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Meridian Capital
Mobile: (949) 500-8777
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Los Angeles County,
California
| Los Angeles County |
| County |
|
|
| Name origin: Named
for the city of Los Angeles |
|
| Country |
United
States |
| State |
California |
| Region |
Southern California |
| Metro area |
Los Angeles
Metropolitan Area |
|
| County
seat |
Los Angeles |
| - elevation |
233 ft (71 m) |
| - coordinates |
34°03′N 118°15′W / 34.05°N 118.25°W / 34.05; -118.25 |
| Highest point |
Mount San Antonio |
| - location |
San Gabriel Mountains, on border with San Bernardino County |
| - elevation |
10,068 ft (3,069 m) |
| - coordinates |
34°17′20″N 117°38′48″W / 34.28889°N 117.64667°W / 34.28889; -117.64667 |
| Lowest point |
Sea
level |
| - location |
Pacific Ocean |
| - elevation |
0 ft (0 m) |
|
| Area |
4,752 sq mi (12,308 km2) |
| - land |
4,061 sq mi (10,518 km2) |
| - water |
691 sq mi (1,790 km2) |
|
| Population |
9,862,049 (2008 estimate) |
| Density |
2,427 /sq mi (937 /km2) |
|
| Incorporated |
1850 |
| Chief Executive Officer |
William T Fujioka |
|
| Timezone |
Pacific Standard Time (UTC-8) |
| - summer (DST) |
Pacific Daylight Time (UTC-7) |
|
Map of Los Angeles
County, with incorporated areas; inset- location of the county in
California
|
|
|
| Wikimedia Commons: Los
Angeles County, California |
| Website: lacounty.gov |
|
Los Angeles County is a county in California and is the most populous county in the United States. Figures from the U.S. Census Bureau give an
estimated 2008 population of 9,862,049 residents,[1] while the California Department of
Finance lists a January 1, 2009, estimate of 10,393,185.[2] The county seat is the city of Los
Angeles, the largest city in California.
The county is home to 88 incorporated cities and
many unincorporated areas. The southern
portion is the most heavily urbanized area and is home to the vast
majority of the population which lives along the Southern California
coastline and the inland basins and valleys. The northern half is a
large expanse of less-populated desert
including the Santa Clarita Valley and the Antelope Valley, which encompasses the northeastern part of
the county and is adjacent to Kern County. In between these portions of the
county sit the San Gabriel Mountains and the vast wilderness
known as the Angeles National Forest.
The county is home to over a quarter of all California residents. One
of the most diverse counties in the country, it holds most of the
principal cities encompassing the Greater Los Angeles Area and is the
core of the five counties that make up the area. In 2004, the county's
population was larger than the individual populations of 42 states considered separately, and is more populous than the aggregate of the
11 least populous states. It is similar in land area to the state of Connecticut and in population to the state of Michigan within the United States, or similar in land area to Trinidad and Tobago and in population to Bolivia.
If Los Angeles County were a nation, it would boast a GDP among the 20
largest countries in the world.[3]
History
Los Angeles County was one of the original counties of California,
created at the time of statehood in 1850.[4] The large area once included parts of what is now known as Kern County,
San Bernardino County, Riverside County and Orange County. These parts
of the county's territory were given to San Bernardino County in
1853, to Kern County in 1866 and to Orange County in 1889. In 1893,
part of San Bernardino County became Riverside County. Geography
With 4,061 square miles[5] (10,517 km²), Los Angeles County borders 70 miles (110 km) of coast on
the Pacific Ocean and encompasses numerous other natural
landscapes including towering mountain ranges, deep valleys, forests,
islands, lakes, rivers, and desert. The county contains the following
rivers: Los Angeles River, Rio Hondo, the San Gabriel River and the Santa Clara River. The
primary mountain ranges are the Santa Monica Mountains and the San Gabriel Mountains. It also includes the
westernmost part of the Mojave
Desert, and San Clemente Island and Santa Catalina Island in
the Pacific Ocean.
Most of the population of Los Angeles County is located in the south
and southwest. The major population centers are the Los Angeles Basin and the San Fernando and San Gabriel Valleys. Moderate populations are in the
Santa Clarita, Crescenta and The Antelope Valley. The area north of the Santa Clarita Valley
(Northwest Los Angeles County, adjacent to Ventura and Kern counties) is mostly mountainous,
rugged, well-timbered and filled with coniferous forests that receives
plentiful snow in the winter, right to the point of blizzard conditions. This area is less populated. Mountains in this area include
San Emigdio Mountains, the southernmost part of Tehachapi Mountains, and the Sierra Pelona Mountains.
Most of the highest peaks in the county are located in the San Gabriel Mountains, which are part of the Transverse Ranges. They include Mount San Antonio (10,064 ft) at the Los Angeles-San Bernardino county
lines, Mount
Baden-Powell (9,399 ft), Mount
Burnham (8,997 ft), and the well-known Mount Wilson (5,710 ft) where the Mount Wilson Observatory is
located. Several smaller, lower peaks
are located in the northern, western, and southwestern Los Angeles
County.
The county has a total area of 4,752 square miles (12,308 km²), of
which, 4,061 square miles (10,518 km²) of it is land and 691 square
miles (1,791 km²) of it (14.55%) is water. Major divisions
of the county
Los Angeles, CA from the air
There are 88 incorporated cities in Los Angeles County. The most
populous are as follows: [6]
Census-designated
places
Unincorporated
communities in Los Angeles County
Despite the large number of incorporated cities, most of the area of
the county is unincorporated, and falls directly
under the county government's jurisdiction.
With no city government, residents of these areas must petition the
appropriate member of the Board of Supervisors when they have a
grievance about the quality of local services.[citation needed]
- See: Los Angeles Almanac MAP:
Unincorporated Areas and Communities of Los Angeles County
- See also: List of
districts and neighborhoods of Los Angeles
Adjacent counties
Counties and bodies of water adjacent to Los Angeles County,
California
National protected
areas
Transportation
Infrastructure
Roads
The county has an extensive freeway
network of legendary size and complexity, which is maintained by Caltrans and patrolled by the California Highway Patrol. It also
has a vast urban and suburban street
network, most of which is maintained by city governments. The county and
most cities generally do a decent job of maintaining and cleaning
streets. For more information about the primary exception, see the Transportation in Los Angeles
article.
Both the freeways and streets are notorious for severe traffic congestion, and the area's freeway-to-freeway
interchanges regularly rank among the top 10 most congested points in
the country.
In addition to Metro Bus service, numerous cities within the county
also operate their own bus companies and shuttle lines. Major highways
Air
The county's primary commercial aviation airport is Los Angeles International
Airport (LAX) in Los Angeles. Other important airports include the Long Beach
Municipal Airport in Long Beach and Bob Hope Airport in Burbank. Palmdale Regional
Airport is planned for expanded commercial service. There are also
general aviation airports in Los Angeles, including airports in Van Nuys and Pacoima.
Other general aviation airports exist in Santa Monica, Compton, Torrance, El Monte, Lancaster, and Hawthorne. Train
Los Angeles is a major freight railroad transportation center,
largely due to the large volumes of freight moving in and out of the
county's port facilities. The ports are connected to the downtown rail
yards and to the main lines of Union Pacific and Burlington
Northern Santa Fe headed east via a grade-separated, freight rail
corridor known as the Alameda Corridor.
Passenger rail service is provided in the county by Amtrak, Los Angeles Metro Rail and Metrolink.
Amtrak has the following intercity Amtrak service at Union Station in the city of Los
Angeles.
Union Station is also the primary hub for Metrolink commuter rail,
which serves much of the Greater Los Angeles Area.
Light rail, subway (heavy rail), and long-distance bus service are
all provided by the Los
Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro). Sea
The county's two main seaports are the Port of Los Angeles and the Port of Long Beach. Together they handle over a quarter
of all container traffic entering the United
States, making the complex the largest and most important port in the
country, and the third-largest port in the world by shipping volume.
The Port of Los Angeles is the largest cruise ship center on the west
coast, handling over 1 million passengers annually.
The Port of Long Beach is home to the Sea
Launch program, which uses a floating launch platform to insert
payloads into orbits that would be difficult to attain from existing
land-based launch sites.
Ferries link Avalon to the mainland. Economy
Los Angeles County is commonly associated with the entertainment
industry; all six major studios?Paramount Pictures, 20th Century Fox, Sony, Warner
Bros., Universal Pictures,
and Walt Disney Studios?are
located within the county. Beyond motion picture and television program production, other major industries of Los Angeles County are
international trade supported by the Port of Los Angeles and the Port of Long Beach, music
recording and production, aerospace,
and professional services such as law and medicine.
For major companies headquartered in the City of Los Angeles, and
adjacent cities, see the Economy section of
the Los Angeles, California article.
The following major companies have headquarters in Los Angeles County
cities not adjacent to the city of Los Angeles:
Demographics
| Historical populations |
| Census |
Pop. |
|
%± |
| 1850 |
3,530 |
|
? |
| 1860 |
11,333 |
|
221.0% |
| 1870 |
15,309 |
|
35.1% |
| 1880 |
33,381 |
|
118.0% |
| 1890 |
101,454 |
|
203.9% |
| 1900 |
170,298 |
|
67.9% |
| 1910 |
504,131 |
|
196.0% |
| 1920 |
936,455 |
|
85.8% |
| 1930 |
2,208,492 |
|
135.8% |
| 1940 |
2,785,643 |
|
26.1% |
| 1950 |
4,151,687 |
|
49.0% |
| 1960 |
6,038,771 |
|
45.5% |
| 1970 |
7,041,980 |
|
16.6% |
| 1980 |
7,477,421 |
|
6.2% |
| 1990 |
8,863,164 |
|
18.5% |
| 2000 |
9,519,338 |
|
7.4% |
| Est. 2008 |
9,862,049 |
|
3.6% |
As of the census[10] of 2000, there were 9,519,338 people, 3,133,774 households, and
2,137,233 families residing in the county. The population density was 2,344 people per square mile
(905/km²). There were 3,270,909 housing units at an average density of
806 per square mile (311/km²). The racial makeup of the county is 48.71%
White[11] 11.0% African
American, 0.81% Native
American, 10.0% Asian, 0.28% Pacific
Islander, 23.53% from other races, and 4.94% from two
or more races. 44.56% of the population are Hispanic or Latino of any race.
The largest ancestry groups are German (6%), Irish (5%), English (4%)
and Italian (3%). 45.87% of the population reported speaking English at home; 37.89% spoke Spanish as their first language, 2.22% Tagalog, 1.98% Chinese, 1.87% Korean, and 1.57% Armenian. [1]
Because the county is so populous, what is not so evident is that it
has the largest Native American population of any county in the nation:
according to the 2000 census, it has more than 153,550 people of
indigenous descent. "The invisible population that is virtually ignored
by the census is that of indigenous people from Mexico, Central and South
America."[12]
There were 3,133,774 households out of which 36.80% had children
under the age of 18 living with them, 47.6% were married
couples living together, 14.7% had a female householder with no
husband present, and 31.8% were non-families. 24.6% of all households
were made up of individuals and 7.1% had someone living alone who was 65
years of age or older. The average household size was 2.98 and the
average family size was 3.61.
In the county the population was spread out with 28.0% under the age
of 18, 10.3% from 18 to 24, 32.6% from 25 to 44, 19.4% from 45 to 64,
and 9.7% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 32 years.
For every 100 females there were 97.7 males. For every 100 females age
18 and over, there were 95.0 males.
The median income for a household in the county was $42,189, and the
median income for a family was $46,452. Males had a median income of
$36,299 versus $30,981 for females. The per capita income for the county was $20,683. There are
14.4% of families living below the poverty line and 17.9% of the population,
including 24.2% of under 18 and 10.5% of those over 64.
According to TNS Financial Services, Los Angeles County has the
highest number of millionaires out of all other counties in the
country, totaling 261,081 households as of 2007, with about 1 out of
every 38 households earning more than $1 million. [13] Housing
The homeownership rate is 47.9%, and the median
value for houses is $209,300. 42.2% of housing units are in multi-unit
structures. 2008 Demographics
Map of Los Angeles County showing population density in 2000 by census
tract
As of: January 1, 2008[2]
- Total Population: 10,363,850, or about 27% of California's
population. The county population increased 8.1% between 2000 and 2008.
|
Non Hispanic Persons: 52.7%
- White (Non-Hispanic/Non-Latino): 29.2%
- African (including African American): 9.6%
- Asian: 13.1%
- Other: 0.90%
- Hispanic or Latino: 47.3%
|
Other Statistics
- Male Residents: 49.4%
- Female Residents: 50.6%
- Residents Aged under 18: 27.6%
- Residents Aged between 19 and 64: 62.3%
- Residents Aged above 65: 10.1%
- Foreign born: 36.2% (a majority born in Mexico)
- Poverty Level: 17.7%
|
Law, government
and politics
The county's voters elect a governing five-member Los Angeles County
Board of Supervisors. The small size of the board means each
supervisor represents over 2 million people. The board operates in a
legislative, executive, and quasi-judicial capacity. As a
legislative authority, it can pass ordinances for the unincorporated
areas (ordinances that affect the whole county, like posting of
restaurant ratings, must be ratified by the individual city). As an
executive body, it can tell the county departments what to do, and how
to do it. As a quasi-judicial body, the Board is the final venue of
appeal in the local planning process, and holds public hearings on
various agenda items.
As of 2008, the Board of Supervisors oversees a $22.5 billion annual
budget and approximately 100,000 employees.[14] The county government is managed on a day-to-day basis by a Chief Executive Officer,
currently William T Fujioka, and is organized into many departments,
each of which is enormous in comparison to equivalent county-level (and
even state-level) departments anywhere else in the United States. Some
of the larger or better-known departments include:
The Grand Avenue entrance of the Stanley Mosk Courthouse.
- Los Angeles
County Coroner ? performs autopsies and determines the cause of
death for those who die without medical supervision.
- Los Angeles County Community Development Commission ? serves as the
County's housing authority as well as the housing and community and
economic development agency with wide-ranging programs that benefit
residents and business owners in unincorporated County areas and in
various incorporated cities.
- Los Angeles County Department of Beaches and Harbors
- Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services ?
administers foster care
- Los Angeles County Fire
Department ? provides fire protection, suppression, and prevention
as well as emergency medical services
- Los Angeles
County Department of Health Services ? operates several county
hospitals and a network of primary care clinics, and also runs the
public health system, which has a requirement that all restaurants in
the unincorporated County and the majority of independent cities
prominently post their food safety inspection grade in their front
window
- Los Angeles County Department of Parks and Recreation[15] ? administers public parks and the largest public golf course system in
the U.S.
- Los Angeles County Department of Public Social Services ?
administers many federal and state welfare programs
- Los Angeles
County Department of Public Works ? operates countywide flood
control system, constructs and maintains roads in unincorporated areas
- Los Angeles
County Department of Regional Planning ? maintains the Zoning Code
that regulates land use in the unincorporated areas, researches and
facilitates land-use decisions and serves to connect the community to
the established building regulations.
- Los Angeles County
District Attorney ? prosecutes criminal suspects
- Los Angeles County Museum of
Art ? public art museum
- Los Angeles County
Probation Department
- Los Angeles County Public Defender ? defends indigent criminal
suspects
- Los
Angeles County Public Library ? operates a large network of branch
libraries
- Los Angeles County
Sheriff's Department ? provides law enforcement services to
unincorporated areas and cities that do not have their own police
departments, and operates the county jails. The LASD is the largest
county Sheriff's Department in the United States.
- Los
Angeles County Disaster Communications Service ( DCS ) is a
volunteer organization administered by the Sheriff's Department
Emergency Operations Bureau for the Los Angeles County Board of
Supervisors. Their main function, authorized under County Ordinance, is
to provide volunteer disaster relief communication for the citizens of
Los Angeles County.
- Los Angeles County Department of Consumer Affairs ? offers consumers
in the county a variety of services including: consumer and real estate
counseling, mediation, and small claims counseling. The department also
investigates: consumer complains, real estate fraud and identity theft
issues.
The Los
Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority, despite its
name, is not a County department. Technically it is a
state-mandated county transportation commission that also operates bus
and rail.
The Los Angeles Superior Court,
which covers the entire county, is not a County department but a
division of the State's trial court system. The courthouses, however,
are county-owned buildings that are maintained at county expense. Politics
Presidential elections results
| Year |
DEM |
GOP |
Others |
| 2008 |
69.2% 2,295,853 |
28.8% 956,425 |
2.0% 65,970 |
| 2004 |
63.2% 1,907,736 |
35.6% 1,076,225 |
1.3% 39,319 |
| 2000 |
63.5% 1,710,505 |
32.4% 871,930 |
4.2% 112,719 |
| 1996 |
59.3% 1,430,629 |
31.0% 746,544 |
9.7% 233,841 |
| 1992 |
52.5% 1,446,529 |
29.0% 799,607 |
18.4% 507,267 |
| 1988 |
51.9% 1,372,352 |
46.9% 1,239,716 |
1.2% 32,603 |
| 1984 |
44.4% 1,158,912 |
54.5% 1,424,113 |
1.1% 29,889 |
| 1980 |
40.2% 979,830 |
50.2% 1,224,533 |
9.7% 235,822 |
| 1976 |
49.7% 1,221,893 |
47.8 1,174,926 |
2.5% 62,258 |
| 1972 |
42.0% 1,189,977 |
54.8% 1,549,717 |
3.2% 90,676 |
| 1968 |
46.0% 1,223,251 |
47.6% 1,266,480 |
6.3% 168,251 |
| 1964 |
57.4% 1,568,300 |
42.5% 1,161,067 |
0.1% 1,551 |
| 1960 |
50.2% 1,323,818 |
49.4% 1,302,661 |
0.3% 8,020 |
Los Angeles County has voted for the Democratic candidate in most of
the presidential elections in the past four decades. In 2008
approximately 69% of the electorate voted for Democrat Barack
Obama.
In the United States House of
Representatives, California districts 27-39 are situated entirely
within the county and are all represented by Democrats. In order of
district number they are Brad
Sherman, Howard Berman, Adam
Schiff, Henry Waxman, Xavier Becerra, Judy Chu,
Diane Watson, Lucille Roybal-Allard, Maxine
Waters, Jane Harman, Laura Richardson, Grace Napolitano, and Linda S?nchez. Parts of the county also lie in the 22nd, 25th, 26th, 42nd, and 46th districts,
which are all represented by Republicans: Kevin McCarthy,
Buck McKeon, David
Dreier, Gary Miller, and Dana Rohrabacher respectively.
In the State Senate, all of districts
20-22 and 24-28, and 30 are entirely within the county and are all
represented by Democrats. In order of district number they are Alex
Padilla, Jack Scott, Gilbert Cedillo, Gloria Romero, Roderick Wright, Curren D. Price, Alan Lowenthal, Jenny
Oropeza, and Ron Calderon. Most of the 17th, 23rd,
and 29th districts are in the county. The 17th and 29th districts are
represented by Republicans George
Runner and Bob Huff, respectively while the 23rd district is
represented by Democrat Sheila
Kuehl. Parts of the 19th and 32nd districts are also in the county.
The 19th district is represented by Republican Tony Strickland while the 32nd is represented by
Democrat Gloria Negrete McLeod.
In the State Assembly, all of districts
39, 40, 42-55, 57, and 58 are entirely within the county and are all
represented by Democrats. In order of district number they are Felipe Fuentes, Lloyd Levine, Mike
Feuer, Paul Krekorian, Anthony Portantino, Kevin DeLeon, John A. Perez, Karen
Bass, Mike Davis, Mike Eng,
Hector De La Torre, Steven Bradford, Isadore Hall, III, Ted Lieu,
Bonnie Lowenthal, Warren T. Furutani, Ed Hernandez, and Charles Calderon. Most of districts 38, 41, and 56 are in
the county. The 38th is held by Republican Cameron
Smyth; the 41st and 56th are held by Democrats Julia Brownley and Tony
Mendoza. Parts of districts 36, 37, 59, 60, and 61 are also in the
county. The 36th, 37th, 59th, and 60th districts are represented by
Republicans: Sharon Runner, Audra Strickland, Anthony
Adams, and Curt Hagman. The 61st is represented by Democrat
Nell
Soto.
On November 4, 2008 Los Angeles County was almost evenly split over Proposition 8 which amended
the California Constitution to ban same-sex marriages. The county voted
for the amendment 50.1% with a margin of 20,806 votes.[16] Legal system
The Los Angeles County
Superior Court has jurisdiction over all cases arising under state
law, while the U.S. District Court for the Central District of
California hears all federal cases. Both are headquartered in a large cluster of government buildings in the city's Civic Center.
Unlike the largest city in the United
States, New York City, all of the city of Los Angeles
and most of its important suburbs are located within a single county. As
a result, both the county superior court and the federal district court
are respectively the busiest courts of their type in the nation.[17][18]
Many celebrities like O.J. Simpson have been seen in Los Angeles
courts. In 2003, the tabloid television show Extra (based in
nearby Glendale) found itself running so many reports on the legal
problems of local celebrities that it spun them off into a separate
show, Celebrity Justice.
State cases are appealed to the Court of Appeal for the Second
Appellate District, which is also headquartered in the Civic Center, and
then to the California Supreme Court, which
is headquartered in San Francisco but also
hears argument in Los Angeles (again, in the Civic Center). Federal
cases are appealed to the Court of
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, which hears them at its branch
building in Pasadena. The court of last resort for federal cases is the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. Seal
The county was targeted with the threat of legal action by the ACLU in 2004 regarding a small cross on its seal. The ACLU said
that separation of church and state prohibited this display. On September 14, 2004, the seal was modified
to address this and other complaints.[19][20] Education
The Los Angeles County Office of Education provides a supporting role
for school districts in the area. The county office also operates two
magnet schools, the International Polytechnic
High School and Los Angeles County
High School for the Arts. Colleges and
universities
Colleges
- Antelope Valley College, Lancaster
- Art Center College of Design,
Pasadena
- The Art Institute of California - Los Angeles
(AICALA), Santa Monica
- California Institute of the
Arts, Santa Clarita
- Cerritos College, Norwalk
- Citrus College, Glendora
- Claremont McKenna College, Claremont
- College of the Canyons, Santa Clarita
- DeVry University, Long Beach and West
Hills (Los Angeles)
- East Los Angeles College, Monterey Park
- El Camino College, Torrance
- Fuller Theological Seminary,
Pasadena
- Glendale Community College,
Glendale
- Harvey Mudd College, Claremont
- Hebrew Union College,
Los Angeles
- ITT Technical Institute, Culver City, San Dimas, Sylmar
(Los Angeles), Torrance, and West Covina
- Life Pacific College, San Dimas
- Long Beach City College, Long Beach
- Los Angeles City College (LACC),
Los Angeles
- Los Angeles Harbor College, Los
Angeles
- Los Angeles Mission College, Sylmar
(Los Angeles)
- Los Angeles Music
Academy College of Music, Pasadena
- Los Angeles Pierce College
(Pierce), Woodland
Hills
- Los Angeles Southwest College,
Los Angeles
- Los
Angeles Trade Technical College (LATTC), Los Angeles
- Los Angeles Valley College, Valley Glen (Los Angeles)
- The Master's College, Santa Clarita
- Mount St. Mary's College, Los
Angeles
- Mt. San Antonio College, Walnut
- Mt. Sierra College, Monrovia
- Occidental College (Oxy), Eagle
Rock (Los Angeles)
- Otis College of Art and Design,
Westchester (Los Angeles)
- Pacific Oaks College, Pasadena
- Pasadena City College, Pasadena
- Pitzer College, Claremont
- Pomona College, Claremont
- Rio Hondo College, Whittier
- Santa Monica College (SMC), Santa
Monica
- Scripps College, Claremont
- West Los Angeles College, Culver
City
- Whittier College, Whittier
- Wyoming
Technical Institute (WyoTech), Long Beach
Universities
- American Jewish University
(AJULA), Los Angeles
- Azusa Pacific University, Azusa
- Biola University, La Mirada
- California Institute of
Technology (Caltech), Pasadena
- California
State Polytechnic University, Pomona, (Cal Poly Pomona), Pomona
- California State
University, Dominguez Hills (CSUDH), Carson
- California State
University, Long Beach (CSULB), Long Beach
- California State
University, Los Angeles (CSULA), Los Angeles
- California State
University, Northridge (CSUN), Northridge (Los Angeles)
- Claremont Graduate University,
(CGU)
- Loyola Marymount University
(LMU), Westchester (Los Angeles)
- Pepperdine University, Malibu
- Southern
California University of Health Sciences, Whittier
- Southern
California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc), Los Angeles
- Southwestern
University School of Law, Los Angeles
- University of California,
Los Angeles (UCLA), Westwood (Los Angeles)
- University of La Verne, La Verne
- University of Southern
California (USC), Los Angeles
- University of the West (UWest), Rosemead
- Western University of
Health Sciences, Pomona
- Woodbury University, Burbank
Religion
As of 2000, there are hundreds of Christian churches, 202 Jewish
synagogues, 145 Buddhist temples, 48 Islamic mosques, 44 Bahai worship centers, 37 Hindu temples, 28 Tenrikyo churches and fellowships, 16 Shinto
worship centers, 14 Sikh gurdwaras in the county.[22] Sites of interest
The county's most visited park is Griffith
Park, owned by the city of Los Angeles. The county is also known
for the annual Rose Parade in Pasadena, the
annual Los Angeles County Fair in Pomona,
the Los Angeles County Museum of
Art, the Los Angeles Zoo, the Natural History Museum, the La Brea Tar Pits, the Arboretum of Los
Angeles, and two horse racetracks and two car racetracks (Pomona
Raceway and Irwindale Speedway), also the RMS Queen Mary located in Long Beach, and the Long Beach Grand Prix, and
miles of beaches?from Zuma to Cabrillo.
Venice Beach is a popular attraction where its Muscle
Beach used to find throngs of tourists admiring "hardbodies". Today
it is more arts-centered. Santa Monica's pier is a well known tourist
spot, famous for its ferris wheel and bumper car rides, which were
featured in the introductory segment of the television sitcom Three's Company. Further north in Pacific Palisades one finds the
beaches used in the television series Baywatch.
The fabled Malibu,
home of many a film or television star, lies
west of it.
In the mountain, canyon, and desert areas one may find Vasquez
Rocks Natural Area Park, where many old westerns were filmed. Mount Wilson Observatory in the San Gabriel Mountains is open for the public to
view astronomical stars from its telescope,
now computer-assisted.
Many county residents find relaxation in water skiing and swimming at Castaic Lake Recreation Area - the county's largest park
by area - as well as enjoying natural surroundings and starry nights at
Saddleback Butte State Park in
the eastern Antelope Valley - California State Parks'
largest in area within the county. The California Poppy
Reserve is located in the western Antelope Valley and shows off the
State's flower in great quantity on its rolling hills every spring. Museums
- California Science Center, Los
Angeles (formerly the Museum of Science and Industry)
- Huntington Library, San Marino
- Long Beach Museum of Art in the
historic Elizabeth Milbank Anderson
residence
- Los Angeles
Children's Museum
- Los Angeles County Museum of
Art, Mid-City, Los Angeles
- Museum of Contemporary
Art, Downtown Los Angeles (founded in 1950); The Geffen Contemporary
at MOCA, Downtown Los Angeles (founded in 1980)
- Museum of Jurassic Technology,
Culver City
- Museum of Latin American Art in
Long Beach
- Museum of Neon Art
- Museum of the
American West (Gene Autry Museum), in Griffith Park
- Museum of Tolerance
- Natural History
Museum of Los Angeles County
- Pasadena Museum of California
Art, in Pasadena
- J. Paul Getty Center,
Brentwood (Ancient Roman, Greek, and European Renaissance Art)
- J. Paul Getty Villa, Pacific
Palisades, California, Getty's original house
- George C. Page Museum at La Brea Tar Pits
- Santa Monica Museum of Art, Santa
Monica (Contemporary art)
- Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena (19th and
early 20th century art)
- Skirball Cultural Center, Los
Angeles
- Southwest Museum
Entertainment
Music venues
Amusement parks
Other attractions
Other areas
Lakes and reservoirs
- Crystal Lake
- Echo Lake
- Elizabeth Lake
- Hughes Lake
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- Holiday Lake
- Jackson Lake
- Munz Lakes
- Tweedy Lake
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See also
References
- ^ QuickFacts.Census.gov
- ^ a b "County population estimates with
annual percent change, January 1, 2009 data".
http://www.dof.ca.gov/research/demographic/reports/estimates/e-1/2008-09/documents/E-1%202009%20Internet%20Version.xls.
- ^ The Role of Metro Areas in the US Economy. United States
Conference of Mayors, 2002: 5. USmayors.org
- ^ Coy, Owen C.; Ph.D. (1923). California
County Boundaries. Berkeley: California Historical Commission.
pp. 140. ASIN B000GRBCXG.
- ^ QuickFacts.Census.gov, U.S.
Census Bureau
- ^ California Department of Finance
2008 Population Estimate
- ^ "JDPower.com." J. D. Power and Associates.
Retrieved on August 22, 2009.
- ^ FactFinder.Census.gov,
"Thousand Oaks city, California". U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved on
August 22, 2009.
- ^ Encyclopedia.com, "Dole gets
ready to turn first shovel of headquarters dirt: plans are set to go to
Westlake Village City Council". (Dole Food Co. Inc. Los Angeles Business Journal.
January 31, 1994. Retrieved on September 27, 2009.
- ^ "American FactFinder". United States Census Bureau. http://factfinder.census.gov. Retrieved 2008-01-31.
- ^ This included over 65,000 Arabs and 75,000 Iranian, who many people
would not count as White (see 2000 Census fact sheet table).
For a clear discussion of Arabs being counted as white, see Census.gov
- ^ "The Invisible Minority", Indian
Country Today, 9 Nov 2009, accessed 12 Mar 2010
- ^ http://blogs.wsj.com/wealth/2008/05/05/california-boasts-most-millionaires/tab/article/
- ^ William T Fujioka, "Department Section," County of Los Angeles,
Annual Report 2007-2008, 4.
- ^ Los Angeles County Department of Parks and Recreation
- ^ SFgate.com
- ^ A look at your Superior Court, Public Information Office, Los
Angeles Superior Court
- ^ About the Los Angeles Superior
Court
- ^ Kennedy, J. Michael (May 25, 2004). "County Seal Has a Cross the ACLU
Can't Bear". Los Angeles Times. http://articles.latimes.com/2004/may/25/local/me-cross25. Retrieved March 11, 2010.
- ^ "County Insignia History". http://lacounty.gov. Retrieved March 11, 2010.
- ^ "city-data - Los_Angeles_County-CA".
analyzed data from numerous sources. http://www.city-data.com/county/Los_Angeles_County-CA.html. Retrieved 2009-04-18.
- ^ Selected Non-Christian Religious Traditions in Los Angeles County: 2000
Prolades.com
External links
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State of California
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