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The
NoHo
Arts
District
in
North
Hollywood
is
"Where
the
Arts
are
Made."
This
one-square
mile
community,
located
just
one
mile
north
of
Universal
studios,
is
filled
with
an
eclectic
array
of
entertainment
options
for
the
artist,
arts
lover
and
the
art
curious.
With
more
than
20
professional
theatres
producing
adventurous
new
work
and
classics,
diverse
art
galleries,
public
art,
professional
dance
studios
that
create
“the
moves”
we
see
on
TV
and
in
film,
the
largest
concentration
of
music
recording
venues
west
of
the
Mississippi,
annual
festivals,
international
dining
options
and
a
myriad
of
clothing
and
specialty
shops,
NoHo
is
your
one-stop
arts
&
entertainment
destination.
NoHo
is
also
home
to
the
"behind-the-scenes"
companies
that
are
the
silent
partners
in
making
movie
and
TV
magic.
In
NoHo,
we
make
art
from
start
to
finish!
Launched
in
1998,
NoHoArtsDistrict.com
became
the
official
web-site
to
focus
entirely
on
the
NoHo
Arts
District.
We
are
NoHo’s
on-line
community
focusing
on
arts,
arts-related
businesses
and
entertainment
in
NoHo.
Whether
you
are
an
artist,
arts lover,
local
resident
or
business,
you
will
find
what
you
are
looking
for.
North
Hollywood
has
certainly
come
a
long
way
since
the
late
1800s
when
the
Southern
Pacific
Railroad
opened
a
branch
line
from
downtown
Los
Angeles
to
the
Valley.
In
1895,
the
Chatsworth
Limited
made
one
stop
a
day
in
Toluca,
although
that
name
was
in
conflict
with
a
sign
on
the
new
station
which
read
Lankershim.
With
the
Post
Office
across
the
street
called
Toluca,
controversy
over
the
town’s
name
continued
and
the
local
ranchers
used
to
quip,
“Ship
the
merchandise
to
Lankershim,
but
bill
it
to
Toluca.”
Driving
down
Lankershim
Boulevard
today,
renting
a
video
tape
from
Blockbusters,
or
sipping
a
Latte
Grande
from
Starbucks
across
from
the
TV
Academy,
there
are
little
if
any
clues
to
the
many
changes
that
have
taken
place
since
Isaac
Lankershim
and
Isaac
Newton
Van
Nuys
bought
the
entire
Southern
half
of
the
Valley,
60,000
acres
including
what
is
now
North
Hollywood
and
Universal
City,
for
$115,000
in
1871.
From
the
early
days
of
the
first
pioneers,
the
small
farming
community
that
originally
became
known
as
Lankershim
grew
and
prospered,
had
it’s
booms
and
it’s
busts,
and
transformed
from
a
one
horse
shay
town
to
the
bustling
and
energetic
area
now
known
as
Universal
City
and
North
Hollywood.
At
first
glance
nothing
indicates
the
area
was
once
filled
and
cattle
ranches,
or
was
home
to
the
Bonner
Fruit
Company
that
in
the
early
1900’s
was
shipping
1200
tons
of
fruit
per
season
to
major
cities
back
East.
Although
there
seems
nothing
left
of
the
people,
places,
and
events
that
shaped
the
past,
if
we
look
closely
we
may
just
discover
some
tell
tale
signs
that
reveal
the
secrets
of
the
history
of
North
Hollywood.
Zipping
North
on
the
101
Freeway
through
Hollywood,
past
the
Sunset
Boulevard
exit,
the
round
tower
of
the
Capital
Records
Building
to
your
left,
the
Hollywood
Hills
crammed
with
houses
on
the
right,
you
soon
find
yourself
sailing
through
the
Cahuenga
Pass
with
the
San
Fernando
Valley
stretching
into
the
distance.
Of
the
never
ending
stream
of
cars
that
travel
that
route
daily,
most
of
them
head
West
towards
Sherman
Oaks
and
beyond
or
veer
onto
the
170
heading
North.
Let’s
stop
at
Barham
Boulevard,
for
a
moment,
and
gaze
North
overlooking
the
freeway
through
the
pass
into
the
Valley.
In
the
late
1800’s,
Senator
Charles
Maclay
stood
at
this
same
vantage
point.
Staring
out
at
the
willow
trees
surrounding
the
Los
Angeles
River
that
unfolded
below
he
declared,
“This
is
the
Garden
of
Eden.”
Shoshone
and
Chumash
tribes
populated
the
semiarid
region
covered
with
oaks
and
scrub
brush
that
stretched
to
the
far
hills.
They
had
been
living
there
for
the
past
4,000
years.
The
largest
Indian
village
was
called
Kawengna,
from
which
the
name
Cahuenga
is
derived.
It
was
a
term
connoting
peace,
translated
“hold
the
arrows
because
friends
are
coming.”
A
smaller
village
nearby
was
called
Toluca,
which
means
“fertile
valley.”
In
1850
California
became
the
30th
state
to
join
the
Union
and
thousands
of
people,
lured
by
the
Gold
Rush,
crossed
the
Cahuenga
Pass
in
oxen
drawn
carts
and
Connistoga
Wagons.
In
1858
The
Butterfield
Overland
Mail
Company
ran
two
stage
coaches
a
week
that
crossed
at
the
ridge
of
Cahuenga
Pass
carrying
US
mail
from
San
Louis
to
San
Francisco
via
Los
Angeles.
More...
Part
2 |