By: Lesley Kennedy

How Spahn Ranch Became a Headquarters for the Manson Family Cult

The former Western movie set provided shelter—and isolation—as Charles Manson and his followers plotted the 1969 murders of actress Sharon Tate and others.

The Manson Family and Spahn Ranch

Ralph Crane/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

Published: August 08, 2019

Last Updated: March 02, 2025

Spahn Movie Ranch was once used as a Hollywood TV and movie set for family-friendly productions, including “Bonanza” and “The Lone Ranger,” but the isolated, run-down property may be best known for playing a role in one of America’s most notorious real-life crimes.

After being evicted from the cabin of Dennis Wilson of the Beach Boys fame, convicted murderer and cult leader Charles Manson and his followers found their way onto the Los Angeles County ranch, where they made the acquaintance of owner George Spahn.

George Spahn

George Spahn, blind owner of Spahn Movie Ranch, in San Fernando Valley, California, late 1969. Convicted murderer Charles Manson and his followers lived on Spahn’s ranch in 1968 and 1969, when they were arrested. 

Ralph Crane/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

George Spahn

George Spahn, blind owner of Spahn Movie Ranch, in San Fernando Valley, California, late 1969. Convicted murderer Charles Manson and his followers lived on Spahn’s ranch in 1968 and 1969, when they were arrested. 

Ralph Crane/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

“Spahn had owned the ranch since 1948, but by the time the Manson Family arrived, he was 81 years old and blind,” says James Buddy Day, author of Hippie Cult Leader: The Last Words of Charles Manson. “George liked Charlie, and they came to an understanding that Manson and the women would work the ranch in exchange for being allowed to stay.”

According to Day, it was Susan “Sadie” Atkins, one of those convicted in the August 9, 1969 Tate-LaBianca murders, who discovered Spahn Ranch sometime in 1967.

“The Manson Family moved onto the ranch gradually, first staying at a nearby church, then squatting in the empty shacks along the riding trails from time to time,” he says.

Spahn Welcomed the Manson Family's Help and Company

Spahn Ranch and the Manson Family

This is a typical abandoned cabin in Spahn Ranch, a former movie ranch north of Los Angeles, photographed in December 1969. 

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

Spahn Ranch and the Manson Family

This is a typical abandoned cabin in Spahn Ranch, a former movie ranch north of Los Angeles, photographed in December 1969. 

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

In a 1970 Esquire magazine article, author Gay Talese wrote that Spahn Ranch was not so much a ranch as it was “the old Western movie set it once was. The row of empty buildings extending along the dirt road toward Spahn’s shack—decaying structures with faded signs marking them as a saloon, a barbershop, a café, a jail, and a carriage house—all were constructed many years ago as Hollywood settings for cowboy brawls and Indian ambushes.”

Talese reported that Spahn liked Manson: “Manson would visit his shack on quiet afternoons and talk for hours about deep philosophical questions, subjects that bewildered the old man but interested him, relieving the loneliness.”

Claudia Verhoeven, an associate professor of history at Cornell University who teaches a course on the Manson murders, says the family helped out on the ranch, cleaning, cooking, making repairs and taking care of the horses, including renting them out to tourists.

Charles Manson's Inspiration from Helter Skelter

Charles Manson established a cult based on an apocalyptic vision predicting a race war in America. Manson convinced his followers that it would be necessary to murder to attract attention. On August 8-9, 1969, four members of the Manson Family cult invaded the home of actress Sharon Tate and director Roman Polanski and murdered the pregnant Tate, as well as four others.

AP Photo

The Manson Family: Susan Atkins

Susan Atkins was born to alcoholic parents. Her mother died of cancer and her father abandoned her and her brother. Atkins became an ardent follower of Charles Manson, whom she met in 1967. On August 8-9, 1969, four members of the Manson Family cult invaded the home of actress Sharon Tate and director Roman Polanski and murdered the pregnant Tate, as well as four others. Atkins was charged with murdering Tate, although later said that she didn’t know why she did. She died of brain cancer at the Central California Women’s facility in Chowchilla in 2009.

Ralph Crane/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

The Manson Family: Leslie Van Houten

Leslie Van Houten began using drugs at 15 and her mother forced her to have an abortion at 17. She eventually fled to a hippie commune where she found her way to Manson and began using LSD and other psychedelic drugs. She was 19 when she was charged with murdering Rosemary and Leno LaBianca..

AP Photo

The Manson Family: Patricia Krenwinkel

Patricia Krenwinkel briefly attended a Jesuit college, but dropped out and then met Manson. The two became sexually involved. She was 21 when she was convicted of stabbing Abigail Folger. Krenwinkel wrote “Death to Pigs” in the victims’ blood at the scene of the murders.

George Brich/AP Photo

The Manson Family: Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme

Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme did not participate in the Tate-LaBianca murders but was a devoted follower of Manson. In September 1975, she pulled a gun on President Gerald Ford in Sacramento. She was convicted of the attempted assassination and sentenced to life in prison. Fromme was granted parole in 2008 and was released a year later.

AP Photo

The Manson Family: Linda Kasabian

Linda Kasabian grew up in Maine and then moved to Los Angeles in 1968. She met Manson and accompanied cult members to carry out the Tate murders, but never went inside the house. She also stayed in the car during the LaBianca murders. Kasabian eventually turned herself in, received immunity and became a lead witness against Manson and his followers.

AP Photo

The Manson Family: Charles Watson

Charles “Tex” Watson was an honor student and athlete from Texas who turned to drugs after moving to Los Angeles. After meeting Manson and joining his cult, Watson took the lead in the Tate and LaBianca murders, claiming he was the devil. Watson was convicted of murder and is serving a life sentence.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

The Manson Family: Bobby Beausoleil

Bobby Beausoleil was sent to a reform camp for delinquent behavior at age 15. He then got involved in the music scene in Los Angeles and San Francisco. During this time he befriended and moved in with Gary Hinman who was a Manson follower. On Manson’s orders, he killed Hinman on July 27, 1969. Beausoleil is serving a life sentence.

Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

The Manson Family: Steve Grogan

Clem Grogan was a high school dropout who was involved in petty crimes before joining Manson’s cult. Manson ordered Grogan and fellow follower Bruce Davis to murder Gary Shea, an aspiring actor and ranch hand at Spahn Ranch on August 26, 1969. Grogan was sentenced to death but received parole in 1985 after revealing to authorities the location of Shea’s remains.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

The Manson Family: Bruce Davis

Bruce Davis met Manson and some of his followers in Oregon and eventually became Manson’s “right-hand man.” Davis was convicted of first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder and robbery in the Manson-directed stabbing death of Hinman and the torture and stabbing of Shea. Davis is serving a life sentence.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

“They also just spent time with Spahn, especially Lynette Fromme,” she says. “It’s usually said that she (and others) also had sex with Spahn, but this has been contested, including by Fromme herself.”

Day says Spahn lived in a small house near a dirt road that served as an entrance to the ranch.

“He didn’t get out much, and needed a lot of help,” he says. “The girls would take turns staying in the house with him, cooking and cleaning.” He says Fromme—aka “Squeaky”—became Spahn’s primary caretaker. “According to Lynette, George reminded her of her grandfather whom she never got to spend time with.”

Ranch's Isolation Fostered Paranoia

Spahn Ranch and the Manson Family

Interior view of the kitchen at Spahn Ranch where the Manson Family lived, photographed in October 1969.

Ralph Crane/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

Spahn Ranch and the Manson Family

Interior view of the kitchen at Spahn Ranch where the Manson Family lived, photographed in October 1969.

Ralph Crane/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

“The ranch really isolated the women,” Day adds. “There were no books, clocks or calendars. They became increasingly reliant on each other, which enabled their eventual feelings of paranoia and fear, all culminating in the murders.”

According to Verhoeven, in the beginning, the Manson Family’s stay at Spahn Ranch was akin to a fairly typical commune experience.

“The fact that Spahn Ranch was an old movie set did certainly accentuate certain aspects of family life, especially what they called ‘magical mystery’ touring,” she says. “Because Spahn Ranch was a film set, the setting supported the family in experimental, improvisational, make-believe living. They would play-act roles: cowboys one day, pirates the next.”

In fact, Day adds, the first few years of the commune were quite tranquil.

“All the people I’ve met have good memories of that time,” he says. “Things changed in the spring of 1969 when Manson and Tex Watson became involved in a bad drug deal involving a man they thought was a member of the Black Panthers political party. This began a spiral of paranoia, and the group became fearful of outsiders—especially the Black Panthers.”

Spahn Ranch and the Manson Family

Interior of a bedroom at Spahn Ranch where the Manson Family lived. 

Ralph Crane/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

Spahn Ranch and the Manson Family

Interior of a bedroom at Spahn Ranch where the Manson Family lived. 

Ralph Crane/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

Caitlin Rother, co-author of the book Hunting Charles Manson with Lis Wiehl, says Manson was growing more and more paranoid during this time, especially after the shooting of Bernard “Lotsapoppa” Crowe during a Hollywood drug buy gone wrong.

“He was scared of Crowe’s people—he thought Crowe was hooked up with the Black Panthers—were going to come to the ranch and kill them,” she says.

Manson prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi, in his 1974 book, Helter Skelter, described the remoteness of the ranch, which was burned down during a Southern California wildfire in September of 1970.

“Cut off from the rest of society, he created in this timeless land a tight little society of his own, with its own value system,” he writes. “It was holistic, complete, and totally at odds with the world outside.”

This isolation, Verhoeven says, contributed to the family’s paranoia and violence.

How Did Charles Manson Recruit His Followers?

Charles Manson's exploitation of sixties counterculture would result in one of the most notorious crimes of the 20th century.

“The other thing that changed in the spring of 1969 was that new people started hanging around the family,” she adds. “Manson increased his contact with former convict friends, plus members of the Straight Satans biker gang began hanging around the ranch. This is the moment when more and more weapons appeared on the ranch, and also when family members became increasingly involved in criminal activities, especially theft and drug dealing. And this, in turn, led to an increased police presence on the ranch, which led to further radicalization.”

Over the course of that summer, Day says, events continued to escalate, culminating in the Tate-Labianca murders.

“After the murders, the group discovered they were under investigation for unrelated cases auto part theft, which resulted in a final murder,” he adds. “After that they left Spahn Ranch.”

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About the author

Lesley Kennedy is a features writer and editor living in Denver. Her work has appeared in national and regional newspapers, magazines and websites.

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Citation Information

Article title
How Spahn Ranch Became a Headquarters for the Manson Family Cult
Website Name
History
Date Accessed
March 21, 2025
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
March 02, 2025
Original Published Date
August 08, 2019

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