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The historic Phillips Mansion in Pomona, a surviving 19th‑century landmark from the former town of Spadra The historic Phillips Mansion in Pomona, a surviving 19th‑century landmark from the former town of Spadra

Only Surviving 19th Century Historic Mansion Part Of Frontier California Town Forgotten

The Phillips Mansion in Pomona—built in 1875 by Louis Phillips, once the wealthiest man in the Southland—stands as one of the last surviving remnants of Spadra after decades of neglect, restoration, and near‑demolition.
Courtesy of CBS Los Angeles / Pomona Historical Society

Today’s Monday Muse is more than a face — it’s an architectural digest in both the literal and metaphorical sense. A one‑of‑a‑kind foundation. A survivor. A landmark that refuses to be forgotten.

Courtesy of CBS Los Angeles

Introducing The Phillips Mansion, standing tall in the industrial stretch of Pomona, right on the eastern edge of Los Angeles County — practically in our own extended backyard and just minutes from one of our favorite long‑standing traditions, the LA County Fair. A little local magic orbiting a lot of local history.

Built in 1875, the mansion was the crown jewel of Spadra, a frontier town that once pulsed with Wild West energy before disappearing into California’s forgotten chapters. And at the center of it all was Louis Phillips, a man once considered the wealthiest person in the Southland. By the 1890s, he owned 12,000 acres across the region, plus major tracts in downtown Los Angeles. His influence was so vast he even convinced the Southern Pacific Railroad to build a line between Pomona and Los Angeles — a move that helped transform the area into a booming suburb.

Phillips sold off much of his land for housing tracts but maintained a 2,000‑acre estate surrounding the mansion until his death in 1900. After passing through his wife and heirs, the home eventually fell into neglect. By World War II, its interior had been gutted. In the 1960s, it was vandalized and nearly torn down entirely — the surrounding area had become an industrial park, and the mansion was dangerously close to being replaced by a paint factory.

But history had other plans.

The Pomona Historical Society stepped in, purchasing the property and beginning the long, ongoing process of restoration. Today, the mansion stands with its three‑foot‑thick walls, six chimneys, and a presence that feels both haunted and heroic. It’s currently closed for an immersive theater experience and is expected to reopen for tours next year.

A mansion and a cemetery — the last surviving remnants of Spadra. A Wild West town erased from the map but not from memory.

So today, we here at INYIM Media see you. We speak your name. You are no longer unsung — and never uncensored.

What part of the Phillips Mansion’s history surprised you most? Comment below.

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