“A marvelous view of hills and mountains and desert can be had from this point. A short walk from the car brought us to the foot of the look-out tower and the more hardy of our party climbed the steel rungs to the small platform, where an unending panorama was had for miles in every direction. The glistening Mojave was right at our back, and seemed to be directly under our feet although in reality it was many miles away.” LA Times article
If you excessively strain your eyes, you can see two people standing on a platform of the tower. The boulders featured in this photo bear resemblance to the boulders on Mount Pacifico today, although I could not find a perfect angle to recreate this photographer’s perspective. This gave me doubts about whether this was built on the summit proper itself. However, anyone that has visited Mount Pacifico has noticed the metal posts on the tallest boulders. I wish the above photo had better resolution.
Two metal posts cemented on each boulder
Metal post and concrete that may have served as a base for the lookout. Is the center hole where the benchmark used to be?
A few other interesting remnants along Mt. Pacifico I found were drill holes on the sides of surrounding boulders as well as other hardware bolted or laying around. I have yet to figure out how it all came together.
A metal post may have been fixed in this drill hole. A tail of metal corrosion left behind.
Hardware anchored onto the boulder
It’s also interesting to note that although this article called it a fire lookout tower, it doesn’t look like the other lookouts built in the San Gabriels around this time. In fact, it’s the only one that does not remotely resemble the others. All the other towers were built with cabs. So why this kind of lookout was built in Mount Pacifico is a mystery. Regardless of how it looks, the main objective of the early forestry was to get up over the treetops so early lookouts might have climbed a tree, a water tower or building to look for smoke. Besides, similar fire lookout towers without cabs were built throughout the states.
One kind of fire lookout is the Aermotor Windmill towers, often erected with no cab. A representative example is the Minnesota State Forest Service Lookout Tower, 1922.
A similar fire lookout tower without a cab was located at Schley Ranger Station in the Chippewa National Forest in Minnesota, 1912.
Another lookout without a cab.
The Pacifico tower really looks similar to towers used for triangulation surveying. Survey towers were used by U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey teams from the mid-1800s through the 1980s to obtain clear lines-of-sight between survey points. One of the most widely used survey towers was the Bilby tower.However, survey towers meant to be a temporary fixture. It was portable, reusable and quick to assemble and dismantle....
And fire lookout towers used to look like this!
So I guess anything is possible?
On a side note, I find it interesting that the main station benchmark is not on the tallest boulder?
Any thoughts on the tower?
http://angelesadventures.com/mtpacificolookout/