![]() ![]() By 1913, because of these three buildings, the park became known as Exposition Park. Plans were laid out for a trio of impressive buildings: the State Exhibition Building, now the California Science Center the State Armory Building, now a science school and the Natural History Museum, whose domed center made it the most beautiful of the three. , By 1910, the saloons and brothels had been torn down. ![]() , Goodbye Blight, Hello Blooms, In 1909, under pressure from Bowen, the California 6th District Agricultural Association and the City and County of Los Angeles all agreed to redevelop Agricultural Park. And on September 10, 1906, some 25,000 people watched a real demolition derby: two steam locomotives huffed and puffed on a mile of track before a shattering head-on collision at a rocketing 50 miles per hour. Two hundred policeman were hired for crowd control. For weeks before the event, advertisements had enticed spectators. ![]() , Anything on wheels was good enough for the park. ![]() In 1903, the nation’s most famous race-car driver, Barney Oldfield, stormed his Winton Bullet around a mile-long dirt oval at the park in a world-record 55 seconds, before a delirious crowd of thousands. , But for thrill-crazy Angelenos, it remained a speed haven, on four wheels, not four legs. , Victory over Vice, In 1901, Bowen was elected to the City Council, where he prevailed on his colleagues to end gambling and racing altogether at the park. Thus began Bowen’s decade-long campaign to clean up Agricultural Park. , “It became clear in a very short time,” Bowen said in a speech, “that the vicious influences here were more than undoing the work we were trying to do in our Sunday School class”. Bowen also found drinking, gambling and prostitution. Pushing his way through a jostling crowd, Bowen saw the horse-racing track and a separate course where greyhounds chased rabbits. A young reformer who took a particularly dim view of sin and corruption decided that the twin pyramids that bore the name “Agricultural Park” might more accurately bear the labels “Sodom” and “Gomorrah.”, One afternoon in 1898, that man, a stern, sharp-eyed 37-year-old attorney, USC law school professor and devout Methodist named William Miller Bowen, ended his boys Sunday School class at the nearby United Methodist Church, then quietly followed his students to see where they were going. , In time, the enticements of sex, speed and cold beer began to crowd out the agricultural attractions. During gentlemen could repair from there to one of the cities more stylish brothels – a white clapboard house in the middle of agricultural park, intended as a hotel for visiting racing fans and big gamblers. , After cheering itself dry at the races, the sporting set could get a drink at a vast bar set up below the four-story brick grandstand. And here, the crowds came to browse the exhibits and watch the races, horses, camels, dogs, bicycles and eventually automobiles. , Here, beneath a pair of pyramid-like towers bearing the name “Agricultural Park”, growers brought produce, from asparagus to zucchini to vivid displays of citrus. , Los Angeles County prided itself on its farming abundance, and beginning in 1872, the place to show off its rich and varied crops was the 160-acre Agricultural Park. , From Sin to Science, A Park For The People, For decades into the 20th century, Los Angeles not only fed the world’s imagination with films and television, it fed the world’s bellies, too. ![]()
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