Hermosa
Beach California
got its start in the form of a land grant from the King of Spain
in 1822 to a loyal subject Antonio Ygnacio Avila. The rancho that
resulted was called Rancho Sausal Redondo--the ranch of the round
grove of willows. After Avila's death, his heirs sold the rancho
to a wealthy Scot, Sir Robert Burnett, who arrived in Southern
California just before the Civil War intending to buy land and
raise sheep and cattle. In 1855 Burnett sold the land to another
Scot, Daniel Freeman.
By
1900, one E. B. Pomroy owned the greater part of the old rancho.
That year, a pair of railroad men and developers named Moses Sherman
and Eli Clark purchased a 1500 acre tract of Pomroy's land. The
two had built an empire of electric railroads and intended to
extend one of them, the Los Angeles Pacific, down to the booming
port of Redondo Beach. Since railroads needed passengers and freight,
they decided to develop their tract and sell off land for homes
and factories.
The
City of Hermosa Beach was laid out with the developers' railroad
running down the middle of Hermosa Avenue and ending up at Redondo
Pier. Intended at first to be a resort town for summer visitors
from Los Angeles the tiny town grew and incorporated in 1907 as
the 19th city in the Los Angeles County. The city grew and the
boom of the 1920's brought in factories: a silk mill, a glass
factory and a large tile plant. The product of the latter, Hermosa
Tile, is still in demand among tile collectors. After the World
War II, Hermosa experienced another boom in population as the
city now promoted Hermosa Beach hotels and people discovered the
pleasures of relaxed beach side living. Over the years, Hermosa's
residents have been as diverse as poet Robinson Jeffers, Presidential
candidate William Jennings Bryan and the Nelson family--Ozzie
and Harriet and the boys. |