Rose Hills, Los Angeles

Rose Hills is a small Los Angeles City neighborhood in the Eastside Los Angeles region of the County of Los Angeles, California.

Rose Hills
Neighborhood of Los Angeles
Rose Hills
Location within Central Los Angeles
Coordinates: 34.085943°N 118.190907°W / 34.085943; -118.190907
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
CountyLos Angeles
CityLos Angeles
Government
  City CouncilJosé Huizar
  State AssemblyWendy Carrillo (D)
  State SenateKevin de Leon (D)
  U.S. HouseXavier Becerra (D
Time zoneUTC-8 (PST)
  Summer (DST)UTC-7 (PDT)
ZIP code
90032
Area code(s)323


History

The Rose Hills area has a long history. The history of the community starts back over 5,000 years, when the Native [[ "There was no one tribe called 'Tongva.'" http://digmagonline.com/dig-magazine/1405/culture/is-csulb-really-on-an-indian-burial-ground ]]-Kizh Nation lived in the Los Angeles basin. At that time, the KIZH named the villages in relation to local features. The name of the village where this community rests was once called 'Otsungna', the largest village of the Kizh tribe. The word 'Otsungna' translates to "Place of Roses," after the native wild roses (Rosa californica) growing along/around the hills.

In a Pacific Ocean expedition in 1602, the first record of 'Rosa de Castilla' was coined by Padre Antonio de la Ascension, as noted in his voyage log.

During the Spanish Exploration led by Gasper de Portola in 1769, the people traveled through the area and made several notes about the abundant amount of roses they saw during the expedition. Padre Junipero Serra also made a kind remark in his diary — that they had "met the Queen of them all, the 'Rosa de Castilla'". After the founding of El Pueblo de Nuestra Senora de la Reina de Los Angeles Sobre el Rio Porciuncula' (present day Los Angeles).

Historical reports and maps in archives indicate that Rose Hills was once part of an 1839 Mexican land grant named "Rancho Rosa Castilla". The first recorded owner of the Rancho was Juan Ballesteros, registrar of the pueblo. After statehood, land claim #309 SD was filed in 1852 to confirm it. By the late 1850s the land had been transferred twice, and was owned by Anacleto Lestrade, priest at La Iglesia de Nuestra Señora la Reina de los Ángeles, the mission church of the Pueblo de Los Ángeles. One of the original 36 adobes in California stood on Rancho Rosa Castilla.

There are various placename references to the historic rancho's and present day community's name, such as: Rose Hill Elementary School (now Huntington Drive Elementary), Rose Hill Regional Park (renamed Ernest E. Debs Regional Park), Rose Road (now Huntington Drive), Rose Hill Pharmacy (demolished), Our Lady of Guadalupe Rose Hill, Rose Hill Recreation Center, [1] and Rose Hill Courts. Rose Hill also was the name of a stop on the Pacific Electric Red Car's Sierra Vista line.

References

  1. Rose Hill Recreation Center, 4560 Mercury Ave. 90032

Anthony Manzano. "Archived History of Rose Hills" (PDF).

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.