List of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments in South Los Angeles explained

This is a list of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments in South Los Angeles, California. In total, there are over 144 Historic-Cultural Monuments (HCM) in the South Los Angeles region, which includes the West Adams, Exposition Park, and University of Southern California campus areas. It also includes historic sites in Watts (including Simon Rodia's Watts Towers), Baldwin Hills, Crenshaw, Jefferson Park, and Leimert Park. Further, certain historic sites in Arlington Heights, Harvard Heights and Mid-City neighborhoods below Washington Boulevard are identified by the Los Angeles Department of City Planning as being in South Los Angeles, and are included here.[1] They are designated by the city's Cultural Heritage Commission. There is also a separate list below identifying other historic sites in the area that have not been designated as HCMs, but which have been recognized as California Historical Landmarks or have been listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Overview of the Historic-Cultural Monuments in South Los Angeles

National Historic Landmarks: South Los Angeles includes some of the city's most historic sites, including three National Historic Landmarks. The sites receiving this high designation are: (1) the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, built in 1923, and used as the principal site of the 1932 and 1984 Summer Olympic Games;[2] (2) the Watts Towers (HCM #15), a collection of 17 interconnected structures, two of which reach heights of over 99 feet (30 m), built by Italian immigrant construction worker Simon Rodia in his spare time from 1921 to 1954; and (3) Baldwin Hills Village (HCM #174), an innovative planned community built in the 1930s with large open grassy areas and trees.

West Adams: A significant concentration of historic sites in the South Los Angeles region are in the West Adams district, which stretches "roughly from Figueroa Street on the east to West Boulevard on the west, and from Pico Boulevard on the north to Jefferson Boulevard on the south."[3] . The West Adams district was one of the city's most affluent areas from the 1890s through the 1920s. Many of the area's mansions, Victorian homes, and American Craftsman bungalows have been preserved. The area's 70 Historic-Cultural Monuments include some of the city's most renowned landmarks, such as the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library (HCM #28) operated by UCLA and the Frederick Hastings Rindge House (HCM #95) built by a Bostonian who owned all of Malibu.

Jefferson Park: Through the 20th century, Jefferson Park was variously settled by Japanese-American, African-American, and Louisiana Creole communities. The neighborhood is known for its concentration of historic American Craftsman houses, and a section of the neighborhood is a City of Los Angeles Historic Preservation Overlay Zone (HPOZ). Notable Historic-Cultural Monuments include the Westminster Presbyterian Church (HCM #229), and the Jefferson Branch Library.

USC, Exposition Park, and North University Park: To the east of West Adams and Jefferson Park is the campus of the University of Southern California, Exposition Park, and the neighborhood of North University Park, which contains the North University Park Historic District and the Menlo Avenue–West Twenty-ninth Street Historic District. The important sites in these neighborhoods include the L.A. Coliseum, the Shrine Auditorium (HCM #139) (the site of eleven Academy Awards ceremonies between 1947 and 2001),[4] the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, oil baron Edward Doheny's Chester Place mansion (HCM #30), the castle-like Stimson House (HCM #212) that survived a dynamite attack in 1896, the picturesque Victorian Forthmann House (HCM #103), the Exposition Park Rose Garden, USC's Widney Hall (HCM #70) (the oldest university building in Southern California, in continuous use since 1880), and the birthplace of two-time U.S. presidential candidate Adlai Stevenson (HCM #35).

Vermont Square, Watts and South L.A.: This area includes the city's oldest library building, the Vermont Square Branch (HCM #264), built in 1913 in the Vermont Square neighborhood. It is an Italian Renaissance style building with Prairie style proportions built with a grant from Andrew Carnegie. The Watts Station was designated as a Historic-Cultural Monument (HCM #36) shortly after the Watts Riots in 1965. The old wooden railway station, built in 1904, was the only building along Watts' main thoroughfare (which became known as "Charcoal Alley") to survive the riots. The station became a symbol of continuity, hope and renewal for the Watts community. Also in South Los Angeles is the Ralph J. Bunche House (HCM #159). The boyhood home of Ralph J. Bunche, the first African-American to win the Nobel Peace Prize, it has been preserved as a museum.

Churches: Many of the city's most recognizable churches are also located in southern Los Angeles, including the domed Second Church of Christ Scientist (HCM #57), the second Catholic church in the city to be consecrated, St. Vincent de Paul (HCM #72), the city's Episcopal cathedral, Saint John's, its Greek Orthodox cathedral, Saint Sophia (HCM #120), the Gothic McCarty Memorial Christian Church, which became one of the first white Protestant churches to be racially integrated in the 1950s, the Lombard Romanesque Second Baptist Church (HCM #200) designed in 1925 by noted African-American architect, Paul R. Williams, and the Richardsonian Romanesque First African Methodist Episcopal Zion Cathedral (HCM #341).

African-American Music History: The area also includes sites that have played an important role in the city's musical history. The Ray Charles Worldwide Offices and Studios were designated as a Historic-Cultural Monument (HCM #776) in 2004, and the Dunbar Hotel (HCM #70) was at the center of the thriving Central Avenue jazz scene in the 1930s and 1940s. After hosting the first national convention of the NAACP to be held in the western United States, the Dunbar hosted Duke Ellington, Cab Calloway, Billie Holiday, Louis Armstrong, Lionel Hampton, Count Basie, Lena Horne and other jazz legends. Former heavyweight champion Jack Johnson also ran a nightclub at the Dunbar in the 1930s. And the Lincoln Theatre (HCM #744), built in 1927, was once the crown jewel of Central Avenue, referred to by some as the West Coast's version of New York City's Apollo Theater.

Current and former Historic-Cultural Monuments

width=1% HCM #[5] width="18%" Landmark name[6] Image width="4%" Date designated width="12%" Locality width="12%" NeighborhoodDescription[7]
15
(1027)
(2373)
Towers of Simon Rodia (Watts Towers)1765 E. 107th St.
WattsTowers constructed by Italian immigrant Simon Rodia between 1921 and 1954
18Hyde Park Congregational Church (site of)6501 Crenshaw Blvd.
Hyde ParkTiny wooden church with two front-corner towers; demolished in 1964; delisted 1/1/1964
28William Andrews Clark Memorial Library2520 Cimarron St.
West Adams -
West Adams Terrace
Renaissance Revival building completed in 1926; designed by Robert D. Farquhar
30Oliver G. Posey-Edward L. Doheny Residence8 Chester Pl.
West AdamsMansion purchased in 1901 by oil businessman Edward L. Doheny; designed by Eisen & Hunt; now part of Mount St. Mary's College campus
35Birthplace of Adlai E. Stevenson II2639 Monmouth Ave.
Site of birthplace of two-time U.S. presidential candidate Adlai Stevenson II
36
(2372)
Watts Station1686 E. 103rd St.
WattsElectric railway station built in early 1900s; the only building along the area known as "Charcoal Alley" to survive the Watts Riots
57
(2364)
Second Church of Christ Scientist, Los Angeles946 - 948 West Adams Blvd.
West Adams -
North University Park
Built in 1910 and designed by Alfred Rosenheim, purchased by the Art of Living foundation in 2009
70
(1025)
Widney Hall (Alumni Hall)650 Childs Way
USC CampusOldest university building in Southern California, in continuous use since 1880
72Automobile Club of Southern California2601 S. Figueroa St.
West AdamsSpanish colonial headquarters building erected in 1922; designed by Sumner Hunt and Silas Reese Burns
90St. Vincent de Paul Church621 W. Adams Blvd.
West AdamsSecond Roman Catholic church in Los Angeles to be consecrated; designed by Albert C. Martin Sr.
95
(2363)
Rindge House2263 S. Harvard St.
West AdamsMansion built in 1906 for Frederick H. Rindge; designed by Frederick Roehrig in Chateauesque style
103Forthmann House (and Carriage House)2801 S. Hoover Blvd.
Victorian house built in the 1880s; designed by Burgess J. Reeve; relocated in 1989 from original location
117Residence2218 S. Harvard Blvd.
West AdamsAmerican Colonial Revival House built in approximately 1905
120Saint Sophia Cathedral1324 S. Normandie Ave.
Byzantine-Latino QuarterGreek Orthodox cathedral designed by Kalionzes, Klingerman & Walker in the Byzantine style, dedicated in 1952
127Exposition Club House3990 Menlo Ave.
Exposition ParkSpanish Colonial Revival building completed in 1920s in Exposition Park
128Hancock Memorial Museum3616 University Ave.USC CampusLarge mansion built by the Hancock family at Wilshire Blvd. and Vermont Ave., circa 1900; razed in 1938, though four rooms were moved in their entirety to the USC campus
131
(2366)
Dunbar Hotel (Somerville Hotel)4225 S. Central Ave.
Central AvenueFocal point of the Central Avenue African-American community in the 1930s and 1940s.
139
(2315)
Shrine Auditorium665 W. Jefferson Blvd.
West Adams -
North University Park
Theater seating 6,700 is one of the largest in the United States and was the prior site of the Academy Awards. Also known as Al Malaikah Temple.
159
(2321)
Ralph J. Bunche House1221 E. 40th Pl.
South Los AngelesHome of Nobel Peace Prize winner in his youth
174Village Green (Baldwin Hills Village)5112 - 5595 Village Green
Baldwin HillsUrban housing project completed in 1942 featuring extensive grassy areas and open spaces, which was designed by Reginald D. Johnson, Wilson and Merril, Robert E. Alexander. AIA 1972 award.
179Residence (site of)919 W. 20th St.
West Adams -
Twentieth Street Historic District
Site of Queen Anne Victorian house built in 1908; demolished in 1978
185President's House (site of)7851 Budlong Ave.
South Los AngelesMission style house built in 1912 (now the location of the Crenshaw Christian Center Faith Dome)
197
(2319)
Britt House2141 W. Adams Blvd.
West Adams -
West Adams Terrace
Classical Revival house built in 1910, designed by Alfred F. Rosenheim; used today as the headquarters of the LA84 Foundation
200Second Baptist Church2412 Griffith Ave.
South Los AngelesLombard Romanesque church built in 1925, designed by Paul R. Williams; long a hub of the African American community
212
(2367)
Stimson House2421 S. Figueroa St.
West AdamsRichardsonian Romanesque mansion; built in 1891; originally home of lumber and banking millionaire; survived a dynamite attack by a blackmailer in 1896; later occupied by a brewer, a fraternity house, student housing and a convent
214Mount Carmel High School (former site)7011 S. Hoover St.
South Los AngelesSpanish Revival style Catholic high school built in 1934. Demolished in 1983.
229Westminster Presbyterian Church2230 W. Jefferson Blvd.
Jefferson ParkFirst African American Presbyterian congregation in Los Angeles; Spanish Revival style structure built in 1904
230
(2362)
Villa Maria (Ramsay-Durfee House)2425 S. Western Ave.
West Adams -
West Adams Terrace
Tudor Revival mansion designed by Frederick Louis Roehrig and built in 1908; bought by Brothers of St. John of God in 1978
240Residence2703 S. Hoover St.
West AdamsQueen Anne style home built circa 1891, designed by Bradbeer and Ferris
241Sunshine Mission2600 S. Hoover St.
West AdamsBuilt in 1893, it has housed an experimental kindergarten, a prep school for girls, the headquarters of the Dianetics Foundation, and the Sunshine Shelter for homeless women; also known as Casa de Rosas
242
(2354)
Miller and Herriott Tract House1163 W. 27th St.
Eastlake style house built in 1890, designed by Bradbeer and Ferris
258Fitzgerald House3115 W. Adams Blvd.
West Adams -
West Adams Terrace
Italian Gothic style house built in 1903, designed by Joseph Cather Newsom
264
(2371)
Vermont Square Branch Library1201 W. 48th St.
Vermont SquareOldest branch library in Los Angeles; built in 1913 as a Carnegie library; designed by Hunt & Burns in Beaux Arts style with Italian Renaissance influence
273Durfee House1007 W. 24th St.
West Adams -
St. James Park
Eastlake style 2-story wood-frame house built, circa 1885, for Richmond Durfee and his wife.
295A. E. Kelly Residence1140 W. Adams Blvd.
West AdamsQueen Anne Victorian house built in the 1890s; fish-scale shingles on second floor
296John C. Harrison Residence1160 W. 27th St.
West AdamsQueen Anne Victorian house built in 1891 with a three-story tower and wrap-around porch
297West Adams Gardens1158-1176 W. Adams Blvd.
West AdamsGrouping of seven two-story Tudor Revival residential structures built in 1920, designed by L.A. Smith
300Casa Camino Real1828 Oak St.
West Adams -
North University Park
Eclectic structure built in 1923, designed by Morgan, Walls & Morgan; Beauz Arts exterior with elements of Art Deco and Spanish Revival styles
305
(2358)
John Muir Branch Library1005 W. 64th St.
South Los AngelesItalian Renaissance style branch library built in 1930, designed by Henry F. Withey (Ed. note: List of RHPs in L.A. states this built in 1920, here states 1930, which is it?)
306Original Vernon Branch Library (site of)4504 S. Central Ave.
South Los AngelesBranch library that housed large collection of books on African American history
307
(2342)
Washington Irving Branch Library1803 S. Arlington Ave.
Arlington HeightsLombardic Richardsonian Romanesque library branch built in 1926, designed by Allison & Allison
330Angelus-Rosedale Cemetery1831 W. Washington Blvd.
West AdamsCemetery opened in 1884 with pioneer families and 19th century funerary architecture; first in the West to operate a crematorium
331Pacific Bell Building2755 W. 15th St.
West Adams -
Harvard Heights
Spanish Mission style garage with Churrigueresque details built, circa 1922
335Henry J. Reuman Residence925 W. 23rd St.
West Adams -
St. James Park
Queen Anne and Colonial Revival transitional style house built, circa 1898, designed by August Wackerbarth
341First African Methodist Episcopal Zion Cathedral & Community Center1449 W. Adams Blvd.
West AdamsRichardsonian Romanesque cathedral built in 1930 for the West Adams Presbyterian Church, designed by architects H.M. Patterson and George W. Kelham
344Institute of Musical Art3210 W. 54th St.
Leimert ParkMusic school and recording studio founded in 1922
349
(2330)
Fire Station No. 182616 S. Hobart Blvd.
West Adams
350Ecung-Ibbetson House and Moreton Bay Fig Tree1190 W. Adams Blvd.
West AdamsRichardsonian Romanesque and Victorian home built in 1899
407Seyler Residence2305 Scarff St.
West Adams -
St. James Park
Queen Anne style Victorian home built in 1894, designed by Abraham M. Edelman
408
(2351)
Machell-Seaman House2341 Scarff St.
West Adams -
St. James Park
Asymmetrical Queen Anne style Victorian home built in 1888
409Burkhalter Residence2309 - 2311 Scarff St.
West Adams -
St. James Park
Queen Anne style Victorian home built in 1895
410Distribution Station No. 311035 W. 24th St.
West Adams -
St. James Park
Industrial building designed by staff architects at Pacific Gas & Electric Company, built in 1925
417Gordon L. McDonough House2532 5th Ave.
West Adams -
West Adams Terrace
American Craftsman style house built in 1908, designed by architect Frank M. Tyler
419Walker Mansion3300 W. Adams Blvd.
West Adams -
Jefferson Park
Grand Craftsman style mansion with Tudor, Mediterranean and Mission Revival influences
434Colonel John E. Stearns Residence27 St. James Park
West Adams -
St. James Park
Classical Revival house built in 1900, designed by architect John C. Parkinson
455Margaret T. and Bettie Mead Creighton Residence2342 Scarff St.
West Adams -
St. James Park
Colonial Revival style house built in 1896
456Ezra T. Stimson House839 W. Adams Blvd.
West AdamsTudor Revival house built in 1901, designed by architect Frederick Roehrig
457Freeman G. Teed House2365 Scarff St.
West Adams -
St. James Park
American Craftsman style house built in 1893
458Wells-Halliday Mansion2146 W. Adams Blvd.
West AdamsDutch Colonial style house built in 1901; Craftsman style wing built in 1909
466Henry J. Foster Residence1030 W. 23rd St.
West Adams -
St. James Park
Queen Anne style house built circa 1889
467Chalet Apartments2375 Scarff St.
West Adams -
St. James Park
Two-story, 19-unit apartment complex built in 1913; designed by Frank M. Tyler with the appearance of a single-family house
477Briggs Residence3734 W. Adams Blvd.
West Adams -
Jefferson Park
Alpine Craftsman style house built in 1912, designed by Hudson & Munsell with steep, cross-gabled roof
478Guasti Villa-Busby Berkeley Estate3500 W. Adams Blvd.
West Adams -
Jefferson Park
Beaux Arts – Italian Renaissance style mansion, designed by Hudson & Munsell; purchased in 1936 by Busby Berkeley; now operated as the "Peace Awareness Labyrinth Gardens"
479Dr. Grandville MacGowan Home3726 W. Adams Blvd.
West Adams -
Jefferson Park
Alpine Craftsman style mansion with Tudor Revival influences, built in 1912 and designed by Hudson & Munsell
487Sanchez Ranch3725 Don Felipe Dr.
Leimert ParkAdobe structures once part of the Rancho La Cienega o Paso de la Tijera, built in 1790
489Richard H. Alexander Residence2119 Estrella Ave.
West AdamsTwo-story Eastlake style house built circa 1888
496Lycurgus Lindsay Mansion3424 W. Adams Blvd.
West AdamsMission Revival style house built circa 1900 with tiles from Western Art Tile works owned by Lycurgus Lindsay; house designed by Charles Whittlesey
497Charles Clifford Gibbons Residence2124 Bonsallo Ave.
West AdamsQueen Anne style house built in 1892, designed by J.H. Bradbeer
498Lois Ellen Arnold Residence1978 Estrella Ave.
West Adams -
North University Park
Queen Anne style house built in 1888
499Agnes B. Heimgartner Residence1982 Bonsallo Ave.
West AdamsEastlake style house built in 1893
500John B. Kane Residence2122 Bonsallo Ave.
West Adams -
North University Park
Eastlake cottage built in 1892, designed by Fred R. Dorn
501Michael Shannon Residence1970 Bonsallo Ave.
West Adams -
North University Park
Eastlake style townhouse built circa 1890
502Collins-Furthmann Mansion3691 - 3801 Lenawee Ave.
Baldwin Hills
507Hiram V. Short Residence2108 - 2110 Estrella Ave.
West Adams
510Residence1157 W. 55th St.
South Los Angeles
511Residence1100 W. 55th St.
South Los Angeles
512Church of the Advent4976 W. Adams Blvd.
West Adams
513Southern California Edison Service Yard Structure615 E. 108th St.
South Los Angeles
516
(2708)
Saint John's Episcopal Church514 W. Adams Blvd.
West AdamsRomanesque Episcopal church built in 1925; now serves as Episcopal cathedral for Los Angeles
517Residence917 E. 49th Pl.
South Los Angeles
518Residence1207 E. 55th St.
South Los Angeles
519Cockins House2653 S. Hoover St.
West Adams
548Korean Independence Memorial Building1368 W. Jefferson Blvd.
Jefferson Park
551Thomas W. Phillips Residence2215 S. Harvard Blvd.
West Adams
560Wright House2121 - 2123 Bonsallo Ave.
West Adams
561Allen House2125 Bonsallo Ave.
West Adams
574Pierce Brothers Mortuary714 W. Washington Blvd.
West Adams -
North University Park
578Emmanuel Danish Evangelical Lutheran Church4254 - 4260 3rd Ave.
Leimert Park
580Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Building4261 S. Central Ave.
Central AvenueHeadquarters of one of the city's most successful African American-owned businesses starting in 1927; now a child development center. Architects: James Garrott and Louis Blodgett.
583Zobelein Estate3738 - 3770 S. Flower St.
Exposition ParkBuilt between 1937 and 1941, named "Sable Arms Apartments", designed by architect W.L. Schmolle in Mediterranean Style
591Denker Estate3820 W. Adams Blvd.
West Adams -
Jefferson Park
Two-story Beaux Arts style 1912 building designed by architect B. Cooper Corbett for Louise Denker, widow of hotel and real estate tycoon Andrew Denker.
598Benjamin J. Waters Residence2289 W. 25th St.
Arlington HeightsVictorian Colonial Revival style house built in 1899
599Julius Bierlich Residence1818 S. Gramercy Pl.
West Adams -
Harvard Heights
2-story California Craftsman bungalow was designed by architect Frank M. Tyler in 1914.
600Lucien and Blanche Gray Residence2515 - 2519 4th Ave.West Adams
601Gramercy Park Homestead2098 - 2108 W. 24th St.
Jefferson Park
602Auguste R. Marquis Residence (Filipino Federation of America)2300 - 2312 W. 25th St.
West Adams -
West Adams Terrace
606Kerckhoff House730 - 746 W. Adams Blvd.
West Adams -
St. James Park
607Powers Apartment#12325 - 2329 Scarff St.
West Adams
608Powers Apartment#22326 - 2332 Scarff St.
West Adams -
St. James Park
609Powers Apartment#32308 - 2312 Scarff St.
West Adams -
St. James Park
610Shankland House715 W. 28th St.
West Adams
620Leimert Plaza4395 Leimert Blvd.
Leimert Park
621Alice Lynch Residence2414 4th Ave.
West Adams -
West Adams Terrace
625Thomas Butler Henry Residence1400 S. Manhattan Pl.
West Adams -
Harvard Heights
626Eyraud Residence1326 S. Manhattan Pl.
Arlington Heights
627John F. Powers Residence1547 S. Manhattan Pl.
West Adams -
Harvard Heights
654Craftsman Mansion4318 Victoria Park Pl.
34.0458°N -118.3297°W
West Adams -
Victoria Park
658Harry & Grace Wurtzel House926 Longwood Ave.Mid-Wilshire
662Perrine House2229 S. Gramercy Pl.
West Adams -
West Adams Terrace
672Percy H. Clark Residence2639 S. Van Buren Pl.
West Adams
678The Furlong House2657 S. Van Buren Pl.
West Adams
679Maverick's Flat4225 - 4225 S. Crenshaw Blvd.Leimert Park
688Holiday Bowl3730 S. Crenshaw Blvd.
CrenshawFounded in 1958 by five Japanese-Americans to rebuild the Nikkei community after World War II internment; torn down in October 2003.
705Dryden Residence3825 W. Adams Blvd.
West Adams -
West Adams Terrace
725John G. Jones Lodge5900 S. Broadway
South Los Angeles
726Gilbert W. Lindsay Home774 E. 52nd Pl.
South Los Angeles
744Lincoln Theatre2300 S. Central Ave.
South Los Angeles
754First Presbyterian Church of Los Angeles1809 West Blvd.
Mid-City
757Joseph Dupy Residence-South Seas Edwardian2301 W. 24th St.
West Adams -
West Adams Terrace
761Kissam House2160 W. 20th St.
Arlington Heights
764Lady Effie's Tea Parlor453 E. Adams Blvd.
South Los Angeles
774Angelus Funeral Home1028-1030 E. Jefferson Blvd.
South Los Angeles
776Ray Charles Worldwide Offices and Studios2107 W. Washington Blvd.
West Adams -
Harvard Heights
The corner of Westmoreland and Washington Boulevards is known as "Ray Charles Square"
779Michael J. Connell Carriage House634 W. 23rd St.
West Adams
780Bernays House1656 W. 25th St.
West Adams
787Fire Station 211187 E. 52nd St.
South Los Angeles
791Betty Hill House1655 W. 37th Pl.
Jefferson ParkHome of early 20th century African American activist Betty Hill (c. 1882–1960).
798Mary E. Smith House1186 W. 27th St.
West Adams
811Tate-McCoy Homestead1463 - 1469 S. Norton Ave.
Arlington Heights
818J.R. Dennison House1919 S. Harvard Blvd.
West Adams -
West Adams Heights
819Vista Magnolia Court1201-1215 W. 27th St., 2671 S. Magnolia Ave.West Adams
820Williard J. Doran Residence1194 W. 27th St.
West Adams
85128th Street YMCA1006 E. 28th St.
South Los Angeles
854Cline Residence and Museum1401-1409 S. Gramercy Pl.
West Adams -
Harvard Heights
855Statton Residence1415 S. Gramercy Pl.
Arlington Heights
864Life Magazine/Leimert Park House3892 S. Olmstead Ave.Leimert Park
865Joseph L. Starr Farmhouse2801 S. Arlington Ave.West Adams -
Jefferson Park
866Glen Lukens Home and Studio3425 W. 27th St.
West Adams -
Jefferson Park
879Louise Pratt House2706 S. Menlo St.
West Adams -
North University Park -
Menlo Avenue–West Twenty-ninth Street Historic District
880Bigelow-Wood Residence2905 S. Hoover St.
West Adams
884Waters-Shaw Family Residence2700 S. Severance St.
West Adams
885Holmes-Shannon House4311 Victoria Park Dr.
34.0464°N -118.3292°W
West Adams -
Victoria Park
924Bigford Residence1546 S. Fifth Ave.Arlington Heights
968Bethlehem Baptist Church4901 Compton Ave.
33.9983°N -118.2481°W
South Los AngelesBuilt 1944, only realized church by R. M. Schindler, has de Stijl style layers. "Rare example of Modernist architecture that crossed L.A.'s economic and racial boundaries."[8]
987St. Philip the Evangelist Church20102716 S. Stanford AvenueSouth Los AngelesSpanish Colonial Revival/Romanesque style; brightly colored stained glass windows and an original 1928 Skinner Opus 737 organ. Architects: Williams, Garrott & Young.
988St. Philip the Evangelist Parish Hall20102716 S. Stanford AvenueSouth Los Angelesmany prominent African-Americans were church members
990Hauerwaas Kusayanagi ResidenceOctober 27, 20103741 W 27th Street Jefferson Parkapproved by city council action[9]
1000Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Building (1949)1999 W. Adams Blvd.West AdamsArchitect Paul R. Williams designed this six-story Late Moderne style commercial building in 1949, to house the Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Company.
1073Charles C. Hurd Residence4359 Victoria Park Place
West Adams -
Victoria Park
Built in 1909, the Charles C. Hurd Residence is a single-family home built in the Arts & Crafts Tudor Revival Style
1253Paul Revere Williams House1271 W. 35th Street
Jefferson ParkWilliams bought the home in 1921 and used it as his principal residence until he moved to Lafayette Park in 1952 [10] [11]

Non-HCM sites also recognized

The Historic-Cultural Monuments listed above include many of the most important historic sites in South Los Angeles. In addition, the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum is a U.S. National Historic Landmark in the region. Some other sites and historic districts within the South Los Angeles region have been listed on the National Register of Historic Places or designated as California Historical Landmarks, but were not also listed as HCMs. These are:

width=1% Code[12] Landmark namevanbureImageSelected dateLocalityNeighborhoodDescription
(1010)
(2348)
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Exposition Park3911 S. Figueroa St.
Exposition Park
(1029)Vermont Avenue Presbyterian Church5300-5308 S. Vermont Ave.
South Los Angeles
(1032)
(2712)
McCarty Memorial Christian Church2002-01-17[13] 4101 W. Adams Blvd.
West AdamsGothic Revival church of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ); founded in 1932 as a white congregation; integrated and became a multi-racial congregation in the mid-1950s
(2192)Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County900 Exposition Blvd.Exposition ParkOpened in 1913; fitted marble walls and domed and colonnaded rotunda; often used as filming location
(2300)St. James Park Historic DistrictRoughly bounded by 21st and 23 Sts., Mount St. Mary's College, W. Adams Blvd. and Union Ave.
West Adams
(2301)Twentieth Street Historic District912-950 W. 20th St.
West Adams -
North University Park
(2304)Van Buren Place Historic District2620-2657 Van Buren Pl. (both sides of street)
West Adams -
Adams-Normandie HPOZ
Craftsman style homes built from 1903 to 1916 in 2600 block of Van Buren Place
(2307)Exposition Park Rose Garden900 Exposition Blvd.Exposition ParkSunken rose garden created in the 1920s, featuring more than 20,000 rose bushes and 200 varieties of roses
(2311)Menlo Avenue-West Twenty-ninth Street Historic DistrictBounded by Adams Blvd., Ellendale Pl., Thirtieth St., and Vermont Ave.West Adams -
North University Park
(2506)Moneta Branch Library4255 S. Olive St.
South Los Angeles
Angelus Mesa Branch Library1987-05-192700 W. 52nd St.
Angeles MesaBranch library; built in 1929
Jefferson Branch1987-05-192211 W. Jefferson Blvd.
Jefferson ParkFormer branch library; built in 1923
Helen Hunt Jackson Branch1987-05-192330 Naomi St.
South Los AngelesFormer branch library; built in 1926; currently a church
North University Park Historic District2004-02-11Roughly bounded by Hoover St., Adams Blvd, 28th St. and Magnolia Ave.West Adams -
North University Park
Historic district with many Victorian homes, also the birthplace of Adlai Stevenson II

See also

Lists of L.A. Historic-Cultural Monuments

Other

External links

Notes and References

  1. The Los Angeles Department of City Planning also identifies Rocha House, Paul R. Williams House, and Gerry Building, as being in South Los Angeles, but those appear to be in South Robertson, Lafayette Square, Downtown Los Angeles, and neighborhoods, outside of what most would agree is the South Los Angeles area.
  2. Web site: Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum . National Park Service . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20071114222329/http://tps.cr.nps.gov/nhl/detail.cfm?ResourceId=1884&ResourceType=Structure . 2007-11-14 .
  3. Book: Lynch . Don . Cooper . Suzanne Tarbell . John . Kurtz . Images of America - West Adams . 2008 . . 978-0-7385-5920-9 . 7 . 24 December 2023 . Introduction . West Adams, an area roughly bounded by Figueroa Street, Jefferson Boulevard, Pico Boulevard and West Street..
  4. Web site: Locations of the Academy Awards Ceremonies. LA Almanac.
  5. Numbers in 1-999 series are L.A. Historic-Cultural Monuments; CHL numbers are state-designated California Historical Landmark sites; 2000 series denote LAHCM assigned numbers for federally designated sites. Blue colors represent higher designations as National Historic Landmarks and/or listing on the National Register of Historic Places; yellow represents sites that are L.A. Historic-Cultural Monuments without a higher designation. No color represents information is unavailable or the monument has been delisted. To resort on this column, refresh your browser.
  6. Web site: Department of City Planning . Designated Historic-Cultural Monuments . City of Los Angeles . 2010-06-15 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100609160708/http://www.preservation.lacity.org/monuments . 2010-06-09 .
  7. Various sources cited in articles, retrieved on various dates.
  8. Office of Historic Resources, Newsletter, January 2010.
  9. Web site: PLANNING AND LAND USE MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE REPORT . LACity.org . 16 February 2023 . APPROVE the recommendation of the CHC relative to the inclusion of the Hauerwaas-Kusayanagi Residence located at 37 41 West 27th Street in the list of Historic-Cultural Monuments..
  10. News: Niland . Josh . Paul R. Williams' first LA home finally gains historic monument status . 17 February 2024 . February 17, 2022.
  11. News: Historic Resource - Paul Revere Williams House 1271 W 35TH ST Report Date: February 16, 2024 . 17 February 2024 . Historic Places Los Angeles.
  12. Numbers in 1000 series denote LAHCM assigned numbers for state-designated sites; 2000 series denote LAHCM assigned numbers for federally designated sites. Blue colors represent higher designations as National Historic Landmarks and/or listing on the National Register of Historic Places. No color represents information is unavailable or the monument has been delisted. To resort on this column, refresh your browser.
  13. National Register listing date