Louis Phillips (rancher)


Louis Phillips was a wealthy land owner and rancher in Los Angeles County, California..

Biography

Phillips was born Louis Galefsky to a Jewish family in Prussia and moved to California in the early 1850s, changing his name to Phillips. He moved to Spadra in 1862 and began engaging in sheep herding and cattle raising. In 1864, Schlesinger and Tischler acquired the Rancho San Jose in a foreclosure. Phillips, who had previously been a manager on the ranch, bought out of the foreclosure.
In January 1874, the Southern Pacific Railroad completed a rail line from Los Angeles to Spadra, spurring interest in land development in the area. In 1875, Phillips built the Phillips Mansion and also sold most of his for subdivision into the Pomona Tract, thus beginning the formation of Pomona. Phillips retained surrounding his mansion, which he operated as a cattle and sheep ranch.
In 1867, Phillips married Esther Blake, with whom he had three sons and two daughters. He also acquired large land holdings in other parts of the county, including the Los Angeles business district where he owned the Phillips Block on Spring Street, a block on Los Angeles Street and another on Third Street. By 1892, the Los Angeles Times reported that Phillips, "who lives so quietly out at Spadra, near Pomona," was "the richest man in Los Angeles County." The Times noted that Phillips was worth "not a dollar less than $3,000,000" and stated that, in addition to his land holdings in Los Angeles, he had a ranch that produced wool, honey and wheat.
He died of pneumonia in 1900 and is interred at Spadra Cemetery, Pomona.