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The
History of Harbor City Elementary School The paved streets ran East to West except for Belleporte and the lots were 300 feet deep , double normal city lots, so the homeowners could raise food in the back such as corn, celery, chickens etc. Most homes were small wooden structures with two bedrooms, a small living room and dining room, with a comfortable porch across the front for sitting outside. The one exception was a very large two story mansion at the end of Belleporte where Harbor City Park is. The whole park and Bay Harbor Hospital area were used as a chinchilla farm. The city was connected to the outside world by the big red streetcars that ran down Vermont from the harbor to Los Angeles.
The remainder of the block was filled with homes, and a church stood where rooms 25 through 28 are now located. This church burned down on March 10th, 1940. The Reverend Mounts lived in a cottage where room 22 is located, and church was conducted there for a while. After World War I, the money ran out for further development of the town of Harbor City and Los Angeles was trying to acquire all the area that it could to keep an open line to the port of San Pedro, so the town was annexed by L.A. and the great plans to bring the Harbor to Belleporte vanished. The town continued to grow however, and more and more children came to Harbor City School, so the school needed to grow too. The principal, Mrs. Creech, went door to door and convinced homeowners to sell their places to the school. Eventually all but two lots on the block were acquired. To accommodate students, bungalows were brought in, which explains why few of the buildings match. The old buildings were eventually closed and torn down and new ones constructed. The first new building was the auditorium which contained the teacher's lunchroom. The cafeteria was a later addition. The old cafeteria was a two room wooden structure located where the parking lot is now. The present office was a classroom which was altered to serve new purposes. Through the years, Harbor City has served the community well, and on this occasion of it's 80th anniversary , we can look back fondly (and forward expectantly) to future generations of students. |
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Los Angeles Unified School District Designed by Dereck Tabata |