Personal photograph (4"x3", matte finish, origin unknown) of a billboard-sized sign in an unidentified location, advertising the 1947 RKO Radio Picture, "Trail Street," partially filmed at the Jauregui Ranch in Placerita Canyon.
Randolph Scott stars as Bat Masterson, who is hired as sheriff to clean up the town of Liberty, Kansas. Credited cast includes Robert Ryan,
Anne Jeffreys,
George "Gabby" Hayes,
Madge Meredith,
Steve Brodie,
Billy House,
Virginia Sale,
Harry Woods,
Phil Warren,
Harry Harvey and
Jason Robards Sr.
Additional filming locations include RKO's Encino Ranch at Balboa Boulevard and Burbank Boulevard; and the Agoura area. 84-minute film released Feb. 19, 1947 (U.S.)
About the Andy Jauregui Ranch.
The Andy Jauregui Ranch, originally the Clarence "Fat" Jones ranch, was located just east of present-day Highway 14 along Placerita Canyon Road. In its day (the 1930s), the Jones
Ranch was next door to Trem Carr's original Monogram Ranch. Carr's original leasehold formed the nucleus of The Walt Disney Co.'s Golden Oak Ranch in the late 1950s.
The Jauregui Ranch was actually owned by Standard Oil and leased to Jauregui — a major purveyor of stock and performers for rodeos, and an equestrian stuntman in the movies.
According to Schneider Vol. 4 (2015:63), "In 1933, Jauregui bought out Jones' share when Jones moved his horse rental business to North Hollywood.
The ranch buildings and ranch house were all actual working buildings for the ranch. Chevron permitted the Jaureguis, Andy and his wife Camille, to remain on the property until they were either
dead or no longer resided on the property."
Andy Jauregui died in 1990, followed by Camille in 1996. Per Schneider (op. cit.), Chevron razed all of the buildings on the land except for the ranch house. The property was then sold to its neighbor,
the Golden Oak Ranch of Walt Disney.
It wasn't an isolated instance. In the mid-1990s Chevron got rid of all of its nonproducing properties. Locally that included Mentryville in Pico Canyon and the Pioneer Oil
Refinery property in Railroad Canyon, Newhall, among others.
Further reading:
Andy Jauregui biography by his daughter, Noureen Baer
Inside Story of the Rodeos by Andy Jauregui, Popular Mechanics 6/1935.