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Culver City: From Barley Fields to the Heart of Screenland

posted by Nathan Masters on Jun 6, 2012 Subscribe to this RSS feed

Culver City, circa 1920. Courtesy of the Special Collections, Loyola Marymount University.
Culver City, circa 1920. Courtesy of the Special Collections, Loyola Marymount University.

When the Expo Line's Culver City station opens June 20, history will come full circle. Founded at the junction of three streetcar lines, the Westside community of Culver City has been without passenger rail service since 1953.

Born on the barley fields of the former Rancho La Ballona in 1913, Culver City quickly transformed itself into "The Heart of Screenland," a star-studded movie town with two major studios and several other production facilities. Though moviegoers outside Southern California were likely unaware, many of their favorite "Hollywood" pictures were actually produced several miles from Hollywood in Culver City.

Culver City owes its existence -- and its name -- to entrepreneur Harry H. Culver. Born and raised in Nebraska, Culver arrived in Southern California in 1910 and proceeded to do brisk business in real estate. Over the course of three years, he sold more than $1.5 million in acreage on the vast and mostly rural coastal plain that stretched out beyond Los Angeles' urbanized core.

Keep reading the full post at KCET.org.

Topics: KCET


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