|
HEADLINE HISTORY
Los Angeles County
1866 to 1886
1866
Kern County is established from a
portion of northern Los Angeles County. The Los Angeles town square, later to be renamed
in 1918 after General John J. Pershing, is established.
1867
Developer
Prudent Beaudry buys land that
he would later develop into Bunker Hill. A great rainstorm cuts Los
Angeles off from the outside world for a month. A large lake is formed
by the rains along Ballona Creek.
1868
Former California Governor John
C. Downey establishes the first bank in Los Angeles Los Angeles is linked to Wilmington by
railroad. Phineas Banning completes Los Angeles Countys first rail line, a
twenty-mile track running between Los Angeles and San Pedro. Los Angeles first
artesian well is sunk near Wilmington. Los Angeles first street lights appear.
1869
The Los Angeles Board of
Education is established. A Wells Fargo stagecoach is robbed just outside Los Angeles. Two
hundred boxes of oranges are shipped by sea from Los Angeles to San Francisco. The first
Los Angeles city fire company is established. The first bicycle in Los Angeles appears on
the streets. Pio Pico, the last governor of Mexican California, begins building
Pico House in downtown Los Angeles.
1870
Los Angeles houses are numbered
for the first time in order to create a city directory. The last recorded lynching in Los
Angeles takes place when a suspect is hanged for the murder of Jacob Bell. Both Pico House and
the Merced Theatre open for business. For a time, Pico House is the finest hotel
in Southern California. The Los Angeles County Medical Society is established. For the
first time, whites outnumber Hispanics and Indians. The first permanent bridge is built
across the Los Angeles River.
1871
The death of an
Anglo man
attempting a citizens arrest on a Chinese merchant provokes an angry white mob to
attack the Chinese quarter. Seventeen Chinese men and two Chinese boys are killed by
bullet, beating, or lynching. The Sheriff, with little backing and only after several
desperate attempts, finally quells the attacks. For these crimes, 150 men are later
indicted, but only six are convicted. All six are released on technicalities. The Los
Angeles Volunteer Fire Department is formed. The Farmers and Merchants Bank is opened. The
first bookstore in Los Angeles by Brodrick & Reilly opens next to the Post Office on
Spring Street. Los Angeles first ice cream parlor opens. The Federal Government
begins making improvements on the Wilmington Harbor.
1872
An earthquake
hits Los Angeles, but little serious damage occurs. Congress passes a
railroad bill that stipulates that a rail line south from San Francisco must pass through Los Angeles.
Charles Nordhoffs book, California: For Health, Pleasure, and Residence,
appears, drawing thousands of newcomers to Southern California. The first public library
is opened. Ventura County is established from a portion of Los Angeles County. A
City of Los Angeles ordinance directs
the City Marshal to
register and license dogs. Former slave Bridget Mason (Biddy Mason), now a successful
businesswoman and landowner, along with son-in-law Charles Owens,
founds and finances the first African American church in Los Angeles,
the Los Angeles branch of the First African Methodist Episcopal
Church.
1873
The first Jewish synagogue is
built. The first high school in Los Angeles is built at Temple and Broadway. The first
trolley line in Los Angeles begins operations. 100,000 eucalyptus trees arrive from
Australia.
1874
After
committing a long series of highly
publicized robberies in the Los Angeles area, the Mexican bandit Tiburcio Vasquez is
captured and becomes a folk hero while in the city jail. He is later convicted and hanged
in San Jose in 1875. His was the last public hanging in California. The first street car
in Los Angeles begins operating. Prostitution is outlawed in Los Angeles.
1875
Two years after the great bank
panic began in the east, depositors in the Temple & Workman Bank begin panic
withdrawals. Francis Temple and John Downey of Farmers & Merchants Bank agree to close
their respective banks for 30 days to ward off a local banking disaster. This event
eventually leads to the ruin of both Temple and Downey. The first labor union
(typographers) in Los Angeles is organized. Wine is Los Angeles Countys principal
product.
1876
The Cathedral of St. Vibiana is
opened. The Southern Pacific completes its rail link between San Francisco and Los
Angeles. Pico oil well no. 4 in the Pico Canyon Oil Field begins producing 25 barrels per
day becoming Californias first commercially successful oil well.
1877
The city marshals office is
abolished. J.F. Gerkins is appointed as Chief of Police. The first kindergarten in Los
Angeles opens. Hundreds of thousands of sheep die in a great drought. Calle de Los Negros,
commonly known as "Nigger Alley", is renamed Los Angeles Street. Oranges from
Los Angeles are shipped for the first time to the east. William Mulholland arrives in Los
Angeles. Southern Californias first woman physician, Dr. Elizabeth A.
Follansbee, begins practicing medicine in Los Angeles.
1878
The Los Angeles Bar Association is
established.
1879
The Los Angeles Athletic Club is
opened.
1880
A rail line is extended to San
Pedro that becomes the beginning of the modern port. The University of Southern
California is founded. Los Angeles receives its first paved road on Main Street. The first
oil pipeline in Los Angeles is laid. Helen Hunt Jackson visits Los Angeles. She later
publishes the famous novel Ramona in 1884 about the life in the early California
missions.
1881
The Los Angeles Times
begins publication as the Los Angeles Daily Times. Los Angeles is linked to the east coast by the completion of the
Southern Pacific transcontinental rail line. The harbor jetty is completed at San Pedro.
Harry Chandler arrives in Los Angeles from New Hampshire. He would later become publisher
of the Los Angeles Times. UCLAs forerunner, the State Normal School, is
established. The first record of snowfall occurs in Los Angeles.
1882
The Los Angeles Telephone Company
receives permission to erect telephone poles in the city, thus bringing telephone service
to Los Angeles. Service begins with seven subscribers and three operators. Harrison Gray Otis
begins writing for the Los Angeles Daily Times. Later in 1886, Otis
becomes owner-publisher of the
newspaper (later to be known as the Los Angeles
Times) and becomes one of the most influential members of the community (see
Letters from the People: The
Los Angeles Times Letters Column, 1881-1889). The Brush
Electric Lighting Company installs the first electric streetlights in Los Angeles.
Chinese immigration is barred.
1883
Nearly one hundred people are
killed in a catastrophic train wreck that occurs in the Tehachapi Mountains. J.W.
Robinson opens a dry goods store in downtown Los Angeles.
1884
Charles F. Lummis arrives in Los
Angeles after hiking 3,507 miles from the east coast. Articles about his trip were
submitted to eastern publications stimulating further interest in Southern California.
Oranges from Southern California win over those from Florida at the New Orleans
International Exposition. The novel Ramona, a stylized story of Indian life during
the mission era, is published. The Times Mirror Company, publisher of the Los
Angeles Times, is incorporated.
Heavy flooding causes the Los Angeles River to alter its course east
to Vernon and then south to San Pedro. A channel for the river is
built through downtown Los Angeles.
1885
The Santa Fe Railroad completes a
second transcontinental rail line into Los Angeles, breaking the Southern Pacific
Railroads monopoly. The University of Southern California opens its medical school.
The department hires its first full-time paid firefighters. Los Angeles original
water system, the Zanja, established with the first settlement, is abolished. The
last Zanjero (keeper of the Zanja) ends his service in 1904.
1886
A terrible flood washes away
every bridge and many other structures in the city and causes a great loss in lives. Los
Angeles receives land for a park that would later be renamed in 1942 in honor of General
Douglas MacArthur. Pasadena and Santa Monica are the first cities incorporated in Los
Angeles County after the City of Los Angeles. William Mulholland, once a ditch tender for
the Los Angeles Water Company, becomes its chief executive. A railroad
rate war opens between Southern Pacific and Santa Fe. Harrison Gray Otis buys
out the one-half interest of Colonel H.H. Boyce in the Times Mirror Company
(publisher of the Los Angeles Times) and gains control of the company
(see Letters from the People:
The Los Angeles Times Letters Column, 1881-1889). The price of a ticket between Kansas
City and Los Angeles drops to one dollar, sparking a major influx of visitors and newcomers to
Los Angeles.
|