Early history Coal, along with clay deposits, was found in the area by John D. Huff in the late 1880s. C.H. Albers, James and George Hill organized the Alberhill Coal and Clay Company which mined the low-grade lignite coal and fire clay in the area from 1890 until 1940. Mining in underground shafts and tunnels, coal was dug with picks, shovels and wheelbarrows. The coal mine was in a canyon, 0.9 miles southeast of what became Alberhill, at the end of a spur line off of the
California Southern Railroad tracks. The spur was built in 1896, from Lake Elsinore Junction through
Lake Elsinore and
Terra Cotta, to the mine where coal could be loaded into coal cars. Pacific Sewer Pipe Company had a plant at nearby
Terra Cotta, (2.3 miles southeast of what became Alberhill) that produced sewer pipe using the Alberhill Company's clay to form the pipe and used their coal to fire the kilns for their production from 1890 until 1915. In 1915 the plant was closed and production was moved to
Santa Fe Springs and the new publicly held company was renamed
Pacific Clay Products. Many buildings in Los Angeles were built using its brick and tile, including
Royce Hall and
Powell Library, both built in the 1920s. Alberhill was a company town, with a Catholic church and a three-room elementary schoolhouse that remained open until the 1960s. Alberhill had its own post office, which operated from 1915 to 1969. The name commemorates C.H. Albers and James and George Hill, landowners and owners of the coal and clay mine. The Los Angeles Brick Company was purchased by Pacific Clay Products in 1963. ==Today==