Literally thousands of motion pictures and television shows have used the Iverson Movie Ranch for some or all of the scenes in the picture. This location ranch is probably the most recognizable site to movie viewers of all ages, whether it is the Garden of Gods site on the Lower Iverson (see picture to the right) or the chase roads on the Upper Iverson.
The stars who have lensed here is a virtual who's who of Hollywood, including Shirley Temple in Wee Willie Winkie, Laurel & Hardy in The Flying Dueces, John Wayne in The Fighting Seabees, Gary Cooper in Lives of the Bengal Lancers, and Johnny Weissmuller, Buster Crabbe, Lex Barker and Gordon Scott as Tarzan in various films.
The history of the ranch began in 1880 when Miss Augustus Wagman homesteaded 160 acres of rocky land which eventually grew to a few thousand acres. In October 1888, she married Karl Iverson, and from that union five children were born: Joe, Sena, Isaac, Anna, and Aaron. [Some of the information in this paragraph is inaccurate and will be changed when the complete accurate data is available.]
In 1912 the California Aqueduct opened, bringing water (and people) to Los Angeles and the first film at Iverson was shot. The name of this first film has been reported as being The Squaw Man, but this is probably incorrect. Unfortunately, because of several fires, the ranch records have been lost.
The management of the ranch during the early years was handled by Karl, Augustus, and Joe. Around 1927, the ownership of the ranch was given to two of the sons, Joe and Aaron (the other children having moved away), but the profits were divided in thirds (the parents receiving one-third, Joe and Aaron receiving one-third each). By 1962, the ownership of the ranch was already divided into two sections: Joe owning the Lower Iverson, and Aaron owning the Upper Iverson [In the 1962 edition of the Studio Blu-Book Directory on page 36 is the following ad: "Aaron Iverson Ranch, Motion Picture & TV Location at the Upper (North) Section of Iverson Ranch, Consisting of Seven Location with Every Kind of Scenery including Miles of Scenic Roads and Insert Roads. There are many new improvements being made such as Western Street, Ranch Village, Lake, Pools, Bulldog Hills, Graves." Unfortunately, most of these improvements appear not to have been started.]
In 1966, the State of California began construction on the Simi Valley Freeway (118). This major thoroughfare cut the Iverson ranch in half, being built through the northern edge of the Lower Iverson. This freeway all but doomed the ranch as a viable movie location because of the high decibel sound levels caused by the traffic passing through the Santa Susanna Mountains.
In 1982, Joe Iverson sold the Lower Iverson to Robert G. Sherman, who almost immediately began subdividing most of the property. By 1998, Sherman had sold the ranch to a family which will keep the remaining acreage intact.
During the late 1980's, most of the ranch was subdivided into three portions: the Upper Iverson is now Indian Springs/Indian Falls, an exclusive gated community of 1 to 4 acre homesites, many of which have homes the size of mansions; the Lower Iverson is California West, a private residential condominium community; and the Middle Iverson is Summerset Village, consisting of luxury rental apartments.
Even though paved roadways now sit on many of the Upper Iverson's chase roads and another roadway traverses the canyon between the Garden of the Gods and the Cliffs of Nyoka (see photo to the right), the major rock formations and terrains still remain intact.
In its days of glory, besides the magnificent rock outcroppings and general landscape, the ranch had a complete western street (see photo to the left), a three-sided ranch house with accompanying barn, and many small buildings that usually were used as outlaw shacks, stagecoach stops, and the like.
To reach the Iverson Movie Ranch from Los Angeles, take the Golden State Freeway (5) north to the Simi Valley Freeway (118) west. The area surrounding the freeway from just before Topanga Canyon Boulevard to less than a mile farther west is the site of the ranch. The Lower Iverson is on the left and the Middle and Upper Iverson is to the right.
The Upper Iverson and adjoining Brandeis Ranch are no longer open to the public, in a general sense, as it is now a gated community (closed sometime in late 1993 or early 1994). There is access via a walkway to the northern hills and you are supposed to stay on that path (thanks to Craig Baker for the correction). To reach Iverson Road, drive back down to Santa Susanna Pass Road, turn right (west) and travel a short distance (the Church of Rocky Peak will be at the corner) and turn right onto Iverson Road. The Middle Iverson is partially open to the public, but apartments cover the main filming area, so there is no longer anything to see there. To reach it, travel north on Topanga Canyon Boulevard and turn left at Poema Place (the last road). This circles up into the Middle Iverson. A gate stops you from continuing into the Upper Iverson.
The Middle Iverson at one time had what is referred to as the three-sided house. The west, south, and east sides of the building could be filmed from different angles and made to appear to be different houses. A barn and outbuilding also were at this site.
|
![]() | ![]() |
![]() | ![]() |
![]() | ![]() |
The photograph of the Iverson Western Street and the Johnny Mack Brown's are used by permission of Stephen Lodge who photographed them during a Johnny Mack Brown film shoot.
