Elysian Park, Los Angeles
Elysian Park | |
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Area code | 213/323 |
Elysian Park is a neighborhood in Central Los Angeles, California, United States. The city park, Elysian Park,[1] and Dodger Stadium are within the neighborhood, as are an all-boys Catholic high school and an elementary school.
History
On August 2, 1769, the
Geography
According to the
Demographics
This section needs to be updated.(May 2023) |
The 2000 U.S. census of the Elysian Park neighborhood counted 2,530 residents in its 1.65 square miles, which includes all the city park land as well as
The neighborhood was moderately ethnically diverse. The breakdown was
The median yearly household income in 2008 dollars was $28,263, low for Los Angeles; a high percentage of households had an income of $20,000 or less. The average household size of 3.1 people was high for the city of Los Angeles. Renters occupied 81.9% of the housing stock, and house- or apartment owners 18.1%.[3]
Education
Thirteen percent of the neighborhood residents aged 25 and older had earned a four-year degree by 2000, an average figure for the city.[3]
The schools operating within the Elysian Park neighborhood borders are:[5]
- Christian Brothers have operated the school since its opening. It was designated Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monumentnumber 281 in 1984.
- Solano Avenue Elementary School, LAUSD, 615 Solano Avenue. In 1955, the school, which then had 230 pupils, was honored as one of the 221 schools given a California Distinguished School award.[6]The Los Angeles Times reported that:
At Solano Avenue Elementary School, things are done right. Parents chip in, teachers stick around for years, children learn, and the surrounding community claims it for their own. The campus is a thing of pride-no graffiti or trash problems here.[6]
- Principal John Stoll noted that nearly half the children began school speaking limited English, having been raised in Spanish or Cantonese-speaking homes. The school was "adopted" by the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1980, and it was known for sending the student choir to Dodger Stadium to sing the National Anthem before a ballgame. It is a Solano tradition to hold culmination ceremonies at Dodger Stadium. The class of 2001, however, did not have this privilege.[6]
Park
The park is one of largest in Los Angeles at 600 acres (2.4 km2).[1] It is also the city's oldest park, founded in 1886 by the Elysian Park Enabling Ordinance. It hosted shooting as well as the shooting part of the modern pentathlon event for the 1932 Summer Olympics.[7] In 1964, the Citizens Committee to Save Elysian Park was founded to prevent the City of Los Angeles from constructing the Municipal Convention Center on 62 acres (250,000 m2) of park land.
In 1968, it hosted a hippie "Love-in."[8]
Figueroa Street Tunnels
The
Solano Canyon
Solano Canyon is a canyon within Elysian Park and also the name of a residential district at the southern extremity of the Elysian Park neighborhood, directly north of the Los Angeles State Historic Park. The district is bisected near its southern tip by the Arroyo Seco Parkway, and it shares a border with Chinatown.
Solano Canyon was also an old name for a ravine in the Hollywood Hills that was later named Runyon Canyon.[9][10]
See also
- Elysian Park Fault, an earthquake-producing fault named after the park
- Ned R. Healy, L.A. City Council member (1943–44) and member of Congress (1945–47), opposed slant oil drilling under the park
- List of districts and neighborhoods of Los Angeles
- List of parks in Los Angeles
References
- ^ a b Smith, Doug (December 21, 2015). "Recovery plan lies dormant as Elysian Park's exotic trees die off". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 4, 2017.
- ^ "Central L.A.," Mapping L.A., Los Angeles Times
- ^ a b c d e "Elysian Park," Mapping L.A., Los Angeles Times
- ^ The Thomas Guide, Los Angeles County, 2004, pp. 594, 634
- ^ "Elysian Park Schools", Mapping L.A., Los Angeles Times
- ^ a b c Marilyn Martinez, "Pride at Solano Helps Earn It State Honor," Los Angeles Times, June 18, 1995, page 8
- ^ 1932 Summer Olympics official report. Archived July 7, 2010, at the Wayback Machine p. 74.
- ^ William Drummond, "Police Arrest 76 Hippies at Easter Love-In Festivities," Los Angeles Times, April 15, 1968, page 3
- ^ "M'Cormack Buys Estate," Los Angeles Times, December 22, 1929, page D-1
- ^ "M'Cormack's Wife Arrives," Los Angeles Times, January 14, 1931, page A-10
External links
- History of Elysian Park
- [1] Elysian Park neighborhood crime map and statistics]
- [2] SolanoCanyon.org
- [3] Solano Canyon can be seen on the horizon of this 1873 photograph, labeled No. 50, as published in "The Story of Fifty Years: Where the City: In Which Southern California and the Los Angeles Times Grew Up Together," Los Angeles Times, December 4, 1931, page E-3.