Gerónimo López, born in the
pueblo de Los Ángeles in 1828, had served as an army messenger in 1847 for
Andrés Pico during the
Mexican–American War, delivering the
Articles of Capitulation to General
John C. Fremont, that ended the war in southern
Alta California. Catalina López was the only daughter of Pedro López, the second mayordomo of the
San Fernando Rey de España Mission, where she was raised; she remained at the mission until 1847 when she moved to Los Ángeles, returning later as the bride of Gerónimo López.
López Station Gerónimo and Catalina López purchased of land near the Mission San Fernando in 1861 and built an
adobe home along the
Butterfield Overland Mail 1st Division, on the
Stockton - Los Angeles Road wagon route that connected Los Angeles and San Francisco. The original López Station adobe was destroyed in the 1910s for the construction of the San Fernando Reservoir (later renamed
Van Norman Reservoir), part of the then new
Los Angeles Aqueduct system. After the
1971 San Fernando earthquake the foundation was again exposed in the reservoir basin. It was later covered by the vehicle track when the Los Angeles Police Department built the Davis Training Center in the late 1990s. Senator
Charles Maclay and his partners George K. and Benjamin F. Porter bought the remaining northern half of the
Rancho Ex-Mission San Fernando from Eulogio de Celis in 1874. Maclay would own the east portion in which the López's land lied and he would proceed to lay out the new town of
San Fernando, adjoining the railroad which arrived in the valley the same year the ex-mission rancho lands were purchased.
López Adobe 19th century Between 1882 and 1883, the López family built a larger adobe using 24-by-6-inch, sun-baked blocks. It is considered the City of San Fernando's oldest standing building. It has been recognized for its blend of
Mission Revival and
Victorian architectural styles. Catalina López designed the residence's Victorian features. The first local newspaper, the San Fernando Times, was printed in April 1889 from the López Adobe.
20th century Catalina López died in 1918, and Gerónimo López died in 1921, at age 90. In 1928, several modifications were made to the house by one of the López daughters, Louisa López McAlonan. The
balcony staircase was changed, and some rooms were divided to form apartments. Modern plumbing and electrical fixtures were also added at the time. The original shake shingle roof was also replaced by clay-tile roof. Members of the López family continued living in the adobe until 1961. The last López to live in the adobe was another daughter, Kate López Millen, who lived in an upper apartment from 1931 until shortly before her death in 1961. The property remained in the López family until 1971. ==Purchase by the City of San Fernando==