisive determine in U.S. historical past. In Kansas, Owen killed a person in a skirmish between abolitionists and pro-slavery settlers. He stayed behind to protect weapons and horses whereas his father led the raid on Harper’s Ferry in 1859, which resulted within the deaths of two of Owen’s brothers and in John’s seize and execution.

“The 1850s resonate so strongly with what’s happening right now,” mentioned Zack, who additionally misplaced her dwelling within the Eaton hearth. “You think we’re divided now? We were divided even more in the 1850s. Owen Brown is symbolic of all that, and here’s this history right in our backyard.”

She nonetheless desires to display the Brown documentary to the general public — however not any time quickly.

“There’s so much suffering and loss and pain right now, and that’s going to go on for years — but we’re not going to postpone [the film] for years,” Zack mentioned.

Miralles and his group had been busy placing the ultimate touches on the challenge. In actual fact, the sound engineer was engaged on it the day the Eaton hearth pressured him to evacuate (his home stays standing).

“The idea that the original radical abolitionists have their literal roots here — the man is still there, his bones are there — is just so important,” Miralles mentioned. “We need to live up to the ideals of this nation like Owen, which means we locals will fight to maintain diversity here.”

He checked out his cellphone’s dwelling display to test the time. It featured a photograph of him, his spouse, their son and their two canine at their dwelling in early January.

We bought into his SUV and drove into Altadena. The plan was to go to his incinerated dwelling, then see if Brown’s grave got here out unscathed. Neither he nor Zack knew its destiny.

Miralles drove by his former faculty, Franklin Elementary — destroyed. A chimney was all that remained of the house the place his brother lived. “Here are a lot of my friends,” Miralles mentioned with a sigh as his head darted backward and forward. “Just blocks and blocks and blocks.”

He determined to not cease at his dwelling “because I don’t want to put on a hazmat suit again.” As a substitute, we handed by checkpoint after checkpoint — “Military vehicles in my hood. It’s kind of crazy” — earlier than getting on a winding avenue that ended close to Brown’s grave.

Indicators throughout warned individuals to proceed at their very own danger. One other proclaimed, “Looters Will be Shot.” Others mentioned the fireplace hazard was “extreme.”

The paved avenue became a one-lane gravel highway main into the Angeles Nationwide Forest. Miralles parked close to a long-abandoned automobile that occupied the spot “where Owen’s cabin used to be.” A employee from the California Conservation Corps quickly approached us to ask what we had been doing up there.

Miralles defined the aim of our go to. The employee nodded.

“I wondered why there was a trail going up there,” he mentioned, waving over to Little Spherical Prime earlier than strolling again to clear extra brush.

The primary a part of the path is slim, with a steep drop that pressured me to look forward as a substitute of writing in my pocket book. Vibrant yucca, scrub oak and sage stood alongside dried-out chaparral. Alongside the way in which had been interpretive indicators that informed the tales of two pioneers of Black Los Angeles: Biddy Mason, a previously enslaved lady who turned a rich property proprietor downtown, and Robert Owens, a profitable businessman and Mason’s relative by marriage who used to gather wooden within the hills we had been trekking by.

We finally bought to the bottom of Little Spherical Prime, named after a well-known Civil Conflict battle, and regarded down at a devastated Altadena of blackened timber and leveled properties.

I requested Miralles what he noticed.

“It’s not what I see,” he replied. “It’s what I don’t see.”

From there, we hiked up a brief however steep switchback that ended on a mud plateau. Pine timber supplied shade for 2 benches. Earlier than us was Brown’s grave.

Pablo Miralles looks at the grave of Owen Brown.

After a brief hike up the hill, Miralles views the grave of Owen Brown, son of abolitionist John Brown.

(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Instances)

Stones outlined the place his physique lies. Somebody had drawn a coronary heart within the dust. On the head of the grave was a tombstone that listed Brown’s title, his years of life and the legend “Son of John Brown the Liberator.”

There have been no indicators of fireside injury. Miralles regarded relieved.

“There used to be way more vegetation here, but it’s all cleared,” he mentioned as we regarded down at Altadena once more. To our proper within the distance was La Cañada Flintridge. A streak of pink hearth retardant dirty the valley beneath.

“I hope people recognize the importance of this grave and what Owen and his family represented for this country,” he mentioned as we checked out Brown’s tombstone. Then he regarded again to his Altadena. A plume of mud now rose from a neighborhood.

“I used to hike these hills growing up. There would be fires every three to four years, he said. “But I never thought what happened to us would ever happen.”

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