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Scouts tend to beloved Camp Josepho after Palisades Fire destroys ‘irreplaceable’ lodge

A large lodge has high ceilings, a stage and a large stone fireplace.
Camp Josepho's Malibu Lodge as it looked before the Palisades Fire
(
Christopher J. Campbell
)

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Listen 1:59
Volunteers and scouts return to beloved camp, a year after Palisades Fire
Since the 1940s, the camp nestled in the Santa Monica Mountains has welcomed generations of Scouts. The Palisades Fire changed the site forever. Robert Garrova has more.

As the one year anniversary of the Palisades fire approaches, a group of volunteers and Scouts with Scouting America are headed back to a beloved camp for the first time since it was lost in the blaze.

An historic site

The 110-acre site nestled in the Santa Monica Mountains known as Camp Josepho has welcomed thousands of Scouts since the 1940s. But a change in the direction of the wind during the Palisades Fire meant it would never look the same again. Pretty much everything was lost in the blaze, save for a concrete pool house.

“It’s a bit of a gut check, it almost doesn’t feel real, 85 years of camp... was just decimated that fast and that suddenly,” Nathan Erlandson, chief operating officer of Scouting America’s Western Los Angeles County Council, told LAist.

A black and white photo shows dozens of boys walking on a path that surrounds several tents
An undated photo of Camp Josepho
(
Courtesy Dr. John S. Dahlem
)

Listed as a Los Angeles Historical Cultural Monument, the land was gifted to the organization by the Josepho family. Ganna Josepho was a silent film star. Her husband, Anatol Josepho is credited with inventing the photo booth, which was coined the ‘Photomaton.’

A photo booth picture depicts a man wearing a suit holding a white dog
Anatol Josepho
(
Courtesy Dr. John S. Dahlem
)
Sponsored message

For decades, Scouts young and old have made the pilgrimage back to the place.

“Some of the older generation, a lot of them are no longer with us, they absolutely loved their experiences down there. It was just such a beautiful location,” said Lee Harrison, Scout executive for Western Los Angeles County Council. He’s been involved with his local council since he was 15, nearly four decades ago.

Harrison remembered Camp Josepho before the fire, when it was complete with the towering Malibu Lodge, which was built with redwood by aircraft manufacturer Donald Douglas and resembled a hangar.

Harrison used to love throwing his sleeping bag down in front of the lodge’s towering stone fireplace.

“It is irreplaceable and had a tremendous amount of history in it. And that’s the saddest part is that you would walk into that cavernous space, you could look at all the names that were written on the walls... And all of that’s gone,” he said.

Many famous and notable people visited Camp Josepho over the years, at least one of them uninvited.

An aerial photo of Camp Josepho shows the charred remnants of a building and burned cars.
Camp Josepho post Palisades Fire
(
Aaron Kupferman
)
Sponsored message

There was the time Adam Sandler buzzed onto the historic grounds.

“He drove his gold cart down into the camp one day, and the site manager who was there had no idea who he was and chased him out of the camp. And he [Sandler] said ‘I’ll never come back here again,’” Harrison recalled.

This weekend, Scouts and members of the community will start to bring the place back to life, weeding out non-native plants and invasive species that have sprung to life around the ruins.

A metal canoe sits in a fire-damaged pool filled with brown murky water
What's left of a pool at Camp Josepho
(
Aaron Kupferman
)

Harrison said the hope is to build the camp back with a lighter footprint, blending it more with the surrounding nature.

“People were -- and are -- very passionate about this place. And I think primarily because we’re able to bring lots of kids who don’t necessarily get access to the outdoors... in a very easy and quick way,” he said.

Harris and Erlandson said they are looking for support from the community as they breathe new life into the camp. You can visit their website to learn how you can help.

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