Mountain History Museum - Rim of The World Historical Society

Mountain History Museum - Rim of The World Historical Society Mountain History Museum Opens Friday of Memorial Day Weekend thru Mid October up: Fri. Noon - 4, Sat & Sun 10:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.

The Mountain History Museum opened June 2010 in a restored county fire house in Lake Arrowhead. Under the direction of the Rim of the World Historical Society, the museum is open on weekends June through October annually. Serving multiple communities in the western San Bernardino Mountains, the exhibits and education programs keep alive the local history for residents and visitors to the scenic area. Opened Fri-Sun, June though October except for special events.

Come visit the Easter Bunny....Bring your cameras !!!!!
03/07/2026

Come visit the Easter Bunny....Bring your cameras !!!!!

10/28/2025

The ROW historical Soceity is not actively posting on this site since it will not allow us to post photos nor our posters of activities any longer. October 28, 2025

10/26/2025

RIP June Lockhart Former Lake arrowhead resident and hostess of the Lake arrowhead Film festivals.
June Lockhart, who became a mother figure for a generation of television viewers whether at home in "Lassie" or up in the stratosphere in "Lost In Space," has died. She was 100.
Writer By Steve Marble for the Los Angeles Times has the story: June Lockhart, the perennial TV mom who consoled her son Timmy and his faithful pet collie in “Lassie” and explained the unfolding galaxy to her children in the kitschy prime-time sci-fi show “Lost in Space,” has died.
Active in Hollywood well into her 90s, Lockhart died Thursday in Santa Monica of natural causes, with daughter June Elizabeth Lockhart-Triolo and granddaughter Christianna Triolo by her side, said her publicist, B. Harlan Boll.
She was 100.
Upbeat and bubbly, Lockhart happily accepted playing second-fiddle to children, animals and even a robot. In “Lassie,” she was most often seen teaching her son small life lessons extracted from his misadventures, often saved from peril by his faithful dog. In “Lost in Space,” she was a biochemist who seemed to spend most of her time prepping meals in the galley or tending to the children as the “Swiss Family Robinson”-like clan drifted randomly in space.
“Motherhood has been a pretty good dodge for me,” Lockhart told The Times, years after the shows went off the air. “I seem to have outlasted most of my colleagues because of it.”
June Kathleen Lockhart was born on June 25, 1925, in New York City and grew up in a family steeped in the arts. Her father was a Broadway actor and her mother a singer. For years the family staged a seasonal production of “A Christmas Carol” in their home, inviting neighbors, friends and relatives to attend.
In 1938, the family went a step further and took their by now well-polished version of the Charles Dickens classic to film with a young Lockhart cast as Belinda Cratchit. The movie was all of one hour and nine minutes long.
Lockhart attended the Westlake School for Girls after the family moved to Los Angeles, where her father hoped to find a career as a film actor. But it was Lockhart who cracked Hollywood by landing modest but frequent roles on popular television shows such as “Wagon Train,” “Gunsmoke” and “Rawhide.”
In 1958, she was cast as Ruth Martin, the patient and good-natured mother on “Lassie,” a role that earned her an Emmy nomination. The show ran for 17 seasons, making it one of the longest-running prime-time shows on television. Lockhart left the series in 1964 to pursue other opportunities.
Lockhart realized the show had its limitations. “It was a fairy tale about people on a farm in which the dog solves all the problems in 22 minutes, just in time for the last commercial,” she told The Times.
The scripts were only slightly more challenging in “Lost in Space,” which followed the adventures of a family aboard a saucer-shaped spaceship headed to an Earth-like planet circling a faraway star. She left the show after three years and joined the cast of “Petticoat Junction” as a medical doctor who sets up practice in a worse-for-wear hotel in the middle of nowhere.
Earlier in life, Lockhart had been a regular on the news quiz show “Who Said That?” in which contestants were read a quote and asked to guess who said it. Lockhart had been absorbed by journalism and newsmakers since childhood, when she started a neighborhood newspaper. As an adult she subscribed to the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Los Angeles Times, reading them from beginning to end.
To prep for the show, she began cutting out quotes from the newspapers and memorizing them. One of the panelists on the show, a White House reporter for United Press International, was so impressed with Lockhart‘s grasp of politics that he invited her to a White House briefing.
Lockhart went on to become an unofficial member of the White House press corps, attending briefings, traveling with the Richard Nixon and John F. Kennedy entourages during their presidential showdown and hitting the campaign trail with Ronald Reagan.
During her years as an informal White House correspondent, she was called on only once to ask a question during a presidential briefing, asking President George W. Bush for the name of the veterinarian who cared for the first family’s dog, Barney. Bush chuckled and said it was top secret.
Though she never had another prime-time role as big as in “Lassie” or “Lost in Space,” her career was remarkably long. She was the kindergarten teacher on “Full House,” James Caan’s mother on “Las Vegas,” a mother once again on “The Drew Carey Show” and a hospice worker on “Grey’s Anatomy.” For years she hosted coverage of the Rose Parade on CBS.
Her final credit arrived in 2018, when she voiced a radio communications officer in the “Lost in Space” reboot on Netflix. Twice married and divorced, Lockhart is survived by daughters Lockhart-Triolo and Anne Lockhart, as well as four grandchildren, said longtime family friend Lyle Gregory.
The service will be private. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations to the Actors Fund, ProPublica and International Hearing Dog Inc.
Times staff writer David Zahniser contribute

08/07/2025

The Boles Murders this weekend 1:30 showings at the Mtn History Museum Satudray and Sunday August 9 &10 and 16 & 17.

07/13/2025

To get the most recent information on the Mountain History Museum, since we can no longer post posters and pictures, here, see the "Rim History" page on Facebook.

07/07/2025

thank you to those who attended the Ice cream social onJuly 4th at the museum! Thso owon;t allow me to add a photos sorry! but it was fun!

Visit the museum this summer ... Its free 27176 Peninsula drive at Rhine Road... open weekends (10:30 to 4:30) and Frida...
06/25/2025

Visit the museum this summer ... Its free 27176 Peninsula drive at Rhine Road... open weekends (10:30 to 4:30) and Friday noon to 4 p.m. FREE!

Come visit the FREE Mountain  History  Musem this summer: Fridays noon to 4 p.m., Weekends 10:30 to 4:30 p.m. at 27176 P...
06/25/2025

Come visit the FREE Mountain History Musem this summer: Fridays noon to 4 p.m., Weekends 10:30 to 4:30 p.m. at 27176 Peninsula Drive at Rhine Road in Lake Arrowhead, Free off street parking, too!

06/15/2025

Another significant mountain mover and shaker is gone:
Ianita Wagner
8/20/1931-6/9/2025
Ianita was born in Sturgis, South Dakota on August 20, 1931, she was proceeded in death by her husband of 40+ years Ralph Wagner. Ianita was a pillar to the Lake Arrowhead Community. Here are some of her many accomplishments.
Ianita spent 37 years with Mountain Meals on Wheels and was honored with Emeritus status on the board when she moved from Lake Arrowhead to Albuquerque in 2020. She volunteered with Contact the Helpline, donated to Wildhaven and the Hospital Foundation. She was an active part of the Mountains Community Hospital Auxiliary for many years and was president for one term. She spent almost 4 decades with Women’s Club of Lake Arrowhead joining in 1983 and served as president for a total of 6 terms.
Ianita was active in the Lake Arrowhead Yacht Club and loved her summer evenings dining on the Lake. In the early years with her boat, “Tickled Pink” she was the first female water ski race boat driver, competing with all the men drivers in the Lake Arrowhead Water Ski club. She received many awards and accolades from the Ski Club, She was declared “The Remarkable Lady of Arrowhead Lake in 1970.” And that she was!
She is survived by her children, Suzanne Apodaca, Linda Taylor and Peggy Boyar. She has 5 grandchildren, Colleen Prina and husband Josh, Jason Taylor and wife Sarah, Jeff Taylor and wife Christina, Derek Taylor and Kevin Boyar. She has 8 Great grandchildren Cole and Kiley Prina, Savannah, Stella and Jack Taylor, Zachary and Ericson Taylor, Bodhi Boyar. Her brother Gerald Habeck and her parents Ruben and Verena Habeck also preceded Ianita in death.
Please join her family in a toast to one Remarkable Lady!

05/26/2025

The Memorial Day weekend, the Free Mountain History Museum has opened for the summer season .The MUSEUM be open every Friday from noon to 4 p.m. every Saturday and Sunday from 10:30 to 4:30 p.m. and holiday Mondays from noon to 4 Such as Memorial Day! HOPE TO SEE YOU THERE, REMEMBER ITS FREE! 27176 Peninsula Drive at Rhine Road, Lake Arrowhead

On Thursday, June 5, at 7:00 PM, Dr. Norman Meek will present Possible Origin of the Myth that California is falling int...
05/26/2025

On Thursday, June 5, at 7:00 PM, Dr. Norman Meek will present Possible Origin of the Myth that California is falling into the ocean.

Our speaker’s hypothesis is based on the morphology of the Victorville Fan that travelers on the Old Spanish Trail spent two days ascending, only to find there were no mountains near the crest of the Victorville alluvial fan. Dr. Meek, professor of Geography at Cal State San Bernardino, believes that since the travelers had always found mountains at the top of alluvial fans on their trips, in the 1800s the basic principles about how the Earth worked would have caused them to believe that the missing mountains must have collapsed into a trough now known as Cajon Pass. And if this was true, all of California might be collapsing into the ocean.

What really happened to the missing mountains was not discovered and published until 1953 when the plate tectonic revolution had started.
The program (barring any unforeseen issues) will be available to view on zoom.

Link https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89751803018?pwd=aDZKcEliUVdYQnEzQStNNzhGK2p3Zz09

Passcode: 726418


For more information call Nick Cataldo at 909-709-3792 or contact by e-mail at [email protected].

HISTORICAL SOCIETY PROGRAMS
All programs are held on the first Thursday of each month unless otherwise noted at 7:00 P.M. inside the Christian R. Harris Memorial Hall, which is located next to the Heritage House at the corner of 8th and “D” Streets in San Bernardino. They are open to the public free of charge, so bring a friend!

The San Bernardino Historical and Pioneer Society headquarters (8th and “D” streets) is open for tours of the meeting hall and Heritage House on the first Saturday of each month from 10 AM until 2 PM and by appointment.

The San Bernardino History and Railroad Museum, located inside the historic (1918) Santa Fe Depot, is open to the public every Saturday from 10 AM until 3 PM.

The Camp Cajon Historic Site, located in the Cajon Pass at 3355 Wagon Train Road, Phelan, (old U.S. Route 66, just south of Highway 138 & McDonald’s), is open to the public every day, from dawn to dusk.

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Address

27176 Peninsula Drive
Lake Arrowhead, CA
92352

Opening Hours

Saturday 11am - 4pm
Sunday 11am - 4pm

Telephone

(909) 744-8625

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