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  1. Sep 24, 2014 · Winona and Norman Stephens were living in the steel garage, employing a caretaker to help maintain the extensive plantings. A guard was also employed who unlocked the gate to admit me.

  2. In the late 1930’s, during WWII, Winona and Norman Stephens were convinced by a German named Herr Schmidt that when Germany ultimately won the war, the American government would not be able to stay afloat and there would be a time of anarchy in the United States.

  3. However, because there was no other record or sighting of Jessie Murphy, some historians believe the name was likely an alias used by a mysterious “Herr Schmidt,” believed to be an agent for Nazi Germany. Soon after, Norman and Winona Stephens, a wealthy Los Angeles couple, took up residence on the property.

  4. Feb 27, 2014 · He convinced the Stephenses that the USA would soon be invaded by Germany as part of the Nazis' New Order.

  5. That was the hope of landowners Winona and Norman Stephens, who built the the 50-acre "Murphy Ranch" in 1933 to be a self-sustaining Nazi community ruled by Adolf Hitler. Under the thrall of a mystical "Herr Schmidt," who may have been a German spy, the couple and a band of Nazi-sympathizers known as the "Silver Shirts" worked in the compound ...

  6. May 9, 2019 · In 1933, Winona and Norman Stephens, sympathizers of the Silver Legion of America, purchased the plot of land under the pseudonym “Jessie M. Murphy.” They believed that the Nazis would defeat...

  7. Mar 7, 2018 · Buried behind Los Angeles' skyscrapers lies Murphy Ranch, a graffiti-laden trail, and compound that was once intended as a sprawling community for American Nazis and Hitler himself. Murphy Ranch was built in Rustic Canyon in the 1930s by Winona and Norman Stephens, who were sympathizers of the anti-semitic, white supremacist Silver Legion of ...

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