In 1769, the Spanish
Portola expedition came northwest along the beach from the previous night's encampment on the
Ventura River. The explorers found a small native village near a watering place at what is now called "Padre Juan Canyon" (which reaches the sea at Pitas Point) and camped nearby on August 15. "Padre Juan" refers to Fray
Juan Crespi, a Franciscan missionary travelling with the expedition, who noted that the natives "kept us awake playing all night on some doleful pipes or whistles". Thus the point was named "los pitos" - Spanish for "whistles". Later American coast survey mapping misspelled the name as "Las Pitas", which was the Spanish name for the
Agave americana (century plant).
Supreme Court case Beach access at one of the beachfront homes was the subject of the 1987
US Supreme Court case
Nollan v. California Coastal Commission. ==References==