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Feather Hill Zoo

1924 establishments in California1930 disestablishments in CaliforniaBird parksEducational organizations disestablished in 1930Educational organizations established in 1924
Former zoosHistory of Santa Barbara County, CaliforniaUse American English from April 2023Use mdy dates from April 2023Zoos disestablished in the 20th centuryZoos established in the 1920sZoos in California
Feather Hill Poultry Ranch, Santa Barbara, California 1925
Feather Hill Poultry Ranch, Santa Barbara, California 1925

The Feather Hill Zoo or Feather Hill Ranch Zoo was a U.S. private animal collection in Montecito, California owned by Christian R. Holmes from 1924 to 1930. Featherhill Ranch was located on East Valley Road "astride Romero Creek." Originally a poultry operation, the ranch rapidly established a large collection of birds and animals to attract customers to the site.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Feather Hill Zoo (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Feather Hill Zoo
Pimiento Lane,

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Wikipedia: Feather Hill ZooContinue reading on Wikipedia

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Latitude Longitude
N 34.4366 ° E -119.6353 °
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Address

Pimiento Lane 491
93108
California, United States
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Feather Hill Poultry Ranch, Santa Barbara, California 1925
Feather Hill Poultry Ranch, Santa Barbara, California 1925
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Nearby Places

Val Verde (Montecito, California)
Val Verde (Montecito, California)

Val Verde, in Montecito, California, also known as the Wright Ludington House, is an estate which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1995. The listing included five contributing buildings, 10 contributing structures, four contributing objects, and a contributing site, on 8.9 acres (3.6 ha).It is located at 2549 Sycamore Canyon Road in Montecito, which is adjacent to Santa Barbara. The house, built in 1918, is a two-story Mediterranean Revival style house, built of hollow clay tile and covered with a red-tiled hipped roof, arranged around an open courtyard patio. It was designed by architect Bertram G. Goodhue for fellow New Yorker Henry Dater Jr.The property was bought by Charles Ludington in 1925, after which Ludington, with architect Lockwood de Forest added landscaping, cottages, garages, an undulating wall, and a Spanish fountain around 1926. The property was inherited by his son Wright S. Ludington in 1929 or 1930.In 2009, the property was sold to Sergey Grishin (businessman). It has also been known as Dias Felices, as the Henry Dater house, and as the Dr. Warren Austin home. It was deemed significant as a "product of the opulent age in Montecito, California, from 1900-1920 when the rural town became noted for its substantial winter homes based on European residential models, commissioned by wealthy easterners and midwesterners from well-known national and regional architects."