Hyperion, California
{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2025}}
{{Infobox settlement
|name = Hyperion
|other_name =
|native_name =
|nickname =
|settlement_type =Former settlement
|image_skyline = File:Hyperion California 1921.jpg
|imagesize =
|image_caption = Hyperion, 1921
|pushpin_map =California
|pushpin_label_position =bottom
|pushpin_mapsize =
|pushpin_map_caption =Location in California
|subdivision_type = Country
|subdivision_name =United States
|subdivision_type1 = State
|subdivision_name1 = California
|subdivision_type2 =County
|subdivision_name2 = Los Angeles County
|subdivision_type3 =
|subdivision_name3 =
|
|established_title =
|established_date =
|coordinates = {{coord|33|55|34|N|118|25|58|W|region:US-CA|display=inline,title}}
|elevation_footnotes = {{gnis|1669977}}
|elevation_m =10
|elevation_ft =33
|footnotes =
}}
Hyperion is a location in Los Angeles County, California. Hyperion was a stop on the Pacific Electric Redondo Beach via Playa del Rey Line that lay at an elevation of 33 feet (10 m). Hyperion still appeared on USGS maps as of 1934.
Hyperion Pier
According to a history of Santa Monica, "Mayor [John C.] Steele co-operated most effectively with his fellow-commissioners in acquiring water-bearing lands in the Charnock Road section, also in the planning of a sewage disposal system, with Hyperion Pier, five miles south of the city, as its outfall point."{{Cite web |title=History of the Santa Monica Bay region : in two parts narrative and biographical / by Charles S. Warren |url=https://hdl.handle.net/2027/uc1.31822043019702?urlappend=%3Bseq=110 |access-date=2024-06-02 |website=HathiTrust |page=78 |language=en}}
Hyperion Pier stood at this location from before 1912 to after 1937.{{Citation |title=Hyperion Pier, El Segundo |date=1937 |url=https://calisphere.org/item/e7aca09aef659fe6d288847bf7556124/ |access-date=2022-12-13}} The pier may have been the site of the outfall sewer into the ocean, as the wharf seemingly carried a redwood pipe {{Cvt|2000|ft}} "out to a submerged end."{{Cite journal |last1=Thomas |first1=Franklin |last2=Hyde |first2=Charles Gilman |date=1940 |title=The Sewage Situation of the City of Los Angeles |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/25029088 |journal=Sewage Works Journal |volume=12 |issue=5 |pages=879–894 |jstor=25029088 |issn=0096-9362}} According to an interview with one sanitation engineer, it was a "five-foot wooden pipe made just like a barrel, only straight strips. The reason I know this, a guy came down from Oregon representing the wood industry, and he wanted a piece of that pipe. He got permission from the city of Los Angeles to go up to the top and saw out a little piece. And they wanted to show how long a piece of wood would stand sewage infiltration."SENIOR OPERATOR AT THE HYPERION TREATMENT PLANT James Howe Van Norman
Interviewed by Andrew D. Basiago
Completed under the auspices of the
Oral History Program University of California Los Angeles 1989
The Regents of the University of California
https://static.library.ucla.edu/oralhistory/pdf/masters/21198-zz0015xdw4-1-master.pdf
File:Streetcar stops of South Bay region of Los Angeles 1912.jpg
See also
References
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{{Los Angeles County, California}}
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Category:Former settlements in Los Angeles County, California
Category:Former populated places in California
{{LosAngelesCountyCA-geo-stub}}