Thousand Oaks and Newbury Park were part of a master planned city, created by the Janss Investment Company in the mid-1950s. It included about 1,000 custom home lots, 2,000 single-family residences, a regional shopping center, 200-acre (0.81 km2) industrial park and several neighborhood shopping centers. The median home price is around $673,000.[2] It is located in the northwestern part of the Greater Los Angeles Area. The city was in 2006 named one of Money magazine’s Best Places to Live
The Janss family, developers of Southern California subdivisions, purchased 10,000 acres (40 km2) in the early 20th century. They eventually created plans for a “total community” and the name remains prominently featured in the city.
Jungleland USA was one of Southern California’s first theme parks. Wild animal shows entertained thousands in the 1940s and 1950s. Many TV and movie productions used the park’s trained animals and were filmed there, including Birth of a Nation, Tarzan, and The Adventures of Robin Hood. Jungleland closed down in May 1968, in part due to competition from other amusement parks such as Knott’s Berry Farm and Disneyland. The Thousand Oaks Civic Arts Center today stands on the site of the park.
The area was once occupied by the Chumash people, and 2000-year-old cave drawings may still be seen at the Chumash Indian Museum, 3290 Lang Ranch Parkway, in the Lang Ranch section of the city. The Chumash village was known as Sap’wi, which means “House of the Deer.”
The area’s recorded history dates to 1542 when Spanish explorer Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo landed at Point Mugu and claimed the land for Spain. It eventually became part of the 48,671 acres (196.96 km2) Rancho El Conejo land grant by the Spanish government, thus becoming the basis of the name Conejo Valley (conejo means “rabbit” in Spanish, and there are many in the area). It served as grazing land for vaqueros for the next fifty years.