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Locality: Lancaster, California

Phone: +1 661-723-6250



Address: 557 W Lancaster Blvd 93534 Lancaster, CA, US

Website: www.lancastermoah.org/western-hotel-museum

Likes: 1543

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Western Hotel Museum 21.02.2021

On the site of the Prime Desert Woodland Preserve, the legacy left behind by Elizabeth Elyze Clifford is an Interpretive Center sharing her name. The Elyze Clifford Interpretive Center is the first public building in the State of California to use straw bales during its construction. Standard frames were constructed using wooden posts and beams; later, these were filled with stacked straw bales. As the bales were stacked, they were threaded on rebar (steel rods) to keep the...Continue reading

Western Hotel Museum 04.02.2021

We are hiring! The Lancaster Museum of Art and History is hiring for part-time Sr. Art Program Leader and Sr. Technical Assistant positions. Visit the talent portal below for more information. #JointheTeam cityoflancasterca.org/hiring

Western Hotel Museum 31.01.2021

The City of Lancaster’s Prime Desert Woodland Preserve Interpretive Center is the result of many hardworking people from all walks of life, however, the Center is dedicated to the memory of one Lancaster resident: Elizabeth Elyze Clifford, the activist that rallied a coalition to preserve the special and unique desert woodland area that you can visit today. A noted and tireless environmentalist, Elyze Clifford had an inquisitive mind and an indomitable spirit. She was born...Continue reading

Western Hotel Museum 23.01.2021

George Black, a third-generation blacksmith in 1915, originally took over Harry Davis’ busy pioneer blacksmith wood building located on Sierra Highway between Lancaster Boulevard and Milling Street. Here, any piece of iron that had to be handled, bent, or shaped on an anvil went through his hands. As in all pioneer towns, a blacksmith shop was a much-needed institution; horses had to be shod, tools made, and equipment repaired. He later opened a new shop known as Carter’s Bar...n on Beech Avenue and Eleventh Street (now Milling Street), where the barn had also been well-known for presenting local rambunctious fighting bouts and other sporting activities. In 1947, George Pulos, son of a Los Angeles dry cleaner, obtained a $25,000 loan and opened George’s Cleaners on Lancaster Boulevard. George originally moved to the Antelope Valley in 1936 to work on the ranch owned by his wife's family. However, in 1945, he took a job as a general manager at what was then the only local dry cleaners. In 1954, the business relocated to the southwest corner of Beech Avenue and Milling Street, taking over the old Carter Barn. This is where the business has been operating since as a full-service cleaner. Family owned and operated to this day by Chris and Monica Gado, the business now offers three locations within the Antelope Valley. Besides carrying on the family legacy, the Grados are prominently known in the community. Monica is on the Lancaster West Rotary and former chairwoman of the Lancaster Chamber of Commerce. The couple are also members of the Palmdale and Quartz Hill Chamber, work for Mental Health America, and actively give back to local schools by providing free services. In October 2018, George’s Cleaners was awarded the 21st Senate District Small Business of the Month by Senator Scott Wilk who remembers going to George’s Cleaners as a boy where they always recognized him by name.