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Victorian Downtown Los Angeles

The late-Victorian-era Downtown of Los Angeles in 1880 was centered at the southern end of the Los Angeles Plaza area, and over the next two decades, it extended south and west along Main Street, Spring Street, and Broadway towards Third Street. Most of the 19th-century buildings no longer exist, surviving only in the Plaza area or south of Second Street. The rest were demolished to make way for the Civic Center district with City Hall, numerous courthouses, and other municipal, county, state and federal buildings, and Times Mirror Square.[1][2] This article covers that area, between the Plaza, 3rd St., Los Angeles St., and Broadway, during the period 1880 through the period of demolition (1920s–1950s).

1894 drawing by Bruce Wellington Pierce: portion from Third Street (bottom left) to Plaza (top right). The Red Sandstone Courthouse with its clocktower is prominent at center. At upper right is Los Angeles High School on Fort Moore Hill.

At the time (1880–1900s), the area was referred to as the business center, business section or business district. By 1910, it was referred to as the "North End" of the business district which by then had expanded south to what is today called the Historic Core, along Broadway, Spring and Main roughly from 3rd to 9th streets.[3]

Location edit

 
Baist's 1910 map of the area. In blue, superimposed on the map: later changes in Spring and Temple streets, the current path of US-101, and most of the largest buildings standing today.

By the mid-1890s, First and Spring was the center of the business district, and the Bradbury Building, opened in 1893 at Third and Broadway and still standing today,[4] By 1910, the area north of Fourth Street was considered the "North End" of the business district and there were already concerns about its deterioration, as the center of commerce moved to what is now known as the Historic Core, from Third to Ninth streets.[5]

Map edit

The map shows the street grid in 1910, and shows in blue three important road alignment changes that came in the 1920s–1950s:

  • Spring Street realignment north of First Street to run parallel to Main Street
  • Temple Street extension eastward from Main Street
  • Creation of the US-101 Freeway and its service roads, called Arcadia and Aliso streets, but not exactly in the positions of the old Arcadia and Aliso streets

Overview of the area edit

 
William Henry Jackson panoramic photo of Los Angeles business district, c.1900-1902. The view stretches from the Bullard Block just south of Temple and Spring (left, bottom) to the Burdick Block at 2nd and Spring, right. Portions of Main Street and Los Angeles Street are visible behind. The vast majority of buildings in view have been demolished. Today, about half of the area in view is City Hall and its grounds, and most of the rest of the area is home to other buildings in the Civic Center district.

Buildings edit

Broadway edit

Temple and Broadway edit

Cable cars of the Temple Street Cable Railway ran along Temple Street starting in 1886 and were replaced with Pacific Electric streetcars in 1902.[6][7]

Northwest corner of Temple and Broadway edit

  • The three-story brick Women's Christian Temperance Union building was erected in 1888 for $45,000.[8] Also known as the Temperance Temple, it has been demolished[9] and was replaced in 1957 by the Los Angeles County Central Heating and Refrigeration Plant.[10]

Southeast corner of Temple and Broadway (Pound Cake Hill, west side of New High St.) edit

This location was at the time known as Pound Cake Hill. The buildings located here faced New High Street to their east and Broadway to their west. They were as follows:[11]

  • Los Angeles High School, whose original location (1873-1887) was between New High on the west and Broadway on the east, south of Temple Street. It was moved to California and Sand streets, and in 1890 a new facility was built on Fort Moore Hill, immediately north of where Broadway today crosses the Hollywood Freeway. The Pound Cake Hill school was demolished and replaced by:
  • First, the Red Stone Courthouse (or "Red Sandstone Courthouse"), which took over the function of courthouse from the Clocktower Courthouse (also called the Temple Courthouse). It was damaged beyond repair by Long Beach earthquake of 1933 and was torn down in 1936.
  • The Los Angeles County Hall of Records was built next to (south of) the Red Sandstone Courthouse in 1911, After the 1971 San Fernando earthquake, it was determined to be unsafe and it was demolished in 1973. A new Hall of Records was built and opened in 1962, one block west on the south side of Temple between Broadway and Hill.

Currently on the site are:

  • Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center (Los Angeles County Grand Jury)
  • A portion of Grand Park, which stretches mid-block between Temple and First, from City Hall at Spring Street, to the Music Center at Grand Avenue.
Realignment of Spring Street (1925) edit

The Poundcake Hill buildings originally backed up to Broadway to their west, and faced New High Street to their east. New High Street (see Sanborn map above) was a north-south street that ran parallel to Broadway, and to Spring Street to its east. As part of the construction of City Hall in the early 1920s, New High Street was removed south of Temple, and Spring Street was realigned more towards a north-south orientation, parallel with Broadway, instead of running more northeasterly and meeting Main Street at Temple Street. As a result the Poundcake Hill buildings faced the newly aligned Spring Street until they were demolished.

Southwest corner of Temple and Broadway edit

Adjacent to the south, mid-block, is a portion of Grand Park.

First and Broadway edit

Northeast corner of First and Broadway edit

Northwest corner of First and Broadway edit

  • Site of the Tajo Building (1896–mid-20th c.).[13] Now the location of the Los Angeles County Law Library.[4]

Southeast corner of First and Broadway and east side of 100 block edit

  • Site of the Culver Block retail and office building.[14] Now the site of the Times Mirror Square 1973 Pereira Addition, so called because it was designed by William Pereira.
  • South of the Culver Block was the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce building, 128–130 S. Broadway, opened February 12, 1904,[15] a landmark at the time featured on postcards and in books. 6 stories, 4 floors. Ground floor offices included those of the Los Angeles Herald and Consolidated Bank.[16]

Southwest corner of First and Broadway edit

The southwest corner, during Victorian times the site of unremarkable retail and office buildings, was from 1958 the location of the State Office Building, (1958-60, architect Anson C. Boyd, razed 2006). It was named the Junipero Serra State Office Building, and this moniker would be transferred to the former Broadway Department Store building at 4th and Broadway when it was opened to replace this building in 1998.[17] It is now the location of the New U.S. Courthouse built in 2016, taking up the entire block between Broadway, Hill, First and Second.[18]

Just south of the southwest corner was the Mason Theatre, 127 S. Broadway. Opened in 1903 as the Mason Opera House, 1,600 seats. Benjamin Marshall of the Chicago firm Marshall & Wilson designed the building in association with John Parkinson. Marshall is known for designing the Iroquois Theatre in Chicago. Remodeled in 1924 by Meyer & Holler. Later, as the Mason Theatre, it showed Spanish-language films. Demolished 1955.[19]

145 S. Broadway,[20]site of the C. H. Frost Building, later known as the Haig M. Prince Building. Built 1898, architect John Parkinson,[21] Now the location of the new United States Courthouse built in 2016, taking up the entire block between Broadway, Hill, First and Second.[18]

Second and Broadway edit

Northeast corner of Second and Broadway edit

One of several “Hellman Buildings” across Downtown L.A. — not to be confused with the still-existing Hellman Building at Fourth and Spring — was located here (#138) from 1897 to 1959.[22] The site is now a parking structure, part of the Times Mirror Square complex.

Southwest corner of Second and Broadway and the west side of the 200 block edit

The west side of the 200 block of South Broadway had a key place in the retail history of Los Angeles from the 1893 through 1917, as it was home to several prominent early department stores such as the Ville de Paris, Coulter's department store from 1905–1917, and J. W. Robinson's "Boston Dry Goods" store from 1895–1915. All three stores would move to Seventh Street when it became the upscale shopping street between 1915 and 1917.

  • On the southwest corner of 2nd and Broadway was Judge O'Melveny's house, built in 1870. This was replaced by the American National Bank (later California Bank) Building, which one turn was replaced by the California Building in 1911. Nos. 201-213 Broadway are now known named the Broadway Media Center.

Further south on the west side of Broadway, was 207–211, location of the:

  • YMCA Building (#207–209–211), Romanesque Revival architecture, opened in July 1889, demolished in 1903.
    • The YMCA operated here at #207 from 1889 until 1903,
    • City of London opened here in August 1891, run by Messrs. Hiles and Niccolls, who came from the City of Paris department store. It carried curtains, window shades, comforters, and the like.[23] It operated here until August 1895, when it moved next door to the Potomac Block at #213.[24]

The YMCA Building was demolished to make way for the:

  • Merchants Trust Co. Building.[25]
Coulter's complex: Potomac and Bicknell blocks edit

The adjacent Potomac Block and Bicknell Block originally housed prominent retailers of the day, then were joined together in 1906 by Coulter's department store to form a complex, opening it as a new, 157,000 sq ft (14,600 m2) store in June, 1905.[26][27][28]

Potomac Block edit

The Potomac Block, 213–223 S. Broadway, was from 1905 to 1917 known as the B. F. Coulter Building. It was originally developed by lumberyard and mill owner J. M. Griffith. It was designed in 1888 by Block, Curlett and Eisen in Romanesque architectural style[29] and opened on July 17, 1890.[30]

Tenants included:

  • Ville de Paris department store (at 221–223, from 1893 through 1906),[29]
  • City of London Dry Goods Co., which moved here from next door at #211 in August 1895 and advertised for this location through August 1899.[24]

It was the first time major retail stores opened on South Broadway, in what would be a shift of the upmarket shopping district from 1890 to 1905 from around First and Spring to South Broadway. In 1904, Coulter's bought the Potomac Block, and combined it with the Bicknell block to create its new store that opened in 1905.

After Coulter's moved:

  • 215 continued as a branch of Coulter's through 1927. Then, 215–217 was home to the Pacific Furniture House in the 1940s.
  • 219 housed Fisch's Department Store in the 1940s.

The building was demolished in 1953 and is still the site of a parking lot.[31]

Bicknell Block edit

The Bicknell Block (or Bicknell Building) at 225–229 S. Broadway, with back entrances at 224–228 S. Hill Street. was part of Coulter's from 1905 from 1917. After Coulter's moved in 1917, it housed the Western Shoe Co. (through 1922), later known as the Western Department Store (1922–1928). Lettering covered the face of the building from top to bottom through the end of the 1950s: "THE LARGEST SHOE DEPT. IN THE WEST".[32]

Further south on Broadway edit
  • 231-235, the Harris Newmark Building (1899, Abram Edelman), Bartlett Music Co. (#233), annex to J. W. Robinson's (#235); Goodwill Industries store (#233-235, 1950s–60s). The building still stands, but all floors except the ground floor have been removed.
  • 237-241, the Boston Dry Goods Building (completed 1895, demolished, architects Theodore Eisen and Sumner Hunt, designer of the Bradbury Building)[33][34] The building was home to J. W. Robinson's "Boston Dry Goods" store from 1895 to 1915, Scott's Department Store (239–241, 1920s), Third Street Store (237–241, 1950s–60s). Demolished, currently the site of a parking lot.
  • 251 was home to the I. Magnin speciality department store, which opened here on January 2, 1899;[35] starting 1904, I. Magnin announced that the store would be known by the name of its manager, Myer Siegel.[36]

Southeast corner and east side of Broadway from 2nd to 3rd edit

The southeast corner of 2nd and Broadway was the site of

  • The First Presbyterian Church was located here in 1894.[37] The church was replaced sometime before 1906 by the:
  • Nolan, Smith and Bridge Building, #200-4 S. Broadway, stores and a restaurant.[38]
  • Now the corner is the site of the Historic Broadway underground light rail station, under construction.

Mid-block were:

  • Crocker Building, #212–6[39] Home to Victor Clothing from 1920 to 1964
  • B'nai B'rith Temple (1873), 214 S. Broadway (post-1890 numbering), the city's first synagogue, razed to make way for the Copp Building, 218–224 S. Broadway, home to the original (1908) Pig 'n Whistle candy shop and tea room.[40] The Pig 'n Whistle would open locations at 7th and Broadway and in Hollywood, where it would become a landmark restaurant that still operates today.
  • City Hall (1888–1928; opened 1888, demolished 1929; 228–238 S. Broadway, architect Solomon Irmscher Haas, Romanesque Revival). Now a parking lot. Three stories, it had a 150-foot (46 m) campanile. Red and brown brick. Housed the Los Angeles Public Library for a time until it moved to the new Hamburger's department store building at Eighth and Broadway in 1908.[41] The site is now part of the "(213) S. Spring" parking garage.[4]
  • #240-246 the Hosfield Building, location of the Natatorium (indoor swimming pool) in 1894 and the Imperial Restaurant in 1906.[39] After 1964, location of Victor Clothing, notable for its changing murals reflecting local Chicano culture. Victor Clothing operated here until 2001, and was known i.a. for its frequent ads on Spanish-language television.[42]

Third and Broadway edit

Northwest corner of Third and Broadway edit

The corner is home to one of the oldest buildings outside the Plaza area, the 1895 Irvine Byrne Block or Byrne Block; now called the Pan American Lofts. The architect was Sumner Hunt. It was built in a hybrid Spanish Colonial Revival/Beaux-Arts style.

The building was home to the renowned I. Magnin clothing store that opened here on January 2, 1899;[43] on June 19, 1904, I. Magnin announced that the Los Angeles store would henceforth be known as Myer Siegel.[36] After a fire at the Irvine Byrne Building destroyed its store on February 16, 1911, Myer Siegel moved further south on Broadway.

It was modernized and converted to lofts in 2007 and given its present name. The halls and staircase have appeared in many of Alfred Hitchcock's movies, Brad Pitt's Se7en, Fight Club, Blade Runner, and other TV shows and commercials.[44]

From Third Street south to Olympic Blvd. (originally Tenth St.), and from Hill Street east to Los Angeles Street, including Broadway, is the Historic Core district, the city's main commercial and entertainment area in the first half of the 20th century.

Northeast corner of Third and Broadway edit

On this corner:[45]

  • Originally the J. C. Graves house stood here; Graves bought the property in 1879 for $2,250. The house was sold and removed to 10th and Hope streets in 1888.
  • Rindge Block (1898, sold in 1899 for $190,000 to Frederick H. Rindge, the "King of Malibu"), 248–260 S. Broadway, commercial building; the top floors were removed and only the ground floor remains.

Southwest corner of Third and Broadway edit

Southeast corner of Third and Broadway edit


Spring Street edit

Gallery edit

West side of Spring south of Temple edit

Along the west side of Spring Street were the following buildings. Spring was realigned in the 1920s and now runs west of these sites, and the sites where these buildings once stood are now part of the full city block on which City Hall stands:

  • At the southwest corner of Spring and Temple was the Allen Block, between 1883 and 1894 location of Harris & Frank's London Clothing Co., with its landmark clock. The first J. W. Robinson's Boston Dry Goods store was also located in this block from 1883–1886 before moving to the Jones Block slightly south.[49] The Allen Block was replaced by the International Savings & Exchange Bank Building (10 floors, 1907, H. Alban Reaves, Renaissance Revival and Italianate, demolished 1954-5)[50]), southwest corner of Temple and Spring. A replica of its façade featured in the Harold Lloyd film Safety Last!, in a famous scene where Lloyd hangs off a clock near the building's roof. In its later years it housed city health offices and was called the "Old City Health Building".[50]
  • City of Paris department store, 203–7 N. Spring, west side between Temple and the Phillips Block. Spring Street now runs west of this site, which is part of City Hall.
  • Jones Block, pre-1890 numbering 71–73 and 77–79–101–103 N. Spring;[51] post-1890 numbering 171–173–175–177–179–201 N. Spring St.,[52] home to:
    • Los Angeles Herald steam printing plant until 1888[51]
    • Preuss & Pironi drugstore c.1885-6[53]
    • J. W. Robinson's Boston Dry Goods at #171–173 from 1886 to 1895. Robinson's would become a major department store chain across Southern California.
    • City of Paris department store at #177 during its final few years of operation, c.1895–1897.[54] even as


Phillips Block edit

At the northwest corner of Franklin and Spring stood two buildings in succession, the Rocha Adobe, then the Phillips Block. The site now lies under the current course of Spring Street, which was straightened, i.e. realigned to run further west, in the 1920s.

  • The Rocha Adobe (built 1820 as a residence for Antous Jose Rocha), 31–33 Spring Street (pre-1890 numbering), which from 1853–1884 served as the City Hall, and a building in the yard behind it served as the city and county jail.[55] It was demolished and in its place was built:
  • Phillips Block (four-and-a-half stories, opened in 1888, Burgess J. Reeve, French Renaissance Revival architecture), 25–37 N. Spring St. (pre-1890 numbering) at the northwest corner of Franklin St., backing up to New High Street to the west. Owned by Pomona Valley rancher Louis Phillips, it cost $260,000. There was 120 feet (37 m) of frontage on Spring Street, 218 feet (66 m) on Franklin, and 121 feet (37 m) along New High Street. This building was the second four-story structure in Los Angeles. It was sometimes called Phillips Block No. 1 (there was a "Phillips Block No. 2" at 135–145 Los Angeles Street, on the west side between Market and First streets).[56] In July 1888, Asher Hamburger opened the Peoples Store here, later known as Hamburger's; it became the largest retail store in the Western United States. In 1908 it moved to 8th and Broadway, and in 1923 Hamburger sold it to May Co. and it became May Company California.[57] The Phillips Block was demolished in the mid-1920s to make way for the realigned Spring Street and today's City Hall.
Franklin to First edit

At the southwest corner of Franklin Street from 1894–1905 was Harris & Frank's London Clothing Co. with its landmark clock.[58][59] Harris & Frank went on to become a chain of junior department stores for men's clothing across the region.

East side of Spring south of Temple edit

Temple Block edit

The triangular space where Spring and Main Streets came together at the south side of Temple Street was the site of Temple Block: actually a collection of different structures that occupied the block bounded by Spring, Main and Temple. The first or Old Temple Block built by Francisco (F. P. F.) Temple in 1856, was of adobe, two stories, facing north to Temple. This was incorporated into a later, expanded Temple Block in 1871, and then demolished. George P. McLain wrote that upon his arrival in the town in 1868, Temple Block had been the undisputed center of commerce and social life in the town. Even into the early 1880s, it was considered the city's most stately building. It housed many law offices, including those of Stephen M. White, Will D. Gould and Glassell, Chapman and Smith.[60] The block had a key role in the retail history of Los Angeles, as it was the first home to several upscale retailers who would become big names in the city: Desmond's (1870–1882)[61] and Jacoby Bros. (1879–1891).[62] It was also home to the Odd Fellows, the Fashion Saloon, the Temple and Workman Bank, Slotterbeck's gun shop, the Wells Fargo office. The northeast corner was home to Adolph Portugal's dry goods store (1874-1879?), Jacoby Bros. (1879–1891) and Cohn Bros. (1892–1897), in succession.[63][64]

In 1925-7 this block and other surrounding areas were demolished to make way for the current Los Angeles City Hall.

Along the south side of Temple Block was Market Street, a small street running between Spring and Main.

Clocktower Courthouse/Bullard Block edit

Taking up the small block immediately south of Temple Block between Market and Court streets, facing both Spring and Main streets, were two buildings in succession:

    • Clock Tower Courthouse: Just south of Temple Block across tiny Market Street was a building known by many names including Temple Courthouse, Temple Market, Temple Theater, Old County Courthouse, etc. Also built by John Temple, in 1858, originally as a market (ground floor) and theater (upper floor). Demolished 1890s.[65][66] Served as a market and retail as well as the County Courthouse 1861-1891 until the Red Sand Courthouse was finished.[67] Topped by a rectangular tower with a clock on all four sides.[68][69] The Clock Tower Courthouse was demolished in 1895 and replaced by:
    • Bullard Block, built in 1895-6, architects Morgan & Walls,[70] 154–160 N. Spring, NE corner of Court Street. Replaced the Clocktower Courthouse. Housed The Hub, a large department store for apparel. See also the photo below of "La Fiesta". Demolished 1925-6 to make way for current Los Angeles City Hall.[71]
Court south to First edit

  • Court Street, a small street running between Spring and Main. At 12-14-16 Court Street (pre-1890 numbering). 112–116 Court St. (post 1890 numbering) was the Tivoli Theatre which opened and closed in 1890, lasting less than a year. From 1891 through 1902, the venue was the (New) Vienna Buffet, a restaurant with live music where scandal occurred, and gatherings of gay men including what were then called "she boys".[72] Then from 1902–c.1910, the site was the Cineograph Theatre, a vaudeville venue. From 1918–1925 it was marked the Chinese Theatre with the Sun Jung Wah Co. performing Chinese plays.[73]
  • H. Jevne & Co. grocers were located at 38–40 (after 1890: 136-138) N. Spring (the older "Wilcox Block", also known as the Strelitz Block) from 1890-1896 before moving to the Wilcox Building when it opened at 2nd and Spring.[74][75]
  • Jacoby Bros. dry goods store was located at 128–134 N. Spring St. from 1891-1900, and added the Jevne premises in 1896 (thus encompassing all of 128 through 138 N. Spring). The store moved to Broadway south of 3rd St. in 1900,[76][77] another signal that the upscale shopping district was moving southwest away from this area at that time.

First and Spring edit

The image at above left looks south past the intersection of First and Spring sometime around 1900–1906. The spire of the Wilson Block is prominent on the left, as is the Nadeau Hotel on the right. In the foreground we can see the Los Angeles National Bank to the left and the Larronde Block to the right. From First to Second streets, Spring Street is still a busy shopping district, though Broadway is also just becoming popular for more upscale shopping. An electric streetcar heads to Griffin Avenue in Montecito Heights, on what would become Line 2 of the Los Angeles Railway. Today, this view would be of the 2009 LAPD Headquarters taking up the entire block on the left and on the right, the 1935 Los Angeles Times Building, and behind it, the 1948 Crawford Mirror Addition building.

Northwest corner of First and Spring edit

  • Larronde Block, built in 1882 at a cost of $10,000,[79] 211 W. 1st St., also 101–105 N. Spring, two stories,[78] offices and retail shops, including:
  • California State Building (completed 1931, opened 1932, architect John C. Austin, 1931, demolished 1976).[82]
  • The lot is currently vacant

Northeast corner of First and Spring edit

  • Los Angeles National Bank Building (1887-1906), demolished and replaced by the
  • Equitable Building (Equitable Savings Bank, 1906-1920s)[83]


First Street from Spring to Main edit

First Street east of Spring: Widney Block (i.e. Joseph Widney), built in 1883, along the north side. The main Olmsted & Wales bookstore was located in the block in the mid-1880s.

Southwest corner of First and Spring edit

  • Nadeau Block or Nadeau Hotel, built 1881-2, demolished 1932, designed by architects Kysor & Morgan, located at the southwest corner of Spring and First streets. It was the first four-story building in the city.[84]
  • This corner is now the site of the Los Angeles Times Building, opened 1935, part of the Times Mirror Square complex taking up the entire block between Spring, Broadway, First and Second streets, formerly the headquarters of the Los Angeles Times, currently vacant.

Southeast corner of First and Spring edit

Four buildings have stood here in succession:

  • The George S. Wilson homestead[85]
  • Wilson Block, sometimes called the city's first skyscraper.[86] Built 1886-8. Demolished around 1927.[87] The corner is now occupied by the Los Angeles Police Department Headquarters Building, completed in 2009.[88] The site is now home to:

Second and Spring edit

Northwest corner of Second and Spring edit

It was replaced by the 1948 Crawford Addition building, part of the Times Mirror Square complex, currently vacant.

Northeast corner of Second and Spring edit

  • Burdick Block, a.k.a. the Trust Building, 127 W. 2nd St., 1888 (Jasper Newton Preston), top stories added 1900 (John Parkinson). In 1910, refitted and rechristened the American Bank Building. Now site of the Los Angeles Police Department Headquarters which occupies the entire block from First to Second and from Spring to Main, completed 2009.[91][92]

Southwest corner of Second and Spring edit

Southeast corner of Second and Spring edit

  • Wilcox Building, built 1895-6, architects Pissis and Moore, five stories. All but the ground floor were removed in 1971 after damage from the 1971 Sylmar earthquake. It housed the larger of two branches of the H. Jevne & Co. gourmet grocery store, as well as the California Club until 1904, when the latter moved to Fourth and Hill streets. The Southwestern School of Law was on its top floors 1915–1924.[94]

200 block edit

On the west side:

  • #217 (pre-1890 numbering: #119), the Parisian Cloak and Suit Co., 1888–1892; then 221 S. Spring until 1899. One of the city's prominent retailers of women's clothing during that era.

Two theatres together called the Perry Buildings:

  • at #225–9 was the Lyceum Theatre, opened in 1888 as the Los Angeles Theatre (not to be confused with the Los Angeles Theatre on Broadway, still standing). From 1903-1911 this venue operated as the Orpheum Theatre. As the Orpheum Circuit was a chain and changed venues several times, the "Orpheum Theatre" in Los Angeles was first at the Grand Opera House venue on Main Street, then at this venue, and finally at the venue now known as the Palace Theatre on Broadway. [95]
  • at #231–5 was the Turnverein Hall (opened 1879), a theatre, renamed the Music Hall in 1894, Elks Hall in the early 1900s and Lyceum Hall in 1915. Demolished.[96]
  • #237–241, Hamilton Bros. block, Hamilton Bros. shoe store at #239.[97]
  • #243, Anheuser-Busch saloon, later known as The Anheuser Restaurant.[98]
  • #245–7, Woollacott Block[97]

On the east side:

  • Stowell Block at #224–228. In 1894 the Los Angeles Athletic Club was located here from 1893 until 1895.[99][100]
  • Workman Block at #230–234. 232–234 were home to Parmelee-Dohrmann from 1899 through 1906. It was the city's premier store for china, crystal and silver, as well as — at that time — selling appliances like stoves and refrigerators. In 1906, the store moved to the 5th and Broadway area.[101]

Third and Spring edit

Northwest corner of Third and Spring edit

  • Hammel and Denker Block (opened 1890, demolished 1899);[102] Henry Hammel and Andrew H. Denker were business partners in hotels and ranching. Thomas Douglas Stimson bought it in 1893, thus owning two buildings at this intersection: this one and the Stimson Block (see below). Leading dry goods retailer Frank, Grey & Co. opened here in 1890[103] and the store was later taken bought by, and turned into a branch of J. M. Hale.[104]
  • The Hammel & Denker Block was demolished and replaced by the Douglas Block in 1899 and still standing, now condos.[105]
  • To the west of the Douglas Block stood the Metropolitan Barber Shop, originally at 214 W. 3rd, in 1908 it moved to 215-9 W. 3rd. The Los Angeles Herald claimed it to be the largest barber shop in the world at that time and the most expensive ever constructed, with 30 chairs, chandeliers and mahogany furnishings.[106]

Northeast corner of Third and Spring edit

  • Stimson Block or Stimson Building, built 1893, architect Carroll H. Brown (also designed the Stimson House), demolished 1963. The city's tallest building when it opened. Built for lumber magnate Thomas Douglas Stimson. Now site of a parking lot.[107]

Southwest corner of Third and Spring edit

Southeast corner of Third and Spring edit

  • Site of the Lankershim Building (1896-7, Robert Brown Young, demolished 1959).[111] Now the site of the Ronald Reagan State Building.

Main Street edit

Main from Plaza south to Arcadia edit

Gallery (west side) edit

Gallery (east side) edit

Pico House edit

Pico House was a luxury hotel built in 1870 by Pío Pico, a successful businessman who was the last Mexican Governor of Alta California. With indoor plumbing, gas-lit chandeliers, a grand double staircase, lace curtains, and a French restaurant, the Italianate three-story, 33-room hotel was the most elegant hotel in Southern California. It had a total of nearly eighty rooms. The Pico House is listed as a California Historical Landmark (No. 159).

Masonic Hall edit

Masonic Hall at 416 N. Main St., was built in 1858 as Lodge 42 of the Free and Accepted Masons. The building was a painted brick structure with a symbolic "Masonic eye" below the parapet. In 1868, the Masons moved to larger quarters further south. Afterward, the building was used for many purposes, including a pawn shop and boarding house. It is the oldest building in Los Angeles south of the Plaza.

Merced Theater edit

The Merced Theater, completed in 1870, was built in an Italianate style and operated as a live theatre from 1871 to 1876. When the Woods Opera House opened nearby in 1876, the Merced ceased being the city's leading theatre.[112] Eventually, it gained an "unenviable reputation" because of "the disreputable dances staged there, and was finally closed by the authorities."[113]

Plaza House edit

This two-story building at 507–511 N. Main St. houses part of the LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes, which includes the Vickrey -Brunswig Building next door.[114] It is inscribed on its upper floor, and on 1890s maps it is marked, "Garnier Block" (not to be confused with the Garnier Block/Building on Los Angeles Street, one block away). Commissioned in 1883 by Philippe Garnier, once housed the "La Esperanza" bakery.[115]

Vickrey-Brunswig Building edit

This five-story brick building facing the Plaza at 501 N. Main St. houses LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes, which also occupies the Plaza House next door. It was built in 1888 and combines Italianate and Victorian architecture; the architect was Robert Brown Young.[116]

Site of Sentous Building edit

The Sentous Block or Sentous Building (19th c., demolished late 1950s) was located at 615-9 N Main St., with a back entrance on 616-620 North Spring St. (previously called Upper Main St., then San Fernando St.). Designed in 1886 by Burgess J. Reeve. Louis Sentous was a French pioneer in the early days of Los Angeles.[117] The San Fernando Theatre was located here. The site is now part of the El Pueblo parking lot.[118][119]


West side of Main from Republic south to Temple edit

This block is part of the site of the current Spring Street Courthouse. Buildings previously located here include:

Northwest corner of Temple and Main edit

On this corner stood four buildings in succession, the first two of which had a key role in the history of retail in Southern California, as it was home to a number of upscale retailers who would later grow to be big names in the city, and some, regional chains.

East side of Main from Arcadia south to Commercial edit

Baker Block edit

  • Baker Block, 334–348** N. Main at the southeast corner of Arcadia Street, opened late 1878, Second Empire architecture. The Baker Block was erected on the site of Don Abel Stearns' adobe mansion also called El Palacio, built in 1835-1838 and demolished in August and September of 1877;[131] Col. Robert S. Baker who had the Baker Block built, had married Stearns' widow, Arcadia Bandini de Stearns Baker. When built, it was called the "finest emporium of commerce south of San Francisco". The ground floor housed retail tenants such as Coulter's (1879–1884), George D. Rowan and Eugene Germain. The second floor was offices, and the third floor held the city's most upscale apartments. In 1919, Goodwill Industries bought the building and opened its store and operations. That is not to say though, that nobody fought to save the building. The Metropolitan Garden Association tried to move the Baker Block to another location for use as a public recreation center, while city councilman Arthur E. Briggs raised funds to convert the building into a city history museum. Nonetheless, in 1941, Goodwill sold the building to the city, which demolished it in 1942. Currently, the US 101 freeway, and the new, more southerly route of Arcadia Street, run over most of the site.[132]

South of Baker Block edit

South of the Baker Block stood buildings that are now the site of the northwestern-most part of the Los Angeles Mall:

  • Downey Building (not to be confused with the "Downey Block"), 324–330** N. Main, opened 1878, three stories, captured in a 1957 color photo standing alone as the last building on the block, demolished that year.[133] In the 1930s photo above, it is home to the Librería Española.
  • Grand Central Hotel, opened 1876, demolished.
  • Pico Building, 318-322** N. Main, opened 1867, the city’s first bank building, to house the new Hellman, Temple & Co. bank, then in 1871 the first location of Hellman’s own bank Farmers and Merchants Bank of Los Angeles, forerunner of Security Pacific National Bank. Later tenants included the Los Angeles County Bank (1874-1878), Charles H. Bush, jeweler and watchmaker (1878-1905), Louis E. Pearlson’s jewelry, loan and pawnshop (from 1905), as well as several barber shops and then a succession of owner-operated restaurants. The last occupants were a jewelers and the Mexican restaurant Arizona Cafe #2. Demolished 1957 to make way for a parking lot.[134]
  • Bella Union Hotel, later the St. Charles Hotel, 314–316** N. Main. Opened 1835, demolished 1940. Home to the Azteca Cafe in the 1930s.
  •  312 N. Main, two stories, home to a saloon in the mid-1890s
  •  306–308 N. Main, three stories, home to offices (at #308) and Bright's Cheap Store (#306) in 1882.[135]

  • Ducommun Block or Ducommun Building, 300-2-4** N. Main (200-2-4* N. Main). In the 1880s, home to the Ducommun hardware store, a furniture store and Prager Dry Goods. In the early 20th century, site of the Security Pacific National Bank.[136] Home to the Federal Theatre from c. 1913–1917.[137]

The Los Angeles Mall replaced these blocks; it is a small shopping center at the Los Angeles Civic Center, between Main and Los Angeles Streets on the north and south sides of Temple Street, connected by both a pedestrian bridge and a tunnel. It features Joseph Young's sculpture Triforium, with 1,500 blown-glass prisms synchronized to an electronic glass bell carillon. The mall opened in 1974 and includes a four-level parking garage with 2,400 spaces.

East side of Main from Commercial south to First edit

Currently, this site is the southernmost end of the Los Angeles Mall; Triforium is approximately on the site of Commercial Street.[138]

  • #240 Farmers and Merchants Bank was located here in 1896[138]
  • #236 Los Angeles Savings Bank was located here in 1896[138]
  • #226-8 Commercial Bank, renamed First National Bank in 1880, was located here in 1896.[139]First National Bank was located here in 1896.[138]
  • #214–222 (pre-1890 numbering: 74): New Lanfranco Block, built 1888, architects Curlett, Eisen & Cuthbertson[140] Site of the Old Lanfranco Block, demolished in 1888.[141][138]
  • #200–202 (NE corner of Requena) Southern Pacific ticket office as of 1888-9[142]
  •  #158–172: United States Hotel, southeast corner of Main and Requena St. (a.k.a. Market St.). Built 1861-2, demolished 1939. When built it was one of three hotels in the city, alongside the Bella Union and the Lafayette Hotel. It was ornate and Italianate in style, with a "profusion of brackets, corbel tables and oriel windows. On one end, a tower with a mansard roof lit by l'oeil de boeuf windows, poked up another story to signal the hotel's location to travelers.”[143] Today, location of the south plaza of the Los Angeles Mall.

West side of Main from Temple south to First edit

This block is, since 1928, the site of Los Angeles City Hall

  • Before 1926, Spring Street and Main Street met at Temple Street. From Temple, Main and Spring streets proceeded south; Spring at a more southwesterly angle. This created a narrow triangle with the triangle's northern point at Temple. Proceeding south along Main on the right-hand side one would pass the east side of Temple Block.
  • Junction with Market Street
  • Clock Tower Courthouse until demolished in 1895, or the Bullard Block built in its place after 1895.
  • Junction with Court Street
  • Illich's Restaurant and Oyster Parlors, 41–43 (pre-1890 numbering) 145–7 (post-1890) N. Main St.. Starting in the 1870s as a small chophouse, Illich's grew to be the largest restaurant in the city. Owner Jerry Illich was born in Dalmatia. He was connected with the Maison Doree restaurant at 4th and Main and later opened his own restaurant in 1896 on west 2nd Street between Broadway and Hill.[144]
  • Northwest corner of First and Main streets.

East side of Main from First to Second edit

  • Grand Opera House (1884, demolished 1936, capacity c. 1,300–1,800), 110 S. Main, in later years known as the Orpheum (Dec. 1894–Sep. 1903), Clune's Grand (c. 1912), The Grand (c. 1920s), and Teatro México (1930s). (The Orpheum Circuit (circuit meaning "chain") moved the Orpheum name to a different venue in 1903 at 227 S. Spring, and again in 1911 to what is now the Palace Theatre). This theater was the site of the first commercial showing of motion pictures in the city, when on July 6, 1896, several films from the Edison Studios were projected by Billy Porter, who would later become a famous silent film director. Appeared in the film in Busby Berkeley's Bright Lights (1st National/Warner Bros, 1935). Demolished in 1936 to make way for a parking lot.[145]
  • Forster Block, 122–128 S. Main St. (post-1890 numbering), 22–28 S. Main St. (per-1890 numbering), was a two-story building built in the early 1880s, five doors south of the Grand Opera House. It housed a coffee house of the Women's Christian Temperance Union at #26, heavily damaged in an 1885 fire, and a saddlery.[146]

Third from Spring to Main, Third and Main edit

On the corner of Third and Main:[147]

  • Wells Fargo and Co. offices, northwest corner of 3rd/Main as of 1894
  • The Thom Block, southeast corner of Mayo/Third and Main as of 1894
  • Schwartz Block and Jackson House, southwest corner of 3rd/Main as of 1894



Buildings along Los Angeles Street edit

 
2005 view. Brick buildings at center-left are at the south end of the Plaza. Los Angeles St. runs along the Plaza's right (east) side, south towards the eastern edge of Los Angeles Mall (bottom center). The circular cluster of trees and freeway onramp to the right of the Plaza is the Lugo Adobe site. Behind them is Union Station.

Northern end of Los Angeles Street edit

 
In 1888, Calle de los Negros had just been renamed, and here is marked Los Angeles Street (only the section from Arcadia to the Plaza). In that same year, but not yet reflected on the map, the Coronel Adobe would be removed to allow Los Angeles Street to continue straight north to the Plaza from Broad Place.

The Coronel Adobe was demolished in 1888 and 1896 Sanborn maps show that the Del Valle adobe had been removed, and Los Angeles Street had been extended[148] to form the eastern edge of the Plaza, thus passing in front of the Lugo Adobe. Calle de los Negros remained for a few more decades, behind a row of houses lining the east side of Los Angeles Street between Arcadia and Aliso streets. This was also the western edge of Old Chinatown from around the 1880s through 1930s. It reached eastward across Alameda St. to cover most of the area that is now Union Station. It proceeded one more block past the Plaza, with the buildings on the east side of Olvera Street forming its western edge, until terminating at Alameda Street.[149]

Eastern edge of Plaza edit

Since the early 1950s, Los Angeles Street has formed the eastern edge of the Plaza, but the buildings lining its eastern edge, including the Lugo Adobe, were removed.[150][151] The site is now Father Serra Park.

From the Plaza north to Alameda edit

 
Placita Dolores, where from 1888 until the 1950s, Los Angeles Street used to run a short block north of the Plaza to terminate at Alameda St.

When it was extended past the Plaza in 1888,[148] Los Angeles Street terminated one short block north of the Plaza at Alameda Street. Now, Los Angeles Street turns east at the north side of the Plaza to terminate at Alameda Street at a right angle, directly across from the Union Station complex. What was the short block of Los Angeles Street north of the Plaza is now part of Placita Dolores, a small open plaza which surrounds a statue of Mexican charro entertainer Antonio Aguilar on horseback.[152]

Calle de los Negros edit

Until the late 19th century, Los Angeles Street did not form the east side of the Plaza; it ran south only from Broad Place at the intersection of Arcadia Street. Here, the Coronel Adobe blocked the path north one block to the Plaza, but just slightly to the right (east) of the path of Los Angeles Street was Calle de los Negros (Spanish-language name; marked on post-1847 maps as Negro Alley or Nigger Alley), a narrow, one-block north–south street likely named after darker-skinned Mexican afromestizo and/or mulatto residents during the Spanish colonial era.[153][154]. At the north end of Calle de los Negros stood the Del Valle adobe (also known as the Matthias or Matteo Sabichi house),[155][156] at the southern edge of which one could turn left and enter the plaza at its southeast corner. Calle de los Negros was famous for its saloons and violence in the early days of the town, and by the 1880s was considered part of Chinatown, lined with Chinese and Chinese American residences, businesses and gambling dens.[157][158]

The neglected dirt alley was already associated with vice by the early 1850s, when a bordello and its owner both known as La Prietita (the dark-skinned lady) were active here. Its other businesses included malodorous livery stables, a pawn shop, a saloon, a theater and a connected restaurant. Historian James Miller Guinn wrote in 1896, "in the flush days of gold mining, from 1850 to 1856, it was the wickedest street on earth...In length it did not exceed 500 feet, but in wickedness, it was unlimited. On either side it was lined with saloons, gambling hells, dance houses and disreputable dives. It was a cosmopolitan street. Representatives of different races and many nations frequented it. Here the ignoble red man, crazed with aguardiente, fought his battles, the swarthy Sonorian plied his stealthy dagger, and the click of the revolver mingled with the clink of gold at the gaming table when some chivalric American felt that his word of “honah” had been impugned."[153]

By 1871, the alley was notorious as a "racially, spatially, and morally disorderly place", according to historian César López. It was here that a growing number of Chinese immigrant railroad laborers settled after the completion of the transcontinental railroad in 1869. There, William Estrada notes, the "Chinese of Los Angeles came to fill an important sector of the economy as entrepreneurs. Some became proprietors and employees of small hand laundries and restaurants; some were farmers and wholesale produce peddlers; others ran gambling establishments; and some occupied other areas left vacant by the absence of workers in the gold rush migration to California." The Chinese population increased from 14 in 1860 to almost 200 by 1870. Guinn stated that the alley stayed "wicked" through and after its transition to the city's Old Chinatown.[153]

Calle de los Negros was reconfigured in 1888 when Los Angeles Street was extended north, with a small, shallow row of houses remaining between the new section of Los Angeles street's eastern edge and the western edge of the new, shortened alley.[148][159] The site of Calle de los Negros is now the Pueblo parking lot and a cloverleaf-style entrance to the US 101 freeway.

Coronel Adobe edit

The Coronel Adobe was built in 1840 by Ygnacio Coronel as a family home. It stood at the northwest corner of Arcadia Street and Calle de los Negros; Los Angeles Street terminated at its southern end. The area gradually became an area for gambling and saloons, and upper-class families left to live elsewhere. Around 1849, they sold the house to a "sporting fraternity", which operated a popular 24-hour gambling establishment with games including monte, faro, and poker; up to $200,000 in gold could be seen on the tables at a time. Arguments ensued and murders were frequent. The building later became a dance hall where "lewd women" were employed, aimed at the Mexican-American population. After that, still in the 1850s, it became a grocery and dry goods store (Corbett & Barker), then a storage house for iron and hard lumber for Harris Newmark Co. It was then leased to a Chinese immigrant. In 1871, it was the site of the Chinese massacre of 1871. The Adobe was torn down in 1888 in order to extend Los Angeles Street north past the Plaza.[148]

Garnier Building edit

At 419 N. Los Angeles Street, at the northwest corner of Arcadia, is the Garnier Building, built in 1890, part of the Los Angeles' original Chinatown. The southern portion of the building was demolished in the 1950s to make way for the Hollywood Freeway. The Chinese American Museum is now located in the Garnier Building. It should not be confused with another Garnier Block/Building on Main St. a block away now commonly known as Plaza House.


Los Angeles Street was lined with mostly commercial buildings; the southeast end of the business district around Los Angeles and 3rd streets was the Wholesale District. Only a few buildings were notable:

West side south of Arcadia edit

  • Arcadia Block: southwest corner of Arcadia Street. Built 1858, razed in 1927.[160]
  • Hellman Block: in 1870, banker and University of Southern California founder Isaias W. Hellman erected the Hellman Block at the northwest corner of Los Angeles and Commercial streets.[161] This is one of several Hellman Blocks or Hellman Buildings in the city.

East side south of Aliso edit

  • Bell Block was at the southeast corner of Aliso Street. It was General John C. Fremont's headquarters and the first Los Angeles City Hall. Captain Alexander Bell and Mellus lived here (Francis Mellus married a niece of Mrs. Bell's). It was taken over by General Fremont for his headquarters and thus became the state capital for the short period of his acting as governor. The Los Angeles City organization was formed in this building in 1850.[162]
  • Mellus Row, adjacent to Bell Block on the south
  • Hellman, Haas & Co. grocers (a partnership of Abraham Haas and Herman W. Hellman), the predecessors of Smart & Final. Located in the 1880s and 1890s at 218-224 (pre-1890 numbering, post-1890 numbering: 318-324) N. Los Angeles St., adjacent to Mellus Row on the south.[163] Not to be confused with the Haas Building.
  • Between Aliso and Temple streets on the east side of Los Angeles St. at #300 is the Federal Building, opened in 1965-6, architect Welton Becket.[164] Temple was extended east of Main Street between Aliso Street and a street that was known as both Requena and Market street. Adjacent and to its east is the Edward R. Roybal Federal Building and United States Courthouse, completed in 1992.
  • Between Temple and First streets is Parker Center, the Los Angeles Police Department headquarters from 1955–2009
  • At the southeast corner of First Street, Little Tokyo begins. At this corner was the Tomio Department Store, and two more Japanese-American department stores, the Asia Company and Hori Brothers were located east of it on 1st Street during the 1920s.[165] Now the site of Weller Court and the DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Los Angeles Downtown, formerly the New Otani Hotel.


Transportation edit

Horsecars (1874–1897) edit

Cable cars (1885–1902) edit

Cable car street railways in Los Angeles first began operating up Bunker Hill in 1885, with a total of three companies operating in the period through 1902,[168] when the lines were electrified and electric streetcars were introduced largely following the cable car routes. There were roughly 25 miles of routes, connecting 1st and Main in what was then the Los Angeles Central Business District as far as the communities known today as Lincoln Heights, Echo Park/Filipinotown, and the Pico-Union district.

Electric streetcar systems (1887–1963) edit

Electrically-powered streetcar systems were numerous starting with the Los Angeles Electric Railway in 1887, but were over time consolidated into two large networks:

  • In 1901, Henry Huntington bought various electric streetcar companies operating mostly within the City of Los Angeles (and not in the San Fernando Valley, Harbor area or Westside) and combined them into the Los Angeles Railway with its "yellow cars".
  • In 1902, Huntington and banker Isaias W. Hellman established the Pacific Electric Railway, which would acquire other railways, providing interurban service to surrounding towns in what is now Greater Los Angeles (Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino and Riverside counties) and new suburban developments. The Pacific Electric Building, with station underneath, was opened in 1905 at 6th and Main Street.

Funiculars edit

Angel's Flight and Court Flight were funicular railways operating from Broadway up Bunker Hill.

Railroad depots edit

Landmarks shown on schematic map edit

This is a map of the former and current buildings located in the Victorian business district of Los Angeles around 1890-1905.

Abbreviations and notes

  • CH = Concert Hall
  • "Female boarding" was a euphemism for small rooms, "cribs", used by prostitutes.[169]
  • †(Dagger) indicates a street that no longer exists

To be read like a map:

For the area to the north, see Los Angeles Plaza Historic District
Temperance Temple (1888–1950s)
Now L.A. County Heating
and Refrigeration Plant.

F
O
R
T

S
T.
/

B
R
O
A
D
W
A
Y
     
B
U
E
N
A
V
I
S
T
A

S
T.
     
N
E
W

H
I
G
H

S
T
R
E
E
T
 

-Lafayette Hotel/
Cosmopolitan Hotel/
St. Elmo Hotel (1850s–?)
-1st Downey Block (?–1871)
2nd Downey Block, (1871–)
later Post Office and Courthouse (1910-1937).
Now Spring Street Courthouse (1940- ).


M
A
I
N

S
T
R
E
E
T

Now US 101
Stearns House (1835-1877)/
BAKER BLOCK (1875–1942)/
—Downey Bldg. (1878-1957)
Grand Central Hotel (1876–?)
—Pico Bldg./ Farmers & Merchants Bank (1867–1957)
Bella Union/St. Charles Hotel (1835–1940)
—Ducommun Block/Security Pacific Bank
Now Los Angeles Mall.

Now US-101 freeway.
Arcadia Block (1858–1927)/




Hellman Block (1870–?)
Now Los Angeles Mall


L
O
S

A
N
G
E
L
E
S

S
T
R
E
E
T
Now US 101
Bell Block
—Mellus Row
(Fremont HQ)
—Hellman, Haas & Co.

Now Federal Building (1965, Welton Becket)

COMMERCIAL ST. COMMERCIAL
Now Hall of Justice (1925)
(N side of Temple
from Broadway to Spring)

—Farmers and Merchants Bank
—L.A. Savings Bank
—Commercial Bank/First National Bank[170]
—New Lanfranco Block (1888)

Now Los Angeles Mall

TEMPLE TEMPLE TEMPLE

Hall of Records (1962)

High School (1873-1887)/
"Red Sandstone" Courthouse (1891-1936)
Now L.A. County Courthouse (1972)
Jones Block
(J. W. Robinson's 1886–1895)
Now part of City Hall site.
S
P
R
I
N
G

S
T
R
E
E
T

Temple
Block
(1858/ 1871–1927)

REQUENA ST. (MARKET)
United States Hotel (1861–1939) Now City Hall East (1972) Parker Center (former LAPD HQ)
MARKET ST.
Court Flight Funicular (1905–1943) PHILLIPS BLOCK (1887–1912), home to Hamburger's Peoples Store (1888–1908)

Clock Tower Courthouse
(1858-1895)
Bullard Block
(1895-1925)/
Now City Hall

Hall of Records (1911-1973) COURT ST. Now Los Angeles Mall. (entire block)
FRANKLIN ST.

—#128–138 Jacoby Bros. DS (1879–1900)
Los Angeles
National Bank
/
Equitable Building (1906-1920s)/
Now Circle Park at City Hall.

Hall of the Amigos del País (1844-?)/
McDonald Block
—#121–127 Jacoby Bros. DS (1879–1900)
Lichtenberger Block
Now Circle Park at City Hall.

German-American
Savings Bank
(1894–1906)


Tajo Building (1896–mid-20th c.)
Now Law Library.

Los Angeles Times Building
(#3, 1912-1938)
Now vacant lot.

Larronde Block (1892-c.1930)/
Calif. State Bldg. (1931–1976)
Now vacant lot.

FIRST ST. FIRST ST. FIRST ST. FIRST ST. FIRST ST.
 #107: Old Junípero Serra
State Office Bldg.
(1958–2006)[171]

U.S. Courthouse
("First Street Courthouse")

(entire block, 2016)


 #127: Mason Opera House (1902-1956)[172]
Culver Block/
Now Times Mirror Square
Pereira building
(1973)
.

Nadeau Hotel (1882–1932)/
Now Times Mirror Square
Kaufmann building
(1935)
.

Wilson Block
(1886–?)
Now LAPD HQ
Natick House
(1883–1950 JP)
Now LAPD HQ

 

 #110: Grand Opera House/
Orpheum Theatre #1
[173]

 

Now Caltrans
(entire block)

Doubletree Hotel
(ex-New Otani)
(1977)
Weller Court mall
 #128-130: Southwest Building
(1903–?;
Chamber of Commerce;
The Herald)
—Louis Roeder Block #1
—Bryson Block
—Mueller's Block
Now LAPD HQ
(built 2009, entire block)

 #141–145: Frost Bldg./
Haig M. Prince Bldg.[174]
Later 7-story
parking garage
(1948–1997)[171]
Now park at U.S. Courthouse.

 #138: Hellman Bldg.
(1897-1959)
Now 221 W. 2nd
parking garage.

Bryson-Bonebrake
Block
(1888)
Now Times Mirror Square
Crawford Bldg. (1948– )

—Corfu Hotel

Burdick Block
(1888-?)
a.k.a. American Bank Bldg.
Now LAPD HQ

H. T. Newell Block (as of 1910, shops and offices)
Now LAPD HQ
SECOND ST. SECOND ST. SECOND ST. SECOND ST. SECOND ST.
Broadway Media Center
—American Natl./California Bank (1878-1911)/ 2nd Calif. Bank Bldg. (1911–?)
—YMCA block (1889-1911)/
Merchants Trust Co. Bldg. (1910–?)

Hollenbeck Hotel

Nolan, Smith & Bridge Bldg. (#200–4)

Now Historic Broadway station under construction.
222 W. 3rd (30-story tower, planned)[175]

Wilcox Building
(1895-6)
Higgins Bldg. (1910) Little Tokyo district
—#213–223 Potomac Block
(1890–1953;
from 1893–1905 Ville de Paris DS;
from 1905–1917 Coulter's DS)
–#237-241 J. W. Robinson's Boston Dry Goods (1895–1915)
Now 213 S. Spring parking garage.

–#206–10 Gordon Bldg. (New King Hotel)
—#212–6 Crocker Bldg. (Victor Clothing 1926–1964)
—#218–224 Copp Bldg. (Pig 'n Whistle)
—#226–8 City Hall (1888-1928)
—#240–6 Hoss Bldg. (Natatorium, Victor Clothing 1964–2001)

Now 213 S. Spring
parking garage.


—#227: 1st Los Angeles Theatre/
2nd Orpheum Theatre/
Lyceum Theatre
(1888–1941)[176]
—#229 Turnverein (Lyceum) Hall (1894-1950s)

Douglas Building (1897)
The Downtown Independent cinema ex-Cathedral of Saint Vibiana (1876)
—#253: Pan American Lofts (prev. Irvine Byrne Block, 1895) Rindge Bldg. (c.1901) Metropolitan Barber Shop[177] Stimson Bldg. (1893–1963) Now misc. retail Now parking garage.
THIRD ST. THIRD ST. THIRD ST. THIRD ST. THIRD ST.
Hotel Ramona (?-1903)/[178]
Million Dollar Theatre (1917- )
Bradbury Building (1893) Washington Bldg. (1912) Lankershim Bldg.
(1896-7, Robert Brown Young, demolished 1959)
Now Reagan Bldg.
Wesley Roberts Bldg.
Now Reagan Bldg.
Now parking lot.
For the area to the south, see Historic Core


See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Early Los Angeles Historical Buildings (1800s)", Water and Power Associates
  2. ^ "Los Angeles Fifty Years Ago: The Re-Creation of a Vanished City". Los Angeles Times. November 15, 1931. p. 90. from the original on June 7, 2019. Retrieved May 13, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ "Fact and Comment". The Los Angeles Times. January 16, 1910. from the original on October 31, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^ a b c search for the location, Google Maps, retrieved October 20, 2020
  5. ^ "Believes in North End". Los Angeles Times. January 16, 1910. p. 65.
  6. ^ "Map of Temple Street Cable Railway, via Metro (Los Angeles County)".
  7. ^ "Temple Street Cable Railway (1886)". www.erha.org.
  8. ^ "New Buildings: A Splendid Showing for the Future Los Angeles". Los Angeles Times. May 13, 1888. p. 3.
  9. ^ "Water and Power Associates".
  10. ^ "Los Angeles County Central Heating and Refrigeration Plant". Calisphere.
  11. ^ "Water and Power Associates". waterandpower.org.
  12. ^ "Water and Power Associates". waterandpower.org. Retrieved May 22, 2021.
  13. ^ "PCAD - Tajo Building, Downtown, Los Angeles, CA". pcad.lib.washington.edu.
  14. ^ "Water and Power Associates".
  15. ^ "BEgins New Era of Achievement: Chamber of Commerce Welcomes Public to Magnificent Home, with Brilliant Reception — Annual Reports Show Splendid Progress". The Los Angeles Times. February 13, 1904. p. 13. Retrieved November 10, 2020.
  16. ^ "PCAD - Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce Building, Downtown, Los Angeles, CA". pcad.lib.washington.edu.
  17. ^ "Junipero Serra State Office Building #1", Pacific Coast Architecture Database
  18. ^ a b "New Los Angeles US Courthouse". www.gsa.gov.
  19. ^ "Mason Theatre in Los Angeles, CA - Cinema Treasures". cinematreasures.org.
  20. ^ "2nd Street and Broadway" Huntington Digital Library
  21. ^ Marques Vickers, Reinventing Broadway, p.52
  22. ^ "Water and Power Associates".
  23. ^ "Broadway to the Front". Los Angeles Evening Express. August 7, 1891. p. 8.
  24. ^ a b "Advertisement for City of Paris". Los Angeles Times. August 6, 1895. p. 10.
  25. ^ "Merchants Trust Company Building, ca.1910". Calisphere.
  26. ^ "Great Store for Coulter". Los Angeles Times. August 2, 1904. p. 13.
  27. ^ Hill, 224-6-8 S. (November 2, 1906). "Coulter's location 1906 225–229 S. Broadway". The Los Angeles Times. p. 19.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  28. ^ "Ad for Coulter's new store opening". Los Angeles Times. May 31, 1905.
  29. ^ a b "Potomac Block :: Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection". tessa.lapl.org.
  30. ^ "Potomac Block. The Work of Building Up a Great City". Los Angeles Herald. July 18, 1890.
  31. ^ "Potomac Block & Bicknell Block – Romanesque Revival Downtown – PocketSights". pocketsights.com.
  32. ^ "Western Shoe Company – Western Department Store – 227 S Broadway". Los Angeles Evening Express. May 26, 1922. p. 14. Retrieved May 22, 2021.
  33. ^ "The Boston Dry Goods Store". Los Angeles Times. January 1, 1895. p. 29. Retrieved May 3, 2019.
  34. ^ "The New Boston Store:Los Angeles' Finest Commercial Structure Is Complete". Los Angeles Herald. October 4, 1895. p. 5.
  35. ^ "31 Dec 1898, 4 – Los Angeles Times at Newspapers.com". Newspapers.com.
  36. ^ a b "19 Jun 1904, 12 – Los Angeles Times at Newspapers.com". Newspapers.com.
  37. ^ Sanborn Map of Los Angeles: 1894, vol. 1, plate 8, via Library of Congress.
  38. ^ Sanborn Map of Los Angeles: 1906, vol. 2, plate 131, via Library of Congress.
  39. ^ a b Sanborn Maps of Los Angeles: 1894, vol. 1, plate 8; 1906, vol. 2, plate 131.
  40. ^ "Pig 'n Whistle opens 224 S. Broadway". The Los Angeles Times. December 10, 1908. p. 22 – via newspapers.com.
  41. ^ "CityDig: This Was L.A.'s City Hall for 39 Years". Los Angeles Magazine. May 8, 2014. Retrieved May 16, 2019.
  42. ^ Maese, Kathryn. "The Victor No Longer". Los Angeles Downtown News - The Voice of Downtown Los Angeles. Retrieved August 11, 2020.
  43. ^ "I Magnin moves from Spring to Broadway 1". Los Angeles Times. December 31, 1898. p. 4 – via newspapers.com.
  44. ^ Flynn, Kathleen Nye. "Mixing the Old With the New". Los Angeles Downtown News – The Voice of Downtown Los Angeles. Retrieved May 22, 2021.
  45. ^ "Business Property Deal: Nearly Two Hundred Thousand Dollars for a Good Corner". March 22, 1899.
  46. ^ "22 Sep 1989, 19 - The Los Angeles Times at Newspapers.com". Newspapers.com. Retrieved October 13, 2018.
  47. ^ a b "Bradbury Building | Los Angeles Conservancy". www.laconservancy.org.
  48. ^ "The Opening of North Broadway". Los Angeles Times. October 9, 1895. p. 6.
  49. ^ "Nine Acres Space in Robinson Store". Los Angeles Evening Express. May 30, 1914.
  50. ^ a b "Wreckers Put Hammer to Old Health Building". Los Angeles Times. December 30, 1954.
  51. ^ a b Sanborn 1888 map of Los Angeles, plate 18, via Los Angeles Public Library
  52. ^ Sanborn 1894 map of Los Angeles, plate 10 (east), via Library of Congress
  53. ^ "Beware of Counterfeits". The Los Angeles Times. April 29, 1885. p. 1. Retrieved November 12, 2020.
  54. ^ "City of Paris 1895 177 N Spring". Los Angeles Times. September 11, 1895. p. 4 – via newspapers.com.
  55. ^ "Rocha Adobe", Water and Power Associates
  56. ^ Stern, Norton B. "Louis Phillips of the Pomona Valley". Historical Society of Southern California: 184.
  57. ^ "Architect B. J. Reeve". San Francisco Examiner. August 14, 1887. p. 19. Retrieved May 13, 2019.
  58. ^ "Advertisement by London Clothing Co., Harris & Frank, proprietors". Los Angeles Herald. February 17, 1894. Retrieved May 6, 2019.
  59. ^ Block 10 as sown on Sanborn Fire Map, 1894
  60. ^ Israel, S. A. (January 3, 1926). "Historic Temple Block Surrenders to Progress after Seventy Years". Los Angeles Times. p. 71.
  61. ^ a b "Desmond's in Seventy-Sixth Year", Los Angeles Times, 21 Oct 1937, Page 8
  62. ^ "Concentrating: The Growth of a Business and a Great Bazaar: A Grand Rally of Wholesale and Retail: Outposts and Pickets Under One Large Roof: The Jacoby Bros. Occupy Their New and Magnificent Building and Receive the Congratulations of Their Many Friends". Los Angeles Times. November 14, 1891. p. 3.
  63. ^ Ad for Cohn Bros., [Los Angeles Herald]] May 14, 1892, p. 8
  64. ^ Ad for Cohn Bros. in Los Angeles Times, May 15, 1897
  65. ^ "Buildings and Lands. The July Permits Break the Record. The Remarkable Gains over Last Year's List". Los Angeles Express. August 3, 1895. p. 5.
  66. ^ "Bullard Block", Los Angeles Water & Power
  67. ^ https://waterandpower.org/museum/Early_LA_Buildings%20(1800s)_Page_1.html#Temple_Blo

victorian, downtown, angeles, this, article, about, area, which, formed, central, business, district, during, 1880s, 1890s, neighborhoods, famous, victorian, residences, angelino, heights, angeles, bunker, hill, angeles, late, victorian, downtown, angeles, 188. This article is about the area which formed the central business district during the 1880s and 1890s For the neighborhoods famous for Victorian residences see Angelino Heights Los Angeles and Bunker Hill Los Angeles The late Victorian era Downtown of Los Angeles in 1880 was centered at the southern end of the Los Angeles Plaza area and over the next two decades it extended south and west along Main Street Spring Street and Broadway towards Third Street Most of the 19th century buildings no longer exist surviving only in the Plaza area or south of Second Street The rest were demolished to make way for the Civic Center district with City Hall numerous courthouses and other municipal county state and federal buildings and Times Mirror Square 1 2 This article covers that area between the Plaza 3rd St Los Angeles St and Broadway during the period 1880 through the period of demolition 1920s 1950s 1894 drawing by Bruce Wellington Pierce portion from Third Street bottom left to Plaza top right The Red Sandstone Courthouse with its clocktower is prominent at center At upper right is Los Angeles High School on Fort Moore Hill At the time 1880 1900s the area was referred to as the business center business section or business district By 1910 it was referred to as the North End of the business district which by then had expanded south to what is today called the Historic Core along Broadway Spring and Main roughly from 3rd to 9th streets 3 Contents 1 Location 2 Map 3 Overview of the area 4 Buildings 4 1 Broadway 4 2 Temple and Broadway 4 2 1 Northwest corner of Temple and Broadway 4 2 2 Southeast corner of Temple and Broadway Pound Cake Hill west side of New High St 4 2 2 1 Realignment of Spring Street 1925 4 2 3 Southwest corner of Temple and Broadway 4 3 First and Broadway 4 3 1 Northeast corner of First and Broadway 4 3 2 Northwest corner of First and Broadway 4 3 3 Southeast corner of First and Broadway and east side of 100 block 4 3 4 Southwest corner of First and Broadway 4 4 Second and Broadway 4 4 1 Northeast corner of Second and Broadway 4 4 2 Southwest corner of Second and Broadway and the west side of the 200 block 4 4 2 1 Coulter s complex Potomac and Bicknell blocks 4 4 2 1 1 Potomac Block 4 4 2 1 2 Bicknell Block 4 4 2 2 Further south on Broadway 4 4 3 Southeast corner and east side of Broadway from 2nd to 3rd 4 5 Third and Broadway 4 5 1 Northwest corner of Third and Broadway 4 5 2 Northeast corner of Third and Broadway 4 5 3 Southwest corner of Third and Broadway 4 5 4 Southeast corner of Third and Broadway 4 6 Spring Street 4 7 Gallery 4 8 West side of Spring south of Temple 4 8 1 Phillips Block 4 8 2 Franklin to First 4 9 East side of Spring south of Temple 4 9 1 Temple Block 4 9 2 Clocktower Courthouse Bullard Block 4 9 3 Court south to First 4 10 First and Spring 4 10 1 Northwest corner of First and Spring 4 10 2 Northeast corner of First and Spring 4 10 3 First Street from Spring to Main 4 10 4 Southwest corner of First and Spring 4 10 5 Southeast corner of First and Spring 4 11 Second and Spring 4 11 1 Northwest corner of Second and Spring 4 11 2 Northeast corner of Second and Spring 4 11 3 Southwest corner of Second and Spring 4 11 4 Southeast corner of Second and Spring 4 12 200 block 4 13 Third and Spring 4 13 1 Northwest corner of Third and Spring 4 13 2 Northeast corner of Third and Spring 4 13 3 Southwest corner of Third and Spring 4 13 4 Southeast corner of Third and Spring 4 14 Main Street 4 15 Main from Plaza south to Arcadia 4 15 1 Gallery west side 4 15 2 Gallery east side 4 15 3 Pico House 4 15 4 Masonic Hall 4 15 5 Merced Theater 4 15 6 Plaza House 4 15 7 Vickrey Brunswig Building 4 15 8 Site of Sentous Building 4 16 West side of Main from Republic south to Temple 4 16 1 Northwest corner of Temple and Main 4 17 East side of Main from Arcadia south to Commercial 4 17 1 Baker Block 4 17 2 South of Baker Block 4 18 East side of Main from Commercial south to First 4 19 West side of Main from Temple south to First 4 20 East side of Main from First to Second 4 21 Third from Spring to Main Third and Main 4 22 Buildings along Los Angeles Street 4 23 Northern end of Los Angeles Street 4 23 1 Eastern edge of Plaza 4 23 2 From the Plaza north to Alameda 4 23 3 Calle de los Negros 4 23 4 Coronel Adobe 4 23 5 Garnier Building 4 24 West side south of Arcadia 4 25 East side south of Aliso 5 Transportation 5 1 Horsecars 1874 1897 5 2 Cable cars 1885 1902 5 3 Electric streetcar systems 1887 1963 5 4 Funiculars 5 5 Railroad depots 6 Landmarks shown on schematic map 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksLocation edit nbsp Baist s 1910 map of the area In blue superimposed on the map later changes in Spring and Temple streets the current path of US 101 and most of the largest buildings standing today By the mid 1890s First and Spring was the center of the business district and the Bradbury Building opened in 1893 at Third and Broadway and still standing today 4 By 1910 the area north of Fourth Street was considered the North End of the business district and there were already concerns about its deterioration as the center of commerce moved to what is now known as the Historic Core from Third to Ninth streets 5 Map editThe map shows the street grid in 1910 and shows in blue three important road alignment changes that came in the 1920s 1950s Spring Street realignment north of First Street to run parallel to Main Street Temple Street extension eastward from Main Street Creation of the US 101 Freeway and its service roads called Arcadia and Aliso streets but not exactly in the positions of the old Arcadia and Aliso streetsOverview of the area edit nbsp William Henry Jackson panoramic photo of Los Angeles business district c 1900 1902 The view stretches from the Bullard Block just south of Temple and Spring left bottom to the Burdick Block at 2nd and Spring right Portions of Main Street and Los Angeles Street are visible behind The vast majority of buildings in view have been demolished Today about half of the area in view is City Hall and its grounds and most of the rest of the area is home to other buildings in the Civic Center district Buildings editBroadway edit See also Broadway Los Angeles nbsp 1905 view south on Broadway from north of Temple Street The Times Mirror printing house in foreground marked 110 N Broadway now site of the Hall of Justice Towers of the 1888 City Hall on the 200 block of S Broadway in the distance Fort Moore Hill now leveled at right nbsp c 1893 1900 looking east along Third St from Olive St on Bunker Hill 3 buildings stand out from left to right the 1888 City Hall Broadway between 2nd 3rd the Stimson Block 3rd amp Spring and the Bradbury Building 3rd amp Broadway Temple and Broadway edit Cable cars of the Temple Street Cable Railway ran along Temple Street starting in 1886 and were replaced with Pacific Electric streetcars in 1902 6 7 Northwest corner of Temple and Broadway edit nbsp The Women s Christian Temperance Union Temple and a Temple Street Cable Railway car 1890The three story brick Women s Christian Temperance Union building was erected in 1888 for 45 000 8 Also known as the Temperance Temple it has been demolished 9 and was replaced in 1957 by the Los Angeles County Central Heating and Refrigeration Plant 10 Southeast corner of Temple and Broadway Pound Cake Hill west side of New High St edit nbsp Los Angeles High Schoolon Pound Cake Hill 1870s nbsp Red Stone Courthouse and Post Office 1891 1936 nbsp Hall of Records adjacent to Courthouse on the south 1911 1973 This location was at the time known as Pound Cake Hill The buildings located here faced New High Street to their east and Broadway to their west They were as follows 11 Los Angeles High School whose original location 1873 1887 was between New High on the west and Broadway on the east south of Temple Street It was moved to California and Sand streets and in 1890 a new facility was built on Fort Moore Hill immediately north of where Broadway today crosses the Hollywood Freeway The Pound Cake Hill school was demolished and replaced by First the Red Stone Courthouse or Red Sandstone Courthouse which took over the function of courthouse from the Clocktower Courthouse also called the Temple Courthouse It was damaged beyond repair by Long Beach earthquake of 1933 and was torn down in 1936 The Los Angeles County Hall of Records was built next to south of the Red Sandstone Courthouse in 1911 After the 1971 San Fernando earthquake it was determined to be unsafe and it was demolished in 1973 A new Hall of Records was built and opened in 1962 one block west on the south side of Temple between Broadway and Hill Currently on the site are Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center Los Angeles County Grand Jury A portion of Grand Park which stretches mid block between Temple and First from City Hall at Spring Street to the Music Center at Grand Avenue Realignment of Spring Street 1925 edit The Poundcake Hill buildings originally backed up to Broadway to their west and faced New High Street to their east New High Street see Sanborn map above was a north south street that ran parallel to Broadway and to Spring Street to its east As part of the construction of City Hall in the early 1920s New High Street was removed south of Temple and Spring Street was realigned more towards a north south orientation parallel with Broadway instead of running more northeasterly and meeting Main Street at Temple Street As a result the Poundcake Hill buildings faced the newly aligned Spring Street until they were demolished Southwest corner of Temple and Broadway edit The second location of the Los Angeles County Hall of Records opened 1962 Adjacent to the south mid block is a portion of Grand Park First and Broadway edit nbsp Looking south along Broadway from First Street 1904 5 At right from left to right C H Frost Building 145 141 3 the turreted Roanoke Bldg 137 9 Newell amp Gammon Bldg 131 5 Mason Opera House 125 9 At left Chamber of Commerce 128 1888 City Hall 228 238 Northeast corner of First and Broadway edit nbsp 1886 Los Angeles Times BuildingLos Angeles Times 1886 building This building was razed after a 1910 bombing and a new headquarters was opened on this site in 1912 The newspaper later moved further south on Spring Street to the Los Angeles Times building now part of Times Mirror Square occupying the entire block between Broadway Spring First and Second streets 12 Northwest corner of First and Broadway edit Site of the Tajo Building 1896 mid 20th c 13 Now the location of the Los Angeles County Law Library 4 Southeast corner of First and Broadway and east side of 100 block edit nbsp 1973 Pereira Addition building Times Mirror Square nbsp 1900s view of Chamber of Commerce 128 S Broadway nbsp Postcard c 1910 of Chamber of Commerce 128 S BroadwaySite of the Culver Block retail and office building 14 Now the site of the Times Mirror Square 1973 Pereira Addition so called because it was designed by William Pereira South of the Culver Block was the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce building 128 130 S Broadway opened February 12 1904 15 a landmark at the time featured on postcards and in books 6 stories 4 floors Ground floor offices included those of the Los Angeles Herald and Consolidated Bank 16 Southwest corner of First and Broadway edit nbsp Mason Opera House or Mason Theatre nbsp C H Frost Building at 145 S Broadway c 1904 5 To its right the turreted Roanoke Bldg 137 9 Newell amp Gammon Bldg 131 5 and the Mason Opera House 125 9 The southwest corner during Victorian times the site of unremarkable retail and office buildings was from 1958 the location of the State Office Building 1958 60 architect Anson C Boyd razed 2006 It was named the Junipero Serra State Office Building and this moniker would be transferred to the former Broadway Department Store building at 4th and Broadway when it was opened to replace this building in 1998 17 It is now the location of the New U S Courthouse built in 2016 taking up the entire block between Broadway Hill First and Second 18 Just south of the southwest corner was the Mason Theatre 127 S Broadway Opened in 1903 as the Mason Opera House 1 600 seats Benjamin Marshall of the Chicago firm Marshall amp Wilson designed the building in association with John Parkinson Marshall is known for designing the Iroquois Theatre in Chicago Remodeled in 1924 by Meyer amp Holler Later as the Mason Theatre it showed Spanish language films Demolished 1955 19 145 S Broadway 20 site of the C H Frost Building later known as the Haig M Prince Building Built 1898 architect John Parkinson 21 Now the location of the new United States Courthouse built in 2016 taking up the entire block between Broadway Hill First and Second 18 Second and Broadway edit nbsp Broadway looking south from 2nd St 1895 1905 The 1888 City Hall is visible on the left east side nbsp Another view of Broadway looking south from 2nd St showing a cable car c 1893 1895Northeast corner of Second and Broadway edit nbsp The 2nd amp Broadway Hellman Building in 1918One of several Hellman Buildings across Downtown L A not to be confused with the still existing Hellman Building at Fourth and Spring was located here 138 from 1897 to 1959 22 The site is now a parking structure part of the Times Mirror Square complex Southwest corner of Second and Broadway and the west side of the 200 block edit nbsp West side of Broadway from 229 at left to 207 at right SW corner of 2nd St sometime after 1894 From left to right Bicknell Block with the Los Angeles Furniture Co Potomac Block with Ville de Paris and City of London stores the YMCA building with its turret and two gables and the American National Bank building nbsp American National Bank later California Bank Building 1878 1911 southwest corner 1890 To the viewer s left south are the turret and two gables of the YMCA Building 1889 then the Potomac Block 1890 nbsp Merchants Trust Company Building in 1910 nbsp Potomac Block c 1890 1895 nbsp The Ville de Paris department store 1901 nbsp Boston Dry Goods and Harris Newmark buildings 1899The west side of the 200 block of South Broadway had a key place in the retail history of Los Angeles from the 1893 through 1917 as it was home to several prominent early department stores such as the Ville de Paris Coulter s department store from 1905 1917 and J W Robinson s Boston Dry Goods store from 1895 1915 All three stores would move to Seventh Street when it became the upscale shopping street between 1915 and 1917 On the southwest corner of 2nd and Broadway was Judge O Melveny s house built in 1870 This was replaced by the American National Bank later California Bank Building which one turn was replaced by the California Building in 1911 Nos 201 213 Broadway are now known named the Broadway Media Center Further south on the west side of Broadway was 207 211 location of the YMCA Building 207 209 211 Romanesque Revival architecture opened in July 1889 demolished in 1903 The YMCA operated here at 207 from 1889 until 1903 City of London opened here in August 1891 run by Messrs Hiles and Niccolls who came from the City of Paris department store It carried curtains window shades comforters and the like 23 It operated here until August 1895 when it moved next door to the Potomac Block at 213 24 The YMCA Building was demolished to make way for the Merchants Trust Co Building 25 Coulter s complex Potomac and Bicknell blocks edit The adjacent Potomac Block and Bicknell Block originally housed prominent retailers of the day then were joined together in 1906 by Coulter s department store to form a complex opening it as a new 157 000 sq ft 14 600 m2 store in June 1905 26 27 28 Potomac Block edit The Potomac Block 213 223 S Broadway was from 1905 to 1917 known as the B F Coulter Building It was originally developed by lumberyard and mill owner J M Griffith It was designed in 1888 by Block Curlett and Eisen in Romanesque architectural style 29 and opened on July 17 1890 30 Tenants included Ville de Paris department store at 221 223 from 1893 through 1906 29 City of London Dry Goods Co which moved here from next door at 211 in August 1895 and advertised for this location through August 1899 24 It was the first time major retail stores opened on South Broadway in what would be a shift of the upmarket shopping district from 1890 to 1905 from around First and Spring to South Broadway In 1904 Coulter s bought the Potomac Block and combined it with the Bicknell block to create its new store that opened in 1905 After Coulter s moved 215 continued as a branch of Coulter s through 1927 Then 215 217 was home to the Pacific Furniture House in the 1940s 219 housed Fisch s Department Store in the 1940s The building was demolished in 1953 and is still the site of a parking lot 31 Bicknell Block edit The Bicknell Block or Bicknell Building at 225 229 S Broadway with back entrances at 224 228 S Hill Street was part of Coulter s from 1905 from 1917 After Coulter s moved in 1917 it housed the Western Shoe Co through 1922 later known as the Western Department Store 1922 1928 Lettering covered the face of the building from top to bottom through the end of the 1950s THE LARGEST SHOE DEPT IN THE WEST 32 Further south on Broadway edit 231 235 the Harris Newmark Building 1899 Abram Edelman Bartlett Music Co 233 annex to J W Robinson s 235 Goodwill Industries store 233 235 1950s 60s The building still stands but all floors except the ground floor have been removed 237 241 the Boston Dry Goods Building completed 1895 demolished architects Theodore Eisen and Sumner Hunt designer of the Bradbury Building 33 34 The building was home to J W Robinson s Boston Dry Goods store from 1895 to 1915 Scott s Department Store 239 241 1920s Third Street Store 237 241 1950s 60s Demolished currently the site of a parking lot 251 was home to the I Magnin speciality department store which opened here on January 2 1899 35 starting 1904 I Magnin announced that the store would be known by the name of its manager Myer Siegel 36 Southeast corner and east side of Broadway from 2nd to 3rd edit nbsp Looking north along Broadway at its east side past 2nd Street From top left The L A Times Bldg with castle like turret with the 1911 Hall of Records behind it The Chamber of Commerce Bldg at 128 Drugstore in the Hellman Bldg 144 6 at the NE corner of 2nd Street Dentist in the Nolan Smith and Bridge Bldg 200 4 at the SE corner of 2nd New King Hotel in the Gordon Bldg 206 10 Victor Clothing in its location from 1926 to 1964 in the Crocker Bldg 212 6 Pig n Whistle in the Copp Bldg 218 224 1888 City Hall at far right nbsp Los Angeles City Hall 1888 1928 demolished nbsp B nai B rith Temple opened 1873 the city s first synagogue nbsp Victor Clothing building 242The southeast corner of 2nd and Broadway was the site of The First Presbyterian Church was located here in 1894 37 The church was replaced sometime before 1906 by the Nolan Smith and Bridge Building 200 4 S Broadway stores and a restaurant 38 Now the corner is the site of the Historic Broadway underground light rail station under construction Mid block were Crocker Building 212 6 39 Home to Victor Clothing from 1920 to 1964 B nai B rith Temple 1873 214 S Broadway post 1890 numbering the city s first synagogue razed to make way for the Copp Building 218 224 S Broadway home to the original 1908 Pig n Whistle candy shop and tea room 40 The Pig n Whistle would open locations at 7th and Broadway and in Hollywood where it would become a landmark restaurant that still operates today City Hall 1888 1928 opened 1888 demolished 1929 228 238 S Broadway architect Solomon Irmscher Haas Romanesque Revival Now a parking lot Three stories it had a 150 foot 46 m campanile Red and brown brick Housed the Los Angeles Public Library for a time until it moved to the new Hamburger s department store building at Eighth and Broadway in 1908 41 The site is now part of the 213 S Spring parking garage 4 240 246 the Hosfield Building location of the Natatorium indoor swimming pool in 1894 and the Imperial Restaurant in 1906 39 After 1964 location of Victor Clothing notable for its changing murals reflecting local Chicano culture Victor Clothing operated here until 2001 and was known i a for its frequent ads on Spanish language television 42 Third and Broadway edit Northwest corner of Third and Broadway edit nbsp Pan American Lofts built 1895 The corner is home to one of the oldest buildings outside the Plaza area the 1895 Irvine Byrne Block or Byrne Block now called the Pan American Lofts The architect was Sumner Hunt It was built in a hybrid Spanish Colonial Revival Beaux Arts style The building was home to the renowned I Magnin clothing store that opened here on January 2 1899 43 on June 19 1904 I Magnin announced that the Los Angeles store would henceforth be known as Myer Siegel 36 After a fire at the Irvine Byrne Building destroyed its store on February 16 1911 Myer Siegel moved further south on Broadway It was modernized and converted to lofts in 2007 and given its present name The halls and staircase have appeared in many of Alfred Hitchcock s movies Brad Pitt s Se7en Fight Club Blade Runner and other TV shows and commercials 44 From Third Street south to Olympic Blvd originally Tenth St and from Hill Street east to Los Angeles Street including Broadway is the Historic Core district the city s main commercial and entertainment area in the first half of the 20th century Northeast corner of Third and Broadway edit nbsp East side of Broadway looking south past 3rd St c 1903 4 From left to right 1888 City Hall with flag Rindge Block at NE corner of 3rd Bradbury Building nbsp East side of Broadway looking north past 3rd St c 1888 From left to right 1888 City Hall with flag Rindge Block at NE corner of 3rd Bradbury BuildingOn this corner 45 Originally the J C Graves house stood here Graves bought the property in 1879 for 2 250 The house was sold and removed to 10th and Hope streets in 1888 Rindge Block 1898 sold in 1899 for 190 000 to Frederick H Rindge the King of Malibu 248 260 S Broadway commercial building the top floors were removed and only the ground floor remains Southwest corner of Third and Broadway edit nbsp Entrance area Million Dollar Theatre nbsp Roofline Million Dollar Theatre nbsp Detail side Million Dollar TheatreMillion Dollar Theatre 1917 8 architects Albert C Martin and William Lee Woollett Spanish Baroque Revival style 2 345 seats 307 S Broadway It is the northernmost of the movie palaces that comprise the Broadway Theater District and is listed in the National Register of Historic Places 46 Built by Sid Grauman who would later open Grauman s Chinese Theatre in Hollywood The theater was designed by architects with a fanciful facade in the Churrigueresque style After more than 30 years as one of the city s most prestigious first run movie palaces the Million Dollar Theater presented Spanish language films and variety shows from 1950 until the late 1980s The theater had a seating capacity of 2 345 when it opened in 1918 47 In 1925 Ben Hur played for six months at the Million Dollar Theater citation needed Southeast corner of Third and Broadway edit nbsp View from Bunker Hill to Bradbury Building and the Stimson Block at 3rd amp Spring The Pan American Lofts had not yet been built on the NW corner of 3rd amp Broadway Around 1894 5 nbsp Bradbury Building in 1894 then anchoring the southwestern end of the business district 48 nbsp Bradbury Building in 1960 nbsp Bradbury Building exterior 2005 nbsp Atrium of the Bradbury BuildingBradbury Building 1893 architects Sumner Hunt and George Wyman Italian Renaissance Revival Romanesque Revival and Chicago School styles the oldest remaining commercial building in Downtown Los Angeles The Los Angeles Conservancy calls it an icon and a unique treasure Commissioned by gold mining and real estate millionaire Lewis Bradbury It is famous for its light filled atrium open cage elevators marble stairways and ornate iron railings and has appeared in many films including Blade Runner 47 For buildings further south on Broadway see Broadway Los Angeles Spring Street edit See also Spring Street Los Angeles Gallery edit nbsp Looking northeast on Spring Street from First Street 1880s Asher Hamburger s Peoples Store at center Towers of the Baker Block are visible in the distance nbsp Looking northeast on Spring Street from First Street 1890s Hamburger s Peoples Store now in the Phillips Block at center Electric streetcars replaced horsecars and the street is paved Today this is the site of City Hall nbsp View south on Spring St from Temple c 1883 1894 The towers in the background are the Phillips Block the two larger buildings to its right are the Jones Block and with turrets City of Paris Far right Allen Block and Harris amp Frank s London Clothing Co with its landmark clock West side of Spring south of Temple edit nbsp International Savings amp Exchange Bank Building 1907 SW corner of Temple Spring nbsp Replica of the Int l Savings Building facade in the film Safety Last nbsp City of Paris department store north of Phillips Block and south of Temple sometime between 1883 1890 Note the cable car which ran 1885 1902 nbsp Jones Block 171 201 N Spring west side across from Market St southern building c 1880 1885 nbsp Jones Block northern building c 1880 1885 Los Angeles High School on Pound Cake Hill at back nbsp Jones Block sometime between 1886 1895 when home to J W Robinson s Boston Dry Goods store Along the west side of Spring Street were the following buildings Spring was realigned in the 1920s and now runs west of these sites and the sites where these buildings once stood are now part of the full city block on which City Hall stands At the southwest corner of Spring and Temple was the Allen Block between 1883 and 1894 location of Harris amp Frank s London Clothing Co with its landmark clock The first J W Robinson s Boston Dry Goods store was also located in this block from 1883 1886 before moving to the Jones Block slightly south 49 The Allen Block was replaced by the International Savings amp Exchange Bank Building 10 floors 1907 H Alban Reaves Renaissance Revival and Italianate demolished 1954 5 50 southwest corner of Temple and Spring A replica of its facade featured in the Harold Lloyd film Safety Last in a famous scene where Lloyd hangs off a clock near the building s roof In its later years it housed city health offices and was called the Old City Health Building 50 City of Paris department store 203 7 N Spring west side between Temple and the Phillips Block Spring Street now runs west of this site which is part of City Hall Jones Block pre 1890 numbering 71 73 and 77 79 101 103 N Spring 51 post 1890 numbering 171 173 175 177 179 201 N Spring St 52 home to Los Angeles Herald steam printing plant until 1888 51 Preuss amp Pironi drugstore c 1885 6 53 J W Robinson s Boston Dry Goods at 171 173 from 1886 to 1895 Robinson s would become a major department store chain across Southern California City of Paris department store at 177 during its final few years of operation c 1895 1897 54 even as Phillips Block edit nbsp Phillips Block nbsp Entrance to Hamburger s department store forerunner of May Co California located at the Phillips Block 1888 1908 nbsp Phillips Block about 1900 nbsp Looking north on Spring St from First Street 1890s with view of the Phillips Block nbsp View north on Spring St from First Street Phillips Block visible in background Harris amp Frank s London Clothing Company at the SW corner of Franklin Spring At the northwest corner of Franklin and Spring stood two buildings in succession the Rocha Adobe then the Phillips Block The site now lies under the current course of Spring Street which was straightened i e realigned to run further west in the 1920s The Rocha Adobe built 1820 as a residence for Antous Jose Rocha 31 33 Spring Street pre 1890 numbering which from 1853 1884 served as the City Hall and a building in the yard behind it served as the city and county jail 55 It was demolished and in its place was built Phillips Block four and a half stories opened in 1888 Burgess J Reeve French Renaissance Revival architecture 25 37 N Spring St pre 1890 numbering at the northwest corner of Franklin St backing up to New High Street to the west Owned by Pomona Valley rancher Louis Phillips it cost 260 000 There was 120 feet 37 m of frontage on Spring Street 218 feet 66 m on Franklin and 121 feet 37 m along New High Street This building was the second four story structure in Los Angeles It was sometimes called Phillips Block No 1 there was a Phillips Block No 2 at 135 145 Los Angeles Street on the west side between Market and First streets 56 In July 1888 Asher Hamburger opened the Peoples Store here later known as Hamburger s it became the largest retail store in the Western United States In 1908 it moved to 8th and Broadway and in 1923 Hamburger sold it to May Co and it became May Company California 57 The Phillips Block was demolished in the mid 1920s to make way for the realigned Spring Street and today s City Hall Franklin to First edit At the southwest corner of Franklin Street from 1894 1905 was Harris amp Frank s London Clothing Co with its landmark clock 58 59 Harris amp Frank went on to become a chain of junior department stores for men s clothing across the region East side of Spring south of Temple edit Temple Block edit nbsp Looking south on Main St towards Temple Block with Adolph Portugal dry goods store mid 1870s nbsp Further north on Main St looking south towards Temple Block mid 1870s nbsp Temple Block c 1885 Courthouse clocktower visible immediately behind Temple Block Main St l Spring St r nbsp Spring St side of Temple Block sign for Cohn Bros store mid 1890s nbsp NE portion of Temple Block at SW corner of Temple r and Main l 1924 nbsp Eastern side of Temple Block looking north along the west side of Main Street towards Temple St r 1924The triangular space where Spring and Main Streets came together at the south side of Temple Street was the site of Temple Block actually a collection of different structures that occupied the block bounded by Spring Main and Temple The first or Old Temple Block built by Francisco F P F Temple in 1856 was of adobe two stories facing north to Temple This was incorporated into a later expanded Temple Block in 1871 and then demolished George P McLain wrote that upon his arrival in the town in 1868 Temple Block had been the undisputed center of commerce and social life in the town Even into the early 1880s it was considered the city s most stately building It housed many law offices including those of Stephen M White Will D Gould and Glassell Chapman and Smith 60 The block had a key role in the retail history of Los Angeles as it was the first home to several upscale retailers who would become big names in the city Desmond s 1870 1882 61 and Jacoby Bros 1879 1891 62 It was also home to the Odd Fellows the Fashion Saloon the Temple and Workman Bank Slotterbeck s gun shop the Wells Fargo office The northeast corner was home to Adolph Portugal s dry goods store 1874 1879 Jacoby Bros 1879 1891 and Cohn Bros 1892 1897 in succession 63 64 In 1925 7 this block and other surrounding areas were demolished to make way for the current Los Angeles City Hall Along the south side of Temple Block was Market Street a small street running between Spring and Main Clocktower Courthouse Bullard Block edit nbsp Clocktower Courthouse viewed from Fort Hill from the west nbsp View from Spring St of Clocktower Courthouse r southside of Temple Block l United States Hotel back nbsp Clocktower Temple Courthouse Market and Theater nbsp Clocktower Courthouse view from Spring St looking SE with the Vienna Buffet on Court St visible nbsp Clocktower Courthouse nbsp Bullard Block c 1900 It replaced the Clocktower Courthouse in 1895 Taking up the small block immediately south of Temple Block between Market and Court streets facing both Spring and Main streets were two buildings in succession Clock Tower Courthouse Just south of Temple Block across tiny Market Street was a building known by many names including Temple Courthouse Temple Market Temple Theater Old County Courthouse etc Also built by John Temple in 1858 originally as a market ground floor and theater upper floor Demolished 1890s 65 66 Served as a market and retail as well as the County Courthouse 1861 1891 until the Red Sand Courthouse was finished 67 Topped by a rectangular tower with a clock on all four sides 68 69 The Clock Tower Courthouse was demolished in 1895 and replaced by Bullard Block built in 1895 6 architects Morgan amp Walls 70 154 160 N Spring NE corner of Court Street Replaced the Clocktower Courthouse Housed The Hub a large department store for apparel See also the photo below of La Fiesta Demolished 1925 6 to make way for current Los Angeles City Hall 71 Court south to First edit nbsp Vienna Buffet which played a role in the city s LGBTQ history seen sometime between 1891 1902 nbsp The palatial Jacoby Bros store 128 134 N Spring Street around 1896Court Street a small street running between Spring and Main At 12 14 16 Court Street pre 1890 numbering 112 116 Court St post 1890 numbering was the Tivoli Theatre which opened and closed in 1890 lasting less than a year From 1891 through 1902 the venue was the New Vienna Buffet a restaurant with live music where scandal occurred and gatherings of gay men including what were then called she boys 72 Then from 1902 c 1910 the site was the Cineograph Theatre a vaudeville venue From 1918 1925 it was marked the Chinese Theatre with the Sun Jung Wah Co performing Chinese plays 73 H Jevne amp Co grocers were located at 38 40 after 1890 136 138 N Spring the older Wilcox Block also known as the Strelitz Block from 1890 1896 before moving to the Wilcox Building when it opened at 2nd and Spring 74 75 Jacoby Bros dry goods store was located at 128 134 N Spring St from 1891 1900 and added the Jevne premises in 1896 thus encompassing all of 128 through 138 N Spring The store moved to Broadway south of 3rd St in 1900 76 77 another signal that the upscale shopping district was moving southwest away from this area at that time First and Spring edit nbsp nbsp View north on Spring St from First Street Los Angeles National Bank building in foreground right Larronde Block in foreground left Phillips Block visible in background Note the electric streetcar to Grand Ave The image at above left looks south past the intersection of First and Spring sometime around 1900 1906 The spire of the Wilson Block is prominent on the left as is the Nadeau Hotel on the right In the foreground we can see the Los Angeles National Bank to the left and the Larronde Block to the right From First to Second streets Spring Street is still a busy shopping district though Broadway is also just becoming popular for more upscale shopping An electric streetcar heads to Griffin Avenue in Montecito Heights on what would become Line 2 of the Los Angeles Railway Today this view would be of the 2009 LAPD Headquarters taking up the entire block on the left and on the right the 1935 Los Angeles Times Building and behind it the 1948 Crawford Mirror Addition building Northwest corner of First and Spring edit nbsp Larronde Block in 1898 Photo by I W Taber 78 nbsp Larronde Block undated photo probably 1910s nbsp NW corner of 1st Spring 2020 an empty lot Back right County Courthouse 1972 Larronde Block built in 1882 at a cost of 10 000 79 211 W 1st St also 101 105 N Spring two stories 78 offices and retail shops including Mullen amp Bluett a major clothing store 101 105 N Spring 80 from its founding in 1889 through 1910 81 California State Building completed 1931 opened 1932 architect John C Austin 1931 demolished 1976 82 The lot is currently vacantNortheast corner of First and Spring edit nbsp The east side of Spring Street north of First during the Fiesta de Los Angeles in 1903 The Bullard Block is in the distance at the top center left nbsp Los Angeles National Bank Building nbsp Equitable Savings Bank Building nbsp North side of First Street between Spring and Main streets Widney Block c 1888Los Angeles National Bank Building 1887 1906 demolished and replaced by the Equitable Building Equitable Savings Bank 1906 1920s 83 First Street from Spring to Main edit First Street east of Spring Widney Block i e Joseph Widney built in 1883 along the north side The main Olmsted amp Wales bookstore was located in the block in the mid 1880s Southwest corner of First and Spring edit nbsp Nadeau Block housing the Nadeau Hotel 1882 1932 nbsp L A Times Building opened 1935 view in 2006 Nadeau BlockorNadeau Hotel built 1881 2 demolished 1932 designed by architects Kysor amp Morgan located at the southwest corner of Spring and First streets It was the first four story building in the city 84 This corner is now the site of the Los Angeles Times Building opened 1935 part of the Times Mirror Square complex taking up the entire block between Spring Broadway First and Second streets formerly the headquarters of the Los Angeles Times currently vacant Southeast corner of First and Spring edit nbsp Wilson Block in 1920 nbsp The c 1927 two story commercial block with the Security Pacific branch seen from the City Hall tower nbsp The 2009 L A P D Headquarters BuildingFour buildings have stood here in succession The George S Wilson homestead 85 Wilson Block sometimes called the city s first skyscraper 86 Built 1886 8 Demolished around 1927 87 The corner is now occupied by the Los Angeles Police Department Headquarters Building completed in 2009 88 The site is now home to A replacement two story retail building 86 home to the Equitable branch of Security Pacific National Bank then the Security Trust and Savings Bank the Equitable Building was across the street to the north 89 Since 2009 the Police Headquarters Building taking up the entire block between First Second Spring and Main streets Second and Spring edit Northwest corner of Second and Spring edit nbsp Bryson or Bryson Bonebrake Block or Building erected 1886 8 photo 1905 nbsp The 1948 Crawford Addition building at Times Mirror Square NW corner of 2nd amp Spring September 2020The Bryson Block also known as the Bryson Bonebrake Block or Bryson Bonebrake Building northwest corner 2nd and Spring constructed 1886 1888 for 224 000 on the site of a public school and an early city hall as a 126 room bank and office building Romanesque architecture Two stories added 1902 1904 Demolished 1934 Architect Joseph Cather Newsom Newsom amp Newsom Pacific Coast Architecture Database states it was nothing short of amazing displaying a riotous and eclectic amalgam of features Built for mayor John Bryson and Major George H Bonebrake President of the Los Angeles National Bank and the State Loan amp Trust Co 90 Desmond s department store was located here from 1890 to 1900 61 It was replaced by the 1948 Crawford Addition building part of the Times Mirror Square complex currently vacant Northeast corner of Second and Spring edit nbsp 1902 photo of the Burdick Block on the NE corner of 2nd amp Spring built 1888 top floors added 1900 nbsp L A P D Headquarters opened 2012 NE corner of 2nd amp Spring Burdick Block a k a the Trust Building 127 W 2nd St 1888 Jasper Newton Preston top stories added 1900 John Parkinson In 1910 refitted and rechristened the American Bank Building Now site of the Los Angeles Police Department Headquarters which occupies the entire block from First to Second and from Spring to Main completed 2009 91 92 Southwest corner of Second and Spring edit nbsp View west on 2nd at Spring Hollenbeck Block left when it was only two stories note Coulter s store 2nd City Hall right 1886 nbsp View south on Spring at 2nd Hollenbeck Block when it was two stories Coulter s store 1886 nbsp Hollenbeck Block 1884 1933 SW corner of 2nd amp Spring c 1900 1905 nbsp Historic Broadway station under construction September 2020 The Hollenbeck Block was located on the southwest corner of Spring and Second streets It was built in 1884 by John Edward Hollenbeck and housed the Hollenbeck Hotel and on the corner from 1884 1898 Coulter s 6 000 sq ft 560 m2 store which would become a leading Los Angeles department store Built 1884 demolished in 1933 Architect Robert Brown Young 93 Currently the construction site of Historic Broadway station an underground station of the Los Angeles Metro Rail light rail subway Southeast corner of Second and Spring edit nbsp Wilcox Building built 1895 6 photo from 1905 nbsp The Wilcox Building in September 2020 Wilcox Building built 1895 6 architects Pissis and Moore five stories All but the ground floor were removed in 1971 after damage from the 1971 Sylmar earthquake It housed the larger of two branches of the H Jevne amp Co gourmet grocery store as well as the California Club until 1904 when the latter moved to Fourth and Hill streets The Southwestern School of Law was on its top floors 1915 1924 94 200 block edit nbsp Music Turnverein Hall l and Los Angeles Lyceum Theatre r West side of Spring between 2nd and 3rd 1895 nbsp Looking north on Spring from 3rd St 1905 nbsp Looking south on Spring between 2nd and 3rd c 1905 In the background at center towers of the Hotel Ramona To its right the Douglas Building Woollacott Block Anheuser restaurant Hamilton Bros shoe store block and portion of the Turnverein Hall nbsp Parmelee Dohrmann store at the Workman Block 232 234 S Spring photo c 1900 1906On the west side 217 pre 1890 numbering 119 the Parisian Cloak and Suit Co 1888 1892 then 221 S Spring until 1899 One of the city s prominent retailers of women s clothing during that era Two theatres together called the Perry Buildings at 225 9 was the Lyceum Theatre opened in 1888 as the Los Angeles Theatre not to be confused with the Los Angeles Theatre on Broadway still standing From 1903 1911 this venue operated as the Orpheum Theatre As the Orpheum Circuit was a chain and changed venues several times the Orpheum Theatre in Los Angeles was first at the Grand Opera House venue on Main Street then at this venue and finally at the venue now known as the Palace Theatre on Broadway 95 at 231 5 was the Turnverein Hall opened 1879 a theatre renamed the Music Hall in 1894 Elks Hall in the early 1900s and Lyceum Hall in 1915 Demolished 96 237 241 Hamilton Bros block Hamilton Bros shoe store at 239 97 243 Anheuser Busch saloon later known as The Anheuser Restaurant 98 245 7 Woollacott Block 97 On the east side Stowell Block at 224 228 In 1894 the Los Angeles Athletic Club was located here from 1893 until 1895 99 100 Workman Block at 230 234 232 234 were home to Parmelee Dohrmann from 1899 through 1906 It was the city s premier store for china crystal and silver as well as at that time selling appliances like stoves and refrigerators In 1906 the store moved to the 5th and Broadway area 101 Third and Spring edit nbsp 1903 looking west on Third past Spring Desmond s store located 1900 1906 in the turreted Ramona Block on the SW corner left and Southern Pacific Railroad office in the Douglas Building still standing today on the NW corner right At far background Angel s Flight at 3rd and Hill nbsp Douglas Building 1899 NW corner nbsp Metropolitan Barber Shop 215 W 3rd demolished nbsp Stimson Block NE corner 1893 1963 nbsp Stimson Block in the mid 20th century nbsp Hotel Ramona SW corner 1885 1903 nbsp Washington Bldg 1912 at SW corner nbsp Lankershim Building 1896 1959 SE corner nbsp Ronald Reagan State Office Bldg occupies the SE corner of 3rd amp Spring today Spring runs along its right side this view looks south on Main St Northwest corner of Third and Spring edit Hammel and Denker Block opened 1890 demolished 1899 102 Henry Hammel and Andrew H Denker were business partners in hotels and ranching Thomas Douglas Stimson bought it in 1893 thus owning two buildings at this intersection this one and the Stimson Block see below Leading dry goods retailer Frank Grey amp Co opened here in 1890 103 and the store was later taken bought by and turned into a branch of J M Hale 104 The Hammel amp Denker Block was demolished and replaced by the Douglas Block in 1899 and still standing now condos 105 To the west of the Douglas Block stood the Metropolitan Barber Shop originally at 214 W 3rd in 1908 it moved to 215 9 W 3rd The Los Angeles Herald claimed it to be the largest barber shop in the world at that time and the most expensive ever constructed with 30 chairs chandeliers and mahogany furnishings 106 Northeast corner of Third and Spring edit Stimson Block or Stimson Building built 1893 architect Carroll H Brown also designed the Stimson House demolished 1963 The city s tallest building when it opened Built for lumber magnate Thomas Douglas Stimson Now site of a parking lot 107 Southwest corner of Third and Spring edit The Callaghan Block or Ramona Block housing the Hotel Ramona 1885 Burgess J Reeve classic bay windowed style 108 Demolished in 1903 and replaced by the Washington Building built 1912 Parkinson and Bergstrom still standing 109 110 Southeast corner of Third and Spring edit Site of the Lankershim Building 1896 7 Robert Brown Young demolished 1959 111 Now the site of the Ronald Reagan State Building For buildings further south on Spring Street see Spring Street Los Angeles Main Street edit See also Main Street Los Angeles nbsp Main Street looking north from Temple photo by T E Stanton 1886 The Baker Block is the prominent building towards the back Left side Cosmopolitan Hotel Farmers and Merchants Bank Downey Block with Commercial Restaurant Main from Plaza south to Arcadia edit Gallery west side edit nbsp Sentous Block a k a Sentous Building 1920 nbsp La Placita Church La Iglesia de Nuestra Senora la Reina de los Angeles nbsp Vickrey Brunswig Building nbsp Vickrey Brunswig Building and Plaza HouseGallery east side edit nbsp Pico House in 1875 nbsp Pico House and the Plaza in 1876 photo taken from Fort Moore nbsp Pico House today nbsp Pico House Merced Theater and Masonic HallPico House edit Main article Pico House Pico House was a luxury hotel built in 1870 by Pio Pico a successful businessman who was the last Mexican Governor of Alta California With indoor plumbing gas lit chandeliers a grand double staircase lace curtains and a French restaurant the Italianate three story 33 room hotel was the most elegant hotel in Southern California It had a total of nearly eighty rooms The Pico House is listed as a California Historical Landmark No 159 Masonic Hall edit Masonic Hall at 416 N Main St was built in 1858 as Lodge 42 of the Free and Accepted Masons The building was a painted brick structure with a symbolic Masonic eye below the parapet In 1868 the Masons moved to larger quarters further south Afterward the building was used for many purposes including a pawn shop and boarding house It is the oldest building in Los Angeles south of the Plaza Merced Theater edit The Merced Theater completed in 1870 was built in an Italianate style and operated as a live theatre from 1871 to 1876 When the Woods Opera House opened nearby in 1876 the Merced ceased being the city s leading theatre 112 Eventually it gained an unenviable reputation because of the disreputable dances staged there and was finally closed by the authorities 113 Plaza House edit This two story building at 507 511 N Main St houses part of the LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes which includes the Vickrey Brunswig Building next door 114 It is inscribed on its upper floor and on 1890s maps it is marked Garnier Block not to be confused with the Garnier Block Building on Los Angeles Street one block away Commissioned in 1883 by Philippe Garnier once housed the La Esperanza bakery 115 Vickrey Brunswig Building edit This five story brick building facing the Plaza at 501 N Main St houses LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes which also occupies the Plaza House next door It was built in 1888 and combines Italianate and Victorian architecture the architect was Robert Brown Young 116 Site of Sentous Building edit The Sentous Block or Sentous Building 19th c demolished late 1950s was located at 615 9 N Main St with a back entrance on 616 620 North Spring St previously called Upper Main St then San Fernando St Designed in 1886 by Burgess J Reeve Louis Sentous was a French pioneer in the early days of Los Angeles 117 The San Fernando Theatre was located here The site is now part of the El Pueblo parking lot 118 119 West side of Main from Republic south to Temple edit nbsp St Elmo orig Lafayette Hotel circa 1890This block is part of the site of the current Spring Street Courthouse Buildings previously located here include Lafayette Hotel 343 N Main opened in the 1850s c 1882 renamed the Cosmopolitan Hotel then the St Elmo Hotel 120 Razed in 1933 121 Farmers and Merchants Bank of Los Angeles location from 1874 through 1883 after leaving their original quarters in the Pico Building Architect Ezra F Kysor 122 123 Northwest corner of Temple and Main edit nbsp View to the NW of Old Downey Block c 1870 before Downey Block was built in 1871 Harris amp Jacoby forerunners to Harris amp Frank and Jacoby Bros and M Kremer forerunner of the City of Paris the city s first department store nbsp South end of the Downey Block at the NW corner of Temple Main 1880s nbsp North end of the Downey Block along the west side of Main St 1887 Temple Block at left Spring Street runs towards the Phillips Block tower in the background at center left nbsp 1910 Post Office and Courthouse which replaced the Downey Block NW corner Temple and Main nbsp The 1940 Spring Street Courthouse NW corner Temple Main 2008On this corner stood four buildings in succession the first two of which had a key role in the history of retail in Southern California as it was home to a number of upscale retailers who would later grow to be big names in the city and some regional chains Old Downey Block 1871 northwest corner of Temple and Main Replaced by the Downey Block 1871 1910 Retailers that got their start here included Harris amp Jacoby 124 125 forerunners to the Harris amp Frank clothing chain and the large Jacoby Bros department store and M Kremer 126 forerunner of the Los Angeles City of Paris Downey Block 1871 1910 replaced by the New Post Office in 1910 Retailers who were located here included Coulter s 1878 9 127 Jacoby Bros 1878 9 128 and Quincy Hall 1876 1882 129 forerunner of Harris amp Frank New Post Office also known as the Federal Building 1910 1937 Razed in 1937 and replaced by a new Federal Building now known as the Spring Street Courthouse opened in 1940 130 Spring Street Courthouse opened in 1940 130 East side of Main from Arcadia south to Commercial edit Baker Block edit nbsp Abel Sterns adobe c 1857 Built in 1835 8 demolished in 1877 to make way for the Baker Block nbsp Baker Block built 1878 demolished 1942 site now under US 101 freeway Photo c 1880 nbsp Lithograph of the Baker BlockBaker Block 334 348 N Main at the southeast corner of Arcadia Street opened late 1878 Second Empire architecture The Baker Block was erected on the site of Don Abel Stearns adobe mansion also called El Palacio built in 1835 1838 and demolished in August and September of 1877 131 Col Robert S Baker who had the Baker Block built had married Stearns widow Arcadia Bandini de Stearns Baker When built it was called the finest emporium of commerce south of San Francisco The ground floor housed retail tenants such as Coulter s 1879 1884 George D Rowan and Eugene Germain The second floor was offices and the third floor held the city s most upscale apartments In 1919 Goodwill Industries bought the building and opened its store and operations That is not to say though that nobody fought to save the building The Metropolitan Garden Association tried to move the Baker Block to another location for use as a public recreation center while city councilman Arthur E Briggs raised funds to convert the building into a city history museum Nonetheless in 1941 Goodwill sold the building to the city which demolished it in 1942 Currently the US 101 freeway and the new more southerly route of Arcadia Street run over most of the site 132 South of Baker Block edit nbsp c late 1870s Grand Central Hotel branded as part of the St Charles Bank of Los Angeles in the Pico Bldg St Charles hotel proper 312 bldg and L Harris store forerunner of Harris amp Frank nbsp Sketch of east side of the 300 block of North Main Street between Arcadia and Commercial streets as it appeared circa 1880 nbsp Downey Liberia Espanola Grand Central Osaka Co Chop Suey Pico Arizona Cafe Money to Loan Bella Union St Charles Azteca 312 and 306 8 buildings 1930s nbsp 2005 view Main St runs along the left west side from the Plaza area top left over US 101 site of the Baker Block and along the western edge of the Los Angeles Mall bottom center site of the buildings described below Downey Building through Ducommun Block South of the Baker Block stood buildings that are now the site of the northwestern most part of the Los Angeles Mall Downey Building not to be confused with the Downey Block 324 330 N Main opened 1878 three stories captured in a 1957 color photo standing alone as the last building on the block demolished that year 133 In the 1930s photo above it is home to the Libreria Espanola Grand Central Hotel opened 1876 demolished Pico Building 318 322 N Main opened 1867 the city s first bank building to house the new Hellman Temple amp Co bank then in 1871 the first location of Hellman s own bank Farmers and Merchants Bank of Los Angeles forerunner of Security Pacific National Bank Later tenants included the Los Angeles County Bank 1874 1878 Charles H Bush jeweler and watchmaker 1878 1905 Louis E Pearlson s jewelry loan and pawnshop from 1905 as well as several barber shops and then a succession of owner operated restaurants The last occupants were a jewelers and the Mexican restaurant Arizona Cafe 2 Demolished 1957 to make way for a parking lot 134 Bella Union Hotel later the St Charles Hotel 314 316 N Main Opened 1835 demolished 1940 Home to the Azteca Cafe in the 1930s 312 N Main two stories home to a saloon in the mid 1890s 306 308 N Main three stories home to offices at 308 and Bright s Cheap Store 306 in 1882 135 Ducommun Block or Ducommun Building 300 2 4 N Main 200 2 4 N Main In the 1880s home to the Ducommun hardware store a furniture store and Prager Dry Goods In the early 20th century site of the Security Pacific National Bank 136 Home to the Federal Theatre from c 1913 1917 137 The Los Angeles Mall replaced these blocks it is a small shopping center at the Los Angeles Civic Center between Main and Los Angeles Streets on the north and south sides of Temple Street connected by both a pedestrian bridge and a tunnel It features Joseph Young s sculpture Triforium with 1 500 blown glass prisms synchronized to an electronic glass bell carillon The mall opened in 1974 and includes a four level parking garage with 2 400 spaces East side of Main from Commercial south to First edit nbsp The 1888 New Lanfranco Block early 1920s nbsp Main and Requena United States Hotel right Victorian 200 202 N Main at left Southern Pacific ticket office in 1888 nbsp United States Hotel SE corner Requena Main c 1880 nbsp Triforium sculpture at the Los Angeles Mall just N of the NE corner of 1st Temple 2018 Currently this site is the southernmost end of the Los Angeles Mall Triforium is approximately on the site of Commercial Street 138 240 Farmers and Merchants Bank was located here in 1896 138 236 Los Angeles Savings Bank was located here in 1896 138 226 8 Commercial Bank renamed First National Bank in 1880 was located here in 1896 139 First National Bank was located here in 1896 138 214 222 pre 1890 numbering 74 New Lanfranco Block built 1888 architects Curlett Eisen amp Cuthbertson 140 Site of the Old Lanfranco Block demolished in 1888 141 138 200 202 NE corner of Requena Southern Pacific ticket office as of 1888 9 142 158 172 United States Hotel southeast corner of Main and Requena St a k a Market St Built 1861 2 demolished 1939 When built it was one of three hotels in the city alongside the Bella Union and the Lafayette Hotel It was ornate and Italianate in style with a profusion of brackets corbel tables and oriel windows On one end a tower with a mansard roof lit by l oeil de boeuf windows poked up another story to signal the hotel s location to travelers 143 Today location of the south plaza of the Los Angeles Mall West side of Main from Temple south to First edit nbsp Illich s Restaurant ad from March 1890This block is since 1928 the site of Los Angeles City Hall Before 1926 Spring Street and Main Street met at Temple Street From Temple Main and Spring streets proceeded south Spring at a more southwesterly angle This created a narrow triangle with the triangle s northern point at Temple Proceeding south along Main on the right hand side one would pass the east side of Temple Block Junction with Market Street Clock Tower Courthouse until demolished in 1895 or the Bullard Block built in its place after 1895 Junction with Court Street Illich s Restaurant and Oyster Parlors 41 43 pre 1890 numbering 145 7 post 1890 N Main St Starting in the 1870s as a small chophouse Illich s grew to be the largest restaurant in the city Owner Jerry Illich was born in Dalmatia He was connected with the Maison Doree restaurant at 4th and Main and later opened his own restaurant in 1896 on west 2nd Street between Broadway and Hill 144 Northwest corner of First and Main streets East side of Main from First to Second edit nbsp Two horsecars pass in a blur c 1889 Looking north along Main from just south of 1st Street Grand Opera House at right Towers of the United States Hotel at back behind which the towers of the Baker Block nbsp Grand Opera House 110 S Main c 1884 1893 nbsp Orpheum Theatre when located at the Grand Opera House building c 1898 nbsp Forster BlockGrand Opera House 1884 demolished 1936 capacity c 1 300 1 800 110 S Main in later years known as the Orpheum Dec 1894 Sep 1903 Clune s Grand c 1912 The Grand c 1920s and Teatro Mexico 1930s The Orpheum Circuit circuit meaning chain moved the Orpheum name to a different venue in 1903 at 227 S Spring and again in 1911 to what is now the Palace Theatre This theater was the site of the first commercial showing of motion pictures in the city when on July 6 1896 several films from the Edison Studios were projected by Billy Porter who would later become a famous silent film director Appeared in the film in Busby Berkeley s Bright Lights 1st National Warner Bros 1935 Demolished in 1936 to make way for a parking lot 145 Forster Block 122 128 S Main St post 1890 numbering 22 28 S Main St per 1890 numbering was a two story building built in the early 1880s five doors south of the Grand Opera House It housed a coffee house of the Women s Christian Temperance Union at 26 heavily damaged in an 1885 fire and a saddlery 146 Third from Spring to Main Third and Main edit nbsp c 1887 view looking east along south side of 3rd Street incl former New York Brewery towards Main across top Back left The Thom Block Back right Olmsted amp Wales bookstore in the Panorama Building nbsp Panorama Building E side of Main between Mayo 3rd and 4th c 1890 The center entrance led through to the panorama exhibition space in the back Note the Olmsted amp Wales Panorama Bookstore and the offices of the Evening Express At right the Hotel Westminster at the NE corner of 4th Main On the corner of Third and Main 147 Wells Fargo and Co offices northwest corner of 3rd Main as of 1894 The Thom Block southeast corner of Mayo Third and Main as of 1894 Schwartz Block and Jackson House southwest corner of 3rd Main as of 1894 Buildings along Los Angeles Street edit See also Los Angeles Street nbsp Old Chinatown stretched from Sanchez Street across Los Angeles Street to what is now Union Station c 1885 nbsp Lugo Adobe lining the eastern edge of Los Angeles Plaza The street in front of the adobe was part of Los Angeles St starting in the 1880s nbsp Chinese American Museum in the Garnier Building nbsp 1882 view looking north from Broad Place along Calle de los Negros to the Ignacio Del Valle adobe in the far background At left with the peeling paint is the Coronel Adobe SE corner of Arcadia A few years later both adobes would be demolished and Los Angeles St would be extended northward to and past the Plaza nbsp Looking east on Arcadia towards houses lining the east side of Broad Place Aliso Street runs form their right side towards the background Calle de los Negros runs to the left in front of them The Coronel Adobe is at left nbsp Adobes in Calle de los Negros nbsp Broad Place at north end of Los Angeles Street c 1870s At back Coronel Adobe l Calle de los Negros r nbsp 2005 view Brick buildings at center left are at the south end of the Plaza Los Angeles St runs along the Plaza s right east side south towards the eastern edge of Los Angeles Mall bottom center The circular cluster of trees and freeway onramp to the right of the Plaza is the Lugo Adobe site Behind them is Union Station Northern end of Los Angeles Street edit nbsp In 1888 Calle de los Negros had just been renamed and here is marked Los Angeles Street only the section from Arcadia to the Plaza In that same year but not yet reflected on the map the Coronel Adobe would be removed to allow Los Angeles Street to continue straight north to the Plaza from Broad Place The Coronel Adobe was demolished in 1888 and 1896 Sanborn maps show that the Del Valle adobe had been removed and Los Angeles Street had been extended 148 to form the eastern edge of the Plaza thus passing in front of the Lugo Adobe Calle de los Negros remained for a few more decades behind a row of houses lining the east side of Los Angeles Street between Arcadia and Aliso streets This was also the western edge of Old Chinatown from around the 1880s through 1930s It reached eastward across Alameda St to cover most of the area that is now Union Station It proceeded one more block past the Plaza with the buildings on the east side of Olvera Street forming its western edge until terminating at Alameda Street 149 Eastern edge of Plaza edit Since the early 1950s Los Angeles Street has formed the eastern edge of the Plaza but the buildings lining its eastern edge including the Lugo Adobe were removed 150 151 The site is now Father Serra Park From the Plaza north to Alameda edit nbsp Placita Dolores where from 1888 until the 1950s Los Angeles Street used to run a short block north of the Plaza to terminate at Alameda St When it was extended past the Plaza in 1888 148 Los Angeles Street terminated one short block north of the Plaza at Alameda Street Now Los Angeles Street turns east at the north side of the Plaza to terminate at Alameda Street at a right angle directly across from the Union Station complex What was the short block of Los Angeles Street north of the Plaza is now part of Placita Dolores a small open plaza which surrounds a statue of Mexican charro entertainer Antonio Aguilar on horseback 152 Calle de los Negros edit Until the late 19th century Los Angeles Street did not form the east side of the Plaza it ran south only from Broad Place at the intersection of Arcadia Street Here the Coronel Adobe blocked the path north one block to the Plaza but just slightly to the right east of the path of Los Angeles Street was Calle de los Negros Spanish language name marked on post 1847 maps as Negro Alley or Nigger Alley a narrow one block north south street likely named after darker skinned Mexican afromestizo and or mulatto residents during the Spanish colonial era 153 154 At the north end of Calle de los Negros stood the Del Valle adobe also known as the Matthias or Matteo Sabichi house 155 156 at the southern edge of which one could turn left and enter the plaza at its southeast corner Calle de los Negros was famous for its saloons and violence in the early days of the town and by the 1880s was considered part of Chinatown lined with Chinese and Chinese American residences businesses and gambling dens 157 158 The neglected dirt alley was already associated with vice by the early 1850s when a bordello and its owner both known as La Prietita the dark skinned lady were active here Its other businesses included malodorous livery stables a pawn shop a saloon a theater and a connected restaurant Historian James Miller Guinn wrote in 1896 in the flush days of gold mining from 1850 to 1856 it was the wickedest street on earth In length it did not exceed 500 feet but in wickedness it was unlimited On either side it was lined with saloons gambling hells dance houses and disreputable dives It was a cosmopolitan street Representatives of different races and many nations frequented it Here the ignoble red man crazed with aguardiente fought his battles the swarthy Sonorian plied his stealthy dagger and the click of the revolver mingled with the clink of gold at the gaming table when some chivalric American felt that his word of honah had been impugned 153 By 1871 the alley was notorious as a racially spatially and morally disorderly place according to historian Cesar Lopez It was here that a growing number of Chinese immigrant railroad laborers settled after the completion of the transcontinental railroad in 1869 There William Estrada notes the Chinese of Los Angeles came to fill an important sector of the economy as entrepreneurs Some became proprietors and employees of small hand laundries and restaurants some were farmers and wholesale produce peddlers others ran gambling establishments and some occupied other areas left vacant by the absence of workers in the gold rush migration to California The Chinese population increased from 14 in 1860 to almost 200 by 1870 Guinn stated that the alley stayed wicked through and after its transition to the city s Old Chinatown 153 Calle de los Negros was reconfigured in 1888 when Los Angeles Street was extended north with a small shallow row of houses remaining between the new section of Los Angeles street s eastern edge and the western edge of the new shortened alley 148 159 The site of Calle de los Negros is now the Pueblo parking lot and a cloverleaf style entrance to the US 101 freeway Coronel Adobe edit The Coronel Adobe was built in 1840 by Ygnacio Coronel as a family home It stood at the northwest corner of Arcadia Street and Calle de los Negros Los Angeles Street terminated at its southern end The area gradually became an area for gambling and saloons and upper class families left to live elsewhere Around 1849 they sold the house to a sporting fraternity which operated a popular 24 hour gambling establishment with games including monte faro and poker up to 200 000 in gold could be seen on the tables at a time Arguments ensued and murders were frequent The building later became a dance hall where lewd women were employed aimed at the Mexican American population After that still in the 1850s it became a grocery and dry goods store Corbett amp Barker then a storage house for iron and hard lumber for Harris Newmark Co It was then leased to a Chinese immigrant In 1871 it was the site of the Chinese massacre of 1871 The Adobe was torn down in 1888 in order to extend Los Angeles Street north past the Plaza 148 Garnier Building edit At 419 N Los Angeles Street at the northwest corner of Arcadia is the Garnier Building built in 1890 part of the Los Angeles original Chinatown The southern portion of the building was demolished in the 1950s to make way for the Hollywood Freeway The Chinese American Museum is now located in the Garnier Building It should not be confused with another Garnier Block Building on Main St a block away now commonly known as Plaza House nbsp Haas Baruch amp Co successor to Hellman Haas amp Co SE corner of Aliso St c 1890s nbsp 1885 view of the east side of Los Angeles St with Bell Block at center with its two story porch to its right Mellus Row then Hellman Haas amp Co At center is Aliso St heading east top center of photo nbsp West side of Los Angeles street from Arcadia to Commercial 1890s Hellman Block at left Arcadia Block at right nbsp Arcadia Block 1870s SW corner of Los Angeles and Arcadia streets nbsp Los Angeles St north from 1st St ca 1910 nbsp Los Angeles St north from 3rd St ca 1910Los Angeles Street was lined with mostly commercial buildings the southeast end of the business district around Los Angeles and 3rd streets was the Wholesale District Only a few buildings were notable West side south of Arcadia edit Arcadia Block southwest corner of Arcadia Street Built 1858 razed in 1927 160 Hellman Block in 1870 banker and University of Southern California founder Isaias W Hellman erected the Hellman Block at the northwest corner of Los Angeles and Commercial streets 161 This is one of several Hellman Blocks or Hellman Buildings in the city East side south of Aliso edit Bell Block was at the southeast corner of Aliso Street It was General John C Fremont s headquarters and the first Los Angeles City Hall Captain Alexander Bell and Mellus lived here Francis Mellus married a niece of Mrs Bell s It was taken over by General Fremont for his headquarters and thus became the state capital for the short period of his acting as governor The Los Angeles City organization was formed in this building in 1850 162 Mellus Row adjacent to Bell Block on the south Hellman Haas amp Co grocers a partnership of Abraham Haas and Herman W Hellman the predecessors of Smart amp Final Located in the 1880s and 1890s at 218 224 pre 1890 numbering post 1890 numbering 318 324 N Los Angeles St adjacent to Mellus Row on the south 163 Not to be confused with the Haas Building Between Aliso and Temple streets on the east side of Los Angeles St at 300 is the Federal Building opened in 1965 6 architect Welton Becket 164 Temple was extended east of Main Street between Aliso Street and a street that was known as both Requena and Market street Adjacent and to its east is the Edward R Roybal Federal Building and United States Courthouse completed in 1992 Between Temple and First streets is Parker Center the Los Angeles Police Department headquarters from 1955 2009 At the southeast corner of First Street Little Tokyo begins At this corner was the Tomio Department Store and two more Japanese American department stores the Asia Company and Hori Brothers were located east of it on 1st Street during the 1920s 165 Now the site of Weller Court and the DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Los Angeles Downtown formerly the New Otani Hotel Transportation edit nbsp Lithograph showing the Baker Block and horse drawn streetcar c 1890 nbsp The Women s Christian Temperance Union building also known as Temperance Temple at Temple and Fort now Broadway streets with a Temple Street Cable Railway car 1890 nbsp Red car of the Pacific Electric nbsp A Los Angeles Railway electric streetcar 1891 nbsp Main Street amp Agricultural Park electric streetcar c 1896 nbsp A Los Angeles Railway electric streetcar c 1900 1910Horsecars 1874 1897 edit Horse drawn streetcars started with the Spring and Sixth Street Railroad in 1874 The last horsecars were converted to electric in 1897 166 167 Cable cars 1885 1902 edit Main article Cable cars in Los Angeles Cable car street railways in Los Angeles first began operating up Bunker Hill in 1885 with a total of three companies operating in the period through 1902 168 when the lines were electrified and electric streetcars were introduced largely following the cable car routes There were roughly 25 miles of routes connecting 1st and Main in what was then the Los Angeles Central Business District as far as the communities known today as Lincoln Heights Echo Park Filipinotown and the Pico Union district Electric streetcar systems 1887 1963 edit Electrically powered streetcar systems were numerous starting with the Los Angeles Electric Railway in 1887 but were over time consolidated into two large networks In 1901 Henry Huntington bought various electric streetcar companies operating mostly within the City of Los Angeles and not in the San Fernando Valley Harbor area or Westside and combined them into the Los Angeles Railway with its yellow cars In 1902 Huntington and banker Isaias W Hellman established the Pacific Electric Railway which would acquire other railways providing interurban service to surrounding towns in what is now Greater Los Angeles Los Angeles Orange San Bernardino and Riverside counties and new suburban developments The Pacific Electric Building with station underneath was opened in 1905 at 6th and Main Street Funiculars edit Angel s Flight and Court Flight were funicular railways operating from Broadway up Bunker Hill Railroad depots edit nbsp Los Angeles amp San Pedro Railroad Depot SW corner Alameda and Commercial streets c 1880 nbsp Los Angeles and Independence Railroad Depot 5th amp San Pedro streets c 1875 nbsp Southern Pacific Railroad s Arcade Depot Alameda between 5th 6th c 1895 1900 nbsp Central Station of the Southern Pacific Railroad c 1918 Central amp 5th streets c 1918 nbsp La Grande Station of the Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Santa Fe and 2nd streets c 1915Los Angeles amp San Pedro Railroad Depot SW corner Alameda and Commercial streets Los Angeles and Independence Railroad Depot San Pedro and 5th street southeast of the business district Arcade Depot of the Southern Pacific Railroad along Alameda Street between 5th to 6th streets Opened 1888 closed 1914 La Grande Station of the Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Santa Fe at 2nd East of the business district opened 1893 closed 1939 Central Station of the Southern Pacific Railroad Central and 5th streets southeast of the business district opened 1914 Union Pacific Railroad started operating from the station in 1924 Disused 1939 Union Station was opened in 1939 replacing the existing Central and La Grande stations Landmarks shown on schematic map editThis is a map of the former and current buildings located in the Victorian business district of Los Angeles around 1890 1905 Abbreviations and notes CH Concert Hall Female boarding was a euphemism for small rooms cribs used by prostitutes 169 Dagger indicates a street that no longer existsTo be read like a map For the area to the north see Los Angeles Plaza Historic District Temperance Temple 1888 1950s Now L A County Heatingand Refrigeration Plant FORTST BROADWAY BUENAVISTAST NEWHIGHSTREET Lafayette Hotel Cosmopolitan Hotel St Elmo Hotel 1850s 1st Downey Block 1871 2nd Downey Block 1871 later Post Office and Courthouse 1910 1937 Now Spring Street Courthouse 1940 MAINSTREET Now US 101 Stearns House 1835 1877 BAKER BLOCK 1875 1942 Downey Bldg 1878 1957 Grand Central Hotel 1876 Pico Bldg Farmers amp Merchants Bank 1867 1957 Bella Union St Charles Hotel 1835 1940 Ducommun Block Security Pacific Bank Now Los Angeles Mall Now US 101 freeway Arcadia Block 1858 1927 Hellman Block 1870 Now Los Angeles Mall LOSANGELESSTREET Now US 101 Bell Block Mellus Row Fremont HQ Hellman Haas amp Co Now Federal Building 1965 Welton Becket COMMERCIAL ST COMMERCIALNow Hall of Justice 1925 N side of Templefrom Broadway to Spring Farmers and Merchants Bank L A Savings Bank Commercial Bank First National Bank 170 New Lanfranco Block 1888 Now Los Angeles MallTEMPLE TEMPLE TEMPLEHall of Records 1962 High School 1873 1887 Red Sandstone Courthouse 1891 1936 Now L A County Courthouse 1972 Jones Block J W Robinson s 1886 1895 Now part of City Hall site SPRINGSTREET TempleBlock 1858 1871 1927 REQUENA ST MARKET United States Hotel 1861 1939 Now City Hall East 1972 Parker Center former LAPD HQ MARKET ST Court Flight Funicular 1905 1943 PHILLIPS BLOCK 1887 1912 home to Hamburger s Peoples Store 1888 1908 Clock Tower Courthouse 1858 1895 Bullard Block 1895 1925 Now City HallHall of Records 1911 1973 COURT ST Now Los Angeles Mall entire block FRANKLIN ST 128 138 Jacoby Bros DS 1879 1900 Los AngelesNational Bank Equitable Building 1906 1920s Now Circle Park at City Hall Hall of the Amigos del Pais 1844 McDonald Block 121 127 Jacoby Bros DS 1879 1900 Lichtenberger BlockNow Circle Park at City Hall German AmericanSavings Bank 1894 1906 Tajo Building 1896 mid 20th c Now Law Library Los Angeles Times Building 3 1912 1938 Now vacant lot Larronde Block 1892 c 1930 Calif State Bldg 1931 1976 Now vacant lot FIRST ST FIRST ST FIRST ST FIRST ST FIRST ST 107 Old Junipero SerraState Office Bldg 1958 2006 171 U S Courthouse First Street Courthouse entire block 2016 127 Mason Opera House 1902 1956 172 Culver Block Now Times Mirror SquarePereira building 1973 Nadeau Hotel 1882 1932 Now Times Mirror SquareKaufmann building 1935 Wilson Block 1886 Now LAPD HQ Natick House 1883 1950 JP Now LAPD HQ 110 Grand Opera House Orpheum Theatre 1 173 Now Caltrans entire block Doubletree Hotel ex New Otani 1977 Weller Court mall 128 130 Southwest Building 1903 Chamber of Commerce The Herald Louis Roeder Block 1 Bryson Block Mueller s Block Now LAPD HQ built 2009 entire block 141 145 Frost Bldg Haig M Prince Bldg 174 Later 7 storyparking garage 1948 1997 171 Now park at U S Courthouse 138 Hellman Bldg 1897 1959 Now 221 W 2ndparking garage Bryson BonebrakeBlock 1888 Now Times Mirror SquareCrawford Bldg 1948 Corfu Hotel Burdick Block 1888 a k a American Bank Bldg Now LAPD HQ H T Newell Block as of 1910 shops and offices Now LAPD HQSECOND ST SECOND ST SECOND ST SECOND ST SECOND ST Broadway Media Center American Natl California Bank 1878 1911 2nd Calif Bank Bldg 1911 YMCA block 1889 1911 Merchants Trust Co Bldg 1910 Hollenbeck HotelNolan Smith amp Bridge Bldg 200 4 Now Historic Broadway station under construction 222 W 3rd 30 story tower planned 175 Wilcox Building 1895 6 Higgins Bldg 1910 Little Tokyo district 213 223 Potomac Block 1890 1953 from 1893 1905 Ville de Paris DS from 1905 1917 Coulter s DS 237 241 J W Robinson s Boston Dry Goods 1895 1915 Now 213 S Spring parking garage 206 10 Gordon Bldg New King Hotel 212 6 Crocker Bldg Victor Clothing 1926 1964 218 224 Copp Bldg Pig n Whistle 226 8 City Hall 1888 1928 240 6 Hoss Bldg Natatorium Victor Clothing 1964 2001 Now 213 S Springparking garage 227 1st Los Angeles Theatre 2nd Orpheum Theatre Lyceum Theatre 1888 1941 176 229 Turnverein Lyceum Hall 1894 1950s Douglas Building 1897 The Downtown Independent cinema ex Cathedral of Saint Vibiana 1876 253 Pan American Lofts prev Irvine Byrne Block 1895 Rindge Bldg c 1901 Metropolitan Barber Shop 177 Stimson Bldg 1893 1963 Now misc retail Now parking garage THIRD ST THIRD ST THIRD ST THIRD ST THIRD ST Hotel Ramona 1903 178 Million Dollar Theatre 1917 Bradbury Building 1893 Washington Bldg 1912 Lankershim Bldg 1896 7 Robert Brown Young demolished 1959 Now Reagan Bldg Wesley Roberts Bldg Now Reagan Bldg Now parking lot For the area to the south see Historic CoreSee also editSonoratown Los Angeles Old Chinatown Los AngelesReferences edit Early Los Angeles Historical Buildings 1800s Water and Power Associates Los Angeles Fifty Years Ago The Re Creation of a Vanished City Los Angeles Times November 15 1931 p 90 Archived from the original on June 7 2019 Retrieved May 13 2019 via Newspapers com Fact and Comment The Los Angeles Times January 16 1910 Archived from the original on October 31 2023 via Newspapers com a b c search for the location Google Maps retrieved October 20 2020 Believes in North End Los Angeles Times January 16 1910 p 65 Map of Temple Street Cable Railway via Metro Los Angeles County Temple Street Cable Railway 1886 www erha org New Buildings A Splendid Showing for the Future Los Angeles Los Angeles Times May 13 1888 p 3 Water and Power Associates Los Angeles County Central Heating and Refrigeration Plant Calisphere Water and Power Associates waterandpower org Water and Power Associates waterandpower org Retrieved May 22 2021 PCAD Tajo Building Downtown Los Angeles CA pcad lib washington edu Water and Power Associates BEgins New Era of Achievement Chamber of Commerce Welcomes Public to Magnificent Home with Brilliant Reception Annual Reports Show Splendid Progress The Los Angeles Times February 13 1904 p 13 Retrieved November 10 2020 PCAD Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce Building Downtown Los Angeles CA pcad lib washington edu Junipero Serra State Office Building 1 Pacific Coast Architecture Database a b New Los Angeles US Courthouse www gsa gov Mason Theatre in Los Angeles CA Cinema Treasures cinematreasures org 2nd Street and Broadway Huntington Digital Library Marques Vickers Reinventing Broadway p 52 Water and Power Associates Broadway to the Front Los Angeles Evening Express August 7 1891 p 8 a b Advertisement for City of Paris Los Angeles Times August 6 1895 p 10 Merchants Trust Company Building ca 1910 Calisphere Great Store for Coulter Los Angeles Times August 2 1904 p 13 Hill 224 6 8 S November 2 1906 Coulter s location 1906 225 229 S Broadway The Los Angeles Times p 19 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Ad for Coulter s new store opening Los Angeles Times May 31 1905 a b Potomac Block Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection tessa lapl org Potomac Block The Work of Building Up a Great City Los Angeles Herald July 18 1890 Potomac Block amp Bicknell Block Romanesque Revival Downtown PocketSights pocketsights com Western Shoe Company Western Department Store 227 S Broadway Los Angeles Evening Express May 26 1922 p 14 Retrieved May 22 2021 The Boston Dry Goods Store Los Angeles Times January 1 1895 p 29 Retrieved May 3 2019 The New Boston Store Los Angeles Finest Commercial Structure Is Complete Los Angeles Herald October 4 1895 p 5 31 Dec 1898 4 Los Angeles Times at Newspapers com Newspapers com a b 19 Jun 1904 12 Los Angeles Times at Newspapers com Newspapers com Sanborn Map of Los Angeles 1894 vol 1 plate 8 via Library of Congress Sanborn Map of Los Angeles 1906 vol 2 plate 131 via Library of Congress a b Sanborn Maps of Los Angeles 1894 vol 1 plate 8 1906 vol 2 plate 131 Pig n Whistle opens 224 S Broadway The Los Angeles Times December 10 1908 p 22 via newspapers com CityDig This Was L A s City Hall for 39 Years Los Angeles Magazine May 8 2014 Retrieved May 16 2019 Maese Kathryn The Victor No Longer Los Angeles Downtown News The Voice of Downtown Los Angeles Retrieved August 11 2020 I Magnin moves from Spring to Broadway 1 Los Angeles Times December 31 1898 p 4 via newspapers com Flynn Kathleen Nye Mixing the Old With the New Los Angeles Downtown News The Voice of Downtown Los Angeles Retrieved May 22 2021 Business Property Deal Nearly Two Hundred Thousand Dollars for a Good Corner March 22 1899 22 Sep 1989 19 The Los Angeles Times at Newspapers com Newspapers com Retrieved October 13 2018 a b Bradbury Building Los Angeles Conservancy www laconservancy org The Opening of North Broadway Los Angeles Times October 9 1895 p 6 Nine Acres Space in Robinson Store Los Angeles Evening Express May 30 1914 a b Wreckers Put Hammer to Old Health Building Los Angeles Times December 30 1954 a b Sanborn 1888 map of Los Angeles plate 18 via Los Angeles Public Library Sanborn 1894 map of Los Angeles plate 10 east via Library of Congress Beware of Counterfeits The Los Angeles Times April 29 1885 p 1 Retrieved November 12 2020 City of Paris 1895 177 N Spring Los Angeles Times September 11 1895 p 4 via newspapers com Rocha Adobe Water and Power Associates Stern Norton B Louis Phillips of the Pomona Valley Historical Society of Southern California 184 Architect B J Reeve San Francisco Examiner August 14 1887 p 19 Retrieved May 13 2019 Advertisement by London Clothing Co Harris amp Frank proprietors Los Angeles Herald February 17 1894 Retrieved May 6 2019 Block 10 as sown on Sanborn Fire Map 1894 Israel S A January 3 1926 Historic Temple Block Surrenders to Progress after Seventy Years Los Angeles Times p 71 a b Desmond s in Seventy Sixth Year Los Angeles Times 21 Oct 1937 Page 8 Concentrating The Growth of a Business and a Great Bazaar A Grand Rally of Wholesale and Retail Outposts and Pickets Under One Large Roof The Jacoby Bros Occupy Their New and Magnificent Building and Receive the Congratulations of Their Many Friends Los Angeles Times November 14 1891 p 3 Ad for Cohn Bros Los Angeles Herald May 14 1892 p 8 Ad for Cohn Bros in Los Angeles Times May 15 1897 Buildings and Lands The July Permits Break the Record The Remarkable Gains over Last Year s List Los Angeles Express August 3 1895 p 5 Bullard Block Los Angeles Water amp Power https waterandpower org museum Early LA Buildings 20 1800s Page 1 html Temple Blo, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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