A Brief History on Hollywood
When Spanish explorers first entered the area now known as Hollywood,
Native Americans were living in the canyons of the Santa Monica
Mountains. Before long, the Indians had been moved to missions
and the land which Hollywood now occupies was divided in two by
the Spanish Government. Acreage to the west became part of Rancho
La Brea and settlements to the East became Rancho Los Feliz.
By the 1870s an agricultural community flourished in the area
and crops ranging from hay and grain to subtropical bananas and
pineapples were thriving. During the 1880s, the Ranchos were sub-divided.
In 1886, H. H. Wilcox bought an area of Rancho La Brea that his
wife then christened "Hollywood." Within a few years,
Wilcox had devised a grid plan for his new community, paved Prospect
Avenue (now Hollywood Boulevard) for his main street and was selling
large residential lots to wealthy Midwesterners looking to build
homes so they could "winter in California."
Prospect Avenue soon became a prestigious residential street
populated with large Queen Anne, Victorian, and Mission Revival
houses. Mrs. Daeida Wilcox raised funds to build churches, schools
and a libraryand Hollywood quickly became a complete and prosperous
community. The community incorporated in 1903, but its independence
was short-lived, as the lack of water forced annexation in 1910
to the city of Los Angeles, which had a surplus supply of water.
In 1911, the Nestor Company opened Hollywood's first film studio
in an old tavern on the corner of Sunset and Gower. Not long thereafter
Cecil B. DeMille and D. W. Griffith began making movies in the
areadrawn to the community for its open space and moderate climate.
Banks, restaurants, clubs and movie palaces sprang up, catering
to the demands of the burgeoning film industry
The needs of this thriving new industry created radical changes
in the communitycausing a clash between older and newer residents.
Acres of agricultural land south of what-is-now Hollywood Boulevard
were subdivided and developed as housing for the enormous numbers
of workers that movie-making required.
High-rise commercial buildings began to spring up along Hollywood
Boulevardthree competing real-estate interests caused concentrations
of development at Highland, Cahuenga, and at Vine. It wasn't long
before nearly all the homes along the Boulevard were replaced
by commercial buildings linking the three corners.
Banks, restaurants, clubs and movie palaces sprang up, catering
to the demands of the burgeoning film industry during the 1920s
and 1930s. The architectural styles of the buildings were representative
of those most popular between the World Wars. Banks were typically
designed in the more formal Beaux Arts styles, but other buildings
in the community took on more playful personalities.
The ornamental Spanish Colonial Revival style reflected Hollywood's
self-conscious extravagance while the new Art Deco and Moderne
styles fit the community's aspirations for glamour and sophistication.
The Hollywood Boulevard commercial and entertainment district
is officially listed in the National Register of Historic Places
Hollywood has been anything but static, however, and after a
few decades as the capital of film glamour, the neighborhood changed
again. Although much of the studio work remained in Hollywood,
many stars moved to Beverly Hills, and the elegant shops and restaurants
left with them.
In the 1960s, music recording studios and offices began moving
to Hollywoodan offshoot of the nightclubs further west on Sunset
Boulevard. Other businesses, however, continued to migrate to
different parts of the city. Hollywood today is a diverse, vital,
and active community striving to preserve the elegant buildings
from its past. Much of the movie industry remains in the area,
although the neighborhood's outward appearance has changed.
In 1985, the Hollywood Boulevard commercial and entertainment
district was officially listed in the National Register of Historic
Places protecting the neighborhood's important buildings and seeing
to it that the significance of Hollywood's past would always be
a part of its future.