Los Angeles (Dark Jazz)

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Los Angeles in the 1920s

1920s Los Angeles was a boom town. In 1920 the population was around 500,000. By 1930 the city had grown to over 1,500,000.

Locations

Alden House

Blue Lotus

Drakusz House

Griffith Park Aerodrome

Hollywood Subway

Magic Moe's

St. Vibiana's Cathedral

UCLA

University of Southern California

Venice, CA

Events

  • May 3, 1924 - Construction begins on the Belmont Tunnel, popularly referred to as the "Hollywood Subway."
File:Aqueduct Sabotage 1924.jpg
Investigators examine dynamite from aqueduct sabotage (1924).
  • May 21, 1924 - A group of armed ranchers seized control of the Los Angeles Aqueduct and dynamite part of the system.
  • August 19, 1924 - The Maxfield Building, designed by architect John M. Cooper, is completed. Located in downtown at 819 Santee Street, it is the first 'modern' skyscraper in Los Angeles.

Los Angeles in the 1960s

The City of Angels.

In 1965, the Los Angeles of Gernsback-9 is the third largest city in the world, with a population of 9,475,000 people (2,660,000 in the inner city, with the remaining 6,815,000 in the suburbs). It is surpassed only by New York City (14,300,000) and Tokyo (20,000,000 est.) in population. Culturally, Los Angeles is widely regaled as "the city of the future," with electric trains and monorails that criss-cross the expanding cityscape, along with six-lane freeways and fewer air car restrictions than other cities. A burgeoning arts scene has existed since the 1920s and of course the entertainment capitol of the Western world is Hollywood. Aerospace and electronics drive the city economy along with tourism and the movie industry.

External Links

Los Angeles in the 1920s