Southern Pacific Engine No. 8315 on the Saugus line at Ravenna, Sept. 18, 1991.
Color transparency by Randy Keller.
It is unlikely that any more than a few dozen people ever lived in the little mining town of Ravenna at any
one time, but the town nonetheless sported a full train station. It was located four miles southwest of Acton in Soledad
Canyon.
A number of miners, most notably Colonel Thomas Finley Mitchell, arrived in Soledad Canyon in 1860 and
set up various mining camps near the canyon's rich veins of gold, silver and copper, which came into great demand
when the Civil War broke out only a year later. Local historian Jerry Reynolds writes (in "Santa Clarita: Valley of the Golden Dream"):
"A conglomeration of log cabins and tents moved up and down the canyon with each new strike.
Called 'Soledad City' wherever it was plunked down, it provided such basic needs as faro
tables, rye whiskey, and ladies of the evening. A portable grocery was operated by James O'Reilly,
a flaming-haired Irishman of medium build, pug nose, and happy-go-lucky air about him."
It wasn't long before a post office was needed, and as one might expect, the U.S. Postal Service rejected the name
"Soledad City" out of fear that it would be confused with the city of Soledad in Monterey County. O'Reilly
suggested the name "Ravenna," in honor of the local merchant and saloon keeper, Manuel Ravenna.
The name became official June 12, 1868.
Ravenna became a shipping point from which gold, silver, copper and other minerals were hauled off to the port at San Pedro.
Freight wagons drawn by oxen or mules were used at first; they gave way to rail cars after the first steam locomotives
chugged through the canyon in 1876. In 1885 a paper mill was set up to pulp Joshua trees from the Antelope Valley, but
it fell out of use by 1889 because the paper was of poor quality.
Besides precious and semi-precious metals, the area was also rich in a variety of gemstones, particularly moss agate and green waxy quartz, which were hunted in the 1950s.
While strip mining is still a big industry in the Soledad and in parts of the
neighboring Mojave Desert, the little mining camp of Ravenna — and its rather sizable train station —
are nothing more than faded memories.
LW2266: 9600 dpi jpeg from color transparency (slide) purchased 2012 by Leon Worden, donated to SCV Historical Society | Archival scan on file