East Hollywood History
Early Days
The first inhabitants of East Hollywood were
the Cahug-Na Indians, who lived in the area spanning from modern-day
Hollywood to Atwater Village. The Spanish settlers named them and their
area "Cahuenga."
In 1887, just 37 years after California gained
statehood, a town named Prospect Park was
established to the east of the then-newly named rancho called Hollywood,
located some four miles northwest of Los Angeles.
The Turn of the 20th Century
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Prospect
Park (East Hollywood) in the early 1900s.
The two men are standing on
what is now Barnsdall Park. |
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By 1900, Hollywood was a farming village of
500 people. Crops also grew in nearby Prospect Park: oranges, avocados,
bananas, and wheat grew on the site of what is now Los Angeles City
College, and north toward the present Los Feliz area. Prospect
Park was renamed “East Hollywood” to more closely associate itself with
the booming town to the west which even then was on its way to legendary
status.
The 'Teens
In 1910, the people of the towns of
Hollywood and East Hollywood voted to be annexed to the City of Los
Angeles. Many other towns and communities at the time, such as neighboring
Colegrove (which also encompasses part of modern-day East Hollywood) chose to join the
growing city in order to have access to its water system, which had just
opened the Los Angeles Aqueduct, piping in water from Owens Valley to the
north.
In the ‘Teens, East Hollywood, now a part
of the growing city, started to develop. In 1914, Children's Hospital
relocated to Vermont Avenue and Sunset Boulevard from downtown Los
Angeles. In 1916, a branch of the Los Angeles Public Library – the
Cahuenga Branch - was built with money donated by steel magnate Andrew
Carnegie on Santa Monica Boulevard.
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The
Childrens Hospital Los Angeles facilty under construction in its new
home on Sunset and Vermont, 1913. |
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In 1917, the community was predominantly
white/Anglo-Saxon. Less than four percent of its residents were nonwhite
(mostly African-American or Japanese).
The nascent motion picture industry grew up in East Hollywood as well -
the Fine Art Studios was located here. In fact, the set of its most famous
film, Intolerance, was located at the present-day site of Vons
Market at Virgil and Sunset. The William Fox Studio (predecessor to 20th
Century Fox) stood on Sunset and Western Avenue (now the Ralphs
supermarket).
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Looking
north at the intersection of Western and Fernwood avenues (just
south of Sunset Boulevard), The
William Fox Studios operated out of East Hollywood from 1917-1924
before moving west to what is now Century City. Fox's studios merged
with Darryl F. Zanuck's 20th Century Pictures to become the 20th
Century Fox Corporation. Today, the old Fox studio lot is now a Food 4
Less
supermarket and the Color By DeLuxe post-production
studios. |
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The Los Angeles Normal School, an
institution which trained teachers, was established along Vermont Avenue
in the ‘Teens. In 1919, the school was acquired by the University of
California Regents and was designated the “University of California,
Southern Branch.”
The 1920s & 1930s
In the early 1920s, Barnsdall Park was
built. The Roaring ‘20s also became a time when the world came to East
Hollywood. Halfway around the world, as the Bolsheviks established the
Soviet Union, Russian immigrants who fled their motherland during the
communist revolution came to East Hollywood. Survivors of the 1915
Armenian Genocide by the Turkish Ottoman Empire found
their new home here, establishing our Armenian community.
At the end of the ‘20s, the University of
California Southern Branch, seeing the need for a much larger campus,
relocated twelve miles west in a ranch named Westwood, and became
UCLA. The old campus then became Los Angeles Junior College, later renamed
Los Angeles City College.
In 1930, East L.A.'s Kaspare Cohn Hospital moved to a new building on
Fountain Avenue and renamed itself the Cedars of Lebanon Hospital.
Despite the Great Depression in the early
1930s, a single-family home building boom was going on here in East
Hollywood – most of our homes were built during this period.
The 1940s & 1950s
East Hollywood was home to a
Japanese-American community dating back to the 'Teens. Centered around the
Melrose/Virgil area, businesses such as markets, florists/nurseries and
restaurants were present here. But suddenly, as Americans of Japanese
descent were relocated to internment camps during World War II, the
community vanished. Following the war, after being released from the
camps, most of them never returned here.
The Hollywood Freeway was built from 1947-1949 and affected the area
considerably. Houses were razed, and residents were forced to relocate.
The 1950’s saw modern-day East Hollywood take shape. Kaiser Hospital
was built along Sunset Boulevard in 1953. L.A. City College's campus
expanded. A few new apartments were built, but hardly
any new single homes.
The 1960s & 1970s
With the 1960’s, the neighborhood continued
to change. The area's white residents gradually moved to suburbs such as
the San Fernando Valley and Orange County. Blacks and new immigrants from
Asia and Latin America moved in.
In the early 1970’s, East Hollywood became
the place where many newly arrived immigrants found their first home and
began the difficult task of adapting to life in America.
In 1970, 53.3 per cent
of area residents were either foreign-born or had foreign-born parents.
More than 25 per cent spoke Spanish as their native language; more than 20
per cent were Asians: Japanese Chinese, Filipinos, Koreans and Thai. There
was a stable Arab population and natives of Russia, France, Greece,
Hungary, and Poland. The black population comprised about 5 percent and
centered around the area directly adjacent to the Cahuenga library.
In 1976, The Cedars of Lebanon Hospital, after having merged with the
Westside's Mt. Sinai Hospital, moved out of its building on Fountain
Avenue into a new hospital complex near Beverly Hills, becoming
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. Today the old Cedars of Lebanon building is
now the Church of Scientology.
Since then, there have been a large increase
in Asians, especially Koreans and Filipinos. New immigrants from
Russia, mainly Armenian and Jewish, also arrived. The Arab population
has increased, while Armenians from Arabic-speaking countries were on the
rise.
The 1980s & 1990s
There was relative prosperity in East
Hollywood during the 1980s -- more immigrant businesses sprang up, but at
the same time the consequences of economy also shifted things around. The
closure of the Ralphs supermarket on Santa Monica and Vermont was a great
loss to residents in the area, who had to go a few blocks farther for
their grocery needs. Banks also moved out of the area, due to mergers and
demographic shifts. And many negative signs of urbanization -- namely gang
violence, homelessness and increased traffic and pollution -- were more
evident in the '80s.
In 1984, East Hollywood shared the Olympic glory as thousands of residents
witnessed the torch relay pass through Vermont Avenue on its way to the
Coliseum.
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Two
runners have just passed the Olympic flame as the torch relay passes
through East Hollywood in July 1984. Here, the relay is running
northbound on Vermont Avenue at Santa Monica Boulevard, zig-zaging its
way around Los Angeles en route to the Coliseum. The LaunderLand
Coin-Op Laundry (background) was burned down in the 1992 Los Angeles
Riots and was eventually razed to make way for a Metro Red Line subway
station. |
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In April 1992, the Los Angeles Riots changed East Hollywood forever, as
many of its businesses were looted and burned, namely around the Santa
Monica/Vermont intersection and in other parts of the area. The 1994
Northridge earthquake also caused further damage, severely damaging
several buildings along Hollywood Boulevard. But despite the destruction,
East Hollywood sprang back.
The late '90s saw a period of recovery and growth. Businesses destroyed by
the Riots and the earthquake were soon rebuilt or repaired. In 1996 Cahuenga Library
reopened after several years of renovation. That same year, the East
Hollywood Community Association was established by concerned residents who
wanted to make a difference in improving the neighborhood. In the summer
of 1999, the Metro Red
Line subway stations at Santa Monica/Vermont, Sunset/Vermont and
Hollywood/Western gave East Hollywood increased transportation options and
a link to the rest of the region via the new Metro Rail system.
The 21st Century
The East Hollywood Neighborhood Council, established in 2001 and
certified as the 89th neighborhood council in the City of Los Angeles on
April 19, 2007, became a way for the historically underserved neighborhood
to not only find a voice in the City, but to establish an identity built
on its unique and unrivalled diversity.
East Hollywood continues to grow.
Its institutions such as Kaiser Hospital, Children's Hospital, Los Angeles
City College and Barnsdall Park are either expanding or being renovated,
and new elementary schools are being built along Santa Monica Boulevard,
while more businesses are finding East Hollywood to be a great area to
locate to, such as the hip, burgeoning "Hel-Mel" corner at Heliotrope
Drive and Melrose Avenue, which includes bicycle shops, cafes, restaurants
and an ice cream parlor.
Now with over
51,000 residents, the challenge for the future is not only to improve the
quality of life for its residents, but to accommodate for an even larger
population expected in the decades to come.
Do you have any pictures or memories of East
Hollywood prior to the 1970s? Please share
them with us via e-mail.
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