Monday, May 23, 2011

The quincentenial California as place, 1510-2010

1510

Spain, ---Garci Rodriguez de Montalvo published Las Segas de Esplandian, a romance tale of a remote land west of the Indies known as California.

1521

Western Hemisphere, ---The Spanish crown conquered Mexico City and began colonization of southwestern North America.

1533

Pacific Ocean, ---Fortún Jiménez discovered the Baja California coast.  

1539

Chiapas, ---Bishop Artega requested that Rome should send priests for missionary work.

1540

Rome, --- Ignatius of Loyola and a few close followers found the Society of Jesus and shortly after a university at Messina, Sicily.

1542

Pacific Ocean, ---Juan Cabrillo discovered S. Diego Bay, S. Catalina, the Channel Islands and S. Monica Bay.

1579

Pacific Ocean, ---Francis Drake claims Nova Albion (California) for England.

 

1602

Pacific Ocean, ---Merchant Sebastian Vizcaino visited California.

1640

New Vizcaya, --- Jesuit fathers petition Rome to send missionaries for work in the Baja California region. 

1641

Madrid, --- Recopilación de leyes de los reynos de las Indias (Laws of the Indies) was published that designated The Roman Catholic Church as the official religion of the Spanish kingdom.

1700

Tucson, ---Jesuit friars established mission.

1758

Rome, --- Society of Jesus elected as general Lorenzo Ricci, S.J. of Florence. 

1767

Madrid, ---the Society of Jesus was expelled from the realm of the King of Spain.
Mexico City, ---Gaspar de Portola appointed first Spanish governor of the Californias.

1768

Mexico City, ---Spanish military ordered four expeditions to California.

1769

July

Pacific Ocean and Sonoran desert, ---the expeditions reached S. Diego Bay.

August

Yaangna (modern Los Angeles), ---Governor Portola’s expedition camped near a large river along the northern coast of California.

1771

Yaangna, ---a few miles east of the village Franciscan Father Junipero Serra established El Santo Arcángel San Gabriel de los Temblores.

1775

Juan Bautista de Anza and soldiers including Santiago de la Cruz Pico leave Tubac in the Sonoran desert to explore the California region. 

1776

Americans won independence from England. 

1777

Monterey, ---Governor de Neve moved the capital of Las Californias from Loreto.

1779

Monterey, ---De Neve issued a Reglamento, the first civil code of California and planned for a civil outpost near Mission San Gabriel in support of the Spanish North American missions.

1781

The first pobladores reached Mission San Gabriel.

September

4th

Forty-four pobladores found El Pueblo de Nuestra Senora de la Reina de los Angeles del Rio Porciuncula.

Comisionado Jose Vicente Feliz became Los Angeles’ first public official 

1784

A chapel was constructed near Buena Vista Street and Bellevue Avenue.

Ranchos Dominguez, Nieto and Verdugo were granted to faithful soldiers of the pueblo.

1786

Governor Pedro Fages appointed native American Jose Vanegas, the pueblo’s alcalde.

1788

Francisco Reyes granted permission to graze in the valley up river from the pueblo.

1789

Jose Sinova became Alcalde of the Pueblo de los Angeles.

1790

Los Angeles population reached 139.
Francisco Reyes became Alcalde.

July

Mariano Verdugo became Alcalde.

1792

Jose Vanegas became Alcalde.

1793

Francisco Reyes became Alcalde.

1795

Governor Diego de Borica introduced grapes and olives.

1796

Governor Borica sent two-hundred head of sheep to the pueblo.
Jose Vanegas became Alcalde.

1797

Manuel Arellaneo became Alcalde.

Mission San Fernando founded near Don Francisco’s Reyes Rancho, now included the ranchos Las Virgenes, Simi, San Francisquito, Tujunga, Caulos, Agua Amargo, Triunfo, Las Calabasas, el Escorpian and los Encinos.

1798

Guillermo Soto became Alcalde.

1799

Francisco Serrano became Alcalde.

1800

In England--- Thomas Wedgwood created sun picture photography.
Los Angeles human population reached 315, sheep 1700.
Joaquin Higuera became Alcalde.

1801

Future governor Pio Pico born at Mission San Gabriel.

1802

Mariano Verdugo became Alcalde.

1805

Los Angeles began trade with American John Shaler from New England. 


1806

The Los Angeles Militia formed.

1809

Guillermo Soto became Alcalde.

1810

Mexico City, --- Antonio de Padua María Severino López de Santa Anna y Pérez de Lebrón joined the colonial Army of Spain.

Los Angeles population equaled 354.
Native Americans staged rebellion at Mission San Gabriel.
Francisco Avila became Alcalde.


1811

In Nueva Espana, provincial revolutions began.
Spanish supply ships ceased visiting Los Angeles and foreign trade began.
Manuel Gutierrez became Alcalde.   

1812

Guillermo Soto became Alcalde.

1814

Plaza and church planning began.

1815

Ground breaking of the Nuestra Senora la Reina de Los Angeles plaza church.
River flooded the pueblo.


1816

France, ---Niépce brothers created photographic paper negatives.
Antonio Maria Lugo became Alacalde.

1817

A school at Maximo Pina’s home began privately in the pueblo.
Jose Polanco became Alcalde.

1818

Georgia, --- Future Los Angeles realtor, nurse and philanthropist, Bridget (Biddy Mason) born a slave in Hancock County.

Don Francisco built his Avila adobe house on the plaza. 
American John Chapman immigrates to the pueblo.

1819

Anastasio Avila became Alcalde.

Following the death of father José María, Andrés and Pío Pico moved near the presidio at San Diego and began earning a living as small merchants.

1820

The population of the pueblo reached 770.

1821

Manuel Gutierrez became Alcalde. 
Pio Pico opens bar and leather shop on the plaza.  

1822

William Gale representing Bryant and Sturgis of Boston initiate trade for hides and tallow.

April

11th

Settlers of the pueblo take oath to Mexico.

1823

Dedication of the Nuestra Senora la Reina de Los Angeles plaza church.

1824

Mexico City, --- Colonization Law allowed non-Catholics to settle in Mexico.

San Diego, --- The Pico brothers built a private home for their mother outside the walls of the presideo becoming the nucleus of the pueblo at San Diego.

Guillermo Soto became Alcalde.
Encarnacion Urquides became Alcalde.

1825

Future California governor Pio Pico recorded in his diary that a violent winter storm altered the course of the Los Angeles River away from Santa Monica Bay and instead directly south to Long Beach leaving behind a low swampy badlands, --- the Ballona wetlands would then extend across the city plain to the western beach.

A priest was sent to live permanently at the Nuestra Senora la Reina de Los Angeles church on the plaza.

Jose Maria Avila became Alcalde.

1826

American trappers enter Los Angeles.
Jose Antonio Carillo became Alcalde.
Claudio Lopez became Alcalde.

1827

Guillermo Soto became Alcalde.

 

1828

Americans Abel Stearn and George Rice established a general store in Los Angeles.

American John Groningen purchased the native village of Yaanga and expleed the residents, a first urban redevelopment.

Jose Antonio Carillo became Alcalde.

1829

Charleston, South Carolina, ---future California governor John C. Frémont entered the College of Charleston.

Guillermo Soto became Alcalde.

1830

Population equals 1200.
Tiburcio Tapia became Alcalde.

1831

Manuel Victoria began military coup and imprisoned the Americans.

Revolutionaries deposed Victoria.
.
Don Pio Pico took oath as governor pro tempore of Alta California at Our Lady Queen of the Angeles Church on the Plaza.

Vicente Sanchez became Alcalde.

1832

Manuel Dominguez became Alcalde.

1833

Vicente Moraga begins a new school.
Jose Antonio Carillo became Alcalde.

1834

Mexico City, --- General Santa Anna, the “Napoleon of the West” became President.

Jose Perez became Alcalde.

1835

Mexican Congress ordered Ciudad de los Angeles to replace Monterey as the regional capital for the territory of the United States of Mexico. The arribenos demand General Castro retain power at the Presideo of Monterey.

Francisco Alvarado became Alcalde.

1836

Texas, --- American settlers declare independence from Mexico.

Juan Alvarado unseated Governor Carillo and declares California independence.
Manuel Requena became Alcalde.
US sailor Richard Henry Dana, Jr. visits and writes Two Years Before the Mast.

The native village of Yaanga, Rancheria de Poblanos, moved to Commercial and Alameda streets.

1837

Jose Sepulveda became Alcalde.

1838

Washington, DC, --- future California governor John C. Frémont appointed second lieutenant in the Corps of Topographical Engineers and begins career as the “Pathfinder” of the American West. 

A vigilante committee formed up.  
Don Ignacio Coronel began a school in his townhouse on plaza.
Luis Arena became Alcalde.

1839

Los Angeles became the seat of the prefecture for the Southern district of California.
First vaccinations.
Tapia and Sepulveda became Alcaldes.

Don Vicente Lugo constructed the first two-story building that later became the home of the St. Vincent’s College which subsequently evolved into Loyola Marymount University.

1840

Washington, DC, ---At Georgetown Seminary future Angeleno authoress Jessie Ann Benton began work as a French and Spanish language translator of government documents in association with her father, Missouri Senator Thomas Hart Benton.

 

Pope Gregory XVI appointed Mexican Franciscan Francisco Friar Moreno Bishop of Both Californias.

1841

Palomares and Alvarado became Justices of the Peace.

1842

Washington, DC, ---At Georgetown Seminary future Angeleno authoress Jessie Ann Benton began work as a French and Spanish language translator of government documents in association with her father, Missouri Senator Thomas Hart Benton.  Jessie Ann Benton Fremont also began chronicling the experiences of husband John Charles Fremont’s exploration of the American West with his friend Kit Carson.  Her father Senator Benton championed US expansionism of the West and pushed appropriations through the US Congress authorizing a survey of the Oregon Trail.   

Dominguez and Sepulveda became Justices of the Peace.
Gold discovered in Placerita Canyon.

October

US flag mistakenly raised over Monterey.

Governor Micheltorrena was sent to expel the Americans and restore Mexican rule.

 

1843

 

Dominguez and Antonio Coronel became Justices of the Peace.

 

January

18th

Governor Micheltorena hosted US Commodore Jones at La Casa de Alto.

1844

Washington, DC, --- Senator Benton pushed appropriations through the US Congress authorizing a survey of the Oregon Territory.  Captain John Drake Sloat was appointed commander of the US Pacific Squadron. 

Governor Micheltorena established a new school in Los Angeles
Manuel Requena and Tapia became Alcaldes.
Pio Pico member of California Assembly.

1845

Washington, DC, --- Washington, DC, --- Senator Benton pushed appropriations through the US Congress authorizing a survey of the Great Basin, the Sierra Nevada mountains and California.  Captain John Drake Sloat was appointed commander of the US Pacific Squadron and ordered to land in Alta California. 

Texas, ---the republic is annexed by the United States.

Micheltorena removed as governor of Alta California.
Vicente Sanchez and Juan Capistrano Sepulveda became Alcaldes.

March

Pico took oath as governor pro tempore of Alta California at Our Lady Queen of the Angels Church on the Plaza and declared Los Angeles now the capital of Alta California.

June

St. Louis, --- John Fremont and Kit Carson began third expedition of the West. 

After complaints of bathing in the Zanja Madre, the native village Rancheria de Poblanos was moved to Boyle Heights.

December

Sacramento Valley, --- Fremont and Carson promised American settlers protection in the event of a war with Mexico.  Fremont appointed lieutenant colonel of the California Battalion. 

1846

Juan Gallardo and Jose Loreto Sepulveda became Alcaldes. 

Northern Californians Juan Alvarado and Jose Castro defeat Governor Micheltorena at Cahuenga Pass.

March

Fremont leaves California. 

 

May

13th

Washington, --- Congress declared war on the United States of Mexico.

June

15th

Sonoma, --- Californians seized the Mexican garrison and declared independence from Mexico.

23rd

Sonoma, --- US Army Major John Fremont arrived and raised the US flag.  .

 

July

Pío Pico removed as governor of Alta California.

7th

Mexico City, --- Congress declared was on the United States of America.

Monterey, --- Commodore John Drake Sloat raised the US flag over the Mexican Customs House and became the first Military Governor of US California. 

9th

Yerba Buena (San Francisco), --- Commodore John Drake Sloat took occupation.

23rd

Monterey, --- On the command ship USS Congress Commodore Robert Field Stockton relieved John Drake Sloat and became the 2nd Military Governor of US California.  The US California fleet consisted of an additional three frigates, one Ship of the line and four sloops. 

August


6th

Commodore Stockton anchored off San Pedro.

Governor Pico and General Castro left California for Mexico City to lobby for defense and supplies.

11th

Commodore Stockton and Frémont marched on Los Angeles.

13th

Stockton and Fremont entered the Plaza with brass band playing Hail “Columbia” and “Yankee Doodle”.  Shortly after, Kit Carson was dispatched to Washington to inform federal officials of the conquest of California. 

September

US Marine Lt. Archibald Gillespie ordered martial law in the pueblo.

22nd

Pueblo revolt led by Capt. José María Flores, Jose Antonio Carillo and Andres Pico force marched American military to San Pedro and the next merchant ship leaving port.

October

8th

Mexicans fired cannon at American Navy’s approach at Dominguez Rancho.

December

6th

Stockton learns of General Stephen Kearny’s defeat at the Battle of San Pasqual near San Diego. 

25th

Captain Frémont captured Presideo Santa Barbara.

29th

Stockton, Kearny and Carson reform and left San Diego to retake Los Angeles.

1847

Jose Salazar and Enrique Avila became Alcaldes. 

January

8th

Fremont entered Los Angeles from the north.
Stockton garrisoned the Avila adobe.
Flores surrendered the Plaza.

13th

Pio Pico surrendered Alta California to the United States at Campo de Cahuenga.

16th


Stockton appointed John Charles Frémont 3rd military governor of California.

August

Fort Leavenworth, Kansas Territory, --- Frémont arrested for court martial trial in Washington.  Frémont retired and purchased Rancho Las Mariposas in the Sierras. 

1848

Coloma, ---Gold discovered in the American River.

Ygnacio Palomares and Jose Loreto Sepulveda became Alcaldes.

Don Antonio opened an English-speaking theater in an addition built at the Coronel townhouse.

Stephen Clark Foster became Mayor of the US territorial town of Los Angeles. 

February

2nd

The Treaty of Guadalupe Hildago ceded California to the United States and outlawed peonage in California.

October

St. Louis, --- Frémont begins fourth expedition to survey a rail route to San Francisco.

1849

Bézeirs, France, --- Father Jean Gailhac and Appolonie Pelissere Cure found the Institute of the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary.

San Jose, ---the state capital is established and Peter Burnett appointed first civil governor.

Iron working and wagon-making industries began.
City water department begins.
Lt. Edward O. C. Ord completed survey of Los Angeles.

February

 

December

Abel Stearns elected Alcalde of Ciudad de los Angeles.

1850

Washington, DC, --- California is admitted to the United States.

San Bernadino, --- The Mormon Robert Smith household including slave Bridget (Biddy Mason move from Salt Lake City.

Pio Pico purchased the Paseo de Bartolo Rancho, Mission San Fernando and Rancho Santa Margarita y Las Flores.

Bella Union Hotel opened. 
Drug store opened.
US post office opened. 

Methodist minister Reverend John W. Brier conducted Protestant services but was discouraged with lawlessness and moved north.

Volunteer police force formed. 
Los Angeles County formed and incorporated Los Angeles as a city.
The Los Angeles City Council is formed.
Jose Sadoc Alemany replaced Bishop Moreno.
Reverend J. W. Douglas began school in the home of William Wolfskill.

July

1st

Alpheus P. Hodges elected mayor. 

1851

Santa Clara, California, ---the Society of Jesus opened Santa Clara College and began college preparatory high school instruction.

50 newcomers settled in El Monte.
Phineas Banning established a stage-line southern California network 
La Estrella bi-lingual newspaper began publication.
Los Angeles Police formed by City Council. 
Ordinance appropriated funds for education.
Reverend Henry Weeks opened a new school.

January

Eight Jewish shopkeepers were recognized in the federal census.

March

Picpus Fathers began a boarding and day school near the Plaza but soon was defunct.

May

7th

Benjamin D. Wilson became major.

August

Wolfskill schoolteacher Reverend J. W. Douglas resigned and moved to San Francisco to edit a new religious journal, The Pacific.

1852

London, --- microfilm photography demonstrated.
Santa Clara, California, ---Santa Clara College began collegiate rank instruction. 

John G. Nichols was elected mayor.  

A property tax established a Los Angeles public school system and a Board of Education.

A. S. Breed opened an English school
Rev. Anacletus Lestrade SS.CC, granted ten lots for a seminary.

The Los Angeles City Council school visitation committee, John G. Downey and Ygnacio del Valle reported thirty-five students under instruction with Rev. Lestrade and Ygnacio Coronel.

J. D. Hunter founded a brick factory.

October

Don Sepulveda’s imported Black Swan beat Pio Pico’s California-bred Sarco in a nine-mile horse race.

1853

Rome, --- California population increase caused Pope Pius IX t split the Californias diocese and create a diocese of Monterey to supervise the southern California “cow” counties.  Tadeo Amat, Rector of St. Joseph’s Seminary in Philadelphia named Bishop of Monterey.  

Oakland, --- Contra Costa Academy opened.

Antonio Coronel became mayor.
Schumacher brewery opened.
Sisters of Charity opened hospital on Main Street
County jail opened.
Mathew Keller planted orange grove. 
Calle de los Negros became center of urban crime in the West. 
Los Angeles Rangers form a volunteer police force.
Masonic lodge founded.

February

Northern Methodist Reverend Adam Bland sent to begin a new church.

 

July

Mrs. Bland began school in the former El Dorado saloon.  

August

The Los Angeles Ranger Company public safety committee began campaign against Murietta.

November

Texas Baptists found church in Lexington (modern El Monte).

1854

Newspaper Southern California began publication.
The itinerant ranch and herding business increased violence on the Plaza.

Northern Methodist Reverend J. McHenry Caldwell (Dickinson ’53) replaced Reverend Bland.

May

Steven C. Foster (Yale ’40) became mayor, moved to build two public schoolhouses and appointed school officials.

July

The Hebrew Benevolent Society was formed.

September

Joseph Newmark and family arrived from San Francisco including two Chinese servants, Ah Luce and Ah Fou.

15th

Methodist camp meetings held at the Sheldon farm in Lexington.

October

Presbyterian Reverend James Woods arrived on the Plaza.

1855

Contra Costa County, --- a College of California is chartered.

Schoolhouse Number One opened at Spring and Second Streets.

March

Presbyterian Reverend James Woods constituted a congregation .

April

LA City Council approved conveyance of three acres to the Hebrew Benevolent Society.

May

California legislature prohibited public financing of sectarian schools and reduced instruction in Spanish.

Fall

Presbyterian Reverend Thomas K. Davis replaced Reverend Woods.

December

Bishop Tadeo Amat finally arrived and welcomed into town after a fund-raising tour of Europe and an enlistment of a company of priests, seminarians and Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul.

1856

Judge Benjamin Haynes granted Biddy Mason and other San Bernadino slaves freedom.

Louis Vignes began an escuela católica In his home.

The Picpus Fathers may have restarted a boarding and day school near the Plaza but soon was defunct.

January

Sisters of Charity arrive from Emmitsburg, Maryland and open the school orphanage, Institución Caritiva in Benjamin Wilson’s home on the Plaza.
   

1857

Rev. Blas Raho, CM proposed to reopen a bilingual school.

1858

A library association opened a reading room at Court and Spring Streets.

1859

Baptist Reverend John Freeman began weekly services in the pueblo at Schoolhouse Number One.

French emigres came to power as Damien Marchessault became mayor.
France established consul general Jacob A. Moerenhoat.
Former governor of Mexican California Pío Pico opened the Pico Hotel.

May

Presbyterian Reverend William E. Boardman replaced Reverend Davis and instituted a First Protestant Society of the City of Los Angeles.  Reverend Boardman was appointed superintendent of public schools.

1860

St. Louis, ---ten-day stage service was established to the city.  
San Francisco, --- the telegraph network connected to the city.  

Chinese population of Los Angeles was 16.
Reverend Boardman was reappointed city school superintendent.
French Benevolent Society formed.
Henry Mellus elected mayor.

1861

Western Union completed a North American transcontinental telegraph networked wire system.

Reverend Boardman was reappointed school superintendent.
A freight schooner arrived in San Pedro.

April

A Presbyterian congregation and others laid cornerstone for a new church on the northwest edge of the city. 



1862

London, --- celluloid film technology demonstrated.

Drought.
Smallpox.

B’nai B’rith congregation formed downtown and Rabbi A. W. Edelman conducted Jewish services. 


January

Rev. Boardman Joined Masonic Lodge 42.

February

Reverend Boardman and family returned to the East.

1863

February

Drought.

The Presbyterian Church was sold at Sheriff’s auction for non-payment of taxes.

1864

Drought

Higher education in Los Angeles, 1865-1910

1865

A first school of higher education is founded when Saint Vincent’s College began in rented rooms at the pioneer Lugo family’s former townhouse on the plaza at Los Angeles Street.  Reverend John Asmuth of the Congregation of the Missions was named first president and succeeded by Reverend James McGill, CM later that year.

1866

Oakland, ---the Agricultural, Mining and Mechanical Arts College was created by the California legislature.

1867


1868

St. Vincent’s College benefactor Ozro W. Childs donated the first permanent campus site at 600 N. Hill St.  At Hill Street and later on Grand Avenue SVC would last over forty-six years and matriculate a few pioneer Los Angeles literary figures such as mystery writer S.S. Van Dine, composer Ferde Grofe, and Krazy Kat comic creator, George Herriman.

March

23rd

University of California is chartered.

1869

Depression

John T. Gower of Hawaii began farming in today’s Hollywood.

Pío Pico, the former Mexican governor of California, opened the first luxury hotel, the Italinate Pico House. 

Sheriff James Thompson sold Rancho Encinos to the Garnier brothers.

Land speculators from San Francisco bought one half of Mission S. Fernando from the Pico family.

August

5th

SVC incorporated as the President and Trustees of St. Vincent’s College.

15th

SVC received charter from the state of California to convey college degrees and granted privileges of a university. 

 

September

23rd

University of California opened in Oakland.

1870

Los Angeles population now over 5000 but nearly all local native Americans are now dead from disease.

William Abbot’s Merced Hall opened as a community room at 418 North Main St. on the plaza.  

AF Gilmore bought 256 acres for dairy farming west of Los Angeles.

1871

Europe, --- microfilm used with carrier pigeons for messaging in the Crimean War.

Farmers and Merchants Bank founded by Isaias Hellman.
San Fernando Sheep Company formed.
Spanish-speaking Protestant Reverend William Mosher

1872

Real estate speculator and former slave Biddy Mason held founding meetings of the First African Methodist Episcopal Church in her home on Spring Street.
 

1873

Los Angeles High School opened.

1875

At SVC Reverend Charles J. Bescher, CM was named President.

Winter

A Chinese temple was dedicated.

1876

Washington, ---Alexander Graham Bell awarded patent for telephone.

New York, ---Edison began data recording and Melvil Dewey published the Dewey Decimal System for library book classification.

Southern Pacific Railroad completed lines into Los Angeles.

The Cathedral of St. Vibiana completed, designed by Ezra Kysor.

Speaking of St. Vincents College, a visiting Austrian royal accounted “…is situated in the west end of town in a pleasant garden…it also contains a library and small chapel”.---Ludwig Salvatore, Los Angeles in the Sunny Seventies.

1877

New York, ---Thomas Edison records Mary Had a Little Lamb on tin-foil wrapped around a spinning cylinder, ---the phonograph.

Palo Alto, ---settling a "do a horse's four hooves ever leave the ground at once" bet among rich San Franciscans, a series of time-sequenced photographs of Leland Stanford's horse demonstrate the human phenomena of the persistence of vision.

1878

New York, --- cornetist Jules Levy recorded “Yankee Doodle” for Edison’s tin-foil sound recorder.

Rochester, ---George Eastman developed the dry gelatin photograph development process

1879

University of Southern California was secured with the benefactions of Ozro W. Childs, John G. Downey and Isaias Hellman.

1880

LA city population = 11,000.
USC began instruction of the Class of 1884.

1881

Paris, --- headphone and microphone technology developed.

1882

State Normal School opened downtown.

Future Loyola College benefactor and Los Angeles Times editor Harry Chandler arrived from his native New Hampshire. 

1883

Downtown electrified with street lamps.
St. Vincent’s College underwent major renovation at the Sixth Avenue campus.

Prohibitionist Harvey Wilcox bought real estate west of downtown to build a temperance community.

Flood.  

1884

A firehouse was built on the plaza.
USC founded a School of Music and held first commencement exercises.

May

Grand Opera House opened at 110 South Main.

October

The Chinese Theater opens at 212 Marchessault St.

1885

USC founded a College of Medicine and the John R. Tansey Chair in Christian Ethics.

1886

James David and Rhonda Jane Hill settle 110 acres in Chatsworth.
Harrison Gray Otis took control of the Los Angeles Times.
SVC purchased a block lot at Washington and Grand.

1887

New Jersey, --- Thomas Edison recorded pianist Josef Hofmanm.

Washington, ---Emile Berliner patented the gramophone sound recording system. using a flat disc which allowed mass reproduction.

The Turnverein Hall opened and Hazard’s Pavilion erected at Olive and Fifth to replace the Merced as a civic meeting hall.

The Sepulveda House opened at 622 N. Main Street.

The Los Angeles Panorama Company stages The Siege of Paris on a lot on South Main St.  Earlier that year another panorama was staged at Washington Gardens at Washington and South Main. 

At SVC Isidore Dockweiler received the first college degree.

February

1st

Hollywood appeared on a sub-division map for $150 per acre.

The Los Angeles Ostrich Railway Company links Dr. Sketchley’s farm in Los Feliz to Hollywood.

April

20th

A group of Presbyterian clergy and laity found Occidental College in the Boyle Heights suburb of Los Angeles.

September

Needing even more space despite the renovation and with booming real-estate speculation St. Vincent’s College moved southwest to a much larger site at Washington Street and Grand Avenue. Designed and constructed by J.V. McNeil Construction, the new campus boasted a modern furnished College Library.

1888

London, ---Handel’s Israel in Egypt recorded at the Crystal Palace.

Washington, DC, ---Emile Berliner improved the gramophone sound system, using a flat disc which when developed would allow mass reproduction.

New York, ---George Eastman developed a low-cost box camera.

Farming west of downtown spured the Cahuenga Valley RR (future Southern Pacific RR) to form. 

Los Angeles City Hall and County Court House was erected.
The Los Angeles Theater opened at 227 South Spring.
Founder of Title Insurance and Trust Company Otto F. Brant arrived from Ohio.

1889

Vienna, ---Johannes Brahms recorded his Hungarian Dance no. 1 in G minor.

Author and real-estate speculator Mark Sibley Severance published the first Angeleno novel, Hammersmith, The Harvard Days (1876).


1890

New York, ---Jacob Riis published How the Other Half Lives, images of tenement life in the city.  Cylinder sound recordings issued commercially.

Cellulose data punch card.  Paper data punch card.  Player piano music rolls

City population = 50,000.
City water and sewer system improved. 

Future educator and major leader of an early American educational reform movement David Snedden (SVC ’90) left Los Angeles for study at Harvard College.


1891

US Senator Stephan M. White and Santa Clara College alumnus gave Saint Vincent’s College commencement address.   Today LMU prizes the William H. Hannon Library Terrance Mahan, SJ Department of Archives & Special Collections Papers of Senator Stephan M. White.

The Burbank Theater opens as first stock house.


1892

At Saint Vincent’s College, Reverend J. W. Hickey, C.M. was named President.
Vassar alumna Katherine Carr began teaching Latin and English at LA High.
Oil discovered.
Edward L. Doheny built mansion at Chester Place.


1893

National economic depression.

Fall 

Merchants Association formed.


1894

Washington, DC, ---Emile Berliner’s US Gramophone Company began marketing the vulcanized rubber sound disc. 

New York, ---the intriguing Kinetoscope entertainment machine that allowed a viewer to watch moving pictures swept the nation beginning along the arcades on New York’s Broadway, ---the birth of the American motion picture industry.

The curriculum at St. Vincent’s College included Rhetoric and Sciences for the degrees of Bachelor of Arts, Sciences and Civil Engineering.   The library benefited with support from the new Bishop, Dr. Thomas Conaty, the well-known national orator and former Rector of The Catholic University of America and his personal library of books.

The Burbank Theater.
Imperial Music Hall on Main Street.
Los Angeles Theater

January

City Council appropriated $10,000 for a public works program to put unemployed to work.

April

Merchants’ Association sponsored La Fiesta de Los Angeles

June

Richmond, Indiana, ---Charles Francis Jenkins and Thomas Armat project motion-picture.

New York, ---an installation of Edison’s Vitascope projector at Koster & Bials Music Hall allowed a “movie” to be seen in concert, quickly became a novelty and then standard fare in American town hall and vaudeville theaters.

SVC formed an Alumni Association and held Commencement Exercises at the Grand Opera House. 

1895

Washington, DC, ---Emile Berliner founded Berliner Gramophone Company. 

New York, ---Marconi’s wireless radio transmission from Italy to North America.  Thomas Edison proclaimed newspapers in the future will be delivered by phonograph.  The Edison company began development of a belt-driven Kinetoscope synched with a   phonograph.  

Vaudeville offered at Mott Hall downtown.

 June

SVC held Commencement Exercises at the Los Angeles Theater.


December

Paris, --- the motion-picture La Sortie des usines Lumière debuted.

31st

Orpheum Vaudeville Circuit opened at the Grand Opera House at 110 South Main.

1896

New York, --- vaudeville’s Keith’s Union Square Theater exhibits Lumiere Cinematographe.

New Jersey, --- the Edison Company released the motion-picture, The Kiss.

Nickelodeons began running in downtown Los Angeles arcades as “movies” start becoming standard fare at vaudeville theaters.

Col. Griffith J. Griffith deeded thirty-five hundred acres of Rancho de los Felix to the City of Los Angeles for a Griffith Park.

Occidental College in Boyle Heights moved to Highland Park in Northeast Los Angeles.

At St. Vincent’s College, George Herriman left school to become an illustrator and engraver for the Los Angeles Examiner.

At USC a law school began.

April

New York, --- the Edison Company introduced the Vitascope projector at Koster & Bials Music Hall.

June

SVC held Commencement and Literary Exercises at the Los Angeles Theater.

July

A Vitascope projector was installed at the Orpheum downtown operated by Edwin S. Porter.

20th

The Vitascope was purchased by Thomas Tally and reinstalled at Tally’s Phonograph Parlor at 311 South Spring Street.

1897

S. D. Sturgis built a Los Angeles automobile for J. Philip Erie.
USC began coursework in dentistry.

June

SVC held Commencement and Literary Exercises were held at the Los Angeles.

1898

Europe, ---Edison’s unlicensed Kinetoscope was used to create the nascent moving-pictures making industry.

Germany, ---Valdemar Poulsen patents the Telegraphone magnetic steel wire sound recording system.

New York, ---J. Stuart Blackton reenacted on motion picture film The Battle of Manila Bay using photographs pasted on wooden sticks propped with an painting as a backdrop in a small basin of water.

Los Angeles Symphony formed.

At SVC on Grand Avenue J. E. A. Linn, C.M. was named President.  The Saints restart reformed collegiate football with games over the next ten years versus Commercial High School, Colorado School of Mines, Los Angeles High School, Occidental College, the Orange Athletic Club, Oregon Agricultural College, Pasadena High School, Pomona High School, Sentous Street School, Shackville, University of Denver, University of Utah, Westlake and YMCA.

June

SVC held Commencement and Literary Exercises at the Los Angeles Theater.

1899

The Los Angeles Theater advertises mutoscope pictures of Pope Leo XII “taken at the Vatican by the American Biograph Co”.

June

SVC held Commencement and Literary Exercises at the Los Angeles Theater.

1900

Los Angeles population now 100,000 and Hollywood is five-hundred.
Oil is discovered on the Gilmore dairy farm west of Los Angeles.
Automobile Club of Southern California founded.

1901

Washington, --- Victor Talking Machine Company founded by Emile Berliner and Eldridge Johnson.

J. W. Eddy built Angels Flight.

Washington Gardens at Washington and South Main became Chutes Park, a theater, zoo, midway and park.  

The Unique “family” vaudeville house opens at 456 South Spring.

June

SVC holds Commencement at the Elk’s Hall and Literary Exercises at the Los Angeles Theater.

1902

New York, --- Edison wax cylinder records began mass production.

William Randolph Hearst began to publish the Los Angeles Examiner from headquarters on Broadway.

Los Angeles amended city charter to prohibit vice city-wide. 
The Unique moved to 629 South Broadway.
Hollywood chartered as a city.

April

Thomas Tally opened the Electric Theater on Broadway and began programming motion-pictures.

June

SVC held Commencement at the Los Angeles Theater.

September

The Cineograph Theater began programming motion-pictures.

1903

Paris, --- the Lumiere brothers patent color photography.

New York, --- Hungarian immigrant and future Loyola University of Los Angeles benefactor William Fox remodeled a Brooklyn arcade into a moving pictures theater and began to acquire vaudeville acts.  Hungarian immigrant Adolph Zukor invested in an electrical arcade on 125th St. and soon opened the Automatic Vaudeville on Fourteenth with hundreds of peep machines grossing over $100,000 in the first year.   Edwin Porter produces The Great Train Robbery.

Moses H. Sherman purchased 16,000 acres of Porter Ranch on the old mission lands.

Across the street from SVC, the Los Angeles Tourists Baseball Club played the first game at Washington Gardens.

Casino Theater at 344 South Spring St opened as a burlesque, billiard and waxworks hall. 

Orpheum moved their vaudeville show to the Los Angeles Theater at 227 South Spring.

June

SVC held Commencement and Literary Exercises at the Los Angeles Theater.

18th

Mason Opera House opened.   

December

A. J. Morganstern opened the Broadway, a flagship for a new California theater chain.

1904

New York, --- Julian Eltinge emerged as a major star on Broadway.

Blessed Sacrament Church in Hollywood was founded accommodating 250 people built on Hollywood Boulevard.

Abbott Kinney developed Venice of America on the beach of Los Angeles.

August

Belasco Theater opened.

November

New York, --- Marcus Loew and David Warfield form People’s Vaudeville Company to operate an arcade on 23rd Street.


1905

New York, --- Adolf Zukor installed a 200-seat Crystal Hall movie theater above the Automatic Vaudeville arcade.

Cincinnati, --- Marcus Loew installed a 110-seat movie theater above an amusement arcade.

Future film pioneer, D. W. Griffith cast as an native on stage in Los Angeles in Ramona.

The Novelty Theater opened at 523 South Main and later renamed the People’s Theater.

At Gilmore’s farm in western Los Angeles the Gilmore Oil Company formed and would later start the Farmers Market and auto speedway, Gilmore Stadium.

At SVC, Edward Doheny donated a set of Remington rifles, a one dollar Student Library fee was instituted for budgeted book collection and Dr. Charles C. Conroy, KHS began a forty-six year career in the History Department. Five years after yet another renovation, St. Vincent’s College made plans to move west once again and purchased eighty-six acres of Rancho La Cienega o Paso de Tijera in western Los Angeles.  However these ambitions would be set aside when after fifty-five years, the Vincentians would in a few short years elect to withdraw from college work in Los Angeles.  

USC opened the School of Pharmacy.

1906

Chicago, --- Rreformers are castigating the new film business when Carl Laemmle opened his first theater, The White Front.

Pittsburg, --- Adolf Zukor visited Harry Davis’s Nicklelodeon and shortly after began buying theaters in the steel capitol, Philadelphia, Boston, Newark and Coney Island to begin renting and exhibiting the Great Train Robbery.

San Francisco, --- the Grauman family lose movie house, the Unique in earthquake.

Lee DeForest invented the vacuum tube signal amplifier.

The Shrine Auditorium opened on Jefferson Blvd.
The Sisters of the Immaculate Heart opened the College for Girls.

Burton Green formed the Rodeo Land and Water Co. and platted the city of Beverly Hills

Temple Auditorium opened on the former site of Hazard’s Pavilion at Olive and Fifth.


July

In Milwaukee, Mutual Film Corporation began as Western Film Exchange founded by Wisconsin natives John R. Freuler, Harry E. Aitken and Roy Aitken.

1907

Haverhill, Mass. --- Russian immigrant and future Loyola College benefactor Louis B. Mayer renamed an old burlesque house the Opheum and began exhibiting movies.

New York, ---William Fox began a film distribution exchange, the Greater New York Rental Company.

The SVC Saints play the Los Angeles Angels and a barnstorming New York Giants in baseball at Chutes Park.

Winter

William Selig began shooting The Count of Monte Cristo in Los Angeles.

The Silverlake Reservoir in Edendale was completed in a picturesque hilly rural neighborhood just northwest of downtown.

1908

New York, --- the Edison Company, Eastman Kodak, American Mutoscope and Biograph Company form the Motion Picture Patents Company.

William Selig moved his Chicago-based motion picture company to California and built a new studio in Edendale.  The Selig Company soon began to collect wild animals including African lions to be used in production.

The Majestic Theater opened in the Hamburger Building, 845 South Broadway.

1909

New York, --- the Buffalo Convention agreed on a standard for mechanical music (piano) rolls manufacturing.

Laemmle released Hiawatha.

Father Healey Dramatic Society formed at Saint Vincent’s College.  The Saints met the USC Trojans for American football.

Selig Polyscope Co. filmed The Heart of the Tout at 8th and Olive.

1910

New York, --- Adolf Zukor met Carl Laemmle in Germany and returned from Europe with rights to exhibit the Passion Play.  Zukor and Loew consolidated.

Los Angeles population 319,000.

Alumnus Willard Huntington Wright began his career as a literary critic for the Los Angeles Times. Later he adopted the pseudonym S.S. Van Dine famously as a pioneer LA Noir mystery writer and created the popular Philo Vance character.

Los Angeles Times Building bombed.
Father Healey staged The Man on the Box.
Hollywood annexed by City of Los Angeles.
David Snedden (SVC ’90) published The Problem of Vocational Education.
Griffith and Biograph completed film in Los Angeles, In Old California.

At Washington and South Main Arthur S. Hyman acquired the theater lease at Chutes Park offering vaudeville and films.  The Hyman Theater opened at 804 Broadway.

February

New York, --- Edison formed distributorship network, General Films Co.

March

2nd

Los Angeles Suburban Homes Company formed to develop the entire southern half of Ex-Mission San Fernando Rancho.

May

Laemmle and other Independents form Motion Picture Distributing and Sales Company.

Aiken formed Mutual Film Corp.
Laemmle formed Universal Pictures.

June

The New Broadway at 833 South Broadway opened.

September

Clune’s Theater opened at 528 South Broadway featuring vaudeville and first-run films.

Pantages Theater opened at 532 South Broadway featuring vaudeville and long-run films Pantagescope.

Los Angeles and St. Vincent's College, 1911-1916


1911

New York, ---Adolf Zukor purchased the American distribution rights to the French film Queen Elizabeth, the first film to play in the US not to feature comedy-novelty vaudeville acts.  Marcus Loew purchased the William Morris Vaudeville Company and reformed as Loews Theaters.

New Jersey, ---Nestor Film Company moved to Hollywood and built studio at corner of Sunset and Gower producing The Law of the Range.

US President William Taft visited USC.

Goodrich Tires began producing rubber-industry promotional motion picture films.

June

The Vincentian fathers withdrew from higher education in Los Angeles closing St. Vincent’s College after 46 years.  Bishop Conaty persuaded a faculty from the Santa Clara College Society of Jesus to move south and continue collegiate operations.

26th

Orpheum opened a third theater at 624 South Broadway.

August

14th

Orpheum screened only the Pathe Journal newsreels, “Motion Views of the World’s News”.

September

Richard Gleeson, S.J. was named first president of Los Angeles College, a private college prep high school founded after SVC closed.  Joseph Tomkin, SJ was named chief academic officer, Vice President of Studies and foreign languages instructor.  Reverend Joseph Farrell, SJ taught the first English class.  A site at 250 W. 52nd Avenue in present day Highland Park was purchased and J.V. McNeil once again contracted to build a new school. 
On campus the Sodality of Our Lady, Glee Club and House of Philhistorians Debate Society formed.

St. Vincent’s College alumnus Isidore Dockweiler (’87) was appointed as the first lay member to the Los Angeles College Board of Trustees.

1912

Massachusetts, --- Future Loyola benefactor Louis B. Mayer brought the Boston Opera to Haverhill.

New York, --- Adolf Zukor liquidated his Loew’s interest and founded Famous Players Film Company hiring former Los Angeles projectionist Edwin S. Porter to direct Prisoner of Zenda.  American Talking Picture Company was organized by A. Paul Keith, Edward F. Albee, and Martin Beck to exhibit TAE kinetophone movies in the United States and Canada through the Keith-Albee chain of vaudeville theaters.  William Fox and Winfield Sheehan sued the film monopoly and busted the Edison Trust. 

Overnight there were seventy-three motion picture companies making movies in Edendale, a small village in the hills above downtown Los Angeles including the famed Mack Sennett.  Neighbor and vaudeville star female impersonator Julian Eltinge who earned more than President Taft debuted in Los Angeles.

Universal Pictures absorbed Nestor Film Company.

LA City Council passed law prohibiting sex between unmarried persons and created a morals police to patrol public property.

The Novelty Theater at 523 South Main renamed the Century.
Burton Green completed the Beverly Hills Hotel.

At Los Angeles College, John McAstocker, SJ began Classics & Archeology instruction and Albert I. Whelan was named first Director of Music.

Occidental College begins construction of a new campus in Eagle Rock north of Los Angeles.

1913

New York, --- AT&T’s Western Electric Engineering Department continued to experiment with electronic sound securing Lee de Forest’s audion tube which allowed amplification of long-distance telephone calls. Western Electric also began research on both sound-on-disc and sound-on-film systems.  Separately Theodore Case and assistant Earl Sponable further improved the audion amplifying tube.  Samuel “Roxy” Rothalfel started at the new Regent Theater. 
Future LA crime boss Meyer “Mickey” Cohen was born in Brooklyn. 

Mack Sennett hired Fatty Arbuckle.

Jesse Lasky and Sam Goldwyn teamed with Cecil B. DeMille and Oscar Apfel to form Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company.

The Los Angeles Aqueduct was completed bringing water from Owens Valley.
Harry H. Culver began advertising a subway to Culver City.
 
At the Los Angeles Examiner, George Herriman (SVC ’96) had success with a comic strip begun in 1910 called The Dingbat Family. The precursors to the characters of Krazy and Ignatz first appeared in a small, unrelated side comic that began on July 26, 1910, that ran below "The Dingbat Family". The small comic involving a cat and mouse underneath the family's floorboards took place in the bottom segment of each panel. The cat and mouse comic strip was then spun off into a separate, Krazy Kat and Ignatz.

January

Edison displayed the Kinetophone sound-on-disc film system.

Feburary

Kinetophone premiered at Keith-Albee’s Colonial theater.

July

New York, --- American Talking Picture Company's agreement with TAE Inc. was terminated and the Edison Kinetophone Company took over the distribution of talking pictures. 

Summer

New York, --- Famous Players’ Zukor completed Monte Cristo, Tess of the D’Urbervilles and the Prisoner of Zelda.

October

Boston, --- Louis B. Mayer started up LBM Film Co. distributorship, the American Feature Film Co. and finally with others formed Metro Pictures to finance motion picture production.

1914

Central America, ---Panama Canal opened.

New York, --- Roxy puts orchestra on stage surrounded by waterfalls and gardens for the preludes for his movies.  Paramount forms as a national film distributor.

Jesse Lasky and Cecil B. DeMille make Squaw Man on location in barn in Los Angeles.

State Normal School moves to Vermont Avenue and renamed Sothern Branch of the University of Los Angeles. 

Society of Jesus to Blessed Sacrament Church in Hollywood.

Majestic-Reliance Studios open at 4516 Sunset Boulevard then renamed Fine Arts Studio by D. W. Griffith.

Temple Auditorium renamed Clune’s and later the Philharmonic Auditorium on the former site of Hazard’s Pavilion at Olive and Fifth.

March

At Los Angeles College the Reverend William J. Denney, SJ was named new president of Los Angeles College when President Gleeson was named Provincial Superior of the Jesuits of the Pacific Coast.

1915

Washington, ---the United States Supreme Court ruled in Mutual Film Corporation v. Industrial Commission of Ohio that motion pictures were a form of business, not an art form, and therefore not covered by the First Amendment.  Shortly after this decision, cities began to pass ordinances banning the public exhibition of "immoral" films, concerning the major studios that state or federal regulations would soon follow. This ruling remained in effect until Joseph Burstyn, Inc. v. Wilson in 1952 which declared that film was a legitimate artistic medium with free speech protections.  In his comments Justice McKenna bellowed that [movies] may be used for evil.

New York, ---The Motion Picture Patents Corp. was dissolved.

Los Angeles College changed name back to St. Vincent’s College and purchased 10 acres in Hollywood for future campus.  Future Dean of Men David E. Daze elected President of the Associated Students.  Pi Kappa Delta Speech Squad formed.  Orchestra formed.

The County Museum of Art, Science and History opened at Exposition Park.

Employees of Keystone Studios, Kay Bee Studios and Reliance-Majestic Studio left Mutual Film Corp. along with the Aitken brothers, to form the Triangle Film Corporation.  Triangle featured pioneer directors Thomas Ince, Mack Sennett and D. W. Griffith producing Birth of a Nation at the Fine Arts Studio.

Louis B. Mayer completed distribution deal with D. W. Griffith.

February

Birth of a Nation premiered in Los Angeles as the first American long-form narrative motion picture.

August

Reverend Frederick Ruppert, SJ appointed 3rd President of now renamed Saint Vincent’s College. En route to Los Angeles Ruppert stoped at the Noviate in Los Gatos and discovered a pamphlet of the St. Theresa and the Little Flower. He was thus inspired to pray for the budding college a goal of $250,000 and a new location within one year. Arriving in Los Angeles Ruppert found a location in mid-city that was served in all directions by the Pacific Electric trains and streetcars.

1916

New York, --- Zukor merged with Lasky to form Famous Players-Lasky . Mary Pickford wanted to bolt from Lasky over $1,000,000 dispute. Louis B. Mayer partnered with Richard A. Rowland to create Metro Pictures Corporation, a talent booking agency, in New York City.

Boston, --- Technicolor offered a color film system.

Griffith’s Intolerance was quickly filmed at Fine Arts Studios and released in response to critics of Birth of a Nation.

Charlie Chaplin became the world’s highest paid entertainer when he signed a contract with Mutual Film Corp. for a salary of $670,000 per year. Mutual built Chaplin a custom film studio and allowed absolute creative control to make twelve two-reel films.

Society of Motion Picture Engineers began work at the clubhouse on motion picture standards.

James J. Hayes, SJ began Philosophy instruction at Saint Vincent’s College. The copper magnate and the Little Flower story. Instead of Hollywood, suddenly St. Vincent’s breaks ground on 16th Street in the western Pico Heights district.

June

Located in the heart of Hollywood, the Roman Catholic Blessed Sacrament Church had close ties to the movie industry in its early years.  “Popular stars of filmdom" were noted giving their time and talents gratis for a three-act burlesque of the "old-time melodrama" and novel specialty numbers.

November

New York, --- Lee De Forest, from experimental radio station 2XG broadcast the first radio advertisements (for his own products) and the first Presidential election report by radio for Charles Evans Hughes and Woodrow Wilson.