Brand new Historic Downtown Los Angeles Tour will
be held this on his Sunday!
On Sunday morning,September 11th - there will be the very first ‘Urban Planning & Historic Downtown Los Angeles’ - at 11 AM and then at 2 PM there will be an updated version of the ‘How Downtown Los Angeles Invented the Wild West’ tour.
On Sunday morning,September 11th - there will be the very first ‘Urban Planning & Historic Downtown Los Angeles’ - at 11 AM and then at 2 PM there will be an updated version of the ‘How Downtown Los Angeles Invented the Wild West’ tour.
Both tours will start at THE LAST BOOKSTORE at 453
S. Spring, on the 5th Street side of the Spring Arts Tower and they
are still only $15 per person. For
reservations call Brady Westwater 213-804-8396.
At the request of some USC urban planning students,
the standard Historic Downtown LA Tour - The Past, Present and Future of
Downtown - will become a totally new tour examining HIsotric Downtown’s Past,
Present and Future from the viewpoint of Urban Planning.
It will also include a small part of an upcoming tour
featuring Mike Davis and his writings about Downtown in City of Quartz and the
Ecology of Fear that will cover the exact places he wrote about so you can
determine for yourself what is fact and what is fabrication.
And then, on the 2PM Wild West Tour, you will discover that long before the famed
Western cowtowns and mining camps Tombstone, Dodge City, and Deadwood
existed, Los Angeles was the first town where all the trappings of the Wild
West were created. You will also discover LA was a far ‘wilder’
town than any Western town that followed after it. Tours, led by
Brady Westwater, will begin at the 10,000 square foot THE LAST
BOOKSTORE - 453 S. Spring Street. Call 213-804-8396 for reservations.
Description of what WILD WEST TOUR will cover.
Besides ‘inventing’ the original Wild West, Los Angeles also remained part of the Wild West for far longer than other place (from 25 years to over 90 years - depending upon the definition of the term - compared to the average period of 3 or 4 years to 10 years of other towns) and LA was also one of the few towns built upon both cattle and mining.
Besides ‘inventing’ the original Wild West, Los Angeles also remained part of the Wild West for far longer than other place (from 25 years to over 90 years - depending upon the definition of the term - compared to the average period of 3 or 4 years to 10 years of other towns) and LA was also one of the few towns built upon both cattle and mining.
It started in the 1820’s when Los Angeles (founded in 1781) became
the end of the Old Spanish Trail and the Western end of the Santé Fe
Trail. During that time LA was regularly visited by many of the early
West’s leading mountain Men and fur trappers and a number of these early
pioneers ended up settling down in Los Angeles. Los Angeles was also home
to the first Western gold rush in 1843 - five years before gold was discovered
by John Marshall (who also spent time in Los Angeles) at Sutter’s Mill.
As the largest city in California, Los Angeles was also involved
in multiple revolutions and insurrections during both the Spanish and Mexican
eras and the exporting of hides from San Pedro starting in the 1820’s made LA
the first major cowtown west of the Rockies. And after the Gold
Rush started, Los Angeles rancho owners made cattle drives to
Northern California gold camps, a full fifteen years before the first cattle
drives left Texas.
The money from those cattle started Los Angeles’s first boom and
immediately made LA a magnet for gamblers, bandits and get rich quick
artists. And many of them were the most hardened criminals who were
run out of the gold camps by vigilantes.
That’s possibly why when one historian states that from 1870
to 1885, the five Kansas cowtowns of Abilene, Caldwell, Dodge City,
Ellsworth and Wichita had a total of 45 homicides during fifteen years, about
of three per year per town - in contrast, Los Angeles, when it’s Wild West
days were just getting started in 1850, had 31 homicides in a one year - more
than all five major Kansas cowtowns had - combined - over 15
years.
And on a per capita basis LA’s murder comes to 1,240
homicides per 100,000 while the national rate even in the lawless 1990’s was… 9
per 100,000.
So LA didn’t just have the highest murder rate in the old West
doing the 1850’s - frontier Los Angeles had the highest homicide rate in all of
American history. And even those statistics were likely surpassed in the
middle and late 1850’s when it was commonly said - and only partly in jest -
that LA had close to a murder a day every day of the year.
So LA’s secret Wild West history isn't just that LA was the
wildest town in the history of the Wild West - - but that LA was
single-handedly practically as wild as the entire rest of the West put
together.
But that is the only the start. Besides murders,
frontier Los Angeles was also home to stage robberies, multiple vigilante or
rangers organizations (the first one in 1836), far grander saloons and gambling
halls than any other cowtown, countless posses that regularly rode over
multiple counties, jail breaks, lynchings (including one led by the Mayor),
far more gun fights than any other Western town, some of largest man
hunts in Western history, bandit gangs that dwarfed those that terrorized
other cowtowns, a 10 year two family blood feud that began with two
murders and ended up in the ‘Shootout at the Bella Union Hotel’ and more
sheriffs, marshals, deputies and police officers who lost their lives in the
line of duty than in any other town, including one marshal who was killed his
own deputy.
And almost all of this happened 10 years before Dodge City
existed, 15 years before Deadwood was founded and 20 years before Tombstone dug
its first mine.
But even during the comparatively quiet 1870’s - after
its peak years - when the rest of the West was just… beginning its heyday… this
‘quieter’ and the always entertaining stage robberies of Dick
Fellows. And LA’s Wild West history continued on until continued on
with a final train robbery in the 1890’s in the San Fernando Valley in the
1890’s and Wyatt Earp being hired for special assignments by the LAPD in
the 1900’s and 1910s.
This makes LA the only place in the West with an uninterrupted
Wild West history that ran uninterrupted for almost 100 years - from
Jedediah Smith, Kit Carson and Peg Leg Smith in the mid-to late 1820's to Wyatt
Earp in the late 1910’s.
That’s why it’s not surprising many famous characters of the Old
West began their careers in Los Angeles. Wyatt Earp worked here as a teamster
or stage driver when he was in his teens, Judge Roy Bean - later to be famed as
the law West of the Pecos (and played by Paul Newman) - was head of the Los
Angeles Rangers in LA before there was even anything West of the Pecos, the
lost Dutchman of the Lost Dutchman mine began his mining career here, Outlaw
Belle Starr's outlaw son was born here and Kit Carson and Jon C. Fremont both
visited here several times before fighting here during the Mexican War.
And that’s only the start of how LA invented the Wild West.
Because after rest of the West died down elsewhere, many of the
leading characters of the era moved - or returned to - LA from the
1880’s to the 1920’s, which is one reason why much of early Downtown was built
by mining and cattle money. Many of them then also helped reinvent
the Wild West in one more way. But this time in was for the Hollywood
Western films that told the all stories of all the now
famous Cowtowns and Mining camps of the Wild West - all of them with
just one exception.
Los Angeles. The place where the Wild West started - and
where it ended.
And, again, for reservations or more information - call
213-804-8396.
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