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Castaneda’s 24/7 Plumbing & Rooter has been serving the Los Angeles County community with top-notch emergency plumbing services for over a decade. Our team of skilled professionals is committed to offering immediate plumbing service when you need it most. We pride ourselves on being a trusted local service and are always ready to help you with any urgent plumbing repair needs.
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When you encounter a plumbing emergency, you need immediate help. Castaneda’s 24/7 Plumbing & Rooter understands the urgency of such situations. Our emergency plumbing services in Bell Canyon, CA ensure that you get help fast to prevent further damage. Whether it’s a burst pipe or severe clog, our 24-hour plumber service is here to assist you anytime. Our expertise and prompt service have made us a trusted name in Los Angeles County.
Chumash Native Americans lived in the canyon for around 8,000 years B.P. The Chumash had the village of Hu’wam here in the canyon on Bell Creek upstream from Escorpión Peak. It was multi-cultural, where Chumash, Tongva, and Tataviam peoples lived and traded together. Nearby is the Burro Flats Painted Cave. Escorpión Peak (aka: Castle Peak) is one of nine alignment points in Chumash territory and is considered essential to maintaining the balance of the natural world.
In 1845 the Mexican land grant for Rancho El Escorpión, named for the peak and located beside it at the mouth of Bell Canyon, was given by Mexican Governor Pío Pico. Chumash-Ventureño Chief Odón Eusebia (1795-), his brother-in-law Urbano, and Urbano’s son Mañuel were the grantees of the Rancho grant, formerly Mission San Fernando Rey de España (Mission San Fernando) lands. After California U.S. statehood, as required by the Land Act of 1851, a claim for Rancho El Escorpión was filed with the United States Public Land Commission in 1852, and the grant was patented to Odón Eusebia, Urbano, and Mañuel in 1876. In 1871, Miguel Leonis acquired Odón Eusebia’s holdings of Rancho El Escorpión, along with an adobe on the adjacent southern ranch lands in Calabasas. He used the land for cattle and sheep herds. Through various landowners that use continued at the Rancho until 1959 and Bell Canyon until 1967.
In 1967 the Spruce Land Corporation and Boise Cascade joined in a partnership to purchase the Bell Canyon area to develop the community of Bell Canyon. In the fall of 1968, the Bell Canyon Equestrian Center, designed by ‘Southern California modern ranch style’ architect Cliff May, was built and began operation. In 1969 a new subdivision called “Woodland Hills Country Estates” was developed and opened for sales. It was a success, selling nearly all the 800 home site lots within ten days. In the fall of 1969 the new residential property owners took leadership of the community association and renamed the development “Bell Canyon,” after Charles A. Bell, the original homesteader here and son of pioneer Horace Bell. He was a leading late 1880s newspaper publisher, Los Angeles attorney winning many cases for clients against neighbor Miguel Leonis, and the 1906 Justice of the Peace for Calabasas. Legend says he lost a right arm in an 1887 shootout when raiding a moonshiner. The Rancho El Escorpión compound adobes, from the 1840s to the 1960s at the mouth of Bell Canyon, were actually outside the land grant and on Bell’s property.
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