L.A. THEN AND NOW - The (d)evolution of a downtown landmark - From lush park to concrete plaza, Pershing Square has been changing, along with the city around it, for 141 years.

Pershing Square has been on a roller coaster of grandeur and decay since its dedication 141 years ago as public space. It has been refurbished and renamed at least half a dozen times.

Once a lush green oasis, the park today is primarily concrete surrounded by skyscrapers. It boasts statues of Beethoven, a World War I doughboy and a Spanish American War soldier -- but only a plaque for the man whose name it bears.

In the 1850s, settlers camped there on the outskirts of the village of Los Angeles. "The stream out of the Arroyo de Los Reyes [now Echo Park] crossed the southwest corner. So the confluence of the Camino Real" -- the Spanish settlers' trail -- "with the stream would have been a natural locale for a camp," Sacramento landscape architect and Los Angeles historian John Crandell said in an interview.

Early surveyors drew the acreage as 10 plots, but in practicality it was a solid five-acre piece of land. In 1866, city fathers declared the plots a public square, according to a city history. In 1867, St. Vincent's College moved in across the street, and the square informally became St. Vincent's Park. In 1870, it was officially named Los Angeles Park.

At some point -- perhaps before the land was dedicated as public space -- German immigrant and civic do-gooder George "Roundhouse" Lehman planted small cypress and fruit trees and shrubs. Lehman, who owed his nickname to the circular design of a popular beer garden he operated nearby, continued to water the greenery until his death in 1882. With Lehman's trees along the perimeter, the park became a shady oasis.

During the 1880s and '90s, it was known as 6th Street Park, and later, Central Park. A pavilion was added, attracting music lovers and soapbox orators.

The park began to play a starring role in the city's cultural life and, beginning in 1894, served as the staging area for the crowning of the queen of La Fiesta de Los Angeles, a celebration of the city's many cultures. That event endures as Fiesta Broadway.

In 1900, a life-size bronze was unveiled commemorating Spanish-American War dead. Created by an unknown artist, it honors 20 Southern California soldiers killed in the war.

The artist's model, according to a 1941 Times article, was a Spanish-American War veteran, 7th California Infantry volunteer Charlie Hammond of San Francisco. The statue, which sports a handlebar mustache and stands at parade rest, is believed to be the oldest work of public art in Los Angeles. The City Council declared it a historic-cultural monument in 1990.


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