- Andrew McNally House
Infobox nrhp
name = Andrew McNally House
nrhp_type =
caption =
location = 654 E. Mariposa StAltadena, California
nearest_city =
lat_degrees = 34
lat_minutes = 11
lat_seconds = 20
lat_direction = N
long_degrees = 118
long_minutes = 08
long_seconds = 10
long_direction = W
area =
built = 1887
architect = Frederick L. Roehrig
architecture = Queen Anne
added =March 27 ,2007
visitation_num =
visitation_year =
refnum = 07000245
mpsub =
governing_body = PrivateThe Andrew McNally House inAltadena, California was the home ofAndrew McNally , co-founder and president of theRand McNally publishing company. The house is listed in theNational Register of Historic Places .McNally was an Irish immigrant who worked as a printer. When he came to the United States, he first worked for the
Chicago Tribune when he met William Rand. Together they formed the company that bears their names. In 1880, McNally took his fortune and family and moved west [Robert H. Peterson, "Altadena's Golden Years", Alhambra, California: Sinclair Printing and Litho, Inc., 1976, p. 34.] They lived for a time inPasadena, California before building their mansion in Altadena in 1887. The mansion is located on East Mariposa Street at Santa Rosa Avenue. McNally was a booster of the life in Altadena, and he convinced his friends to move here as well. They also built mansions along Mariposa, which soon began to be known locally as "Millionaire's Row".McNally paid Pasadena architect
Frederick Roehrig $15,000 to design the house. Facing south, away from the street, the house offered vistas of the Los Angeles Basin, the Pacific Ocean, and Santa Catalina Island. The house has a three-story rotunda that allows a view to the San Gabriel Mountains to the north. [Michele Zack, "Altadena: Between Wilderness and City", Altadena, California: Altadena Historical Society, 2004, pp. 118-119.] McNally also built a private rail spur from Altadena Junction to his property to store his private railroad car. [Zack, p.119] The grounds were lavishly landscaped, with an aviary along Mariposa St. His gardener also looked after the deodar cedars that grew along Santa Rosa Avenue. These trees becameChristmas Tree Lane , which is also listed in the National Register.In 1904, McNally caught pneumonia while en route to his Windemere Ranch in
La Mirada, California . (The ranch headquarters is also listed in the National Register.) He died shortly afterward. The gardens and aviary were neglected, some of the birds escaped. The property was then subdivided. [Peterson, p. 34; Zack, p. 119]Notes
References
*Peterson, Robert H. "Altadena's Golden Years". Alhambra, California: Sinclair Printing and Litho, Inc., 1976.
*Zack, Michele. "Altadena: Between Wilderness and City". Altadena, California: Altadena Historical Society, 2004. ISBN 0-9747257-0-6
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.