1 Cy Shafii, “
CSUN Alum Uncovers Early Homestead Owned by African American Woman in Santa Monica Mountains,”
CSUN Today, December 4, 2019.
2 Both fragments were found during a NPS excavation of the site – in coordination with California State University, Northridge – held in summer of 2021.
3 Patty R. Colman, “John Ballard and the African American Community in Los Angeles, 1850-1905,”
Southern California Quarterly 94, no. 2 (2012): 196-200, 204-05, 208-10. For more on unfree labor in nineteenth-century California, see Stacey Smith,
Freedom’s Frontier: California and the Struggle over Unfree Labor, Emancipation, and Reconstruction (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2013), and Kevin Waite,
West of Slavery: The Southern Dream of a Transcontinental Empire (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2021).
4 Colman, “John Ballard and the African American Community,” 218-221.
5 Ibid., 223-25.
6 “Homestead Act (1862),” Milestone Documents,
National Archives.
7 Greg Bradsher,
“Women Homesteaders,” The Text Message,
National Archives.
8 Alice Ballard Homestead Testimony, 1900, reprinted in Colman, “John Ballard and the African American Community,” 226-27. Information about the unlikely possibility of Alice being a nurse comes from Patty Colman, email to the author, April 23, 2024.
9 Information on the Chumash bedrock mortars is from Nicole Kulaga, Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area, email to the author, October 25, 2023.
10 Colman, “John Ballard and the African American Community,” 223.
11 Shafii, “CSUN Alum Uncovers Early Homestead.” It is unknown if the grandsons were Alice’s children or her siblings’.
12 “To Right a Wrong: Ballard Mountain,” Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area, National Park Service, 2022.