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Los Angeles
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Destination Facts
Population: 3.6 million in the City of Los
Angeles; 14 million in the greater LA area When to Go Despite its desert climate, most of Los Angeles is protected from extremes
of temperature and humidity by the mountain ranges to its north and east.
August and September are the hottest months, January and February the coolest
and wettest. Offshore breezes keep the beach communities cooler in summer and
warmer in winter than those further inland, particularly the San Fernando
Valley, which is the hottest area in summer and the coldest in winter. The
average LA temperature is around 70°F (21°C), though smog-shrouded summer days
can get well over 90°F (32°C), while winter temperatures around 55°F (12°C) are
not uncommon. There really aren't any seasonal restrictions on a visit to LA. If you go in
summer, you'll see the beaches at their liveliest, with all the Baywatch
types flexing their pecs and displaying their implants. If the thought of
wall-to-wall toned bodies makes you a tad uneasy, try spring (April to May) or
fall (September to November), when the crowds are smaller and the prices lower. History The earliest residents of the Los Angeles area were Gabrieleño and Chumash
Indians, who arrived in the desert region between 5000 and 6000 BC. The first
European known to have visited the LA basin was Portuguese sailor Juan
Rodriguez Cabrillo, who cruised the coast in 1542, but it wasn't until the late
18th century that the real influx began. In 1769, the Spanish governor of
California, Don Gaspar de Portola, and Franciscan father Junipero Serra led an
expedition north from San Diego, looking for places to build missions and
Christianize California's 'heathen' natives. Eventually, 21 California missions
were established along El Camino Real (The King's Highway), two of them
in what was to become Greater Los Angeles: the Mission San Gabriel Archangel
(1771) and the Mission San Fernando Rey de España (1797). In 1781, the missionaries chose 44 settlers from San Gabriel to establish a
new town on the banks of a stream about 9 miles (15km) southwest of the
mission. They named the settlement El Pueblo de Nuestro Señora la Reina de los
Angeles del Río Porciúncula (The Town of Our Lady the Queen of the Angels of
the Porciuncula River) after a saint whose feast day had just been celebrated.
Los Angeles, as the pueblo became known, developed into a thriving farming
community. Upon Mexican independence in 1821, many of that new nation's citizens looked
to California to quench their thirst for private land. By the mid-1830s, the
missions had been secularized and a series of governors began doling out
hundreds of free land grants, thus giving birth to the rancho system. The
prosperous rancheros quickly became California's bigwigs, while
immigrants from the United States became the merchant class. By the mid-1830s,
there were still only 29 US citizens residing in Los Angeles. Most Easterners
hadn't heard about California until 1840, with the publication of Richard Henry
Dana's popular Two Years Before the Mast, an account of his experience
plying the hide-and-tallow trade. 'In the hands of an enterprising people, what
a country this might be,' Dana wrote of Los Angeles, then with a population of
just over 1200. As part of the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, the United States paid $15
million for all Mexican territories west of the Rio Grande and north of
Arizona's Gila River, including Alta California. Two years later California was
admitted as the 31st state of the union. The big push behind this rapidfire
recognition was gold; first unearthed near the San Fernando mission in 1842,
that find was soon eclipsed by James Marshall's famous 1848 discovery on the
American River, which ignited one of the greatest gold rushes in history. The
sudden stampede of tens of thousands of argonauts (80,000 in 1849 alone - thus
the nickname '49ers) had an undeniable impact on LA as well. Southern
California's rancheros were called upon to feed the miners, and they quickly
discovered that the new wealth of the mining camps could earn them 10 times the
profits they were earning from their cattle. With statehood, Los Angeles was incorporated (on 4 April 1850) and made the
seat of broad Los Angeles County. It was an unruly city of dirt streets and
adobe homes, plus many saloons, brothels and gambling houses. By 1854, northern
California's gold rush had peaked and the state fell into a depression. As
unemployed miners flocked to LA, businesses that had harnessed their futures to
miners' fortunes closed their doors. Making matters worse for the rancheros was
the land commission sent west by Congress in 1851. Everyone who had received a
land grant two decades earlier was now forced to prove its legitimacy with
documents and witnesses. By 1857, some 800 cases had been reviewed by tribunal,
500 in favor of the original pre-rancho landowners. When the first transcontinental railroad, the Central Pacific (later renamed
the Southern Pacific), was completed in 1869, San Francisco was California's
metropolitan center. Los Angeles' isolation made it unattractive to San
Francisco's robber barons, but a spur line finally reached LA in 1876, just in
time to service the upstart southern Californian orange-growing industry. The
first commercial grove proved so successful that a second crop was established
in what is now Orange County. By 1889, more than 13,000 acres (5200 hectares)
were planted in citrus. After a hard-sell boosterism campaign, more Easterners heeded the advice of
crusading magazine and newspaper editor Horace Greeley to 'Go West, young man.'
LA's population jumped from 2300 in 1860 to more than 100,000 in 1900, despite
the fact that there was no natural harbor and the fresh water supply was
woefully inadequate. Construction of a harbor at San Pedro, 25 miles (40km)
south of city hall, began in 1899; the first wharf opened in 1914, the year the
Panama Canal was completed, and - suddenly 8000 miles closer to the Atlantic
seaboard - San Pedro became the busiest harbor on the West Coast. Bringing drinkable water to the growing city required a more complex
solution. In 1904, LA's water-bureau superintendent William Mulholland visited
the Owens Valley, 230 miles (370km) northeast, and returned with plans to build
an aqueduct to carry snowmelt from the mountains to the city. Voters approved
the plan, and by November 1913, Owens River water was spilling into the San
Fernando Valley at a rate of 26 million gallons (120 million litres) per day.
Today, the daily flow has increased to 525 million gallons (2.4 billion
litres). The rest of the city's water, as well as Southern California's
electricity, comes from dams on the Colorado River, 200 miles (320km) east. LA's population soared to one million by 1920, two by 1930, which had a lot
to do with the discovery of oil. During WWI, the Lockheed brothers and Donald
Douglas established aerospace plants in the area, and by WWII the aviation
industry employed enough people to lift LA out of the Depression. A real estate
boom, capitalizing on the influx of aviation employees, brought capital to the
region as well as new suburbs south of Los Angeles. And then there was the
movies. Ever since the studios first landed in Los Angeles, the city has raced to
live up to the hype created by 'the industry.' That image helped lure two new
breeds of immigrant: the eccentric artisan and the fashionable hedonist, drawn
by the broad sandy beaches and the temptation of living the Hollywood
lifestyle. Despite the economic upswing, trouble was brewing. For decades policy-makers
had turned a blind eye to ethnic friction, including the 'zoot-suit riots' in
1943. By the mid-60s, South Central LA had reached the boiling point. The
bubble burst in August 1965, with one of the nation's worst-ever race riots.
The primarily black district of Watts exploded during six days of burning and
looting. South Central saw subsequent riots in 1979 and 1992; the latter, a
direct result of the notorious Rodney King beatings, cost 51 lives and $1
billion in property damage, much of it directed at Korean shopkeepers. In contrast, a ray of hope came with the city's unified response to a recent
spate of natural disasters. Though a surprising number of earthquakes,
wildfires, floods and mud slides have plagued LA in the last decade, they've brought
out the best in Angelenos. Downtown Los
Angeles Just as you'd imagine, LA's downtown area is framed by
freeways rather than any particular geographic boundary. The Hollywood
Fwy lies to the north, the Harbor Fwy to the west, the Santa Monica
Fwy to the south and a bird's nest of other freeways intertwine beyond
the Los Angeles River to the east. In the thick of all this concrete
and congestion, however, intrepid urbanites will find a number of
pockets worth exploring. Extending eight blocks east to west, the city's Civic
Center is America's largest complex of government buildings after
Washington, DC. It contains the most important of LA's city, county,
state and federal office buildings, including the US Federal
Courthouse, where the infamous OJ Simpson murder trial took place in
1995, and the 1928 City Hall, which served as the Daily Planet
building in Superman and the police station in Dragnet.
North across Temple St from City Hall is the excellent LA
Children's Museum. A few blocks east of the Civic Center, El Pueblo de
Los Angeles is a 44 acre (18ha) state historic park commemorating
the site where the city was founded in 1781 and preserving many of its
earliest buildings. Its central attraction for most visitors is Olvera
Street, a narrow, block-long passageway that was restored as an
open-air Mexican marketplace in 1930. In addition to its restaurants,
Olvera St teems with the shops and stalls of vendors selling all
manner of Mexican crafts, from leather belts and bags to handmade
candles and colorful piñatas. Directly across from El Pueblo is Union Station,
one of LA's oft-overlooked architectural treasures. Built in 1939 in
Spanish Mission style with Moorish and Moderne details, it's worth a
stop even if you aren't hopping a train. A few blocks north of the
station, the 16 square blocks of Chinatown comprise the social
and cultural nucleus of LA's 200,000 Chinese residents. Here, the
businesses of traditional acupuncturists and herbalists mingle with
scores of restaurants and shops whose inventories vary from cheap
kitsch to exquisite silk clothing, inlaid furniture, antique porcelain
and intricate religious art. Immediately southeast of the Civic Center is Little
Tokyo. First settled by early Japanese immigrants in the 1880s and
thriving by the 1920s, the neighborhood was effectively decimated by
the anti-Japanese hysteria of the WWII years. Thanks in part to an
injection of investment from the 'old country,' Little Tokyo is again
the locus for LA's Japanese population of nearly a quarter million.
Among its streets and outdoor shopping centers, you'll find sushi
bars, bento houses and traditional Japanese gardens. Housed in a
historic Buddhist temple, the Japanese American National Museum,
exhibits objects and art that relate the history of Japanese
emigration to, and life in, the USA. Just southwest of the Civic Center is the Museum of
Contemporary Art, designed by Japanese architect Arata Isozaki. It
houses what is considered one of the world's most important collection
of paintings, sculptures and photographs from the 1940s to the
present. Just west of MOCA is The Westin Bonaventure hotel, a
quintet of cylindrical glass towers that are instantly recognizable to
any regular moviegoer. South of the Civic Center, LA's Hispanic shopping
district is a deliciously cluttery mix of cheap restaurants,
frilly wedding dress shops and blaring Latin pop. For a shocking
contrast to the bustling street scene, step inside the 1893 Bradbury
Building, where a skylit, five-story atrium is surrounded by
Belgian marble, Mexican tiles, ornate French wrought-iron railings,
glazed brick walls, oak paneling and a pair of open-cage elevators.
You've seen it in detail if you've seen the movies Blade Runner
or Wolf. Across the street from the Bradbury, between Broadway
and Hill St, Grand Central Market is LA's oldest (1917) and
largest open-air food market. Hollywood Los Angeles has built its reputation on the glamour of
the movies, and most visitors want at least a little of its glitz to
rub off on them. Hollywood itself (in northwestern LA) is no longer
the movie mecca it once was, but it certainly holds plenty of historic
interest. Take a walk down Hollywood Blvd and you'll pass by famous
sights such as Mann's (née Grauman's) Chinese Theatre, where
more than 150 of the glitterati have left their prints on the sidewalk
out the front. Head east along the Boulevard, stepping on those famous
bronze stars, and you'll find yourself at the Roosevelt Hotel.
Soak up a bit of 1930s ambiance: this is where the first Academy
Awards were held in 1928 and where Errol Flynn, Salvador Dali and F
Scott Fitzgerald often propped up the bar. The corner of Hollywood and Vine was once the heart of
off-screen action for the Industry, but you wouldn't know it now. If
you want a memento of those golden days, the Collectors Book Store
on the corner is a treasure trove of memorabilia. If you don't manage
to spot a real star while you're in Hollywood, drop by the Hollywood
Wax Museum or (for real stars' knickers) Frederick's of
Hollywood Lingerie Museum. Disneyland Does anyone go to Los Angeles and not visit
Disneyland? Apparently the happiest place on earth (though the hordes
of screaming children and parents at their wits' end may make you
doubt it), Disneyland is a masterpiece of picture-perfect choreography
- even the litter bins are themed. The park is divided into four
different lands: Adventureland has a jungle theme and features
Indiana Jones and the Forbidden Eye; Frontierland celebrates
the myth of the Wild West; Fantasyland devotes itself to
Disney's favorite characters; and Tomorrowland is (you guessed
it) all about the future. In summer, you'll spend the better part of
your visit to Disneyland queuing - one of the best ways to avoid this
is to come in the evening when the kiddies are in bed. Uncle Walt's
wonderland is in Anaheim, half an hour's drive south of downtown LA;
you can get there by bus, hotel shuttle or by car on I-5. Universal City To lift your chances of running into a living, working
actor, visit Universal City, home of the very-much functional Universal
Studios and one of LA's biggest theme parks. The studios were
built in 1915, and public tours have been running since 1964. Catch a
tram on the Backlot Tour to see the locations of several famous movies
and TV shows, or spend your bucks on one of the many movie-related
rides. Universal also features special effects displays,
musical-comedy revues and an animal actors stage. The studio's eight
restaurants are prime star-spotting territory. Universal is in the San
Fernando Valley, north of the city. Beverly Hills No star-studded tour would be complete without a visit
to Beverly Hills, home to the rich and famous. Just west of Hollywood,
this city-within-a-city flaunts its wealth with opulent manors on
manicured grounds and shopping streets overflowing with designer
labels. The Hills' Golden Triangle is bisected by that locus of
conspicuous consumption, Rodeo Drive, where retailers such as
Tiffany, Armani and Vuitton flog their wares. North Beverly Hills is the epicenter of luxury living,
home to the likes of Jack Nicholson, Warren Beatty and Harrison Ford.
For all the latest on who lives where, pick up a 'Star Home Map' from
a street-corner vendor. If your desire to look over strangers' fences
isn't sated by Beverly Hills, extend your trip to that other famous
neighborhood, Bel Air, in western LA, or the slightly less
lively (but nonetheless star-studded) Hollywood Memorial Cemetery,
final resting place of Rudolph Valentino, Jayne Mansfield and Cecil B
De Mille. Malibu Los Angeles' beaches have a lot of hype to live up to,
and in most cases they don't quite make it. Immortalized by the Beach
Boys, Beach Blanket Bingo and Baywatch as miles of
golden sand awash with babes of both sexes, in reality the city's
beaches are often polluted and sparsely populated. Nonetheless, some
of them are definitely worth a look. Malibu is the archetypal Southern
California babe beach and your best bet for sunning and swimming. West
of the city, Malibu's beaches are backed by the rugged mountains of
the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area. It can be
quite difficult to find a stretch of sand, as much of the shoreline is
privately owned, but there are some very pleasant state beaches. Santa Monica Just north of the airport, Santa Monica is one of the
city's most appealing neighborhoods. Although the beach only comes to
life on the hottest summer days, the surrounding area is a very
pleasant place to spend an afternoon. The heart of Santa Monica is the
3rd St Promenade, a lively pedestrian mall packed with buskers,
movie theaters, bars and cafes. The Santa Monica pier, built
between 1908 and 1921, is the oldest pleasure pier on the West Coast.
It has plenty of old-world carnival attractions, including a 1920s
carousel, and seafood restaurants. The neighborhood is also home to
some excellent museums of modern art. Venice Beach Venice Beach pretty much sums up the LA lifestyle. The
beach's Ocean Front Walk is a human circus of jugglers and
acrobats, tarot readers, jug-band musicians, pick-up basketballers,
oiled-up fitness freaks and petition circulators. A hundred years ago,
this place was just swampland, until an enterprising cigarette tycoon
turned it into a network of gondola-poled canals and dubbed it the 'Playland
of the Pacific.' Most of the canals have now been paved over, but the
playland atmosphere is hanging in there. It's a great place to shop
and an even better place to down a freshly-squeezed juice while the
human tide washes over you. Getty Center Contrary to popular belief, LA does have an
intellectual, refined side. When you're shopped, glitzed, tanned and
rollercoastered out, head for some of the best museums in the USA. Top
of the list has to be the John Paul Getty collection of museums. The
original Getty gallery, in a replica of an AD 79 Pompeiian villa on
the Pacific Coast Hwy just west of Santa Monica, is undergoing
extensive remodeling and will reopen as the Getty Villa in 2002. The
Villa will house the Greek and Roman sculpture collections, which
comprise only a fraction of one of the world's most valuable art
collections (around US$3 billion worth). The museum's European and
photography and numerous other collections are now on display at the
stunning new 110-acre Getty Center in the Santa Monica mountains.
Admission is free, making this one of the best bargains in town. Other museums worth a look include downtown's Museum
of Contemporary Art, which houses one of the world's best
collections of modern art. The Museum of Tolerance, just south
of Beverly Hills, presents a gut-wrenching look at some of the more
appalling examples of human behavior. Its interactive, high-tech
exhibits focus on the oppression of blacks in America and the Jewish
Holocaust. At the other end of the spectrum, the Max Factor Beauty
Museum in Hollywood lauds the cosmetics industry's role in
creating many an LA beauty.
Knott's Berry Farm If lining up to have your photo taken with an acned teen in a mouse suit
isn't your idea of fun, you might prefer Knott's Berry Farm, a more bucolic
theme park 4 miles (6km) northwest of Disneyland. Originally a fried chicken
dinner and berry eatery, the Knotts set up a little Old West display to keep
the diners entertained. The place has grown a bit since then, but gunfightin'
and gold pannin' are still all the rage. There's also a Mexican-themed Fiesta
Village, Camp Snoopy for the littlies and plenty of chicken-regurgitating
rides. You can get here by bus, hotel shuttle or by car on I-5 and Hwy 91. Rollercoaster purists will bypass both Disneyland and Knott's for the
greater glories of Six Flags Magic Mountain. Magic Mountain has more
rides than Greyhound, with all the joys of spiral hairpin drops, boomerang
turns, zero-gravity spins and waterfall plummets. Magic Mountain's 100 rides
are in Valencia, an hour's drive northwest of downtown off of I-5. Pasadena Never mind that the neighboring foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains often
sit shrouded in a mantle of smog; once you get over your wheezing, there are
few areas of Los Angeles more redolent of LA's 'golden years' than Pasadena.
Its oak-lined avenues wind past superbly maintained turn of the century homes,
from Mission-style stucco squats to column-clad mansions of every persuasion -
even 'stately Wayne Manor' from the original Batman TV series. Among the
treasures is local architects Charles and Henry Greene's sprawling Gamble
House, considered the consummate Craftsman bungalow, and even the
persnickety genius of Frank Lloyd Wright has been locally preserved in the
Millard House, La Miniatura. The heart of the city, known as Old Town Pasadena, centers on Colorado Blvd
at Fair Oaks Ave. This 14-block historic district underwent a major facelift
around 1990, ushering in a bustling renaissance of upscale boutiques,
restaurants, coffeehouses and the odd antique and rare-book dealer. On the
south side of the district, the Moorish/Spanish Colonial Hotel Green
rises up like an elaborate Errol Flynn movie set, while at the western end of
Colorado, the Norton Simon Museum houses its a different brand of eye
candy: one of the finest collections of classical art in the country. Look for
Rodin's The Thinker out front. A few miles east of Old Town, opulent San Marino is home to the Huntington
Library, Museum & Botanical Gardens. Once the estate of railroad tycoon
Henry E Huntington, it's now a cultural center, research institution and a damn
fine place to spend a lazy afternoon. The library's collection of rare books
includes a Gutenberg bible, a Chaucer manuscript and Benjamin Franklin's
handwritten autobiography. The art gallery has a world-class collection of 18th
century British and French paintings and two centuries' worth of American art.
The botanical gardens are made up of 15 theme areas: the most popular are the
Desert, Japanese and Shakespearean Gardens. La Brea Tar Pits The La Brea Tar Pits, just outside the downtown area, is one of the world's
most important paleontological sites. These bubbling pits have trapped
thousands of plants and animals over the last 40,000 years, and fossils of all
sorts of prehistoric beasts are still being uncovered. You can see excavations
in action at an observation pit, and the George C Page Museum displays
many of the fossils pulled from the pits, including saber-tooth cats and an
enormous dire wolf. Santa Catalina Island Discovered by Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo in 1542, Santa Catalina is one of the
largest of the Channel Islands, a chain of semi-submerged mountains between
Santa Barbara and San Diego. Most of the island has been privately owned since
1811, when the Native American population was shipped off to the mainland.
Tourists have been sailing in since the 1930s, but the privately owned areas
remained largely untouched until 1975, when they were bought out by the Santa
Catalina Island Conservancy. The island is now preserved against development,
and its unique ecosystem, with 400 endemic and indigenous plants, 100 species
of birds and numerous animals (including wild American bison), is protected by
law. Avalon is the only town on Santa Catalina. It's dominated by the white
Spanish-Moderne Casino, built by chewing-gum heir William Wrigley Jr in
1929, when he owned the island. The casino is no longer open for gambling, but
it does have a grand ballroom (Benny Goodman and Glenn Miller both played
here), a huge theater, the Catalina Island Museum and an art gallery. Other
highlights of the town include the Chimes Tower, which is covered in
inlaid tiles; the old Wrigley Mansion, now a hotel; and the Wrigley
Memorial & Botanic Gardens. Most visitors to Santa Catalina come for the fantastic watersports, including
diving, snorkeling, sea kayaking, ocean rafting and sailing. There's also some
great hiking, horseback riding and bicycling trails. Catalina has plenty of
hotels and resorts, as well as four campgrounds, but most are fairly expensive.
You can get to Catalina on one of the regular cruises from Long Beach, San
Pedro, Redondo Beach or Newport Beach, or you can take a (very pricey)
helicopter from Queen Mary Seaport. San Gorgonio Wilderness High in the San Bernardino National Forest, south of the popular outdoors
destination of Big Bear, San Gorgonio is 90 sq miles (150 sq km) of trees,
lakes and barren slopes. The area takes in Mt San Bernardino and San
Gorgonio Peak, both over 10,000ft (3000m) high, and a multitude of hiking
and equestrian trails. At low elevations, the area is especially arid and full
of rattlesnakes; at higher elevations, oak and manzanita are joined by cedar,
fir and pine trees. Black bears, coyote, deer and squirrel are common, and even
bald eagles fly frequently over the area's campgrounds. Jenks Lake,
between Mt San Bernardino and San Gorgonio Peak, is a scenic spot for
picnicking and easy hiking. There are several campgrounds in the wilderness, with minimal facilities and
sites for tents and RVs. For those not so keen on roughing it, there are also
cabins with sports facilities. San Gorgonio is about 90 minutes' drive from LA.
If you don't have wheels, buses run as far as nearby Big Bear, but you'll
probably need to organize a ride along Hwy 38 to San Gorgonio. Palm Springs Once famous as a winter retreat for Hollywood stars and increasingly as a
well-scrubbed retirement home for the moderately wealthy, Palm Springs is the
original desert resort city in the Coachella Valley east of LA. To put things
in perspective, the valley has about 250,000 people, 10,000 swimming pools, 85
golf courses and more plastic surgeons per head than anywhere else in the US.
There's a growing gay scene in Palm Springs, and college kids in the thousands
flock here for a riotous spring break, but even so, there's not much to do in
town except lounge around the pool or play golf. The real interest is in visiting the nearby canyons, mountains and desert.
Highlights include hiking trails in the Andreas, Murray, Palm and Tahquitz
canyons, which are shaded by fan palms and surrounded by towering cliffs, and
taking the aerial tramway which climbs 6000ft (1800m) from the desert floor up
into the San Jacinto mountains. There are a number of museums in town,
including the informative Palm Springs Desert Museum, the Living
Desert outdoor museum and botanical garden and the Museum of the Heart,
which explains heart attacks while giving you the chance to step inside a giant
aorta. Palm Springs is a two hour drive east of LA and is accessible by Greyhound
or train. Santa Barbara Sandwiched between the Pacific Ocean and the Santa Ynez Mountains, Santa
Barbara is often called the California Riviera because of its affluent
population, outstanding Mediterranean architecture and gorgeous seaside
location. Highlights include the delightful Spanish-Moorish revival style Santa
Barbara County Courthouse, the stately Mission Santa Barbara and the
Santa Barbara Museum of Art. The city boasts half a dozen decent
beaches, the oldest continuously operating wharf on the west coast (once owned
by James Cagney), botanical gardens, zoological gardens and arguably one of the
most pleasant downtown areas in Southern California. Rising abruptly and
majestically to the north, the Santa Ynez foothills offer great camping and
hiking opportunities. Santa Barbara is just over an hour's drive along the coast north of Los
Angeles and is accessible by Greyhound or train. |
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