Elizabeth Lake

USA / California / Quartz Hill /
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Coordinates:   34°39'57"N   118°24'9"W

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  • Elizabeth Lake is a lake located directly on the San Andreas Fault in the Angeles National Forest in Los Angeles County, California. The lake is one of a series of sag ponds in the area including Hughes Lake, and Munz Lakes, all created by the active motion of tectonic plates. Elizabeth Lake is in the Antelope Valley, surrounded by rolling golden hills. It once straddled the boundary of the Tataviam and Kittanemuk tribes. The Tataviam may have called the lake Kivarum. In 1780, Father Junipero Serra named the lake La Laguna de Diablo. The lake earned the name La Laguna de Diablo because some who lived by it believed it to contain the devil's pet, also known as the Elizabeth Lake Monster. Sometime after 1834, the lake was named Rabbitt for a very short time. Then it became La Laguna de Chico Lopez. In 1849, Elizabeth Wingfield was camping with her family beside the lake. She walked down a log which extended into the water to fill buckets for cooking and drinking. Elizabeth slipped off the log and fell into the lake. Although she wasn't injured, several other families also vacationing, witnessed her stumble. In fun they began calling the lake Elizabeth's Lake. The name caught on and locals started calling it Elizabeth Lake. The name didn't become official until much later. It is now sometimes incorrectly referred to as Lake Elizabeth since the local golf course and the community sign project have mislabeled their welcome signs causing much confusion. In 1924, Judge Hughes separated the western part of Elizabeth Lake to create a recreation resort area. This part of Elizabeth Lake was renamed Lake Hughes.
This article was last modified 15 years ago