Beverly Hills, California: Difference between revisions
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In [[1919]], [[Douglas Fairbanks]] and [[Mary Pickford]] bought land on Summit Drive and built ''[[Pickfair]]'', the house that would remain Pickford's home after she and Fairbanks divorced and for the rest of her life. Other wealthy movie people followed them and settled in Beverly Hills. [[Will Rogers]], a wisecracking political humorist, wrote of the land boom in [[1923]], " |
In [[1919]], [[Douglas Fairbanks]] and [[Mary Pickford]] bought land on Summit Drive and built ''[[Pickfair]]'', the house that would remain Pickford's home after she and Fairbanks divorced and for the rest of her life. Other wealthy movie people followed them and settled in Beverly Hills. [[Will Rogers]], a wisecracking political humorist, wrote of the land boom in [[1923]], "Lotsnfnx,mmnnncmvncmcn are sold so quickly and often out here that they put through escrow made out to the 12th owner... They couldn't possibly make out a separate deed for each purchaser; besides, he wouldn't have time to read it in the 10 minutes' time he owned the land." The movie colony was well entrenched by [[1928]] when [[Harold Lloyd]] built his mansion in Benedict Canyon, followed by [[John Barrymore]], [[Robert Montgomery (actor)|Robert Montgomery]] and [[Miriam Hopkins]]. Thus, Beverly Hills became famous for being home to the rich and for the large, stylish mansions of famous [[movie star]]s. |
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The population in [[1920]] was 672; in [[1924]], it was 5,000; by [[1930]], it was 17,429. The issuance of building permits in [[1918]] totaled $35,200; in [[1919]], $304,900; in [[1921]], $787,729; [[1922]], $1,838,994. |
The population in [[1920]] was 672; in [[1924]], it was 5,000; by [[1930]], it was 17,429. The issuance of building permits in [[1918]] totaled $35,200; in [[1919]], $304,900; in [[1921]], $787,729; [[1922]], $1,838,994. |
Revision as of 20:27, 22 May 2007
Picture of Beverly Hills taken at Wilshire Boulevard | |
File:Bhcityseal.png | |
City seal | |
City nickname: "Garden Spot of the World" | |
Location of Beverly Hills, California | |
County | Los Angeles County, California |
Population - Total (2000) |
33,784 |
Time zone - Summer (DST) |
PST (UTC–8) PDT (UTC–7) |
Location | 33°56′00″N 118°24′00″W / 33.93333°N 118.40000°W |
Mayor | Jimmy Delshad |
Vice Mayor | Jimmy Delshad |
City Manager | Roderick J. Wood |
City website |
Beverly Hills is a city in the western part of Los Angeles County, California. Beverly Hills and the neighboring city of West Hollywood are together entirely surrounded by the city of Los Angeles. The area's so-called "Golden Triangle" of wealthy neighborhoods is formed by Beverly Hills and the Los Angeles neighborhoods of Bel-Air and Holmby Hills.
Beverly Hills is bordered on the north by Bel-Air and the Santa Monica Mountains, on the east by West Hollywood and the Fairfax District of Los Angeles, on the south by Los Angeles' Beverlywood neighborhood and on the west by Holmby Hills as well as Westwood Village and Century City, which are also Los Angeles neighborhoods and not separate cities. While Beverly Hills is a separate city, it is culturally very much a part of Los Angeles.
History
Early years
The area that would one day become Beverly Hills was fertile because of the streams that met there in the rainy months. Water cascaded down from the canyons that became known as Coldwater and Benedict, creating a ciénaga (or swamp) at the location of present day Sunset Boulevard and Beverly Drive. The foothill site had flocks of geese and ducks, bands of wild horses and herds of antelope. Native American inhabitants, the Tongva (who the Spanish named the Gabrielino) tribe, considered it a holy site and named it "The Gathering of the Waters," which in the Spanish language is "El Rodeo de las Aguas." El Rodeo later became the name of one of the four elementary schools of Beverly Hills.
Gaspar de Portolà's land expedition arrived in the area on August 3 1769. The group, composed of Portolà (the first governor of the province of California), some Franciscan priests and a cavalcade of leather-jacket soldiers and horses, traveled over the Indian trail, which would one day be Wilshire Boulevard, across the plain toward the foothills gouged with deep canyons, and made camp in the cool of the sycamore trees at the present site of La Cienega Park, near the large swamp. On September 27 1821, New Spain became Mexico and the province of California quietly changed flags.
Also in the 1820s, a retired Spanish soldier, who was by now an invalid on a pension, Vicente Ferrer Valdez, and his wife, Maria Rita Villa de Valdez, went to live on the 4,500 acre (18 km²) Rancho El Rodeo de las Aguas. Rita did not care for the name, however, and chose to call it San Antonio. The Valdez adobe home was built near what is the present day intersection of Sunset Boulevard and Alpine Drive. Numerous vaqueros (or cowboys) were employed to tend the cattle and horses. Valdez died in 1828, leaving Rita a widow with eleven children.
In 1831, the alcalde (mayor) of the pueblo (town) of Los Angeles, Vicente Sanchez, granted to Rita, jointly with her kinsman Luciano Valdez, a tract of land styled San Antonio. She began having trouble with Luciano Valdez, however, and decided the rancho was not big enough for the both of them. In 1834, she testified before the Los Angeles City Council that Luciano built his house within 70 feet (21 m) of hers, obstructing the view; ran her cattle off the only watering hole on the rancho, which sent them wandering over the neighbor's property, kept her from planting and dared her to complain. When she did complain, Rita found the man of bad temper, a user of indecent language and generally intolerable. The council agreed and ordered him to vacate the premises. In 1840, the land grant was confirmed by the governor of California, Juan Bautista Alvarado. By 1844, Rita had built a second home, this one on Main Street in Los Angeles, which is where she kept her title papers and grant. Before the Americans commanded by Commodore Stockton entered the city in 1846, she, her children, and other Californios, fled. When she returned, she found her papers had been stolen.
California was admitted as a U.S. state on September 9 1850. The United States Board of Land Commissioners later confirmed her title. But before that happened, Rita tired of Indian raids on her livestock and sold the rancho in 1854 to Benjamin D. Wilson and Henry Hancock. Hancock sold out to William Workman, who planned to grow wheat. But after one successful season, the drought of 1863–1864 put a temporary end to farming in the area. The legendary waters dried up, crops withered and cattle died.
A brief oil boom brought a flourish of interest in the land in 1865 when the Pioneer Oil Company bought the rights to drill wells. But the wildcatting ended when the land proved as dry underneath as on top. Then newcomers arrived and herds of sheep appeared on the land, with portions being sold. James Whitworth bought a 125 acre (0.5 km²) parcel between what became Robertson and La Cienega Boulevards, north of what became Pico Boulevard, and Edison A. Benedict built a home in 1868 at the mouth of the canyon that bears his name. Benedict and his son, Pierce, bought adjoining land, planted walnut trees, beans and other vegetables and raised bees.
The De Las Aguas Land Association was formed with headquarters in San Francisco. Nearly the whole ranch was divided into 75 acre (303,000 m²) farming lots with the center reserved for the "Town of Santa Maria," which was to be split into five acre (20,000 m²) lots to be sold at $10 each. The proposed main street of the town was Los Angeles Avenue, which is today Wilshire Boulevard. But another drought came, and the dream of Dr. Preuss blew away with the dust as the land reverted to sheep ranching.
Henry Hammel and Charles Denker, owners of the United States Hotel in Los Angeles, then purchased the land. Lima beans were the only crop to flourish, along with the sheep, but their ultimate dream was to establish a subdivision called Morocco. During their ownership in the 1880s, there was a land boom and a steam train brought buyers from Los Angeles to Santa Monica, passing through the Hammel and Denker Ranch. A station named Morocco, with a town of the same name was shown on the map of 1888, but the station and the town existed only on paper. The land boom collapsed, taking their plans along with it.
Creation of Beverly Hills
In 1900, the land was purchased by the Amalgamated Oil Company. They drilled several wells, only to have their drill bits gather dust above and below ground. And by 1906, the property passed into the hands of the Rodeo Land and Water Company, with Burton E. Green as head of the development company.
Green and the new corporation hired a landscape architect, Wilbur D. Cook, who designed a town with large lots for homes and wide curving streets, to be lined with palm, eucalyptus, acacia and other variety of trees. Cook also created a three block long, eighty-feet wide greensward along the north side of Santa Monica Boulevard called Santa Monica Park. When trying to decide on a name for the town they were about to build, Burton Green happened to read a newspaper article that mentioned Beverly Farms, Massachusetts, and as he read, it struck him that Beverly was a pretty name. He suggested the name Beverly Hills to his associates and it was accepted.
The names of the streets, Crescent, Cañon, Beverly, Rodeo, Camden, Bedford, Roxbury and Linden Drives, Carmelita, Elevado and Lomitas Avenues, and Burton Way, appeared on a map for the first time on January 23 1907, when the subdivision of Beverly Hills was filed at the County Recorder's Office. On November 15, two lots on Crescent Drive were sold to Henry C. Clarke and he built a home. During 1910, after the financial panic of 1907-1908 had blown over, land sales were in full bloom and houses began to dot the landscape.
The Beverly Hills Hotel was built in 1912 and immediately became the center of social life in the area. Church was held in the hotel on Sunday; all formal social affairs were conducted in the grand ballroom; brides had to be married in the hotel; and the only motion picture theater was located there. Mrs. Margaret Anderson, well known in Los Angeles hotel circles, was brought in from the Hollywood Hotel as manager.
A streetcar line ran down the middle of Sunset Boulevard from Los Angeles through Hollywood. By late 1913, with a population of 550, there were fifty more residents than needed to incorporate.
On January 28 1914, Beverly Hills was incorporated. 1915 saw the first land annexation to the city. Street lights and fire equipment were purchased and the tax rate was fixed at $1.00 for each $100.00 of assessed valuation.
Middle years
In 1919, Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford bought land on Summit Drive and built Pickfair, the house that would remain Pickford's home after she and Fairbanks divorced and for the rest of her life. Other wealthy movie people followed them and settled in Beverly Hills. Will Rogers, a wisecracking political humorist, wrote of the land boom in 1923, "Lotsnfnx,mmnnncmvncmcn are sold so quickly and often out here that they put through escrow made out to the 12th owner... They couldn't possibly make out a separate deed for each purchaser; besides, he wouldn't have time to read it in the 10 minutes' time he owned the land." The movie colony was well entrenched by 1928 when Harold Lloyd built his mansion in Benedict Canyon, followed by John Barrymore, Robert Montgomery and Miriam Hopkins. Thus, Beverly Hills became famous for being home to the rich and for the large, stylish mansions of famous movie stars.
The population in 1920 was 672; in 1924, it was 5,000; by 1930, it was 17,429. The issuance of building permits in 1918 totaled $35,200; in 1919, $304,900; in 1921, $787,729; 1922, $1,838,994.
In early 1920, the Beverly Hills Speedway, a 1.25 mile wood oval track with turns banked 35 degrees, which was built at a cost of $500,000 on the south side of Wilshire Boulevard between Beverly Drive on the east and Lasky Drive on the west in Beverly Hills, was opened. Joe Boyer ran his race car 110 mph during the exhibition run. The races drew huge crowds and radio broadcasts were on a par with today's Indianapolis 500. There were also some aviation shows, another national craze. The speedway was closed in 1924 and the site was later subdivided for housing and businesses.
In 1923, annexation to the City of Los Angeles was proposed, but faced opposition. Residents Mary Pickford, Will Rogers and others mobilized local voters against the plan. Those for annexation argued that Los Angeles would provide an adequate supply of better quality water for growth. Workers left bottles of sulfur-smelling water on the doorsteps of every home in Beverly Hills with a label that read: "Warning. Drink sparingly of this water as it has laxative qualities." Despite the campaign tactics, annexation was defeated 507 to 337. The following year, the city voted $400,000 in bonds to purchase the water system from the Beverly Hills Utilities Company and drill additional wells.
This fight for an independent city was arguably the first union of show business and politics in the United States. When Will Rogers became involved in local city government the community received international advertising. In 1925, long before Ronald Reagan became governor or Clint Eastwood became mayor of Carmel, Rogers was given the title "Honorary Mayor of Beverly Hills," which was the first and only time anyone has been so honored. That same year, the citizens of the city voted a $100,000 bond issue to purchase with Los Angeles, Santa Monica and Venice 385 acres (1.6 km²) for the building of UCLA. There were ninety-six miles (154 km) of paved streets in the city limits by 1927. In 1928, the Beverly-Wilshire Hotel on Wilshire Boulevard between El Camino and Rodeo Drives, part of the old Beverly Hills Speedway, was completed. That same year, Greystone Mansion was completed by Edward L. Doheny, Jr., the only son and heir of wealthy oil man Edward L. Doheny. And in 1930, horses were banned in the City of Beverly Hills.
Beverly Hills continued to grow. Promotional materials from the period touted the young metropolis as the "center of the next million." Fortunately, human-scale public improvements helped soften the effects of growth. In the early 1930s, Santa Monica Park was renamed Beverly Gardens and was extended to span the entire two mile length of Santa Monica Boulevard through the city. At its Santa Monica and Wilshire corner, the Electric Fountain, a constant symphony of form and color at night, was installed, with a small sculpture at the top of a Tongva kneeling in prayer, homage to the heritage of Beverly Hills as a wellspring of fertility and abundance.
The following year, 1932, a new Italian Renaissance-style City Hall was opened. By 1933, however, the Depression hit Beverly Hills. The city and school board cut salaries to save funds. In February, some 161 parcels of land were advertised for sale for delinquent lighting assessments. The Chamber of Commerce established an employment bureau and the mayor requested a branch welfare office from the County of Los Angeles.
Despite these problems, in April 1934 there was a huge celebration over the dedication of the city's new United States Post Office. The civic festival that followed was called Beverly Hills on Parade. By 1937, the city had weathered the storm of the Depression and was riding the crest of a wave of retail sales that reached more than $20,000,000 and bank deposits topped the $25,000,000 figure. Property values of that year showed a 30% increase over the previous year and new buildings were being opened regularly.
In the years after World War II, energies were again turned toward the building of the city; businesses and residential areas began to flourish.
Contemporary Beverly Hills
By the 1950s, few vacant lots remained and developers cropped whole mountains to ease the housing shortage. The Trousdale Estates area was eventually annexed and an expensive housing development began to take shape in the hills above the city. Beverly Hills marketed itself as one of the most glamorous places in the world to shop. The Golden Triangle, with Rodeo Drive at its center, was marketed as the apex of chic shopping and fashion.
The Via Rodeo, the first new street in Beverly Hills in seventy-six years, was completed in 1990. The Spanish cobblestone street leads to 2 Rodeo, a "mini-mall". In 1992, the Beverly Hills Civic Center was opened. Designed by architect Charles Moore, it links the new public library, fire and police departments with the historic City Hall. The exterior of the old public library, which had featured a mosaic resembling books on a shelf, appeared in stock shots in The Brady Bunch as Mike Brady's office building.
A little known fact about the center divider that runs from North Santa Monica to Sunset in the middle of Rodeo Drive is a trolley once ran from downtown Beverly Hills to the Beverly Hills Hotel along that route.
While the city derives its unique personality from being favored by show business people; and it is true that many actors, writers, directors and producers live in the city and take part in civic life; many professionals, doctors and lawyers, have homes and offices in the city also. The Beverly Hills Unified School District, with its four K-8 schools and the Beverly Hills High School, boasts particularly high academic achievement.
The city's image has been enhanced by being featured in television shows and movies set in Beverly Hills, including the The Jack Benny Program (1950 to 1954), The Beverly Hillbillies (1962 to 1971), the Beverly Hills Cop movies, and Beverly Hills 90210 (1990 to 2000). There's a worldwide hit animation series Totally Spies based in Beverly Hills, as three teen girls attend fictional Beverly High School are part-time undercover spies.
Rodeo, Beverly, and Canon Drives all recently underwent construction to widen the sidewalks and beautify the streets. New construction has also just been completed that added more parking for visitors to the famed shopping area.
90210
90210 is a ZIP code in Beverly Hills, made one of the most famous postal codes in the world by the television series Beverly Hills 90210. (West Beverly Hills High School is a fictional high school.) The real Beverly Hills High School is actually located in 90212. Beverly Hills also has two additional ZIP codes based on the general area. These ZIP codes are 90211 and 90212. In 1983, the local weekly magazine "Beverly Hills 213" debuted as the city's first color ultra-luxury magazine. The population of 90210 is 21,396.
Geography
Beverly Hills is located at 34°4′23″N 118°23′58″W / 34.07306°N 118.39944°WInvalid arguments have been passed to the {{#coordinates:}} function (34.073109, -118.399460).Template:GR
According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 14.7 km² (5.7 mi²), all land.
Beverly Hills is surrounded by the city of Los Angeles, except the small Northeast corner shares the boundary for West Hollywood, another city known for the Sunset strip that includes Beverly Hills on the famous Sunset Boulevard.
Main thoroughfares include Wilshire Boulevard, Santa Monica Boulevard, and Sunset Boulevard. Shopping streets include Beverly Drive and Rodeo Drive. Coldwater Canyon Drive is the main road through Beverly Hills into the San Fernando Valley.
In spite of the city's name, most residents live in the "flats" of Beverly Hills. This relatively flat land includes all of Beverly Hills south of Sunset Blvd. The homes in the hills north of Sunset have a much higher than average value than the rest of Beverly Hills, and the most expensive homes in Beverly Hills are all in the hills. Wilshire Boulevard divides the flats into two areas, locally know as "(North or South) of the tracks," referring to the train tracks that were once used by the old Redline stockcar that went traversed Beverly Hills along Wilshire Blvd. Homes south of Wilshire have more urban square and retangular lots, generally smaller than those to the north. There are also more apartment buildings south of Wilshire than anywhere else in Beverly Hills, and the average home value south of Wilshire is the lowest in Beverly Hills.
Beverly Hills Post Office or BHPO, is a part of Los Angeles that lies in the hills just north of the City of Beverly Hills. This area, as the name might indicate, shares the 90210 zip code with Beverly Hills proper. The very hilly terrain makes BHPO seem more like the Hollywood Hills in character, with many homes overlooking dramatic views of the city.
Except for the Beverly Hills Hotel and the Beverly Hilton Hotel, all businesses and government offices in Beverly Hills are located south of Santa Monica Blvd. Nearby the Beverly Hills city limits is the famous Los Angeles Country Club, where golfers tee up aside celebrities into the game.
Population figures
As of the censusTemplate:GR of 2000, there were 33,784 people, 15,035 households, and 8,269 families residing in the city. The population density was 2,300.5/km² (5,954.0/mi²). There were 15,856 housing units at an average density of 1,079.7/km² (2,794.4/mi²). The racial makeup of the city was 85.06% White American, 1.77% African American , 0.13% American Indian and Alaskan Native, 7.05% Asian American, 0.03% Pacific Islander American, 1.50% from other races, and 4.46% from mixed two, or more, races. 4.63% of the population were Hispanic American or Latino of any race. 20.8% were of Iranian, 8.3% Russian, 7.0% United States or American and 5.5% Polish ancestry according to Census 2000. 57.0% spoke English, 19.7% Persian, 6.2% Spanish, 3.2% Hebrew, 2.6% Korean, 2.4% Russian and 2.2% French as their first language. Beverly Hills has a larger percentage of foreign-born persons than the national average, but the majority of residents are born in the United States.
Local diversity
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Beverly Hills isn't a homogeneous community, like the mass media made most people believe the city is "populated by whites" or "WASPs". Beverly Hills is portrayed with a large percentage of Democrats, a common trait among urban areas, the traditional rich (i.e., Liberal elite) and celebrities hold more liberal opinions. The city has a small Republican minority.
Some estimates put the Persian community in Beverly Hills as high as 20%, while some claim it to be even higher, close to half or more. The large majority of the Persians living in Beverly Hills adhere to Judaism [1], making them Persian Jews. A 2007 article stated that: "...about 8,000 of Beverly Hill's approximately 35,000 residents are of Iranian descent" [2].
Beverly Hills has one of California's largest American Jewish populations and there are four synagogues within the city (although there are many others adjacent). Nessah Synagogue on Rexford Dr., a Persian congregation, may be the largest of them and also has its own preschool. During the Jewish high holy days, an additional number of "temporary" synagogues host services in locations like the El Rodeo School or the Beverly Hilton hotel. Other religious groups are represented, such as the LDS (Mormon) community which has several chapels for Sunday worship as well as a nearby temple for special rites (on Santa Monica Blvd. in Century City.)
Beverly Hills has multiple ethnic communities: Russian American, Polish American, Arab American, and Armenians are well known (same goes for nearby West Hollywood, a large percentage are second or third-generation whose families are immigrants or refugees arrived after world war II, another wave came after the fall of the Soviet Union (1990s) like Russia and the Ukraine are well documented.
In the 1980s and 1990s, Western Europeans, Australians, Canadians and Asians purchased properties for investment or to move in as permanent residences. Thousands of political refugees happen to live in Beverly Hills, usually are wealthy, or upper-classes fleeing from economic turmoil to the US, for example: from Iran, Serbia, Hungary, India, Pakistan, South Korea, Taiwan, Ethiopia, Chile, and Argentina.
Beverly Hills and the nearby Fairfax District of Los Angeles has became an enclave of African immigrants who are socioeconomically successful, Asian Americans often of Chinese, Korean and Japanese American descent, Latino millionaires (like Cuban Americans via Florida and wealthy Mexicans live part-time in rich sections of Mexico City), and Native Americans, some have legal residence in Oklahoma from the oil industry that gave foundation to both that state and Beverly Hills.
Demographic facts
Of the 15,035 households, 24.4% had children under the age of 18, 43.8% were married couples, 8.1% had a female householder with no husband present, and 45.0% were non-families. 38.2% of all households were made up of individuals and 11.3% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.24 and the average family size was 3.02.
In the city the population was spread out with 20.0% under the age of 18, 6.3% from 18 to 24, 29.3% from 25 to 44, 26.8% from 45 to 64, and 17.6% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 41 years. For every 100 females there were 83.5 males. For every 100 adult females, there were 79.4 adult males. Beverly Hills has two large age groupings: senior citizens with large retirement incomes, and single young adults (some live together), including the city's large gay and lesbian community.
Renters, not homeowners, are the majority. Renter-occupied housing units comprise 56.6 percent of the city's housing stock. The median household income for renter-occupied housing units in the city is $48,179, which is just slightly above average for the entire United States. The overall median household income is $70,945, while the median income for a family is $102,611. About 7.9% of families and 9.1% of the population were below the poverty line, including 9.5% of those under age 18 and 7.9% of those age 65 or over.
Despite its reputation, 90210 is not the wealthiest ZIP code in the United States or even California. The wealthiest ZIP code in California is 94027, generally in Atherton, California, while the wealthiest ZIP code in the United States is 33139, in Miami Beach, Florida). However, it's been said if Beverly Hills was a country, it would be as wealthy as Monaco or Liechtenstein.
In fact, Beverly Hills has the lowest median household income of cities with a population of over 10,000 where the average home value is above $1 million. The highest concentration of millionaires goes to Indian Wells, a desert community of 4,300 residents, but couldn't match up with Beverly Hills' larger population of millionaires and billionaires alike.
Government and politics
See also: Mayor of Beverly Hills
Of the 21,426 registered voters in Beverly Hills; approximately 50.3% are Democrats and 25.9% are Republicans. The remaining 23.8% either declined to state political affiliation or are registered with one of the many minor political parties, like the Green Party and the Libertarian Party.
The heavy Democratic advantage makes Beverly Hills one of the more liberal cities in Southern California. In 2004, John Kerry won 62% of the vote compared to 37% for George W. Bush. In the 2006 state governor election, Arnold Schwarzenegger got nearly 40% of the vote but won a second term by a state-wide majority, while Democratic opponent Phil Angelides only had over 60%. [citation needed]
Beverly Hills is a general law city governed by a five-member City Council including the mayor and vice mayor. City Council hires a city manager to carry out policies and serve as executive officer. Every odd-numbered year either two or three members are elected by the people to serve a four-year term. Each March the City Council meets and chooses one of its members as mayor and one as vice-mayor.
Stephen P. Webb serves as mayor, Jimmy Delshad as vice mayor, and Roderick J. Wood as city manager. The other three city council members are Barry Brucker, Linda J. Briskman, and Frank M. Fenton. In city council meetings, a few celebrities showed up to speak on local political issues. The Beverly Hills Police Department has its stake to claim in serving the city in law enforcement, included run-ins with celebrities in its history. The police department was featured on the 1983 comedy movie Down and Out in Beverly Hills and another comedy, Beverly Hills Cop.
Education
Public schools
Beverly Hills is served by Beverly Hills Unified School District; the district's sole high school is Beverly Hills High School.
Los Angeles neighborhoods near Beverly Hills are served by Los Angeles Unified School District.
Private schools
Beverly Hills also has several private schools.
Good Shepherd School, a PreK-8 school in Beverly Hills, is a part of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles.
Other Beverly Hills private schools include Harkham Hillel Hebrew Academy, Emanuel Academy of Beverly Hills, and Page Private School.
Marymount High School in nearby Westwood, across from the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), is in close proximity to Beverly Hills.
Public libraries
Beverly Hills Public Library is in Beverly Hills.
Media
Beverly Hills is served by the following newspapers: the Beverly Hills Courier, Beverly Hills Weekly, and Beverly Hills 213 Magazine. The Beverly Hills Post used to be one of the main newspapers, but it went out of business. Due to its location, it is also served by all Los Angeles TV, radio, and newspaper media.
Beverly Hills also has its own Television channel, KBEV. Run by the students of Beverly Hills High School, it airs on channel 6 (on cable) to the residents of Beverly Hills.
Landmarks
- Beverly Gardens Park
- Beverly Hills High School
- Beverly Hills Hotel
- Beverly-Wilshire Hotel
- Burton Way - named for Richard Burton, city co-founder.
- Electric Fountain
- Greystone Mansion
- Greystone Park
- La Cienega Park
- Pickfair
- Beverly Hills Police department.
- Roxbury Park
- Will Rogers Memorial Park
Name monikers
Some areas are dubbed "Beverly Hills of" as comparisons to the actual Beverly Hills. For example, Ladera Heights, an unincorporated area in southwestern Los Angeles County, is dubbed the "Black Beverly Hills" [3]. Scottsdale, AZ has become known by many Arizona residents as the "Beverly Hills of Arizona" for its upscale shops, stately homes, and high household income.
See also
- Hollywood, California
- Los Angeles, California
- Rodeo Drive
- Tehrangeles - largest ethnic Iranian community outside of Iran
- Iranians / Persians - 25% of Beverly Hills, 40% of Beverly Hills high school
- Persian-American Jews - a well represented ethno-religious group in Beverly Hills
External links
- [4] Travel video from Beverly Hills
- Beverly Hills City Photographs
- Beverly Hills Photos
- [5] Los Angeles Times profile
- History of Beverly Hills
- Iranian Jew poised to become mayor of Beverly Hills
- Nessah Synagogue