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{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}
{{short description|American businesswoman}}
{{short description|American businesswoman}}
{{Infobox person
'''Rhoda May Knight Rindge''', (b. 1864, d. 1941),<ref name="auto20">{{cite web|url=http://pcad.lib.washington.edu/building/289/|title=PCAD - Adamson, Merritt Huntley and Rhoda Rindge Adamson, House, Malibu, CA|website=pcad.lib.washington.edu}}</ref> also known as '''May Rindge'''<ref>{{cite web|url=https://adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com/photo/D2648E4F-A885-456C-8E27-470022947651|title=(Rhoda)-May Knight - FF-3|website=adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com}}</ref> or '''May K.''', was an American businesswoman. She was known as the Queen of [[Malibu, California|Malibu]]<ref name="auto29">{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1998-mar-29-me-33980-story.html|title=Defender of Malibu's Beauty|date=March 29, 1998|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.sierraclub.org/sierra/2016-3-may-june/green-life/king-and-queen-malibu|title=The King and Queen of Malibu|date=May 24, 2016|website=Sierra Club}}</ref> as well as the Founding Mother of Malibu<ref name="auto18">{{cite web|url=http://www.malibutimes.com/article_4c6357f8-b23a-11e9-b307-8fa995ed78ff.html|title=Preserving the history of Malibu Pottery tiles|first=Judy|last=Abel|website=Malibu Times}}</ref> and L.A.'s first high-profile female environmentalist.<ref name="auto29"/> She holds the distinction of being the first female to serve as president of a railroad company.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mmcFsuaxPQEC&q=first+woman+to+serve+as+president+of+a+railroad,+rhoda+rindge&pg=PA33|title=California Pottery: From Missions to Modernism|first=Bill|last=Stern|date=May 25, 2001|publisher=Chronicle Books|via=Google Books|isbn=9780811830683}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dri3AAAAIAAJ|title=The Determined Mrs. Rindge and Her Legendary Railroad: A History of the Hueneme, Malibu and Port Los Angeles Railway|first=David F.|last=Myrick|date=November 25, 1996|publisher=Ventura County Historical Society|via=Google Books}}</ref> Additionally, she founded Marblehead Land Company in 1921,<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_-SKDwAAQBAJ&q=emily+preston,+frederick+rindge&pg=PT184|title=Major Harold Ferguson: Citizen-Soldier Meets Roaring 20S Los Angeles|first=Edmond J. Clinton|last=III|date=December 18, 2018|publisher=Xlibris Corporation|via=Google Books|isbn=9781984571373}}</ref><ref name="auto8">{{cite web|url=https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8mw2fhx/entire_text/|title=Rindge and Adamson Family Papers|website=oac.cdlib.org}}</ref> and most notably, the [[Malibu Potteries]] in [[1926]],<ref name="auto26">{{cite web|url=https://la.curbed.com/2016/8/25/12621280/adamson-house-malibu-history|title=The story of Malibu's spectacular first beach house|first=Hadley|last=Meares|date=August 25, 2016|website=Curbed LA}}</ref><ref name="auto10">{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-rhoda-may-adamson-dallas-20111024-story.html|title=Rhoda-May Adamson Dallas dies at 94; Pepperdine donor|date=October 24, 2011|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref> the first business in Malibu. The company originated [[Malibu tile]], and the venture became one of [[Southern California]]'s most successful of its kind alongside [[Catalina Pottery]], [[Gladding, McBean]], and [[Ernest A. Batchelder|Batchelder tile]].<ref name="auto14">{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/style/la-hm-tile14oct14-story.html|title=The tile detectives|date=October 14, 2004|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref><ref name="auto26"/><ref name="auto18"/>
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| birth_name = Rhoda May Knight
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| other_names = Queen of Malibu, May K.
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| known_for = Founder of [[Malibu Potteries]], and the Malibu Movie Colony
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'''Rhoda May Knight Rindge''', (b. 1864, d. 1941),<ref name="auto20">{{cite web|url=http://pcad.lib.washington.edu/building/289/|title=PCAD - Adamson, Merritt Huntley and Rhoda Rindge Adamson, House, Malibu, CA|website=pcad.lib.washington.edu}}</ref> also known as '''May Rindge'''<ref>{{cite web|url=https://adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com/photo/D2648E4F-A885-456C-8E27-470022947651|title=(Rhoda)-May Knight - FF-3|website=adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com}}</ref> or '''May K.''', was an American businesswoman. She was known as the Queen of [[Malibu, California|Malibu]]<ref name="auto29">{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1998-mar-29-me-33980-story.html|title=Defender of Malibu's Beauty|date=March 29, 1998|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.sierraclub.org/sierra/2016-3-may-june/green-life/king-and-queen-malibu|title=The King and Queen of Malibu|date=May 24, 2016|website=Sierra Club}}</ref> as well as the Founding Mother of Malibu<ref name="auto18">{{cite web|url=http://www.malibutimes.com/article_4c6357f8-b23a-11e9-b307-8fa995ed78ff.html|title=Preserving the history of Malibu Pottery tiles|first=Judy|last=Abel|website=Malibu Times}}</ref> and L.A.'s first high-profile female environmentalist.<ref name="auto29"/> She was the first woman to serve as president of a railroad company.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mmcFsuaxPQEC&q=first+woman+to+serve+as+president+of+a+railroad,+rhoda+rindge&pg=PA33|title=California Pottery: From Missions to Modernism|first=Bill|last=Stern|date=May 25, 2001|publisher=Chronicle Books|via=Google Books|isbn=9780811830683}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dri3AAAAIAAJ|title=The Determined Mrs. Rindge and Her Legendary Railroad: A History of the Hueneme, Malibu and Port Los Angeles Railway|first=David F.|last=Myrick|date=November 25, 1996|publisher=Ventura County Historical Society|via=Google Books}}</ref> Additionally, she founded Marblehead Land Company in 1921,<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_-SKDwAAQBAJ&q=emily+preston,+frederick+rindge&pg=PT184|title=Major Harold Ferguson: Citizen-Soldier Meets Roaring 20S Los Angeles|first=Edmond J. Clinton|last=III|date=December 18, 2018|publisher=Xlibris Corporation|via=Google Books|isbn=9781984571373}}</ref><ref name="auto8">{{cite web|url=https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8mw2fhx/entire_text/|title=Rindge and Adamson Family Papers|website=oac.cdlib.org}}</ref> and the [[Malibu Potteries]] in [[1926]],<ref name="auto26">{{cite web|url=https://la.curbed.com/2016/8/25/12621280/adamson-house-malibu-history|title=The story of Malibu's spectacular first beach house|first=Hadley|last=Meares|date=August 25, 2016|website=Curbed LA}}</ref><ref name="auto10">{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-rhoda-may-adamson-dallas-20111024-story.html|title=Rhoda-May Adamson Dallas dies at 94; Pepperdine donor|date=October 24, 2011|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref> the first business in Malibu. The company originated [[Malibu tile]], and the venture became one of [[Southern California]]'s most successful of its kind alongside [[Catalina Pottery]], [[Gladding, McBean]], and [[Ernest A. Batchelder|Batchelder tile]].<ref name="auto14">{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/style/la-hm-tile14oct14-story.html|title=The tile detectives|date=October 14, 2004|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref><ref name="auto26"/><ref name="auto18"/>


Rindge also founded the [[Malibu, California#Malibu Colony|Malibu Movie Colony]],<ref name="auto28">{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/la-hm-malibukids4nov04-story.html|title=They were the kids of Malibu Colony|date=November 4, 2004|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref> building and renting cottages—and later selling them—to early Hollywood stars such as [[Bing Crosby]], [[Gloria Swanson]], and [[Mary Pickford]].<ref name="auto17">{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-then18-2009oct18-story.html|title=Living chic by jowl in the Malibu Colony|date=October 18, 2009|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref><ref name="auto11">{{cite web|url=https://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/04/29/the-rise-of-the-malibu-movie-colony|title=The Rise of the Malibu Movie Colony|first=Michele|last=Willens|date=April 29, 2014|via=www.thedailybeast.com}}</ref><ref name="auto15">{{cite web|url=https://www.laphamsquarterly.org/roundtable/making-malibu|title=The Making of Malibu &#124; David K. Randall|website=Lapham’s Quarterly}}</ref><ref name="auto28"/> She fought bitterly<ref name="auto15"/><ref name="auto29"/> to preserve her family's rancho, the [[Rancho Topanga Malibu Sequit]]<ref name="auto28"/><ref name="auto29"/> which extended from Los Flores Canyon in Malibu into [[Ventura County]].<ref name="auto13">{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2009-aug-09-me-then9-story.html|title=A jewel on the Malibu coast|date=August 9, 2009|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref>
Rindge also founded the [[Malibu, California#Malibu Colony|Malibu Movie Colony]],<ref name="auto28">{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/la-hm-malibukids4nov04-story.html|title=They were the kids of Malibu Colony|date=November 4, 2004|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref> building and renting cottages—and later selling them—to early Hollywood stars such as [[Bing Crosby]], [[Gloria Swanson]], and [[Mary Pickford]].<ref name="auto17">{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-then18-2009oct18-story.html|title=Living chic by jowl in the Malibu Colony|date=October 18, 2009|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref><ref name="auto11">{{cite news|url=https://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/04/29/the-rise-of-the-malibu-movie-colony|title=The Rise of the Malibu Movie Colony|first=Michele|last=Willens|newspaper=The Daily Beast|date=April 29, 2014|via=www.thedailybeast.com}}</ref><ref name="auto15">{{cite web|url=https://www.laphamsquarterly.org/roundtable/making-malibu|title=The Making of Malibu &#124; David K. Randall|website=Lapham’s Quarterly|date=10 March 2016 }}</ref><ref name="auto28"/> She fought bitterly<ref name="auto15"/><ref name="auto29"/> to preserve her family's rancho, the [[Rancho Topanga Malibu Sequit]]<ref name="auto28"/><ref name="auto29"/> which extended from Los Flores Canyon in Malibu into [[Ventura County]].<ref name="auto13">{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2009-aug-09-me-then9-story.html|title=A jewel on the Malibu coast|date=August 9, 2009|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref>


Rindge successfully diverted the course of the [[Southern Pacific Railway]]<ref name="auto29"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.scpr.org/news/2008/07/07/2549/pacific-coast-highway-paved-way-supreme-court-ruli/|title=Pacific Coast Highway Paved Way for Supreme Court Ruling|first=Southern California Public|last=Radio|date=July 7, 2008|website=Southern California Public Radio}}</ref> by fighting their efforts to connect their [[Santa Barbara, California|Santa Barbara]] end terminus with [[Santa Monica]]; the route would have been coastal, not only infringing on the family ranch<ref name="auto24">{{cite web|url=https://www.kpbs.org/news/2016/mar/16/how-king-and-queen-malibu-kept-out-riff-raff-and-s/|title=How 'The King And Queen Of Malibu' Kept Everyone Out And Saved The Coast|first=Maureen Cavanaugh, Pat|last=Finn|website=KPBS Public Media}}</ref> but destroying the natural beauty and [[topography]] of the [[Pacific Coast]].<ref name="auto29"/> In the process, Rindge constructed the Malibu Pier.<ref name="auto29"/> Rindge subsequently became known for her battle to keep the [[Pacific Coast Highway (California)|Pacific Coast Highway]]—at the time, Roosevelt Highway<ref name="auto29"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.parks.ca.gov/%5C%5C?page_Id=672 |title=Adamson House |publisher=Parks.ca.gov |date= |accessdate=2019-11-25}}</ref>—from accomplishing the same and similar goals. Rindge also built the 100-foot-high [[Rindge Dam]].<ref name="auto29"/><ref name="auto9">{{cite web|url=https://www.theacorn.com/articles/rindge-dam-removal/|title=Rindge Dam REMOVAL|date=February 15, 2018|website=The Acorn}}</ref> Furthermore, she built what became the [[Franciscan order]]'s Serra Retreat.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.malibutimes.com/malibu_life/article_a3ead888-a1b0-11e4-9ab5-dfe584d0e652.html|title=Serra Retreat: Malibu's Best-Kept Secret|first=Jimy Tallal / Special to The Malibu|last=Times|website=Malibu Times}}</ref><ref name="auto29"/><ref name="auto1">{{cite web|url=https://www.malibumag.com/unpublished/malibus-best-kept-secet|title=Malibu's Best-Kept Secet|website=Malibu Magazine}}</ref> Rindge is also known as donor of the land upon which her daughter and son-in-law's home, the historic [[Adamson House]], was built.<ref name="auto13"/>
Rindge successfully diverted the course of the [[Southern Pacific Railroad]]<ref name="auto29"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.scpr.org/news/2008/07/07/2549/pacific-coast-highway-paved-way-supreme-court-ruli/|title=Pacific Coast Highway Paved Way for Supreme Court Ruling|first=Southern California Public|last=Radio|date=July 7, 2008|website=Southern California Public Radio}}</ref> by fighting their efforts to connect their [[Santa Barbara, California|Santa Barbara]] end terminus with [[Santa Monica]]; the route would have been coastal, not only infringing on the family ranch<ref name="auto24">{{cite web|url=https://www.kpbs.org/news/2016/mar/16/how-king-and-queen-malibu-kept-out-riff-raff-and-s/|title=How 'The King And Queen Of Malibu' Kept Everyone Out And Saved The Coast|first=Maureen Cavanaugh, Pat|last=Finn|website=KPBS Public Media|date=16 March 2016}}</ref> but destroying the natural beauty and [[topography]] of the [[Pacific Coast]].<ref name="auto29"/> In the process, Rindge constructed the Malibu Pier.<ref name="auto29"/> Rindge subsequently became known for her battle to keep the [[Pacific Coast Highway (California)|Pacific Coast Highway]]—at the time, Roosevelt Highway<ref name="auto29"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.parks.ca.gov/%5C%5C?page_Id=672 |title=Adamson House |publisher=Parks.ca.gov |date= |accessdate=2019-11-25}}</ref>—from accomplishing the same and similar goals. Rindge also built the 100-foot-high [[Rindge Dam]].<ref name="auto29"/><ref name="auto9">{{cite web|url=https://www.theacorn.com/articles/rindge-dam-removal/|title=Rindge Dam REMOVAL|date=February 15, 2018|website=The Acorn}}</ref> Furthermore, she built what became the [[Franciscan order]]'s Serra Retreat.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.malibutimes.com/malibu_life/article_a3ead888-a1b0-11e4-9ab5-dfe584d0e652.html|title=Serra Retreat: Malibu's Best-Kept Secret|first=Jimy Tallal / Special to The Malibu|last=Times|website=Malibu Times}}</ref><ref name="auto29"/><ref name="auto1">{{cite web|url=https://www.malibumag.com/unpublished/malibus-best-kept-secet|title=Malibu's Best-Kept Secet|website=Malibu Magazine}}</ref> Rindge is also known as donor of the land upon which her daughter and son-in-law's home, the historic [[Adamson House]], was built.<ref name="auto13"/>


==Early life==
==Early life==
Rindge was born Rhoda May Knight in 1864, the eighth child of James and Rhoda Roxanna Lathrop Knight.<ref name="auto20"/><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_KjWDgAAQBAJ&q=trenton,+may+rindge&pg=PA125|title=A Century History Of The Santa Monica Bay Cities|first=Luther A.|last=Ingersoll|date=November 25, 2017|publisher=Jazzybee Verlag|via=Google Books|isbn=9783849690458}}</ref> She grew up on a sheep farm outside [[Trenton, Michigan]] with 12 siblings.<ref name="auto25">{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/31/books/review-the-king-and-queen-of-malibu-a-history-of-paradise.html|title=Review: 'The King and Queen of Malibu,' a History of Paradise|first=Louis|last=Bayard|date=March 30, 2016|via=NYTimes.com}}</ref><ref name="auto8"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=e-xYAAAAMAAJ&q=trenton,+may+rindge&pg=PA402|title=Out West|first=Charles Fletcher|last=Lummis|date=November 25, 1909|publisher=F. A. Pattee & Company|via=Google Books}}</ref><ref name="auto">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_GsuCgAAQBAJ&q=TRENTON+michigan,+james+knight,+rhoda+lathrop&pg=PT38|title=The King and Queen of Malibu: The True Story of the Battle for Paradise|first=David K.|last=Randall|date=March 2, 2016|publisher=W. W. Norton & Company|via=Google Books|isbn=9780393292930}}</ref> By age 22, she was working as a math teacher at a local schoolhouse.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_GsuCgAAQBAJ&q=rhoda+may+knight,+math+teacher&pg=PT38|title=The King and Queen of Malibu: The True Story of the Battle for Paradise|first=David K.|last=Randall|date=March 2, 2016|publisher=W. W. Norton & Company|via=Google Books|isbn=9780393292930}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1998-mar-29-me-33980-story.html|title=Defender of Malibu's Beauty|date=March 29, 1998|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref>
Rindge was born Rhoda May Knight in 1864, the eighth child of James and Rhoda Roxanna Lathrop Knight.<ref name="auto20"/><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_KjWDgAAQBAJ&q=trenton,+may+rindge&pg=PA125|title=A Century History Of The Santa Monica Bay Cities|first=Luther A.|last=Ingersoll|date=November 25, 2017|publisher=Jazzybee Verlag|via=Google Books|isbn=9783849690458}}</ref> She grew up on a sheep farm outside [[Trenton, Michigan]] with 12 siblings.<ref name="auto25">{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/31/books/review-the-king-and-queen-of-malibu-a-history-of-paradise.html|title=Review: 'The King and Queen of Malibu,' a History of Paradise|first=Louis|last=Bayard|work=The New York Times |date=March 30, 2016|via=NYTimes.com}}</ref><ref name="auto8"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=e-xYAAAAMAAJ&q=trenton,+may+rindge&pg=PA402|title=Out West|first=Charles Fletcher|last=Lummis|date=November 25, 1909|publisher=F. A. Pattee & Company|via=Google Books}}</ref><ref name="auto">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_GsuCgAAQBAJ&q=TRENTON+michigan,+james+knight,+rhoda+lathrop&pg=PT38|title=The King and Queen of Malibu: The True Story of the Battle for Paradise|first=David K.|last=Randall|date=March 2, 2016|publisher=W. W. Norton & Company|via=Google Books|isbn=9780393292930}}</ref> By age 22, she was working as a math teacher at a local schoolhouse.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_GsuCgAAQBAJ&q=rhoda+may+knight,+math+teacher&pg=PT38|title=The King and Queen of Malibu: The True Story of the Battle for Paradise|first=David K.|last=Randall|date=March 2, 2016|publisher=W. W. Norton & Company|via=Google Books|isbn=9780393292930}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1998-mar-29-me-33980-story.html|title=Defender of Malibu's Beauty|date=March 29, 1998|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref>


Knight's family was strictly [[Methodist]]. Her aunt, Emily Lathrop Preston, the founder and proprietor of a cult-like religious faith-healing health colony in [[Northern California]],<ref name="auto25"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.pressdemocrat.com/news/4041040-181/sense-of-place-how-preston|title=Sense of Place: How Preston got its name|date=June 25, 2015|website=Santa Rosa Press Democrat}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://prestoncolonysonomacountyca.wordpress.com/2014/06/23/madam-prestons-community-1889/|title="Madam Preston's Community," 1889|date=June 23, 2014}}</ref> first brought Knight out west. Back in Michigan, Knight was paid a visit by [[Frederick H. Rindge|Frederick Rindge]], who had been a client at Preston's colony.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.pressdemocrat.com/news/5221985-181/community-news-from-sonoma-county|title=Community news from our towns|date=March 11, 2016|website=Santa Rosa Press Democrat}}</ref> He had seen a photograph of her on Preston's piano, felt enchanted, and asked Preston for her blessing in romantically pursuing her niece. Preston encouraged the coupling.<ref name="auto25"/> Rindge had proceeded to write Knight letters, leading to their face-to-face acquaintance.<ref name="auto"/> Knight and Rindge determined their compatibility and within two days were engaged. They were then married within a week,<ref name="auto25"/> moving out to California within the year, 1887, by way of first-class Pullman Palace rail car.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_GsuCgAAQBAJ&q=pullman+palace+cars,+men+and+women+decked,+david+k.+randall&pg=PT41|title=The King and Queen of Malibu: The True Story of the Battle for Paradise|first=David K.|last=Randall|date=March 2, 2016|publisher=W. W. Norton & Company|via=Google Books|isbn=9780393292930}}</ref> Upon arrival, they stayed at Emily Preston's ranch before venturing to [[Southern California]].
Knight's family was strictly [[Methodist]]. Her aunt, Emily Lathrop Preston, the founder and proprietor of a cult-like religious faith-healing health colony in [[Northern California]],<ref name="auto25"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.pressdemocrat.com/news/4041040-181/sense-of-place-how-preston|title=Sense of Place: How Preston got its name|date=June 25, 2015|website=Santa Rosa Press Democrat}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://prestoncolonysonomacountyca.wordpress.com/2014/06/23/madam-prestons-community-1889/|title="Madam Preston's Community," 1889|date=June 23, 2014}}</ref> first brought Knight out west. Back in Michigan, Knight was paid a visit by [[Frederick H. Rindge|Frederick Rindge]], who had been a client at Preston's colony.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.pressdemocrat.com/news/5221985-181/community-news-from-sonoma-county|title=Community news from our towns|date=March 11, 2016|website=Santa Rosa Press Democrat}}</ref> He had seen a photograph of her on Preston's piano, felt enchanted, and asked Preston for her blessing in romantically pursuing her niece. Preston encouraged the coupling.<ref name="auto25"/> Rindge had proceeded to write Knight letters, leading to their face-to-face acquaintance.<ref name="auto"/> Knight and Rindge determined their compatibility and within two days were engaged. They were then married within a week,<ref name="auto25"/> moving out to California within the year, 1887, by way of first-class [[Pullman Company|Pullman Palace]] rail car.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_GsuCgAAQBAJ&q=pullman+palace+cars,+men+and+women+decked,+david+k.+randall&pg=PT41|title=The King and Queen of Malibu: The True Story of the Battle for Paradise|first=David K.|last=Randall|date=March 2, 2016|publisher=W. W. Norton & Company|via=Google Books|isbn=9780393292930}}</ref> Upon arrival, they stayed at Emily Preston's ranch before venturing to [[Southern California]].


==Homes, children, and businesses==
==Homes, children, and businesses==
The Rindge couple had three children: Samuel, Frederick Jr., and [[Rhoda Adamson|Rhoda Agatha]]. The family first settled into a home in [[Santa Monica, California|Santa Monica]].<ref name="auto29"/> In the 1890s, the family began utilizing a [[Victorian architecture|Victorian]] ranch home they built in [[Malibu Canyon]],<ref>{{cite web|url=https://adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com/photo/A970684F-D551-4536-9353-971925908022|title=Rindge home and farmland in Malibu Canyon - FF-139|website=adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com}}</ref> which eventually burned down in a brush fire in 1903.<ref name="auto27">[https://www.malibucity.org/DocumentCenter/View/399/Chapter-Three?bidId=]{{Dead link|date=November 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/californias-burning-again/|title=California's Burning Again|website=The American Conservative}}</ref> They also had a home in Santa Monica. It had been Rindge Sr.'s dream<ref name="auto13"/> to come to California for its temperate climate and what he had imagined as the American [[French Riviera|Riviera]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://digital.smpl.org/digital/collection/smfacts/id/23/|title=Hueneme, Malibu and Port Los Angeles Railroad.|website=digital.smpl.org}}</ref><ref name="auto4">{{cite web|url=https://www.palipost.com/hg-malibu-tiles-endure-decades/|title=H&G: Malibu Tiles Endure Decades|date=September 28, 2006|website=Palisadian Post}}</ref> when he first came to California with his father on the first transcontinental railroad.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.cambridgema.gov/~/media/Files/historicalcommission/pdf/findingaids/fa_rindge_new.pdf?la=en |title=Commission |publisher=www.cambridgema.gov |date= |accessdate=2019-11-25}}</ref> He had always wanted a farm by the sea, and once he purchased the Malibu rancho as the final Spanish land grant owner of the property, he established a cattle ranch. He also became deeply involved in civic life, from serving as director of Edison Electric, founding Conservative Life Insurance Company,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://cdnc.ucr.edu/?a=d&d=LAH19050830.2.16&e=-------en--20--1--txt-txIN--------1|title=Los Angeles Herald 30 August 1905 — California Digital Newspaper Collection|website=cdnc.ucr.edu}}</ref> and promoting [[Temperance movement in the United States|Temperance]] by helping close saloons in Santa Monica to building Santa Monica's First Methodist Episcopal Church<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ytwxyaMhHI0C&q=rindge,+first+methodist+episcopal+church,+santa+monica&pg=RA2-PA104|title=Malibu Diary: Notes from an Urban Refugee|first=Penelope Grenoble|last=O'Malley|date=November 25, 2004|publisher=University of Nevada Press|via=Google Books|isbn=9780874175660}}</ref> and taking the post of vice president of Union Oil. When he died suddenly at the age of 48<ref name="auto27"/> in 1905,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://cambridge.dlconsulting.com/cgi-bin/cambridge?a=d&d=Chronicle19050909-01.2.279&e=-------en-20--1--txt-txIN-------|title=Cambridge Chronicle 9 September 1905 — Cambridge Public Library|website=cambridge.dlconsulting.com}}</ref> Rhoda May Knight Rindge was left with the totality of his business dealings,<ref name="auto30">{{cite web|url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-war-for-paradise-1457130926|title=The War for Paradise|first=Nancy|last=Rommelmann|website=WSJ}}</ref> setting the stage for her unusual position at the time as a woman at the helm of a major family estate.
The Rindge couple had three children: Samuel, Frederick Jr., and [[Rhoda Adamson|Rhoda Agatha]]. The family first settled into a home in [[Santa Monica, California|Santa Monica]].<ref name="auto29"/> In the 1890s, the family began utilizing a [[Victorian architecture|Victorian]] ranch home they built in [[Malibu Canyon]],<ref>{{cite web|url=https://adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com/photo/A970684F-D551-4536-9353-971925908022|title=Rindge home and farmland in Malibu Canyon - FF-139|website=adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com}}</ref> which eventually burned down in a brush fire in 1903.<ref name="auto27">[https://www.malibucity.org/DocumentCenter/View/399/Chapter-Three?bidId=]{{Dead link|date=November 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/californias-burning-again/|title=California's Burning Again|website=The American Conservative|date=December 2003 }}</ref> They also had a home in Santa Monica. It had been Rindge Sr.'s dream<ref name="auto13"/> to come to California for its temperate climate and what he had imagined as the American [[French Riviera|Riviera]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://digital.smpl.org/digital/collection/smfacts/id/23/|title=Hueneme, Malibu and Port Los Angeles Railroad.|website=digital.smpl.org}}</ref><ref name="auto4">{{cite web|url=https://www.palipost.com/hg-malibu-tiles-endure-decades/|title=H&G: Malibu Tiles Endure Decades|date=September 28, 2006|website=Palisadian Post}}</ref> when he first came to California with his father on the first transcontinental railroad.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.cambridgema.gov/~/media/Files/historicalcommission/pdf/findingaids/fa_rindge_new.pdf?la=en |title=Commission |publisher=www.cambridgema.gov |date= |accessdate=2019-11-25}}</ref> He had always wanted a farm by the sea, and once he purchased the Malibu rancho as the final Spanish land grant owner of the property, he established a cattle ranch. He also became deeply involved in civic life, from serving as director of Edison Electric, founding Conservative Life Insurance Company,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://cdnc.ucr.edu/?a=d&d=LAH19050830.2.16&e=-------en--20--1--txt-txIN--------1|title=Los Angeles Herald 30 August 1905 — California Digital Newspaper Collection|website=cdnc.ucr.edu}}</ref> and promoting [[Temperance movement in the United States|Temperance]] by helping close saloons in Santa Monica to building Santa Monica's First Methodist Episcopal Church<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ytwxyaMhHI0C&q=rindge,+first+methodist+episcopal+church,+santa+monica&pg=RA2-PA104|title=Malibu Diary: Notes from an Urban Refugee|first=Penelope Grenoble|last=O'Malley|date=November 25, 2004|publisher=University of Nevada Press|via=Google Books|isbn=9780874175660}}</ref> and taking the post of vice president of Union Oil. When he died suddenly at the age of 48<ref name="auto27"/> in 1905,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://cambridge.dlconsulting.com/cgi-bin/cambridge?a=d&d=Chronicle19050909-01.2.279&e=-------en-20--1--txt-txIN-------|title=Cambridge Chronicle 9 September 1905 — Cambridge Public Library|website=cambridge.dlconsulting.com}}</ref> Rhoda May Knight Rindge was left with the totality of his business dealings,<ref name="auto30">{{cite news|url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-war-for-paradise-1457130926|title=The War for Paradise|first=Nancy|last=Rommelmann|newspaper=Wall Street Journal|date=4 March 2016}}</ref> setting the stage for her unusual position at the time as a woman at the helm of a major family estate.


===Victory over [[Southern Pacific Railroad]] and construction of Malibu Pier===
===Victory over Southern Pacific Railroad and construction of Malibu Pier===
Prior to her husband's death, there had been word that Southern Pacific intended to connect their [[Santa Barbara, California|Santa Barbara]] terminus with [[Santa Monica, California|Santa Monica]], which would entail running tracks right through the vast 13,315-acre<ref name="auto30"/><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_-SKDwAAQBAJ&q=13,315-acre+Rindge+property&pg=PT184|title=Major Harold Ferguson: Citizen-Soldier Meets Roaring 20S Los Angeles|first=Edmond J. Clinton|last=III|date=December 18, 2018|publisher=Xlibris Corporation|via=Google Books|isbn=9781984571373}}</ref> Rindge property. Frederick hatched a plan to take advantage of an obscure [[Interstate Commerce Commission]] law<ref name="auto31">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pH8tfv0McvAC&q=malibu+potteries,+dana+junior+high&pg=PA6|title=Hollywoodland|first=David|last=Wallace|date=October 20, 2003|publisher=Macmillan|via=Google Books|isbn=9780312316143}}</ref> that stated if one railway ran through a property, there could be no other railway doing the same.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Rindge_Co._v._County_of_Los_Angeles&oldid=910140722|title=Rindge Co. v. County of Los Angeles|date=August 9, 2019|via=Wikipedia}}</ref> Hence Rindge decided to build his own private track<ref name="auto23">{{cite web|url=https://labusinessjournal.com/news/1999/may/24/rindge/|title=Rindge &#124; Los Angeles Business Journal|website=labusinessjournal.com}}</ref><ref name="auto6">{{cite web|url=http://malibupier.com/history-1|title=History|website=The Malibu Pier}}</ref>—a utilitarian one to service his cattle ranch—but died before carrying out the plan, leaving the operation up to Rhoda May.<ref name="auto5">[https://www.malibucity.org/DocumentCenter/View/396/Chapter-Four?bidId=]{{Dead link|date=November 2019}}</ref> She subsequently built the Malibu Pier and 15 miles of standard gauge track, known as the [[Hueneme, Malibu and Port Los Angeles Railway]], that ran down the length of the pier, where a steam-powered crane lifted cattle hides and walnuts onto boats for shipment and grains onto land for cattle-feed.<ref name="auto23"/><ref name="auto6"/> The operation kept Southern Pacific Railroad out of Malibu, diverting its course inland.<ref name="auto5"/><ref name="auto23"/>
Prior to her husband's death, there had been word that [[Southern Pacific Transportation Company|Southern Pacific]] intended to connect their [[Santa Barbara, California|Santa Barbara]] terminus with [[Santa Monica, California|Santa Monica]], which would entail running tracks right through the vast 13,315-acre<ref name="auto30"/><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_-SKDwAAQBAJ&q=13,315-acre+Rindge+property&pg=PT184|title=Major Harold Ferguson: Citizen-Soldier Meets Roaring 20S Los Angeles|first=Edmond J. Clinton|last=III|date=December 18, 2018|publisher=Xlibris Corporation|via=Google Books|isbn=9781984571373}}</ref> Rindge property. Frederick hatched a plan to take advantage of an obscure [[Interstate Commerce Commission]] law<ref name="auto31">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pH8tfv0McvAC&q=malibu+potteries,+dana+junior+high&pg=PA6|title=Hollywoodland|first=David|last=Wallace|date=October 20, 2003|publisher=Macmillan|via=Google Books|isbn=9780312316143}}</ref> that stated if one railway ran through a property, there could be no other railway doing the same.<ref>{{citation |title=[[Rindge Co. v. County of Los Angeles]]}}</ref> Hence Rindge decided to build his own private track<ref name="auto23">{{cite web|url=https://labusinessjournal.com/news/1999/may/24/rindge/|title=Rindge &#124; Los Angeles Business Journal|website=labusinessjournal.com|date=23 May 1999 }}</ref><ref name="auto6">{{cite web|url=http://malibupier.com/history-1|title=History|website=The Malibu Pier}}</ref>—a utilitarian one to service his cattle ranch—but died before carrying out the plan, leaving the operation up to Rhoda May.<ref name="auto5">[https://www.malibucity.org/DocumentCenter/View/396/Chapter-Four?bidId=]{{Dead link|date=November 2019}}</ref> She subsequently built the Malibu Pier and 15 miles of standard gauge track, known as the [[Hueneme, Malibu and Port Los Angeles Railway]], that ran down the length of the pier, where a steam-powered crane lifted cattle hides and walnuts onto boats for shipment and grains onto land for cattle-feed.<ref name="auto23"/><ref name="auto6"/> The operation kept Southern Pacific Railroad out of Malibu, diverting its course inland.<ref name="auto5"/><ref name="auto23"/>


===Court battles over county roads and Roosevelt Highway===
===Court battles over county roads and Roosevelt Highway===
Rindge had successfully won her Southern Pacific Railway battle, but on her victory's heels came homesteaders along the edge of her property demanding county roads to be laid through her ranch for the public good. Rindge was strictly opposed to the idea, entering the law office of O'Melveny & Myers in 1907<ref name="auto8"/><ref name="auto2">{{cite web|url=https://adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com/photo/DC01129D-1411-4821-BD63-428687911965|title=O'Melveny and Meyers - TRR-41|website=adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com}}</ref> to take up the new fight against the Federal Government and People of the State of California.<ref name="auto2"/> What ensued was an approximately 16-year fight costing Rindge over $1 million a year,<ref name="auto3">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aezmS52IavcC&q=may+rindge,+sons+lawsuit&pg=PA385|title=Los Angeles in the 1930s: The WPA Guide to the City of Angels|first1=United States Federal Writers|last1=Project|first2=WPA Writers' Program of the Work Projects Administration in Southern|last2=California|date=April 5, 2011|publisher=University of California Press|via=Google Books|isbn=9780520268838}}</ref><ref name="auto29"/> first to keep out the roads, then Roosevelt Highway. The court cases were extremely complex and imbued with intense hostility, with Rindge sabotaging the public's efforts to lay roads with extreme measures. Such measures ranged from employing armed guards on horseback to patrol her property and enforce locked gates to digging up roads and replacing them with [[alfalfa]] and [[pigs]].<ref name="auto29"/><ref name="auto3"/><ref name="auto31"/> She waged civil suits, numbering in the hundreds, for trespass, libel, and defamation of character.<ref name="auto29"/> Ultimately, she lost her county roads battle and, finally, her effort against Roosevelt Highway, enumerating four California Supreme Court cases and two [[Supreme Court of the United States|United States Supreme Court]] cases,<ref name="auto31"/><ref name="auto29"/> including [[Rindge Co. v. County of Los Angeles]].
Rindge had successfully won her Southern Pacific Railroad battle, but on her victory's heels came homesteaders along the edge of her property demanding county roads to be laid through her ranch for the public good. Rindge was strictly opposed to the idea, entering the law office of O'Melveny & Myers in 1907<ref name="auto8"/><ref name="auto2">{{cite web|url=https://adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com/photo/DC01129D-1411-4821-BD63-428687911965|title=O'Melveny and Meyers - TRR-41|website=adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com}}</ref> to take up the new fight against the Federal Government and People of the State of California.<ref name="auto2"/> What ensued was an approximately 16-year fight costing Rindge over $1 million a year,<ref name="auto3">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aezmS52IavcC&q=may+rindge,+sons+lawsuit&pg=PA385|title=Los Angeles in the 1930s: The WPA Guide to the City of Angels|first1=United States Federal Writers|last1=Project|first2=WPA Writers' Program of the Work Projects Administration in Southern|last2=California|date=April 5, 2011|publisher=University of California Press|via=Google Books|isbn=9780520268838}}</ref><ref name="auto29"/> first to keep out the roads, then Roosevelt Highway. The court cases were extremely complex and imbued with intense hostility, with Rindge sabotaging the public's efforts to lay roads with extreme measures. Such measures ranged from employing armed guards on horseback to patrol her property and enforce locked gates to digging up roads and replacing them with [[alfalfa]] and [[pigs]].<ref name="auto29"/><ref name="auto3"/><ref name="auto31"/> She waged civil suits, numbering in the hundreds, for trespass, libel, and defamation of character.<ref name="auto29"/> Ultimately, she lost her county roads battle and, finally, her effort against Roosevelt Highway, enumerating four California Supreme Court cases and two [[Supreme Court of the United States|United States Supreme Court]] cases,<ref name="auto31"/><ref name="auto29"/> including [[Rindge Co. v. County of Los Angeles]].


===Founding of [[Malibu Potteries]]===
===Founding of Malibu Potteries===
[[File:This is a picture of took of the Eternal Man on the grounds of the Adamson House in Malibu, California.jpg|thumb|Malibu Potteries ''Eternal Man'' on the grounds of the Adamson House in Malibu, California]]
In 1926, Rindge found herself land-rich and cash-poor<ref name="auto28"/> due to her extensive court battles. In an effort to recoup her expenditures, she first drilled for oil on her property, establishing the Rindge derrick on [[Point Dume]], but found none.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.themalibupost.com/2015/05/|title=The Malibu Post}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.themalibupost.com/2015/05/oil-and-water.html|title=Oil and Water|first=Suzanne|last=Guldimann}}</ref> However, she uncovered clay<ref name="auto18"/> that she was told were ideal for tile-making. As the 1920s were a real-estate boom in Los Angeles,<ref>{{Cite journal|title=The Southern California Real Estate Boom of the Twenties|author=ROBINSON, W. W.|year=1942|journal=The Quarterly: Historical Society of Southern California|volume=24|issue=1|pages=25–30|doi=10.2307/41167994|jstor=41167994}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.kcet.org/history-society/bungling-across-america-the-bungalow-in-southern-california-and-beyond|title=Bungling Across America: The Bungalow in Southern California and Beyond|first=Ryan|last=Reft|date=November 14, 2013|website=KCET}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/messages/downloadsexceeded.html|title=Download Limit Exceeded|website=citeseerx.ist.psu.edu}}</ref> with thousands upon thousands of homes being built, and furthermore, in the tile-reliant [[Mission Revival]], Mayan Revival,<ref name="auto16">{{cite web|url=https://pepperdine.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p15730coll28|title=CONTENTdm|website=pepperdine.contentdm.oclc.org}}</ref> [[Spanish Colonial Revival]],<ref name="auto12">{{cite web|url=https://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/CALIFORNIA-CLAY-Arts-and-Crafts-movement-left-2905568.php|title=CALIFORNIA CLAY / Arts and Crafts movement left rich legacy in local tile art|first1=Barbara|last1=Tannenbaum|first2=Special to The|last2=Chronicle|date=June 23, 2001|website=SFGate}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VBZO2jIy71kC&q=malibu+potteries+cuerda+seca&pg=PA54 |title=Old-House Journal - Google Books |date= |accessdate=2019-11-25}}</ref> and [[Moorish Revival]] styles,<ref name="auto12"/> a tile business promised to be lucrative. Thereafter, Rindge built [[Malibu Potteries]] a half mile east of her pier, right on the beach.<ref name="auto21">{{cite web|url=http://www.adamsonhouse.org/tile.php|title=Welcome to Adamson House|website=www.adamsonhouse.org}}</ref><ref name="auto10"/><ref name="auto31"/> She recruited renowned tile and glaze expert [[Rufus Keeler|Rufus B. Keeler]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1989-03-30-vw-722-story.html|title=Malibu Tile Is Feat of Clay : Artist Helps Revive Hand-Glazed Ceramics|date=March 30, 1989|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref><ref name="auto21"/> to run the factory. At its peak, 125 employees worked at the factory,<ref name="auto18"/> producing 30,000 square feet of tile monthly.<ref name="auto21"/> Women hand-painted tile with substances modernly-regarded as toxic, such as [[cadmium]] for oranges, [[Uranium tile|uranium]] for oranges and reds, [[cobalt]] for blues, and [[lead]] for yellows.<ref name="auto14"/><ref name="auto4"/> Methods included cuerda seca and cuenca,<ref name="auto19">{{cite web|url=https://www.kcet.org/shows/socal-wanderer/where-to-find-socals-historical-decorative-tiles|title=Explore the Remnants of SoCal's Historical Tile Industry|first=Sandi|last=Hemmerlein|date=August 22, 2017|website=KCET}}</ref> and patterns and iconography were inspired by books from an expensive library with which Rindge furnished the pottery. The potteries produced not only flat ceramic tiles for ceilings, walls, baseboards, and floors but also ceramic tile fountains, murals, urns, and bathroom built-ins like toothbrush holders and soap dishes.
In 1926, Rindge found herself land-rich and cash-poor<ref name="auto28"/> due to her extensive court battles. In an effort to recoup her expenditures, she first drilled for oil on her property, establishing the Rindge derrick on [[Point Dume]], but found none.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.themalibupost.com/2015/05/|title=The Malibu Post}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.themalibupost.com/2015/05/oil-and-water.html|title=Oil and Water|first=Suzanne|last=Guldimann}}</ref> However, she uncovered clay<ref name="auto18"/> that she was told were ideal for tile-making. As the 1920s were a real-estate boom in Los Angeles,<ref>{{Cite journal|title=The Southern California Real Estate Boom of the Twenties|author=ROBINSON, W. W.|year=1942|journal=The Quarterly: Historical Society of Southern California|volume=24|issue=1|pages=25–30|doi=10.2307/41167994|jstor=41167994}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.kcet.org/history-society/bungling-across-america-the-bungalow-in-southern-california-and-beyond|title=Bungling Across America: The Bungalow in Southern California and Beyond|first=Ryan|last=Reft|date=November 14, 2013|website=KCET}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/messages/downloadsexceeded.html |title=Archived copy |access-date=November 25, 2019 |archive-date=April 9, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090409124742/http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/messages/downloadsexceeded.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> with thousands upon thousands of homes being built, and furthermore, in the tile-reliant [[Mission Revival]], Mayan Revival,<ref name="auto16">{{cite web|url=https://pepperdine.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p15730coll28|title=CONTENTdm|website=pepperdine.contentdm.oclc.org}}</ref> [[Spanish Colonial Revival]],<ref name="auto12">{{cite web|url=https://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/CALIFORNIA-CLAY-Arts-and-Crafts-movement-left-2905568.php|title=CALIFORNIA CLAY / Arts and Crafts movement left rich legacy in local tile art|first1=Barbara|last1=Tannenbaum|first2=Special to The|last2=Chronicle|date=June 23, 2001|website=SFGate}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VBZO2jIy71kC&q=malibu+potteries+cuerda+seca&pg=PA54 |title=Old-House Journal - Google Books |date= |accessdate=2019-11-25}}</ref> and [[Moorish Revival]] styles,<ref name="auto12"/> a tile business promised to be lucrative. Thereafter, Rindge built [[Malibu Potteries]] a half mile east of her pier, right on the beach.<ref name="auto21">{{cite web|url=http://www.adamsonhouse.org/tile.php|title=Welcome to Adamson House|website=www.adamsonhouse.org}}</ref><ref name="auto10"/><ref name="auto31"/> She recruited renowned tile and glaze expert [[Rufus Keeler|Rufus B. Keeler]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1989-03-30-vw-722-story.html|title=Malibu Tile Is Feat of Clay : Artist Helps Revive Hand-Glazed Ceramics|date=March 30, 1989|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref><ref name="auto21"/> to run the factory. At its peak, 125 employees worked at the factory,<ref name="auto18"/> producing 30,000 square feet of tile monthly.<ref name="auto21"/> Women hand-painted tile with toxic substances such as [[cadmium]] for oranges, [[Uranium tile|uranium]] for oranges and reds, [[cobalt]] for blues, and [[lead]] for yellows.<ref name="auto14"/><ref name="auto4"/> Methods included cuerda seca and cuenca,<ref name="auto19">{{cite web|url=https://www.kcet.org/shows/socal-wanderer/where-to-find-socals-historical-decorative-tiles|title=Explore the Remnants of SoCal's Historical Tile Industry|first=Sandi|last=Hemmerlein|date=August 22, 2017|website=KCET}}</ref> and patterns and iconography were inspired by books from an expensive library with which Rindge furnished the pottery. The potteries produced not only flat ceramic tiles for ceilings, walls, baseboards, and floors but also ceramic tile fountains, murals, urns, and bathroom built-ins like toothbrush holders and soap dishes.


===Construction of Serra Retreat and Malibu Movie Colony===
===Construction of Serra Retreat and Malibu Movie Colony===


Despite the success of the pottery, Rindge still struggled to balance her finances,<ref name="auto11"/> even as her net worth was estimated in the many millions in 1928. Hence, Rindge's next venture was the Malibu Movie Colony—cottages built on her beachfront by movie studio carpenters that were at first leased to figures in the nascent movie business such as [[Bing Crosby]], [[Gloria Swanson]], [[Mary Pickford]], [[Anna Q. Nilsson]], [[Dolores del Río]], [[Gary Cooper]], [[Lana Turner]], [[Adela Rogers St. Johns]], [[Carole Lombard]], and [[Clark Gable]].<ref name="auto28"/><ref name="auto11"/><ref name="auto17"/> In the meantime, Rindge commissioned a 99-foot yacht called ''The Malibu''<ref>{{cite web|url=https://adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com/bysearchterm?keyword=Yacht+%27Malibu%27|title=Yacht 'Malibu'|website=adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com}}</ref> and began work on a three-wing, 55-room mansion, called the Rindge Castle, atop Laudamus Hill,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://pepperdine.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p15730coll8/id/236/|title=Rindge mansion on Laudamus Hill|website=pepperdine.contentdm.oclc.org}}</ref><ref name="auto19"/> overlooking the ocean and a vast span of Malibu, with views reaching out to the [[Pacific Palisades, Los Angeles|Pacific Palisades]]. Nine-thousand cases of Malibu Potteries tile were produced to adorn it, including a massive 13'x 59' all-tile faux Persian carpet,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com/photo/2E44D7F3-B3E7-401D-A7F6-592820129823|title=13'x59' tiled Persian carpet in the burned-out east end of the Malibu Potteries. - MP-4|website=adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com}}</ref><ref name="auto31"/> and hand-carved [[mahogany]] was to decorate it as well. When the [[Great Depression]] hit in 1929, followed by a kiln fire that destroyed most of Malibu Potteries in 1931 (closing the Potteries entirely by 1932), Rindge was plunged into further financial trouble.<ref name="auto17"/><ref name="auto31"/> She could not afford to complete the Rindge Castle, and she was forced to sell off her Malibu Movie Colony properties other assets.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1986-03-16-we-26835-story.html|title=A Lasting Legacy : Merritt Adamson Jr.'s Land Dealings Changed Malibu Forever|date=March 16, 1986|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref> By 1942,<ref name="auto7">{{cite web|url=https://pepperdine.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p15730coll18/id/393/|title=Christ the King Garden in Serra Retreat, Malibu, California|website=pepperdine.contentdm.oclc.org}}</ref><ref name="auto1"/> she was forced to sell her unfinished castle, with the buyer being the [[Franciscan order]].<ref name="auto7"/><ref name="auto1"/> Though most of the castle eventually burned to the ground in the 1970s,<ref name="auto1"/> various parts were salvaged, including [[Malibu tile]], and the property is still in the hands of the Franciscans as Serra Retreat.<ref name="auto1"/>
Despite the success of the pottery, Rindge still struggled to balance her finances,<ref name="auto11"/> even as her net worth was estimated in the many millions in 1928. Hence, Rindge's next venture was the Malibu Movie Colony—cottages built on her beachfront by movie studio carpenters that were at first leased to figures in the nascent movie business such as [[Bing Crosby]], [[Gloria Swanson]], [[Mary Pickford]], [[Anna Q. Nilsson]], [[Dolores del Río]], [[Gary Cooper]], [[Lana Turner]], [[Adela Rogers St. Johns]], [[Carole Lombard]], and [[Clark Gable]].<ref name="auto28"/><ref name="auto11"/><ref name="auto17"/> In the meantime, Rindge commissioned a 99-foot yacht called ''The Malibu''<ref>{{cite web|url=https://adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com/bysearchterm?keyword=Yacht+%27Malibu%27|title=Yacht 'Malibu'|website=adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com}}</ref> and began work on a three-wing, 55-room mansion, called the Rindge Castle, atop Laudamus Hill,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://pepperdine.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p15730coll8/id/236/|title=Rindge mansion on Laudamus Hill|website=pepperdine.contentdm.oclc.org}}</ref><ref name="auto19"/> overlooking the ocean and a vast span of Malibu, with views reaching out to the [[Pacific Palisades, Los Angeles|Pacific Palisades]]. Nine thousand cases of Malibu Potteries tile were produced to adorn it, including a massive 13'x 59' all-tile faux Persian carpet,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com/photo/2E44D7F3-B3E7-401D-A7F6-592820129823|title=13'x59' tiled Persian carpet in the burned-out east end of the Malibu Potteries. - MP-4|website=adamsonhouse.pastperfectonline.com}}</ref><ref name="auto31"/> and hand-carved [[mahogany]] was to decorate it as well. When the [[Great Depression]] hit in 1929, followed by a kiln fire that destroyed most of Malibu Potteries in 1931 (closing the Potteries entirely by 1932), Rindge was plunged into further financial trouble.<ref name="auto17"/><ref name="auto31"/> She could not afford to complete the Rindge Castle, and she was forced to sell off her Malibu Movie Colony properties other assets.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1986-03-16-we-26835-story.html|title=A Lasting Legacy : Merritt Adamson Jr.'s Land Dealings Changed Malibu Forever|date=March 16, 1986|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref> By 1942,<ref name="auto7">{{cite web|url=https://pepperdine.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p15730coll18/id/393/|title=Christ the King Garden in Serra Retreat, Malibu, California|website=pepperdine.contentdm.oclc.org}}</ref><ref name="auto1"/> she was forced to sell her unfinished castle, with the buyer being the [[Franciscan order]].<ref name="auto7"/><ref name="auto1"/> Though most of the castle eventually burned to the ground in the 1970s,<ref name="auto1"/> various parts were salvaged, including [[Malibu tile]], and the property is still in the hands of the Franciscans as Serra Retreat.<ref name="auto1"/>


==Bankruptcy, death, and legacy==
==Bankruptcy, death, and legacy==
By [[1938]], Rindge was bankrupt.<ref name="auto17"/> Her relationship with one of her sons was fractured, as he held her responsible for depleting the family wealth so severely between her court battles and lavish expenditures.<ref name="auto29"/><ref name="auto3"/> Rindge died in 1941.
By [[1938]], Rindge was bankrupt.<ref name="auto17"/> Her relationship with one of her sons was fractured, as he held her responsible for depleting the family wealth so severely between her court battles and lavish expenditures.<ref name="auto29"/><ref name="auto3"/> Rindge died in 1941.


Despite having been known to the public for so many years as more than ornery, her role in preserving Malibu's ecological landscape<ref name="auto31"/> is still felt, as large swathes are not only preserved but protected as part of the [[Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area]]. This includes the sprawling, nature-ensconced [[Pepperdine University]] campus, for which her [[Rhoda Adamson|daughter's]] family donated the first 138 acres—original Rindge ranch land.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.upi.com/Archives/1986/03/04/Pepperdine-benefactor-dies/6011510296400/|title=Pepperdine benefactor dies|website=UPI}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://pepperdine-graphic.com/miracle-at-malibu-materialized/|title=Miracle at Malibu Materialized ‹ Pepperdine Graphic|website=pepperdine-graphic.com}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/os-xpm-1986-03-05-0200340022-story.html|title=MERRITT ADAMSON, 59, a developer who donated...|first=Orlando|last=Sentinel|website=OrlandoSentinel.com}}</ref> World-famous [[Surfrider Beach]],<ref name="auto24"/> where her pier still stands and the [[Malibu Potteries]] lot remains vacant, is protected by the [[Surfrider Foundation]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.surfrider.org/our-work|title=Our Work|website=Surfrider Foundation}}</ref> and officially declared as the first-ever World Surfing Reserve via the Save the Waves Coalition.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2010-oct-10-la-me-surf-breaks-20101010-story.html|title=Malibu's Surfrider Beach declared first-ever World Surfing Reserve|date=October 10, 2010|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref> It is also listed on the [[National Register of Historic Places]].<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20190212004924/https://www.malibucity.org/DocumentCenter/View/17035/05-06-2018-Malibu-Surfing-Area-Listed-in-National-Register-of-Historic-Places?bidId=]</ref>
Despite having been known to the public for so many years as more than ornery, her role in preserving Malibu's ecological landscape<ref name="auto31"/> is still felt, as large swathes are not only preserved but protected as part of the [[Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area]]. This includes the sprawling, nature-ensconced [[Pepperdine University]] campus, for which her [[Rhoda Adamson|daughter's]] family donated the first 138 acres—original Rindge ranch land.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.upi.com/Archives/1986/03/04/Pepperdine-benefactor-dies/6011510296400/|title=Pepperdine benefactor dies|website=UPI}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://pepperdine-graphic.com/miracle-at-malibu-materialized/|title=Miracle at Malibu Materialized ‹ Pepperdine Graphic|website=pepperdine-graphic.com|date=14 November 2002 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/os-xpm-1986-03-05-0200340022-story.html|title=MERRITT ADAMSON, 59, a developer who donated...|first=Orlando|last=Sentinel|website=OrlandoSentinel.com|date=5 March 1986 }}</ref> World-famous [[Surfrider Beach]],<ref name="auto24"/> where her pier still stands and the [[Malibu Potteries]] lot remains vacant, is protected by the [[Surfrider Foundation]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.surfrider.org/our-work|title=Our Work|website=Surfrider Foundation}}</ref> and officially declared as the first-ever World Surfing Reserve via the Save the Waves Coalition.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2010-oct-10-la-me-surf-breaks-20101010-story.html|title=Malibu's Surfrider Beach declared first-ever World Surfing Reserve|date=October 10, 2010|website=Los Angeles Times}}</ref> It is also listed on the [[National Register of Historic Places]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.malibucity.org/DocumentCenter/View/17035/05-06-2018-Malibu-Surfing-Area-Listed-in-National-Register-of-Historic-Places?bidId= |title=Archived copy |website=www.malibucity.org |access-date=14 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190212004924/https://www.malibucity.org/DocumentCenter/View/17035/05-06-2018-Malibu-Surfing-Area-Listed-in-National-Register-of-Historic-Places?bidId= |archive-date=12 February 2019 |url-status=dead}}</ref>


Meanwhile, Rindge's pier, regarded as a Southern California landmark,<ref name="parks.ca.gov">{{Cite web|url=https://www.parks.ca.gov/|title=Malibu Pier|website=CA State Parks}}</ref> has been a recreation destination since the 1950s and home to fishermen since 1934.<ref name="ReferenceA">http://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/835/files/mailbu_pier_historic_preservation_honored_may_2009.pdf</ref> In 1933, Rindge gave permission for the pier to be used in what became the iconic movie ''[[King Kong (1933 film)|King Kong]]'' starring [[Faye Wray]], earning its place in film history.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lGmDkaAp8OsC&q=malibu+pier,+king+kong&pg=PA105|title=Malibu|first1=Ben|last1=Marcus|first2=Marc|last2=Wanamaker|date=December 29, 2011|publisher=Arcadia Publishing|via=Google Books|isbn=9780738576145}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hLV2CQAAQBAJ&q=malibu+pier,+king+kong&pg=PT17|title=Pacific Coast Highway in Los Angeles County|first=Carina Monica|last=Montoya|date=February 4, 2014|publisher=Arcadia Publishing|via=Google Books|isbn=9781625841063}}</ref> The pier was restored in 2009, earning its steward, [[California State Parks]], the [[Los Angeles Conservancy]] Preservation Award.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> In Summer 2009, the pier became home to a surfing museum.<ref name="parks.ca.gov"/> As a community, Malibu is known for its wealthy entertainment business denizens, a stage Rindge set by being the first in the area to rent and sell homes to elite actors, directors, producers, and other aristocratic figures. In shaping the city in this way, she ultimately fulfilled her husband's vision for the region as an American [[French Riviera|Riviera]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital.smpl.org/digital/collection/smfacts/id/23/|title=Hueneme, Malibu and Port Los Angeles Railroad.|website=digital.smpl.org}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.palipost.com/hg-malibu-tiles-endure-decades/|title=H&G: Malibu Tiles Endure Decades|date=September 28, 2006|website=Palisadian Post}}</ref>
Meanwhile, Rindge's pier, regarded as a Southern California landmark,<ref name="parks.ca.gov">{{Cite web|url=https://www.parks.ca.gov/|title=Malibu Pier|website=CA State Parks}}</ref> has been a recreation destination since the 1950s and home to fishermen since 1934.<ref name="ReferenceA">http://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/835/files/mailbu_pier_historic_preservation_honored_may_2009.pdf {{Bare URL PDF|date=March 2022}}</ref> In 1933, Rindge gave permission for the pier to be used in what became the iconic movie ''[[King Kong (1933 film)|King Kong]]'' starring [[Faye Wray]], earning its place in film history.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lGmDkaAp8OsC&q=malibu+pier,+king+kong&pg=PA105|title=Malibu|first1=Ben|last1=Marcus|first2=Marc|last2=Wanamaker|date=December 29, 2011|publisher=Arcadia Publishing|via=Google Books|isbn=9780738576145}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hLV2CQAAQBAJ&q=malibu+pier,+king+kong&pg=PT17|title=Pacific Coast Highway in Los Angeles County|first=Carina Monica|last=Montoya|date=February 4, 2014|publisher=Arcadia Publishing|via=Google Books|isbn=9781625841063}}</ref> The pier was restored in 2009, earning its steward, [[California State Parks]], the [[Los Angeles Conservancy]] Preservation Award.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> In Summer 2009, the pier became home to a surfing museum.<ref name="parks.ca.gov"/> As a community, Malibu is known for its wealthy entertainment business denizens, a stage Rindge set by being the first in the area to rent and sell homes to elite actors, directors, producers, and other aristocratic figures. In shaping the city in this way, she ultimately fulfilled her husband's vision for the region as an American [[French Riviera|Riviera]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://digital.smpl.org/digital/collection/smfacts/id/23/|title=Hueneme, Malibu and Port Los Angeles Railroad.|website=digital.smpl.org}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.palipost.com/hg-malibu-tiles-endure-decades/|title=H&G: Malibu Tiles Endure Decades|date=September 28, 2006|website=Palisadian Post}}</ref>


The tile Rindge produced remains in thousands of homes, the most extensive display remaining being her daughter's home, the [[Adamson House]], slightly west of Rindge's pier, while [[Los Angeles City Hall]], the [[Mayan Theater]], [[The Roosevelt Hotel]], the [[Geffen Playhouse]], Dana Junior High School in [[San Pedro, Calif.|San Pedro]], and other public buildings across the United States—and even some abroad—still contain their own examples of Malibu tile.<ref name="auto22">{{cite web|url=http://www.malibutimes.com/life_and_arts/article_00ec8efc-a5be-51c9-b038-0c07c32e0591.html|title=Telling history through tiles|website=Malibu Times}}</ref><ref name="auto16"/><ref name="auto31"/> Though predating the Potteries by roughly 20 years, hence containing no Malibu tile, the Rindge family home she and her husband built in West Adams Heights, the [[Frederick Hastings Rindge House]], still stands—the home Rindge lived in until she died. It is on the National Register of Historic Places<ref>{{cite web|url=https://npgallery.nps.gov/GetAsset/e0fef522-17b7-4829-a91c-515ea4195ce4 |title=Listing |publisher=npgallery.nps.gov |date= |accessdate=2019-11-25}}</ref> and is designated as a [[Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=List_of_Los_Angeles_Historic-Cultural_Monuments_in_South_Los_Angeles&oldid=916424923|title=List of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments in South Los Angeles|date=September 18, 2019|via=Wikipedia}}</ref> Her dam in the Malibu Hills is still extant, though long out of use and plans are in place to tear it down.<ref name="auto9"/>
The tile Rindge produced remains in thousands of homes, the most extensive display remaining being her daughter's home, the [[Adamson House]], slightly west of Rindge's pier, while [[Los Angeles City Hall]], the [[Mayan Theater]], [[The Roosevelt Hotel]], the [[Geffen Playhouse]], Dana Junior High School in [[San Pedro, Calif.|San Pedro]], and other public buildings across the United States—and even some abroad—still contain their own examples of Malibu tile.<ref name="auto22">{{cite web|url=http://www.malibutimes.com/life_and_arts/article_00ec8efc-a5be-51c9-b038-0c07c32e0591.html|title=Telling history through tiles|website=Malibu Times}}</ref><ref name="auto16"/><ref name="auto31"/> Though predating the Potteries by roughly 20 years, hence containing no Malibu tile, the Rindge family home she and her husband built in West Adams Heights, the [[Frederick Hastings Rindge House]], still stands—the home Rindge lived in until she died. It is on the National Register of Historic Places<ref>{{cite web|url=https://npgallery.nps.gov/GetAsset/e0fef522-17b7-4829-a91c-515ea4195ce4 |title=Listing |publisher=npgallery.nps.gov |date= |accessdate=2019-11-25}}</ref> and is designated as a [[Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument]]. Her dam in the Malibu Hills is still extant, though long out of use and plans are in place to tear it down.<ref name="auto9"/>


Rindge's life has been the subject of numerous print and online articles over time, and in 2017, a ''[[Los Angeles Times]]'' bestseller titled ''The King and Queen of Malibu: The True Story of the Battle for Paradise''.<ref name="auto25"/><ref name="auto24"/>
Rindge's life has been the subject of numerous print and online articles over time, and in 2017, a ''[[Los Angeles Times]]'' bestseller titled ''The King and Queen of Malibu: The True Story of the Battle for Paradise''.<ref name="auto25"/><ref name="auto24"/>
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==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

== Further reading ==
* {{Cite book |last=Rasmussen |first=Cecilia |title=L.A. Unconventional: The Men and Women Who Did L.A. Their Way |date=1998 |chapter=Mrs. Rindge and Her Malibu Turf War |pages=117–118 |publisher=Los Angeles Times |isbn=978-1-883792-23-7 |location=Los Angeles |oclc=40701771}}


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[[Category: People from Michigan]]
[[Category:People from Trenton, Michigan]]
[[Category:Land owners from California]]
[[Category:Landowners from California]]
[[Category:Businesswomen]]
[[Category:Dams]]
[[Category:American women in business]]
[[Category:American women in business]]

Latest revision as of 03:42, 23 June 2024

Rhoda May Knight Rindge
Rhoda May Knight Rindge, c. 1900–1901
Born
Rhoda May Knight

1864
Died1941
Other namesQueen of Malibu, May K.
Occupation(s)businessperson, environmentalist
Known forFounder of Malibu Potteries, and the Malibu Movie Colony
SpouseFrederick Rindge

Rhoda May Knight Rindge, (b. 1864, d. 1941),[1] also known as May Rindge[2] or May K., was an American businesswoman. She was known as the Queen of Malibu[3][4] as well as the Founding Mother of Malibu[5] and L.A.'s first high-profile female environmentalist.[3] She was the first woman to serve as president of a railroad company.[6][7] Additionally, she founded Marblehead Land Company in 1921,[8][9] and the Malibu Potteries in 1926,[10][11] the first business in Malibu. The company originated Malibu tile, and the venture became one of Southern California's most successful of its kind alongside Catalina Pottery, Gladding, McBean, and Batchelder tile.[12][10][5]

Rindge also founded the Malibu Movie Colony,[13] building and renting cottages—and later selling them—to early Hollywood stars such as Bing Crosby, Gloria Swanson, and Mary Pickford.[14][15][16][13] She fought bitterly[16][3] to preserve her family's rancho, the Rancho Topanga Malibu Sequit[13][3] which extended from Los Flores Canyon in Malibu into Ventura County.[17]

Rindge successfully diverted the course of the Southern Pacific Railroad[3][18] by fighting their efforts to connect their Santa Barbara end terminus with Santa Monica; the route would have been coastal, not only infringing on the family ranch[19] but destroying the natural beauty and topography of the Pacific Coast.[3] In the process, Rindge constructed the Malibu Pier.[3] Rindge subsequently became known for her battle to keep the Pacific Coast Highway—at the time, Roosevelt Highway[3][20]—from accomplishing the same and similar goals. Rindge also built the 100-foot-high Rindge Dam.[3][21] Furthermore, she built what became the Franciscan order's Serra Retreat.[22][3][23] Rindge is also known as donor of the land upon which her daughter and son-in-law's home, the historic Adamson House, was built.[17]

Early life

[edit]

Rindge was born Rhoda May Knight in 1864, the eighth child of James and Rhoda Roxanna Lathrop Knight.[1][24] She grew up on a sheep farm outside Trenton, Michigan with 12 siblings.[25][9][26][27] By age 22, she was working as a math teacher at a local schoolhouse.[28][29]

Knight's family was strictly Methodist. Her aunt, Emily Lathrop Preston, the founder and proprietor of a cult-like religious faith-healing health colony in Northern California,[25][30][31] first brought Knight out west. Back in Michigan, Knight was paid a visit by Frederick Rindge, who had been a client at Preston's colony.[32] He had seen a photograph of her on Preston's piano, felt enchanted, and asked Preston for her blessing in romantically pursuing her niece. Preston encouraged the coupling.[25] Rindge had proceeded to write Knight letters, leading to their face-to-face acquaintance.[27] Knight and Rindge determined their compatibility and within two days were engaged. They were then married within a week,[25] moving out to California within the year, 1887, by way of first-class Pullman Palace rail car.[33] Upon arrival, they stayed at Emily Preston's ranch before venturing to Southern California.

Homes, children, and businesses

[edit]

The Rindge couple had three children: Samuel, Frederick Jr., and Rhoda Agatha. The family first settled into a home in Santa Monica.[3] In the 1890s, the family began utilizing a Victorian ranch home they built in Malibu Canyon,[34] which eventually burned down in a brush fire in 1903.[35][36] They also had a home in Santa Monica. It had been Rindge Sr.'s dream[17] to come to California for its temperate climate and what he had imagined as the American Riviera[37][38] when he first came to California with his father on the first transcontinental railroad.[39] He had always wanted a farm by the sea, and once he purchased the Malibu rancho as the final Spanish land grant owner of the property, he established a cattle ranch. He also became deeply involved in civic life, from serving as director of Edison Electric, founding Conservative Life Insurance Company,[40] and promoting Temperance by helping close saloons in Santa Monica to building Santa Monica's First Methodist Episcopal Church[41] and taking the post of vice president of Union Oil. When he died suddenly at the age of 48[35] in 1905,[42] Rhoda May Knight Rindge was left with the totality of his business dealings,[43] setting the stage for her unusual position at the time as a woman at the helm of a major family estate.

Victory over Southern Pacific Railroad and construction of Malibu Pier

[edit]

Prior to her husband's death, there had been word that Southern Pacific intended to connect their Santa Barbara terminus with Santa Monica, which would entail running tracks right through the vast 13,315-acre[43][44] Rindge property. Frederick hatched a plan to take advantage of an obscure Interstate Commerce Commission law[45] that stated if one railway ran through a property, there could be no other railway doing the same.[46] Hence Rindge decided to build his own private track[47][48]—a utilitarian one to service his cattle ranch—but died before carrying out the plan, leaving the operation up to Rhoda May.[49] She subsequently built the Malibu Pier and 15 miles of standard gauge track, known as the Hueneme, Malibu and Port Los Angeles Railway, that ran down the length of the pier, where a steam-powered crane lifted cattle hides and walnuts onto boats for shipment and grains onto land for cattle-feed.[47][48] The operation kept Southern Pacific Railroad out of Malibu, diverting its course inland.[49][47]

Court battles over county roads and Roosevelt Highway

[edit]

Rindge had successfully won her Southern Pacific Railroad battle, but on her victory's heels came homesteaders along the edge of her property demanding county roads to be laid through her ranch for the public good. Rindge was strictly opposed to the idea, entering the law office of O'Melveny & Myers in 1907[9][50] to take up the new fight against the Federal Government and People of the State of California.[50] What ensued was an approximately 16-year fight costing Rindge over $1 million a year,[51][3] first to keep out the roads, then Roosevelt Highway. The court cases were extremely complex and imbued with intense hostility, with Rindge sabotaging the public's efforts to lay roads with extreme measures. Such measures ranged from employing armed guards on horseback to patrol her property and enforce locked gates to digging up roads and replacing them with alfalfa and pigs.[3][51][45] She waged civil suits, numbering in the hundreds, for trespass, libel, and defamation of character.[3] Ultimately, she lost her county roads battle and, finally, her effort against Roosevelt Highway, enumerating four California Supreme Court cases and two United States Supreme Court cases,[45][3] including Rindge Co. v. County of Los Angeles.

Founding of Malibu Potteries

[edit]
Malibu Potteries Eternal Man on the grounds of the Adamson House in Malibu, California

In 1926, Rindge found herself land-rich and cash-poor[13] due to her extensive court battles. In an effort to recoup her expenditures, she first drilled for oil on her property, establishing the Rindge derrick on Point Dume, but found none.[52][53] However, she uncovered clay[5] that she was told were ideal for tile-making. As the 1920s were a real-estate boom in Los Angeles,[54][55][56] with thousands upon thousands of homes being built, and furthermore, in the tile-reliant Mission Revival, Mayan Revival,[57] Spanish Colonial Revival,[58][59] and Moorish Revival styles,[58] a tile business promised to be lucrative. Thereafter, Rindge built Malibu Potteries a half mile east of her pier, right on the beach.[60][11][45] She recruited renowned tile and glaze expert Rufus B. Keeler[61][60] to run the factory. At its peak, 125 employees worked at the factory,[5] producing 30,000 square feet of tile monthly.[60] Women hand-painted tile with toxic substances such as cadmium for oranges, uranium for oranges and reds, cobalt for blues, and lead for yellows.[12][38] Methods included cuerda seca and cuenca,[62] and patterns and iconography were inspired by books from an expensive library with which Rindge furnished the pottery. The potteries produced not only flat ceramic tiles for ceilings, walls, baseboards, and floors but also ceramic tile fountains, murals, urns, and bathroom built-ins like toothbrush holders and soap dishes.

Construction of Serra Retreat and Malibu Movie Colony

[edit]

Despite the success of the pottery, Rindge still struggled to balance her finances,[15] even as her net worth was estimated in the many millions in 1928. Hence, Rindge's next venture was the Malibu Movie Colony—cottages built on her beachfront by movie studio carpenters that were at first leased to figures in the nascent movie business such as Bing Crosby, Gloria Swanson, Mary Pickford, Anna Q. Nilsson, Dolores del Río, Gary Cooper, Lana Turner, Adela Rogers St. Johns, Carole Lombard, and Clark Gable.[13][15][14] In the meantime, Rindge commissioned a 99-foot yacht called The Malibu[63] and began work on a three-wing, 55-room mansion, called the Rindge Castle, atop Laudamus Hill,[64][62] overlooking the ocean and a vast span of Malibu, with views reaching out to the Pacific Palisades. Nine thousand cases of Malibu Potteries tile were produced to adorn it, including a massive 13'x 59' all-tile faux Persian carpet,[65][45] and hand-carved mahogany was to decorate it as well. When the Great Depression hit in 1929, followed by a kiln fire that destroyed most of Malibu Potteries in 1931 (closing the Potteries entirely by 1932), Rindge was plunged into further financial trouble.[14][45] She could not afford to complete the Rindge Castle, and she was forced to sell off her Malibu Movie Colony properties other assets.[66] By 1942,[67][23] she was forced to sell her unfinished castle, with the buyer being the Franciscan order.[67][23] Though most of the castle eventually burned to the ground in the 1970s,[23] various parts were salvaged, including Malibu tile, and the property is still in the hands of the Franciscans as Serra Retreat.[23]

Bankruptcy, death, and legacy

[edit]

By 1938, Rindge was bankrupt.[14] Her relationship with one of her sons was fractured, as he held her responsible for depleting the family wealth so severely between her court battles and lavish expenditures.[3][51] Rindge died in 1941.

Despite having been known to the public for so many years as more than ornery, her role in preserving Malibu's ecological landscape[45] is still felt, as large swathes are not only preserved but protected as part of the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area. This includes the sprawling, nature-ensconced Pepperdine University campus, for which her daughter's family donated the first 138 acres—original Rindge ranch land.[68][69][70] World-famous Surfrider Beach,[19] where her pier still stands and the Malibu Potteries lot remains vacant, is protected by the Surfrider Foundation[71] and officially declared as the first-ever World Surfing Reserve via the Save the Waves Coalition.[72] It is also listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[73]

Meanwhile, Rindge's pier, regarded as a Southern California landmark,[74] has been a recreation destination since the 1950s and home to fishermen since 1934.[75] In 1933, Rindge gave permission for the pier to be used in what became the iconic movie King Kong starring Faye Wray, earning its place in film history.[76][77] The pier was restored in 2009, earning its steward, California State Parks, the Los Angeles Conservancy Preservation Award.[75] In Summer 2009, the pier became home to a surfing museum.[74] As a community, Malibu is known for its wealthy entertainment business denizens, a stage Rindge set by being the first in the area to rent and sell homes to elite actors, directors, producers, and other aristocratic figures. In shaping the city in this way, she ultimately fulfilled her husband's vision for the region as an American Riviera.[78][79]

The tile Rindge produced remains in thousands of homes, the most extensive display remaining being her daughter's home, the Adamson House, slightly west of Rindge's pier, while Los Angeles City Hall, the Mayan Theater, The Roosevelt Hotel, the Geffen Playhouse, Dana Junior High School in San Pedro, and other public buildings across the United States—and even some abroad—still contain their own examples of Malibu tile.[80][57][45] Though predating the Potteries by roughly 20 years, hence containing no Malibu tile, the Rindge family home she and her husband built in West Adams Heights, the Frederick Hastings Rindge House, still stands—the home Rindge lived in until she died. It is on the National Register of Historic Places[81] and is designated as a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument. Her dam in the Malibu Hills is still extant, though long out of use and plans are in place to tear it down.[21]

Rindge's life has been the subject of numerous print and online articles over time, and in 2017, a Los Angeles Times bestseller titled The King and Queen of Malibu: The True Story of the Battle for Paradise.[25][19]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "PCAD - Adamson, Merritt Huntley and Rhoda Rindge Adamson, House, Malibu, CA". pcad.lib.washington.edu.
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  81. ^ "Listing". npgallery.nps.gov. Retrieved November 25, 2019.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Rasmussen, Cecilia (1998). "Mrs. Rindge and Her Malibu Turf War". L.A. Unconventional: The Men and Women Who Did L.A. Their Way. Los Angeles: Los Angeles Times. pp. 117–118. ISBN 978-1-883792-23-7. OCLC 40701771.