Cawston Ostrich Farm

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LocationSouth Pasadena, California, U.S.
Coordinates34°6′45″N 118°10′24″W / 34.11250°N 118.17333°W / 34.11250; -118.17333
Opened1896
Closed1935
Cawston Ostrich Farm
Interactive map of Cawston Ostrich Farm
LocationSouth Pasadena, California, U.S.
Coordinates34°6′45″N 118°10′24″W / 34.11250°N 118.17333°W / 34.11250; -118.17333
Opened1896
Closed1935
OwnerEdwin Cawston

Cawston Ostrich Farm, located in South Pasadena, California, United States, was opened in 1886 by Edwin Cawston. It was one of America's first ostrich farms[1] and was located in the Arroyo Seco Valley just three miles (5 km) north of downtown Los Angeles and occupied nine acres.[2] In 1887, the company built Hollywood's first railway, linking the farm to Hollywood.[3]

In 1886, Edwin Cawston and E.P. Hoyle chartered a ship to take some of the best obtainable ostriches in the world from South Africa to Galveston, Texas, where it arrived on January 25, 1887. From there, the ostriches endured a treacherous train journey to Los Angeles, California. Out of the original fifty-two birds – 26 males and 26 females – forty-three survived. (Cawston's 1920 obituary claimed that there were 50 ostriches at the outset and only 18 survivors.) The farm was first established at the corner of Main Street and Washington Boulevard in Los Angeles. In 1888, it was relocated to Norwalk, California; at this point, Cawston had 34 birds. The farm was moved again to South Pasadena in 1896, where it reopened to the public that October 15 with no fewer than 200 ostriches in its stable.

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