Claus von Stauffenberg and List of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments in South Los Angeles: Difference between pages

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This is a '''list of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments in South Los Angeles''', [[California]], [[USA]]. In total, there are 145 [[Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument|Historic-Cultural Monument]]s (HCM) in the South Los Angeles area, which includes the historic [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]], [[Exposition Park]], and [[University of Southern California]] campus areas. It also includes historic sites in [[Watts, Los Angeles, California|Watts]] (including Simon Rodia's [[Watts Towers]]), [[Leimert Park, Los Angeles, California|Leimert Park]], and [[Baldwin Hills, Los Angeles, California|Baldwin Hills]]. A number of additional historic sites and districts in the area have been designated as [[California Historical Landmark]]s or listed on the [[National Register of Historic Places]]. Three sites in the area have received the higher distinction as [[National Historic Landmark]]s -- the [[Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum]], [[Watts Towers]] and [[Baldwin Hills Village]]. A map displaying the historic sites and districts in South Los Angeles can be viewed by clicking "Map of all coordinates" below to the right.
{{Infobox Person
|name = Claus Philipp Maria Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg
|image = PICT4156.JPG
|caption = Bust of Colonel Count von Stauffenberg<br />(Memorial to the German Resistance, Berlin)
|birth_name = Claus Philipp Maria Schenk Graf
|birth_date = {{birth date|1907|11|15}}
|birth_place = [[Jettingen]], [[German Empire|German Reich]]
|death_date = {{death date and age|1944|07|21|1907|11|15}}
|death_place = [[Berlin]], [[Nazi Germany]]
|death_cause = [[Capital punishment|Execution by firing squad]]
|nationality = [[Germany|German]]
|known_for = [[July 20 plot]] coordinator
|employer = [[Heer (1935-1945)|Wehrmacht Heer]]
|home_town = [[Albstadt]], [[Germany]]
|title = [[Oberst]]
|religion = [[Roman Catholic Church]]
|spouse = [[Nina Schenk Gräfin von Stauffenberg]]
|parents = Graf Alfred Schenk<br />Caroline Schenk Gräfin<br />([[Stauffenberg|von Stauffenberg]] family)
|relations = [[Major General#Germany|Gm]] [[Berthold Maria Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg]] (son)
|signature =
|website =
|footnotes =
}}


{{GeoGroupTemplate}}
'''Claus Philipp Maria Schenk Graf'''<ref>{{German title|Graf}}</ref> '''von Stauffenberg''' ([[15 November]] [[1907]] &ndash; [[21 July]] [[1944]]) was a [[German army]] officer and Catholic aristocrat who reached the rank of [[colonel]] and one of the leading officers of the failed [[July 20 plot]] of 1944 to kill German dictator [[Adolf Hitler]] and remove him and the [[Nazi Party]] from power in [[Germany]]. He was one of the central figures of the [[German Resistance]] movement.
==Current and former Historic-Cultural Monuments==


{|class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
==Early life==
! class="unsortable" {{LAHCM color}} width=1% | '''HCM #'''<ref>Numbers in 1-999 series are L.A. Historic-Cultural Monuments; CHL numbers are state-designated [[California Historical Landmark]] sites; 2000 series denote LAHCM assigned numbers for Federally-designated sites. Blue colors represent higher designations as National Historic Landmarks and/or listing on the National Register of Historic Places; yellow represents sites that are L.A. Historic-Cultural Monuments without a higher designation. No color represents information is unavailable or the monument has been delisted. To resort on this column, refresh your browser.</ref>
Stauffenberg was the third of three sons (the others being the twins [[Berthold Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg|Berthold]] and [[Alexander Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg|Alexander]]) of [[Alfred Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg]], the last ''[[Oberhofmarschall]]'' of the [[Kingdom of Württemberg]], and Caroline Schenk Gräfin von Stauffenberg ([[née]] Gräfin (Countess) von Üxküll-Gyllenband). Claus was born in the Stauffenberg castle of [[Jettingen]] between [[Ulm]] and [[Augsburg]], in the eastern part of [[Swabia]], at that time in the [[Kingdom of Bavaria]], part of the [[German Reich]]. The [[von Stauffenberg]] family is one of the oldest and most distinguished aristocratic [[Roman Catholic Church|Roman Catholic]] families of [[southern Germany]].<ref>The family's original name was Stauffenberg, and they held the noble titles of [[Schenk]] and [[Graf]] (Count). After 1918, when the [[Weimar Republic]] abolished all noble titles, the Stauffenberg family, like the other formerly noble German families, added the words ''Schenk'' and ''Graf'' to their surname. Stauffenberg's formal surname was thus '''Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg''', though by convention he is usually referred to in English simply as Count von Stauffenberg.</ref> Among his ([[Lutheran Church|Protestant]]) maternal ancestors were several famous [[Prussia]]ns, including Field Marshal [[August von Gneisenau]].
! {{LAHCM color}} width="18%" |'''Landmark name'''<ref name = "LAHCM_list">{{Citation | last = Los Angeles Department of City Planning | year = 2008 | date = August 14, 2008 | title = Historic - Cultural Monuments (HCM) Listing: City Declared Monuments | place = | publisher = City of Los Angeles | edition = | url =http://preservation.lacity.org/files/HCM%20Database%20Updated%20081408.pdf | accessdate = 2008-09-22 }}</ref>
! class="unsortable" {{LAHCM color}} width="11%" |'''Image'''
! {{LAHCM color}} width="4%" |'''Date designated'''<ref name = "LAHCM_list"/>
! {{LAHCM color}} width="12%" |'''Locality'''<ref name = "LAHCM_list"/>
! {{LAHCM color}} width="12%" |'''Neighborhood'''
! class="unsortable" {{LAHCM color}} width="41%" |'''Description'''<ref name = "various">Various sources cited in articles, retrieved on various dates.</ref>
|-
|{{NHL color}}|<small>15<br>(1027)<br>(2373)</small>
|[[Watts Towers|Towers of Simon Rodia (Watts Towers)]]
|[[Image:Watts-towers.jpg|100x100px]]
|[[01 Mar]] [[1963]]
|1765 E. 107th St.<br/><small>{{coord|33|56|19|N|118|14|28|W|name=Watts Towers}}</small>
| [[Watts, California|Watts]]
| Towers constructed by Italian immigrant Simon Rodia between 1921 and 1954
|-
| |<small>18</small>
| [[Hyde Park Congregational Church (Los Angeles, California)|Hyde Park Congregational Church]] (site of)
|
| {{dts|1963|5|10}}
|6501 Crenshaw Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|33|58|49|N|118|19|52|W|name=Hyde Park Congregational Church (site of)}}</small>
| [[Hyde Park, Los Angeles, California|Hyde Park]]
| Tiny wooden church with two front-corner towers; demolished in 1964; delisted 1/1/1964
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>28</small>
|[[William Andrews Clark Memorial Library]]
|[[Image:William Andrews Clark Memorial Library.jpg|100x100px]]
| {{dts|1964|10|9}}
|2520 Cimarron St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|59|N|118|18|51|W|name=Clark, William Andrews, Memorial Library}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|Renaissance Revival building completed in 1926; designed by [[Robert Farquhar]]
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>30</small>
|[[Oliver G. Posey-Edward L. Doheny Residence]]
|[[Image:Edward L. Doheny Mansion.jpg|100x100px]]
| {{dts|1965|1|8}}
|8 Chester Place<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|50|N|118|16|37|W|name=Doheny Residence}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Mansion built in 1899 for oil tycoon [[Edward L. Doheny]]; designed by Eisen & Hunt; now part of St. Mary's College campus
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>35</small>
|[[Birthplace of Adlai E. Stevenson III]]
|[[Image:Birthplace of Adlai Stevenson (Los Angeles).jpg|100x100px]]
| {{dts|1965|8|20}}
| 2639 Monmouth Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|54|N|118|17|06|W|name=Stevenson, Adlai E., Birthplace}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]-[[North University Park, Los Angeles, California|North University Park]]
|Site of birthplace of two-time U.S. Presidential candidate [[Adlai Stevenson]]
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>36<br>(2372)</small>
|[[Watts Station]]
|[[Image:Watts Station, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
| {{dts|1965|12|3}}
|1686 E. 103rd St.<br/><small>{{coord|33|56|35|N|118|14|34|W|name=Watts Station}}</small>
|[[Watts, Los Angeles, California|Watts]]
|Electric railway station built in early 1900s; the only building along the area known as "Charcoal Alley" to survive the [[Watts Riots]]
|-
|{{NRHP color}}|<small>57<br>(2364)</small>
|[[Second Church of Christ, Scientist (Los Angeles, California)|Second Church of Christ Scientist of Los Angeles]]
|[[Image:Second Church of Christ Scientist.jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1968|7|17}}
|946-948 West Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|51|N|118|16|59|W|name=Second Church of Christ, Scientist}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|Built in 1910 and designed by [[Alfred Rosenheim]]; as of 2008 for sale for $8 million.
|-
| {{LAHCM color}}|<small>70</small><br><small>(1025)</small>
|[[Widney Hall]] (Alumni Hall)
|
| {{dts|1970|12|16}}
|650 Childs Way<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|08|N|118|16|56|W|name=Widney Hall}}</small>
|[[University of Southern California|USC Campus]]
|Oldest university building in Southern California, in continuous use since 1880
|-
| {{LAHCM color}}|<small>72</small>
|[[Automobile Club of Southern California]]
| [[Image:Automobile Club of Southern California.jpg|100x100px]]
| {{dts|1971|2|3|}}
|2601 S. Figueroa St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|41|N|118|16|35|W|name=Automobile Club of Southern California}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|Spanish colonial headquarters building erected in 1922; designed by [[Sumner Hunt]] and [[Silas R. Burns]]
|-
| {{LAHCM color}}|<small>90</small>
|[[St. Vincent de Paul Church (Los Angeles, California)|St. Vincent de Paul Church]]
|[[Image:St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church (Los Angeles).jpg|100x100px]]
| {{dts|1971|7|11}}
| 621 W. Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|43|N|118|16|34|W|name=St. Vincent de Paul Church}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Second Roman Catholic church in Los Angeles to be consecrated; designed by [[Albert C. Martin, Sr.]]
|-
| {{NRHP color}}|<small>95<br>(2363)</small>
|[[Frederick Hastings Rindge House|Rindge House]]
|[[Image:Frederick Hastings Rindge House, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
| {{dts|1972|2|23}}
|2263 S. Harvard St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|03|N|118|18|25|W|name=Rindge House}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Mansion built in 1906 for [[Frederick H. Rindge]]; designed by [[Frederick Roehrig]] in Chateauesque style
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>103</small>
|[[Forthmann House]] (and Carriage House)
|[[Image:USC Community House.jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1972|10|4}}
|2801 S. Hoover Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|45|N|118|17|03|W|name=Forthmann House}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]-[[North University Park, Los Angeles, California|North University Park]]
| Victorian house built in the 1880s; designed by Burgess J. Reeve; relocated in 1989 from original location
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>117</small>
|Residence
|
|{{dts|1973|4|4}}
|2118 S. Harvard Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|11|N|118|18|23|W|name=Residence}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| American Colonial Revival House built in approximately 1905
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>120</small>
|[[Saint Sophia (Los Angeles)|Saint Sophia Cathedral]]
|[[Image:St. Sophia's Greek Orthodox Church, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1973|6|6}}
|1324 S. Normandie Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|44|N|118|17|58|W|name=Saint Sophia Cathedral}}</small>
|
| Greek Orthodox cathedral designed by Kalionzes, Klingerman & Walker in the Byzantine style, dedicated in 1952
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>127</small>
|[[Exposition Club House]]
|
|{{dts|1974|5|1}}
|3990 Menlo Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|00|41|N|118|17|23|W|name=Exposition Club House}}</small>
|[[Exposition Park (Los Angeles)|Exposition Park]]
|Spanish Colonial Revival building completed in 1920s in Exposition Park
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>128</small>
|[[Hancock Memorial Museum]]
|
|{{dts|1974|5|15}}
|3616 University Ave.
| [[University of Southern California|USC Campus]]
| Large mansion built by the Hancock family at Wilshire Blvd. and Vermont Ave., circa 1900; razed in 1938, though four rooms were moved in their entirety to the USC campus
|-
| {{NRHP color}}|<small>131<br>(2366)</small>
|[[Dunbar Hotel|Dunbar Hotel (Somerville Hotel)]]
|[[Image:Somerville Hotel, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px|Dunbar Hotel, 2008]]
|{{dts|1974|9|4}}
|4225 S. Central Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|00|24|N|118|15|24|W|name=Dunbar Hotel}}</small>
|[[Central Avenue (Los Angeles)|Central Avenue]]
|Focal point of the [[Central Avenue (Los Angeles)|Central Avenue]] [[African-American]] community in the 1930s and 1940s.
|-
| {{NRHP color}}|<small>139</small><br><small>(2315)</small>
|[[Shrine Auditorium]]
|[[Image:Postcard-ca-los-angeles-shrine-auditorium.jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1975|3|5}}
|665 W. Jefferson Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|23|N|118|16|53|W|name=Shrine Auditorium}}</small>
|[[University Park, Los Angeles, California|University Park]]
|Theater seating 6,700 is one of the largest in the United States and was the prior site of the Academy Awards. Also known as ''Al Malaikah Temple''.
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>159</small><br><small>(2321)</small>
|[[Ralph J. Bunche House]]
|[[Image:Ralph J. Bunche House, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1976|7|27}}
|1221 E. 40th Place<br/><small>{{coord|34|00|37|N|118|15|13|W|name=Bunche, Ralph J., House}}</small>
| [[South Los Angeles]]
| Home of Nobel Peace Prize winner in his youth
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>170</small>
|[[Paul R. Williams Residence]]
|
|{{dts|1976|12|1}}
|1690 Victoria Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|33|59|59|N|118|26|54|W|name=Williams, Paul R., Residence}}</small>
|
| House built in the International style in 1952; designed by noted African-American architect [[Paul R. Williams]]
|-
| {{NHL color}} |<small>174</small>
|[[Baldwin Hills Village|Village Green (Baldwin Hills Village)]]
|[[Image:Baldwin Hills Village, Office Building.JPG|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1977|5|4}}
|5112-5595 Village Green<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|10|N|118|21|39|W|name=Village Green}}</small>
| [[Baldwin Hills, Los Angeles, California|Baldwin Hills]]
| Urban housing project completed in 1942 featuring extensive grassy areas and open spaces
|-
| |<small>179</small>
|Residence (site of)
|
|{{dts|1977|8|17}}
|919 W. 20th St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|09|N|118|16|45|W|name=Residence (site of)}}</small>
|
| Site of Queen Anne Victorian house built in 1908; demolished in 1978
|-
| |<small>185</small>
|President's House (site of)
|
|{{dts|1978|4|19}}
|7851 Budlong Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|33|58|05|N|118|17|47|W|name=President's House (site of)}}</small>
|[[South Los Angeles]]
| Mission style house built in 1912 (now the location of the Crenshaw Christian Center Faith Dome)
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>197</small><br><small>(2319)</small>
|[[Eugene W. Britt House|Britt House]]
|[[Image:Eugene W. Britt House, West Adams, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1978|10|18}}
|2141 W. Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|59|N|118|18|46|W|name=Britt House}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|Classical Revival house built in 1910, designed by [[Alfred F. Rosenheim]]; used today as the headquarters of the [[LA84 Foundation]]
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>200</small>
|[[Second Baptist Church Building]]
|
|{{dts|1978|10|18}}
|2412 Griffith Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|16|N|118|15|23|W|name=Second Baptist Church Building}}</small>
|
| Lombard Romanesque church built in 1925, designed by [[Paul R. Williams]]; long a hub of the African American community
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>212<br>(2367)</small>
|[[Stimson House]]
|[[Image:Stimson House, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1979|5|16}}
|2421 S. Figueroa St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|46|N|118|16|33|W|name=Stimson House}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Richardsonian Romanesque mansion; built in 1891; originally home of lumber and banking millionaire; survived a dynamite attack by a blackmailer in 1896; later occupied by a brewer, a fraternity house, student housing and a convent
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>214</small>
|[[Mount Carmel High School]] (site of)
|
|{{dts|1979|6|6}}
|7011 S. Hoover St.<br/><small>{{coord|33|58|33|N|118|17|15|W|name=Mount Carmel High School}}</small>
|[[South Los Angeles]]
| Spanish Revival style Catholic high school built in 1934
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>229</small>
|[[Westminster Presbyterian Church]]
|
|{{dts|1980|6|11}}
|2230 W. Jefferson Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|31|N|118|19|11|W|name=Westminster Presbyterian Church}}</small>
|
|First African American Presbyterian congregation in Los Angeles; Spanish Revival style structure built in 1904
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>230<br>(2362)</small>
|[[Ramsay-Durfee Estate|Villa Maria (Durfee House)]]
|[[Image:Ramsay-Durfee Estate, Los Angeles.JPG.JPG|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1980|6|12}}
|2425 S. Western Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|01|N|118|18|36|W|name=Villa Maria (Durfee House)}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| [[Tudorbethan architecture|Tudor Revival]] mansion designed by [[Frederick Roehrig|Frederick Louis Roehrig]] and built in 1908; bought by [[Brothers Hospitallers of St. John of God|Brothers of St. John of God]] in 1978
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>240</small>
|Residence
|[[Image:House at 2703 S. Hoover, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1981|4|9}}
|2703 S. Hoover St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|48|N|118|17|03|W|name=Residence}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]-[[North University Park, Los Angeles, California|North University Park]]
| Queen Anne style home built circa 1891, designed by Bradbeer and Ferris
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>241</small>
|[[Casa de Rosas|Sunshine Mission]]
|[[Image:Casa de Rosas, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1981|4|9}}
|2600 S. Hoover St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|52|N|118|17|01|W|name=Sunshine Mission}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Built in 1893, it has housed an experimental kindergarten, a prep school for girls, the headquarters of the [[Dianetics]] Foundation, and the Sunshine Shelter for homeless women; also known as Casa de Rosas
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>242<br>(2354)</small>
|[[ Miller and Herriott House|Miller and Herriott Tract House]]
|[[Image:Miller and Herriott Tract House.jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1981|4|9}}
|1163 W. 27th St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|49|N|118|17|10|W|name=Miller and Herriott Tract House}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]-[[North University Park, Los Angeles, California|North University Park]]
| Eastlake style house built in 1890, designed by Bradbeer and Ferris
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>258</small>
|Fitzgerald House
|
|{{dts|1982|11|5}}
|3115 W. Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|58|N|118|19|05|W|name=Fitzgerald House }}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Italian Gothic style house built in 1903, designed by Joseph Cather Newsom
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>264<br>(2371)</small>
|[[Vermont Square Branch|Vermont Square Branch Library]]
|[[Image:Vermont Square Branch Library, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1983|6|7}}
|1201 W. 48th St.<br/><small>{{coord|33|59|59|N|118|17|45|W|name=Vermont Square Branch Library}}</small>
|[[Vermont Square, Los Angeles, California|Vermont Square]]
| Oldest branch library in Los Angeles; built in 1913 as a Carnegie library; designed by Hunt & Burns in Beaux Arts style with Italian Renaissance influence
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>273</small>
|[[Durfee House]]
|
|{{dts|1984|1|4}}
|1007 W. 24th St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|01|N|118|16|55|W|name=Durfee House}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Eastlake style wood frame house built, circa 1885
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>295</small>
|[[A. E. Kelly Residence]]
|
|{{dts|1985|7|12}}
|1140 W. Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|55|N|118|17|06|W|name=Kelly, A.E., Residence}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]] - [[North University Park, Los Angeles, California|North University Park]]
| Queen Anne Victorian house built in the 1890s; fish-scale shingles on second floor
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>296</small>
|[[John C. Harrison Residence]]
|[[Image:John C. Harrison House, Los Angeles.jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1985|7|25}}
|1160 W. 27th St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|48|N|118|17|09|W|name=Harrison, John C., Residence}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]] - [[North University Park, Los Angeles, California|North University Park]]
| Queen Anne Victorian house built in 1891 with a three-story tower and wrap-around porch
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>297</small>
|[[West Adams Gardens]]
|
|{{dts|1985|8|13}}
|1158-1176 W. Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|55|N|118|17|08|W|name=West Adams Gardens}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]] - [[North University Park, Los Angeles, California|North University Park]]
| Grouping of seven two-story Tudor Revival residential structures built in 1920, designed by L.A. Smith
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>300</small>
|[[Casa Camino Real]]
|
|{{dts|1985|10|29}}
|1828 S. Oak St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|13|N|118|16|37|W|name=Casa Camino Real}}</small>
|
| Eclectic structure built in 1923, designed by Morgan, Walls & Morgan; Beauz Arts exterior with elements of Art Deco and Spanish Revival styles
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>305<br>(2358)</small>
|[[John Muir Branch|John Muir Branch Library]]
|[[Image:John Muir Branch Library, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1986|6|27}}
|1005 W. 64th St.<br/><small>{{coord|33|58|53|N|118|17|31|W|name=John Muir Branch Library}}</small>
|[[South Los Angeles]]
| Italian Renaissance style branch library built in 1930, designed by Henry F. Withey (Ed. note: [[List of RHPs in L.A.]] states this built in 1920, here states 1930, which is it?)
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>306</small>
|[[Original Vernon Branch Library]] (site of)
|
|{{dts|1986|6|27}}
|4504 S. Central Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|00|09|N|118|15|23|W|name=Original Vernon Branch Library (site of)}}</small>
|
| Branch library that housed large collection of books on African American history
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>307<br>(2342)</small>
|[[Washington Irving Branch|Washington Irving Branch Library]]
|[[Image:Washington Irving Branch Library, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1986|6|27}}
|1803 S. Arlington Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|26|N|118|19|04|W|name=Washington Irving Branch Library}}</small>
|
| Lombardic Richardsonian Romanesque library branch built in 1926, designed by Allison & Allison
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>330</small>
|[[Rosedale Cemetery]]
|
|{{dts|1987|12|1}}
|1831 W. Washington Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|26|N|118|17|53|W|name=Rosedale Cemetery}}</small>
|
| Cemetery opened in 1884 with pioneer families and 19th century funerary architecture; first in the West to operate a crematorium
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>331</small>
|[[Pacific Bell Building]]
|
|{{dts|1987|12|8}}
|2755 W. 15th St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|44|N|118|18|07|W|name=Pacific Bell Building}}</small>
|
| Spanish Mission style garage with Churriqueresque details built, circa 1922
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>335</small>
|[[Henry J. Reuman Residence]]
|
|{{dts|1987|12|18}}
|925 W. 23rd St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|01|N|118|16|49|W|name=Reuman, Henry J., Residence}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Queen Anne and Colonial Revival transitional style house built, circa 1898, designed by [[August Wackerbarth]]
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>341</small>
|[[First African Methodist Episcopal Zion Cathedral & Community Center]]
|
|{{dts|1988|1|22}}
|1449 W. Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|59|N|118|17|35|W|name=First African Methodist Episcopal Zion Cathedral & Community Center}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|Richardsonian Romanesque cathedral built in 1930 for the West Adams Presbyterian Church, designed by architects H.M. Patterson and George W. Kelham
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>344</small>
|[[Institute of Musical Art]]
|
|{{dts|1988|2|23}}
|3210 W. 54th St.<br/><small>{{coord|33|59|34|N|118|19|43|W|name=Institute of Musical Art}}</small>
|
| Music school and recording studio founded in 1922
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>349<br>(2330)</small>
|[[Engine House No. 18 (Los Angeles, California)|Fire Station No. 18]]
|[[Image:Engine House No. 18, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1988|3|29}}
|2616 S. Hobart Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|55|N|118|18|27|W|name=Engine House No. 18}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| [[Mission Revival Style architecture|Mission Revival]] fire station built in 1912, designed by [[The Parkinsons|John C. Parkinson]] (Ed. note: [[List of RHPs in L.A.]] states it was built in 1904, which is it?. And, coords showed as Fire Station No. 18. Is Fire Station rather than Engine House a valid alt name? Perhaps for mention in article which is official name according to whom.)
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>350</small>
|[[Ecung-Ibbetson House and Moreton Bay Fig Tree]]
|[[Image:Ibbetson House, Los Angeles.jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1988|3|29}}
|1190 W. Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|56|N|118|17|10|W|name=Ecung-Ibbetson House and Moreton Bay Fig Tree}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]] - [[North University Park, Los Angeles, California|North University Park]]
| Richardsonian Romanesque and Victorian home built in 1899
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>407</small>
|[[Seyler Residence]]
|
|{{dts|1989|1|20}}
|2341 Scarff St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|56|N|118|16|50|W|name=Seyler Residence}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|Queen Anne style Victorian home built in 1894, designed by Abraham M. Edelman
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>408<br>(2351)</small>
|[[Machell-Seaman House]]
| [[Image:Machell-Seaman House, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1989|1|20}}
| 2305 Scarff St. or 2341 Scarff St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|1|55|N|118|16|46|W|name=Machell-Seaman House}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Assymetrical Queen Anne style Victorian home built in 1888 (Ed. note: Listed at 2341 by NRHP program; listed at 2305 by LAHCM, which is it?)
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>409</small>
|[[Burkhalter Residence]]
|
|{{dts|1989|1|20}}
|2309-2311 Scarff St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|58|N|118|16|49|W|name=Burkhalter Residence}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|Queen Anne style Victorian home built in 1895
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>410</small>
|[[Distribution Station No. 31]]
|
|{{dts|1989|1|20}}
|1035 W. 24th St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|02|N|118|16|59|W|name=Distribution Station No. 31}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Industrial building designed by staff architects at Pacific Gas & Electric Company, built in 1925
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>417</small>
|[[Gordon L. McDonough House]]
|
|{{dts|1989|2|21}}
|2532 5th Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|00|N|118|19|19|W|name=McDonough, Gordon L., House}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| American Craftsman style house built in 1908, designed by architect Frank M. Tyler
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>419</small>
|[[Walker Mansion]]
|
|{{dts|1989|3|3}}
|3300 W. Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|56|N|118|19|12|W|name=Walker Mansion}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Grand Craftsman style mansion with Tudor, Mediterranean and Mission Revival influences
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>434</small>
|[[Colonel John E. Stearns Residence]]
|[[Image:House at 27 St. James Park, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1989|5|5}}
|27 Saint James Park<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|54|N|118|16|49|W|name=Stearns, Col. John E., Residence}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Classical Revival house built in 1900, designed by architect [[The Parkinsons|John C. Parkinson]]
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>455</small>
|[[Margaret T. and Bettie Mead Creighton Residence]]
|
|{{dts|1989|10|24}}
|2342 Scarff St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|52|N|118|16|48|W|name=Creighton Residence}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Colonial Revival style house built in 1896
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>456</small>
|[[Ezra T. Stimson House]]
|
|{{dts|1989|10|24}}
|839 W. Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|50|N|118|16|50|W|name=Stimson, Ezra T., House}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Tudor Revival house built in 1901, designed by architect [[Frederick Roehrig]]
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>457</small>
|[[Freeman G. Teed House]]
|
|{{dts|1989|10|24}}
|2365 Scarff St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|54|N|118|16|51|W|name=Teed House}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| American Craftsman style house built in 1893
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>458</small>
|[[Wells-Halliday Mansion]]
|
|{{dts|1989|11|3}}
|2146 W. Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|56|N|118|18|48|W|name=Wells-Halliday Mansion}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Dutch Colonial style house built in 1901; Craftsman style wing built in 1909
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>466</small>
|[[Henry J. Foster Residence]]
|
|{{dts|1989|10|17}}
|1030 W. 23rd St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|04|N|118|16|58|W|name=Foster Residence}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Queen Anne style house built circa 1889
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>467</small>
|[[Chalet Apartments]]
|
|{{dts|1989|10|27}}
|2375 Scarff St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|54|N|118|16|52|W|name=Chalet Apartments}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Two-story, 19-unit apartment complex built in 1913; designed by Frank M. Tyler with the appearance of a single-family house
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>477</small>
|[[Briggs Residence]]
|
|{{dts|1990|1|30}}
|3734 W. Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|56|N|118|19|33|W|name=Briggs Residence}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Alpine Craftsman style house built in 1912, designed by Hudson & Munsell with steep, cross-gabled roof
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>478</small>
|[[Guasti Villa-Busby Berkeley Estate]]
|
|{{dts|1990|1|30}}
|3500 W. Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|58|N|118|19|20|W|name=Guasti Villa-Busby Berkeley Estate}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Beaux Arts – Italian Renaissance style mansion, designed by Hudson & Munsell; purchased in 1936 by [[Busby Berkeley]]
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>479</small>
|[[Dr. Grandville MacGowan Home]]
|
|{{dts|1990|1|30}}
|3726 W. Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|56|N|118|19|32|W|name=MacGowan Home}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Alpine Craftsman style mansion with Tudor Revival influences, built in 1912 and designed by Hudson & Munsell
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>487</small>
|[[Sanchez Ranch]]
|
|{{dts|1990|5|1}}
|3725 Don Felipe Drive<br/><small>{{coord|34|00|25|N|118|20|24|W|name=Sanchez Ranch}}</small>
|
| Adobe structures once part of the Rancho La Cienega o Paso de la Tijera, built in 1790
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>489</small>
|[[Richard H. Alexander Residence]]
|[[Image:Richard H. Alexander Residence.jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1990|5|30}}
| 2119 Estrella Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|57|N|118|16|35|W|name=Alexander, Richard H., Residence }}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Two-story Eastlake style house built circa 1888
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>496</small>
|[[Lycurgus Lindsay Mansion]]
|
|{{dts|1990|5|30}}
| 3424 W. Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|56|N|118|19|19|W|name=Lycurgus Lindsay Mansion}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Mission Revival style house built circa 1900 with tiles fro Western Art Tile works owned by Lycurgus Lindsay; house designed by [[Charles F. Whittlesey]]
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>497</small>
|[[Charles Clifford Gibbons Residence]]
|[[Image:Charles Clifford Gibbons Residence.jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1990|6|1}}
| 2124 Bonsallo Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|58|N|118|16|37|W|name=Gibbons, Charles Clifford, Residence}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Queen Anne style house built in 1892, designed by J.H. Bradbeer
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>498</small>
|[[Lois Ellen Arnold Residence]]
|[[Image:Lois Ellen Arnold Residence.jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1990|6|12}}
| 1978 Estrella Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|00|N|118|16|31|W|name=Arnold, Lois Ellen, Residence}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Queen Anne style house built in 1888
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>498</small>
|[[Agnes B. Heimgartner Residence]]
|[[Image:Agnes B. Heimgartner Residence.jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1990|6|12}}
| 1982 Bonsallo Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|01|N|118|16|35|W|name=Shannon, Michael, Residence}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Eastlake style house built in 1893
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>500</small>
|[[John B. Kane Resldence]]
|[[Image:John B. Kane Resldence.jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1990|6|12}}
| 2122 Bonsallo Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|58|N|118|16|36|W|name=Kane, John B., Resldence}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Eastlake cottage built in 1892, designed by Fred R. Dorn
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>501</small>
|[[Michael Shannon Residence]]
|[[Image:Michael Shannon Residence.jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1990|6|12}}
| 1970 Bonsallo Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|02|N|118|16|34|W|name=Shannon, Michael, Residence}}</small>
|
| Eastlake style townhouse built circa 1890
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>502</small>
|[[Collins-Furthmann Mansion]]
|
|{{dts|1990|6|20}}
| 3691-3801 Lenawee Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|08|N|118|22|34|W|name=Collins-Furthmann Mansion}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>507</small>
|[[Hiram V. Short Residence]]
|[[Image:Hiram V. Short Residence.jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1990|11|2}}
| 2108-2110 1/2 Estrella Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|58|N|118|16|33|W|name=Short, Hiram V., Residence}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>510</small>
|Residence
|
|{{dts|1991|1|11}}
| 1157 W. 55th St.<br/><small>{{coord|33|59|33|N|118|17|44|W|name=Residence}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>511</small>
|Residence
|
|{{dts|1991|1|11}}
| 1100 W. 55th St.<br/><small>{{coord|33|59|31|N|118|17|38|W|name=Residence}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>512</small>
|[[Church of The Advent]]
|
|{{dts|1991|1|16}}
| 4976 W Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|55|N|118|20|58|W|name=Church of The Advent}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>513</small>
|[[Southern California Edison Service Yard Structure]]
|
|{{dts|1991|1|15}}
| 615 E. 108th St.<br/><small>{{coord|33|56|18|N|118|15|52|W|name=Southern California Edison Service Yard Structure}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>516<br>(2708)</small>
|[[St. John's Cathedral, Los Angeles|Saint John's Episcopal Church]]
|[[Image:St. John's Cathedral (Los Angeles).jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1991|1|22}}
| 514 W. Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|39|N|118|16|31|W|name=St. John's Cathedral}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Romanesque Episcopal church built in 1925; now serves as Episcopal cathedral for Los Angeles
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>517</small>
|Residence
|
|{{dts|1991|1|16}}
| 917 E. 49th Place<br/><small>{{coord|33|59|55|N|118|15|34|W|name=Residence}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>518</small>
|Residence
|
|{{dts|1991|1|16}}
|1207 E. 55th St.<br/><small>{{coord|33|59|35|N|118|15|14|W|name=Residence}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>519</small>
|[[Cockins House]]
|[[Image:USC Center for Occupation and Lifestyle Redesign.jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1991|2|1}}
|2653 S. Hoover St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|49|N|118|17|03|W|name=Cockins House}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]-[[North University Park, Los Angeles, California|North University Park]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>548</small>
|[[Korean Independence Memorial Building]]
|
|{{dts|1991|10|2}}
|1368 W. Jefferson Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|31|N|118|17|49|W|name=Korean Independence Memorial Building}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>551</small>
|[[Thomas W. Phillips Residence]]
|
|{{dts|1991|11|13}}
|2215 S. Harvard Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|08|N|118|18|24|W|name=Phillips, Thomas W., Residence}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>560</small>
|Wright House
|[[Image:Wright House (Los Angeles, CA).jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1992|5|26}}
|2121-2123 Bonsallo Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|59|N|118|16|38|W|name=Wright House}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>561</small>
|Allen House
|[[Image:Allen House (Los Angeles, CA).jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1992|5|26}}
|2125 Bonsallo Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|58|N|118|16|38|W|name=Allen House}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>574</small>
|[[Pierce Brothers Mortuary]]
|
|{{dts|1993|2|29}}
|714 W. Washington Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|07|N|118|16|29|W|name=Pierce Brothers Mortuary}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>578</small>
|[[Emmanuel Danish Evangelical Lutheran Church]]
|
|{{dts|1993|5|25}}
|4254-4260 3rd Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|00|20|N|118|19|12|W|name=Emmanuel Danish Evangelical Lutheran Church}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>580</small>
|[[Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Building]]
|[[Image:Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Building, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1993|6|29}}
|4261 S. Central Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|00|22|N|118|15|24|W|name=Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Building}}</small>
|[[Central Avenue (Los Angeles)|Central Avenue]]
| Headquarters of one of the city's most successful African American-owned businesses starting in 1927; now a child development center
|--
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>583</small>
|[[Zobelein Estate]]
|
|{{dts|1993|9|21}}
|3738-3770 S. Flower St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|00|58|N|118|16|54|W|name=Zobelein Estate}}</small>
| Exposition Park
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>591</small>
|[[Denker Estate]]
|
|{{dts|1994|3|8}}
|3820 W. Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|56|N|118|19|38|W|name=Denker Estate}}</small>
| West Adams
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>598</small>
|[[Benjamin J. Waters Residence]]
|
|{{dts|1994|9|27}}
|2289 W. 25th St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|02|N|118|19|02|W|name=Waters, Benjamin J., Residence}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>599</small>
|[[Julius Bierlich Residence]]
|
|{{dts|1994|9|27}}
|1818 S. Gramercy Place<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|28|N|118|18|45|W|name=Bierlich, Julius, Residence}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>600</small>
|[[Lucien and Blanche Gray Residence]]
|
|{{dts|1994|9|27}}
|2515-2519 4th Ave.
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>601</small>
|[[Gramercy Homestead Park]]
|
|{{dts|1994|9|27}}
|2098-2108 W. 24th St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|04|N|118|18|43|W|name=Gramercy Homestead Park}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>602</small>
|[[Auguste R. Marquis Residence (Filipino Federation of America)]]
|
|{{dts|1994|9|27}}
|2300-2312 W. 25th St., 2501 S. Arlington Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|00|N|118|19|04|W|name=Marquis, Auguste R., Residence (Filipino Federation of America)}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>606</small>
|[[Kerckhoff House]]
|[[Image:Kerckhoff Hall (USC).jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1994|11|1}}
|730-746 W. Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|45|N|118|16|45|W|name=Kerckhoff House}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>607</small>
|[[Powers Apartment #1]]
|
|{{dts|1994|11|1}}
|2325-2329 Scarff St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|57|N|118|16|50|W|name=Powers Apartment #1}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>608</small>
|[[Powers Apartment #2]]
|
|{{dts|1994|11|1}}
|2326-2332 Scarff St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|56|N|118|16|48|W|name=Powers Apartment #3}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>609</small>
|[[Powers Apartment #3]]
|
|{{dts|1994|11|1}}
|2308-2312 1/2 Scarff St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|58|N|118|16|47|W|name=Powers Apartment #3}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>610</small>
|[[Shankland House]]
|[[Image:Shankland House (Los Angeles).jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|1994|11|1}}
|715 W. 28th St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|38|N|118|16|48|W|name=Shankland House}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>620</small>
|[[Leimert Plaza]]
|
|{{dts|1996|2|2}}
|4395 Leimert Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|00|08|N|118|19|51|W|name=Leimert Plaza}}</small>
|[[Leimert Park, Los Angeles, California|Leimert Park]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>621</small>
|[[Alice Lynch Residence]]
|
|{{dts|1996|3|6}}
|2414 4th Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|05|N|118|19|15|W|name=Lynch, Alice, Residence}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>625</small>
|[[Thomas Butler Henry Residence]]
|
|{{dts|1996|6|21}}
|1400 S. Manhattan Place<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|46|N|118|18|35|W|name=Thomas Butler Henry Residence}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>626</small>
|[[Eyraud Residence]]
|
|{{dts|1996|6|21}}
|1326 S. Manhattan Place<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|47|N|118|18|35|W|name=Eyraud Residence}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>627</small>
|[[John F. Powers Residence]]
|
|{{dts|1996|6|21}}
|1547 S. Manhattan Place<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|38|N|118|18|37|W|name=John F. Powers Residence}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>654</small>
|[[Craftsman Mansion]]
|
|{{dts|1998|9|18}}
|4318 Victoria Park Place<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|45|N|118|19|47|W|name=Craftsman Mansion}}</small>
| Victoria Park
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>658</small>
|[[Harry & Grace Wurtzel House]]
|
|{{dts|1998|11|4}}
|926 Longwood Ave.
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>662</small>
|[[Perrine House]]
|
|{{dts|1999|6|22}}
|2229 S. Gramercy Place<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|10|N|118|18|49|W|name=Perrine House}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>672</small>
|[[Percy H. Clark Residence]]
|
|{{dts|1999|11|9}}
|2639 South Van Buren Place<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|53|N|118|17|50|W|name=Clark, Percy H., Residence}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>678</small>
|[[The Furlong House]]
|
|{{dts|2000|4|25}}
|2657 S. Van Buren Place<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|51|N|118|17|50|W|name=Furlong House}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>679</small>
|[[Maverick's Flat]]
|
|{{dts|2000|4|25}}
|4225-4225 1/2 S. Crenshaw Blvd.
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>688</small>
|[[Holiday Bowl (Los Angeles, CA)|Holiday Bowl]]
|
|{{dts|2000|12|19}}
|3730 S. Crenshaw Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|09|N|118|20|05|W|name=Holiday Bowl}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>705</small>
|[[Dryden Residence]]
|
|{{dts|2001|12|18}}
|3825 West Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|58|N|118|19|37|W|name=Dryden Residence}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>725</small>
|[[John G. Jones Lodge]]
|
|{{dts|2002|10|1}}
|5900 South Broadway<br/><small>{{coord|33|59|11|N|118|16|40|W|name=Jones, John G., Lodge}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>726</small>
|[[Gilbert W. Lindsay Home]]
|
|{{dts|2002|10|1}}
|774 East 52nd Place<br/><small>{{coord|33|59|41|N|118|15|40|W|name=Lindsay, Gilbert W., Home}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>744</small>
|[[Lincoln Theatre (Los Angeles, CA)|Lincoln Theatre]]
|
|{{dts|2003|3|18}}
|2300 S Central Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|13|N|118|15|13|W|name=Lincoln Theatre}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>754</small>
|[[First Presbyterian Church of Los Angeles]]
|
|{{dts|2003|6|3}}
|1809 West Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|26|N|118|20|14|W|name=First Presbyterian Church of Los Angeles}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>757</small>
|[[Joseph Dupy Residence-South Seas Edwardian]]
|
|{{dts|2003|7|29}}
|2301 W 24th St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|05|N|118|19|03|W|name=Joseph Dupy Residence-South Seas Edwardian}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>761</small>
|[[Kissam House]]
|
|{{dts|2003|7|29}}
|2160 W 20th St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|18|N|118|18|39|W|name=Kissam House}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>764</small>
|[[Lady Effie's Tea Parlor]]
|
|{{dts|2003|10|1}}
|453 E Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|22|N|118|15|49|W|name=Lady Effie's Tea Parlor}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>774</small>
|[[Angelus Funeral Home]]
|
|{{dts|2004|1|6}}
|1028 - 1030 E Jefferson Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|00|42|N|118|15|25|W|name=Angelus Funeral Home}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>776</small>
|[[Ray Charles Worldwide Offices and Studios]]
|
|{{dts|2004|1|21}}
|2107 W Washington Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|25|N|118|18|22|W|name=Ray Charles Worldwide Offices and Studios}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>779</small>
|[[Michael J. Connell Carriage House]]
|[[Image:Michael J. Connell Carriage House.jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|2004|5|19}}
|634 W. 23rd St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|51|N|118|16|31|W|name=Connell, Michael J., Carriage House}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>780</small>
|[[Bernays House]]
|
|{{dts|2004|5|7}}
|1656 W. 25th St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|00|N|118|17|57|W|name=Bernays House}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>787</small>
|[[Fire Station 21]]
|
|{{dts|2004|8|10}}
|1187 E. 52nd St.<br/><small>{{coord|33|59|45|N|118|15|15|W|name=Fire Station 21}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>791</small>
|[[Betty Hill House]]
|
|{{dts|2005|4|13}}
|1655 W. 37th Place<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|12|N|118|18|28|W|name=Hill, Betty, House}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>798</small>
|[[Mary E. Smith House]]
|[[Image:House at 1186 W. 27th St., Los Angeles.jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|2005|5|18}}
|1186 W. 27th St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|48|N|118|17|10|W|name=Smith, Mary E., House}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]-[[North University Park, Los Angeles, California|North University Park]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>811</small>
|[[Tate-McCoy Homestead]]
|
|{{dts|2005|7|8}}
|1463-1469 S. Norton Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|40|N|118|19|30|W|name=Tate-McCoy Homestead}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>818</small>
|[[J.R. Dennison House]]
|
|{{dts|2005|7|13}}
|1919 S. Harvard Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|22|N|118|18|16|W|name=Dennison, J.R., House}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>819</small>
|[[Vista Magnolia Court]]
|
|{{dts|2005|7|13}}
|1201-1215 W. 27th St., 2671 S Magnolia Ave.
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>820</small>
|[[Williard J. Doran Residence]]
|
|{{dts|2005|7|13}}
|1194 W. 27th St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|48|N|118|17|11|W|name=Doran Residence}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>851</small>
|[[28th Street Y.M.C.A. Building]]
|
|{{dts|2006|9|27}}
|1006 E 28th St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|01|N|118|15|26|W|name=28th Street Y.M.C.A. Building}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>854</small>
|[[Cline Residence and Museum]]
|
|{{dts|2006|10|11}}
|1401-1409 South Gramercy Place<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|45|N|118|18|48|W|name=Cline Residence and Museum}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>855</small>
|[[Statton Residence]]
|
|{{dts|2006|10|11}}
|1415 South Gramercy Place<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|44|N|118|18|48|W|name=Statton Residence}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>864</small>
|[[Life Magazine/Leimert Park House]]
|
|{{dts|2007|3|27}}
|3892 S Olmstead Ave.
|[[Leimert Park, Los Angeles, California|Leimert Park]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>865</small>
|[[Joseph L. Starr Farmhouse]]
|
|{{dts|2007|4|11}}
|2801 S Arlington Ave.
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>866</small>
|[[Glen Lukens Home and Studio]]
|
|{{dts|2007|4|11}}
|3425 West 27th St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|51|N|118|19|19|W|name=Lukens, Glen, Home and Studio}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>879</small>
|[[Louise Pratt House]]
|[[Image:House at 2706 S. Menlo Ave., Los Angeles.jpg|100x100px]]
|{{dts|2007|7|17}}
|2706 South Menlo St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|48|N|118|17|24|W|name=Pratt, Louise, House}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]] - [[North University Park, Los Angeles, California|North University Park]]
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>880</small>
|[[Bigelow-Wood Residence]]
|
|{{dts|2007|7|17}}
|2905 South Hoover St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|40|N|118|17|03|W|name=Bigelow-Wood Residence}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>884</small>
|[[Waters-Shaw Family Residence]]
|
|{{dts|2007|8|15}}
|2700 S Severance St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|44|N|118|16|53|W|name=Waters-Shaw Family Residence}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>885</small>
|[[Holmes-Shannon House]]
|
|{{dts|2007|8|15}}
|4311 Victoria Park Dr.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|47|N|118|19|45|W|name=Holmes-Shannon House}}</small>
|Victoria Park
|
|-
| {{LAHCM color}} |<small>924</small>
|[[Bigford Residence]]
|
|{{dts|2008|7|2}}
|1546 South Fifth Ave.
|
|
|-
|}


==Non-HCM sites also recognized==
In his youth Claus and his brothers were members of the Neupfadfinder, a [[Scouting in Germany|German Scout association]] and part of the [[German Youth movement]].<ref>{{Citation
The Historic-Cultural Monuments listed above include many of the most important historic sites in South Los Angeles. In addition, the [[Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum]] is a U.S. [[National Historic Landmark]] in the area. Some other sites and historic districts within the South Los Angeles area have been listed on the National Register of Historic Places or designated as California Historical Landmarks, but were not also listed as HCMs. These are:
| last = Löttel
| first = Holger
| title = Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg (1907-1944): Leben und Würdigung- Vortrag anläßlich der Gedenkveranstaltung zum 100.Geburtstag von Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg, Ketrzyn/Rastenburg, 22.Juli 2007
|date = 2007-07-22
|language= German
|year = 2007
|format=PDF
|url = http://www.forschungsgemeinschaft-20-juli.de/downloads/vortraege/Loettel%20zu%20Stauffenberg.pdf
|accessdate = 2008-02-07
}}</ref><ref>{{Citation
| last = Kiesewetter
| first = Renate
| title = Im Porträt: Claus Graf Schenk von Stauffenberg
|language= German
| url = http://www.br-online.de/wissen-bildung/collegeradio/medien/geschichte/stauffenberg/manuskript/stauffenberg_manuskript.pdf
| accessdate = 2008-02-07}}</ref>


{|class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
Like his brothers, Claus was carefully educated and inclined toward literature, but eventually took up a military career. In 1926, he joined the family's traditional regiment, the ''[[Bamberger Reiter]]- und Kavallerieregiment 17'' (17th Cavalry Regiment) in [[Bamberg]]. (See also [[Bamberg Horseman]].) It was around this time that the three brothers were introduced by Albrecht [[von Blumenthal]] to poet [[Stefan George]]'s influential circle ''Georgekreis'', from which many notable members of the German resistance would later emerge. George dedicated ''Das neue Reich'' ("The new Reich") in 1928, including the ''Geheimes Deutschland'' ("secret Germany") written in 1922, to Berthold.<ref>[http://www.iablis.de/iablis_t/2007/ammonrez07.html Herbert Ammon: Vom Geist Georges zur Tat Stauffenbergs - Manfred Riedels Rettung des Reiches, in: Iablis 2007<!-- bot-generated title -->] at www.iablis.de</ref> The work outlines a new form of society ruled by hierarchical spiritual aristocracy. George rejected any attempts to use it for mundane political purposes, especially Nazism.
! class="unsortable" width=1% | '''Code'''<ref>Numbers in 1000 series denote LAHCM assigned numbers for state-designated sites; 2000 series denote LAHCM assigned numbers for Federally-designated sites. Blue colors represent higher designations as National Historic Landmarks and/or listing on the National Register of Historic Places. No color represents information is unavailable or the monument has been delisted. To resort on this column, refresh your browser.</ref>
! width="18%" |'''Landmark name'''
! class="unsortable" width="11%" |'''Image'''
! width="4%" |'''Selected date'''
! width="12%" |'''Locality'''
! width="12%" |'''Neighborhood'''
! class="unsortable" width="41%" |'''Description'''<ref name = "various">Various sources cited in articles, retrieved on various dates.</ref>
|-
| {{NHL color}} |<small>(1010)<br>(2348)</small>
|[[Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum|Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Exposition Park]]
|[[Image:Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum (Entrance).JPG|100x100px]]
|
|3911 S. Figueroa St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|00|50|N|118|17|16|W|name=Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum}}</small>
|[[Exposition Park]]
|
|-
| |<small>(1029)</small>
|Vermont Avenue Presbyterian Church
|
|
|5300-5308 S. Vermont Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|33|59|38|N|118|17|28|W|name=Vermont Avenue Presbyterian Church}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>(1032)<br>(2712)</small>
|[[McCarty Memorial Christian Church]]
|[[Image:McCarty Memorial Christian Church, Los Angeles edit1.jpg|100x100px]]
| [[2002-01-17]]<ref>National Register listing date</ref>
|4101 W. Adams Blvd.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|58|N|118|19|47|W|name=McCarty Memorial Christian Church}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Gothic Revival church of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ); founded in 1932 as a white congregation; integrated and became a multi-racial congregation in the mid-1950s
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>(2192)</small>
|[[Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County]]
|[[Image:Natural History Museum, Los Angeles, California.JPG|100x100px]]
|
|900 Exposition Blvd.
|[[Exposition Park]]
| Opened in 1913; fitted marble walls and domed and colonnaded rotunda; often used as filming location
|-
| {{HD color}} |<small>(2300)</small>
|[[St. James Park Historic District]]
|[[Image:House at 27 St. James Park, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
|
|Roughly bounded by 21st and 23 Sts., Mount St. Mary's College, W. Adams Blvd. and Union Ave.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|53|N|118|16|48|W|name=St. James Park Historic District}}</small>
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
|
|-
| {{HD color}} |<small>(2301)</small>
|[[Twentieth Street Historic District]]
|[[Image:Twentieth Street Historic District, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
|
|912-950 W. 20th St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|02|09|N|118|16|47|W|name=Twentieth Street Historic District}}</small>
|
|
|-
| {{HD color}} |<small>(2304)</small>
|[[Van Buren Place Historic District]]
|[[Image:Van Buren Place Historic District, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
|
|2620-2657 Van Buren Place (Both Sides of St.)<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|55|N|118|17|50|W|name=Van Buren Place Historic District}}</small>
| [[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]
| Craftsman style homes built from 1903-1916 in 2600 block of Van Buren Place
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>(2307)</small>
|[[Exposition Park Rose Garden]]
|[[Image:Exposition Park Rose Garden, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
|
|900 Exposition Blvd.
|[[Exposition Park]]
| Sunken rose garden created in the 1920s, featuring more than 20,000 rose bushes and 200 varieties of roses
|-
| {{HD color}} |<small>(2311)</small>
|[[Menlo Avenue-West Twenty-ninth Street Historic District]]
|[[Image:House at 2813 S. Menlo Ave., Los Angeles.jpg|100x100px]]
|
|Bounded by Adams Blvd., Ellendale, Thirtieth Ave., and Vermont
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]-[[North University Park, Los Angeles, California|North University Park]]
|
|-
| {{NRHP color}} |<small>(2506)</small>
|[[Moneta Branch|Moneta Branch Library]]
|[[Image:Moneta Branch Library, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
|
|4255 S. Olive St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|00|20|N|118|16|46|W|name=Moneta Branch Library}}</small>
|
|
|-
! {{NRHP color}} |
| [[Helen Hunt Jackson Branch]]
| [[Image:Former Helen Hunt Jackson Branch Library, Los Angeles.JPG|100x100px]]
| [[1987-05-19]]
| 2330 Naomi St.<br/><small>{{coord|34|01|07|N|118|15|05|W|name=Jackson, Helen Hunt, Branch}}</small>
| [[South Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California|South Los Angeles]]
| Former branch library; built in 1926; currently a church
|--
! {{HD color}} |
| [[North University Park Historic District]]
| [[Image:House at 2703 S. Hoover, Los Angeles.JPG|100px]]
| [[2004-02-11]]
| Roughly bounded by Hoover St., Adams Blvd, 28th St. and Magnolia Ave.
|[[West Adams, Los Angeles, California|West Adams]]-[[North University Park, Los Angeles, California|North University Park]]
|Historic district with many Victorian homes, also the birthplace of [[Adlai Stevenson]]
|--
|}


==See also==
Claus was commissioned as a [[Lieutenant]] (second lieutenant) in 1930. In his military career, Stauffenberg studied modern weapons at the [[Kriegsakademie]] in Berlin-[[Moabit]], but remained focused on the use of the horse&mdash;which continued to carry out a large part of transportation duties throughout the [[Second World War]]&mdash;in modern warfare. His regiment became part of the [[German 1st Light Division]] under General [[Erich Hoepner]], who had taken part in the plans for the September 1938 [[German Resistance]] coup, cut short by Hitler's unexpected success in the [[Munich Agreement]]. The unit was part of the troops that moved into the [[Sudetenland]], the part of Czechoslovakia that had a German-speaking majority, as agreed upon in Munich.
*[[List of Registered Historic Places in Los Angeles]]
*[[List of California Historical Landmarks]]
*[[List of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments in the Harbor area]]
*[[List of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments in the San Fernando Valley]]


==References==
Following the outbreak of war in 1939, Stauffenberg and his regiment took part in the attack on Poland. Afterwards he at first tolerated the way the occupation of Poland had been handled by the Nazi regime and the use of Poles as [[Slavery|slave]] workers to achieve German prosperity. Some claim he even endorsed this, <ref name="Martyn"> Martyn Housden,"Resistance and Conformity in the Third Reich" Routledge, 1997 page 100: "He was endorsing both the tyrannical occupation of Poland and the use of its
{{reflist}}
people as slave labourers"</ref><ref>[http://www.bundestag.de/dasparlament/2004/26/Panorama/002.html]
)</ref> and the systematic German colonisation and exploitation of Poland. For example in letter from occupied Poland to his wife, Nina, he wrote:
:''Die Bevölkerung ist ein unglaublicher Pöbel, sehr viele Juden und sehr viel Mischvolk. Ein Volk, welches sich nur unter der Knute wohlfühlt. Die Tausenden von Gefangenen werden unserer Landwirtschaft recht gut tun'' (''The population here are unbelievable rabble; a great many [[Jews]] and mixed folk. A folk that only feels good under the [[knout]]. The thousands of prisoners will be used well in our agriculture.'')

This idea of colonisation was deeply rooted in German aristocracy strongly believing that the eastern territories populated predominantly by Poles, most of which were German territory before World War I should be colonised as the [[Teutonic Knights]] had done in the [[Middle Ages]].<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_Eastern_Marches_Society</ref> There is still significant controversy on the point if Stauffenberg really approved of the way this was achieved by the Nazi regime.<ref name="Hoffman">"It is essential that we begin a systemic colonisation in Poland. But I have no fear that this will not occur". Peter Hoffman "Stauffenberg: A Family History, 1905-1944; page 116; 2003McGill-Queen's Press</ref> In any case it is certain that in the early stages of the war he still held the usual aristocratic beliefs typical of late imperial times.

==World War II==

{{Refimprovesect|date=March 2008}}

Stauffenberg found some aspects of the [[Nazi Party]]'s ideology repugnant; although he agreed with its [[nationalism|nationalistic aspects]], he never became a member of the party. Moreover, Stauffenberg remained a practising Catholic. The Roman Catholic Church had signed the [[Reichskonkordat]] in 1933, the year Hitler and the Nazi Party came to power. The Nazi government quickly violated this agreement, leading German Catholic bishops and the papacy to protest against these violations. This culminated in the papal [[encyclical]]''"[[Mit brennender Sorge]]"'' ("With Burning Anxiety") of 1937, which also condemned the ascendancy of racist ideologies. On top of this, the growing systematic ill-treatment of [[Jew]]s and suppression of religion had offended Stauffenberg's strong personal sense of religious morality and justice; he felt, for instance, that the November 1938 [[Kristallnacht]] ("Night of the broken glass") had brought shame upon Germany. While his uncle, Nikolaus Graf von [[Ikšķile|Üxküll]], had approached him before to join the resistance movement against the Hitler regime, it was only after the Polish campaign in 1939 that Stauffenberg's individual conscience and his religious convictions made him consider joining. [[Peter Yorck von Wartenburg]] and [[Ulrich Wilhelm Graf Schwerin von Schwanenfeld|Ulrich Schwerin von Schwanenfeld]] urged him to become the adjutant of [[Walther von Brauchitsch]], then Supreme Commander of the Army, in order to participate in a coup against Hitler. Stauffenberg declined at the time, reasoning that all German soldiers had pledged allegiance not to the institution of the presidency of the German Reich, but to the person of [[Adolf Hitler]] due to the [[Führereid]] having been introduced in 1934.

Stauffenberg's unit was reorganized into the [[6th Panzer Division]], and he served as officer of its [[General staff]] in the [[Battle of France]], for which he was awarded the [[Iron Cross]] First Class. Like many others, Stauffenberg was impressed by the overwhelming military success, which was attributed to Hitler.

[[Operation Barbarossa|Operation ''Barbarossa'']] (the German invasion of the [[Soviet Union]]) was launched in 1941. The resultant mass executions of Jews, Poles, Russians and others, as well as what he believed was an already apparent deficiency in military leadership (Hitler had assumed the role of supreme commander in late 1941 after sacking Hoepner and others), finally convinced Stauffenberg in 1942 to sympathize with resistance groups within the Wehrmacht, the only force that had a chance to overcome Hitler's [[Gestapo]], [[Sicherheitsdienst|SD]], and [[Schutzstaffel|SS]]. During the idle months of the so called [[Phoney War]], preceding the military actions of the [[Battle of France]] (1939-40), he had already been transferred to the organizational department of the [[Oberkommando des Heeres]], the German army high command, which directed the operations on the Eastern Front. Stauffenberg opposed the [[Commissar Order]], which Hitler wrote and then cancelled after a year. He tried to soften the German occupation policy in the conquered areas of the Soviet Union by pointing out the benefits of getting volunteers for the [[Ostlegionen]] which were commanded by his department. Guidelines were issued on [[2 June]] [[1942]] for the proper treatment of [[prisoners of war]] (POWs) from the [[Caucasus]] region which had been captured by [[Heeresgruppe A]]. The [[Soviet Union]] had not signed the [[Geneva Convention (1929)]]. However, a month after the German invasion in 1941, an offer was made for a reciprocal adherence to the [[Hague Conventions (1899 and 1907)|Hague convention]]. This 'note' was left unanswered by Third Reich officials.<ref>Beevor, ''Stalingrad'' . Penguin 2001 ISBN 0141001313 p60</ref>
Stauffenberg did not engage in any coup plot at this time. Hitler was at the peak of his power in 1942. The Stauffenberg brothers (Berthold and Claus) maintained contact with former commanders like Hoepner, and with the [[Kreisau Circle]]; they also included civilians and [[social democrats]] like [[Julius Leber]] in their scenarios for an administration after Hitler.

In November 1942, the Allies [[Operation Torch|landed in French North Africa]], and the [[10th Panzer Division]] occupied [[Vichy France]] ([[Case Anton|Case ''Anton'']]) before being transferred to the [[Tunisian Campaign]], as part of the [[Afrika Korps]].

In 1943 Stauffenberg was promoted to lieutenant-colonel on a general staff (''[[Oberstleutnant]] i. G. (im Generalstab)''), and was sent to Africa to join the 10th Panzer (tank) Division as its Ia or "First Officer in the General Staff." There, while he was scouting out a new command area, his vehicle was strafed on [[7 April]] [[1943]] by British fighter-bombers and he was severely wounded. He spent three months in hospital in Munich, where he was treated by [[Ferdinand Sauerbruch]]. Stauffenberg lost his left eye, his right hand, and the fourth and fifth fingers of his left hand. He jokingly remarked to friends never to have really known what to do with so many fingers when he still had all of them.

For his injuries, Stauffenberg was awarded the [[Wound Badge]] in Gold on [[14 April]] [[1943]] and for his courage the [[German Cross]] in Gold on [[8 May]] [[1943]].

For rehabilitation, Stauffenberg was sent to his home, Schloss [[Lautlingen]] (today a museum), then still one of the Stauffenberg castles in Southern Germany. Initially he felt frustrated not to be in a position to stage a coup by himself. But by the beginning of September 1943, after a somewhat slow recuperation from his wounds, he was positioned by the conspirators, mainly [[Henning von Tresckow|Tresckow]] as a staff officer to the headquarters of the "Ersatzheer" ("Replacement Army" - charged with training soldiers to reinforce first line divisions at the front), located on Bendlerstrasse (later Stauffenbergstrasse) in [[Berlin]].

There, one of Stauffenberg's superiors was [[General]] [[Friedrich Olbricht]], a committed member of the resistance movement. The Ersatzheer had a unique opportunity to launch a coup, as one of its functions was to have [[Operation Valkyrie]] in place. This was a contingency measure which would let it assume control of the Reich in the event that internal disturbances blocked communications to the military high command. Ironically, the ''Valkyrie'' plan had been agreed to by Hitler and was now secretly prepared to become the means, after Hitler's death, of sweeping the rest of his regime from power.

For after the suicide assassination to be committed by [[Axel von dem Bussche]] in November 1943 a detailed military plan was developed not only to occupy Berlin but also to take the different headquarters in [[East Prussia]] by military force. Stauffenberg had von dem Bussche transmit these written orders personally to Major Kuhn once he arrived at [[Wolfsschanze]]. The assassination plan of von dem Bussche failed. Kuhn hid these compromising documents in the nearby OKH under a watch tower. (Kuhn became a POW of the Soviets after the July 20 plot. He led the Soviets to the hiding place of the documents in February 1945. In 1989 [[Gorbachev]] returned them as a present to the then German chancellor Dr [[Helmut Kohl]]). These documents are important because having been produced in 1943 they are evidence of the materially uninterested motivation of the resistance group, which had been doubted and was a matter of discussion for years in Germany after the war.

As also several other assassination attempts organised by Stauffenberg ( [[Axel von dem Bussche| von dem Bussche]], [[Ewald Heinrich von Kleist|von Kleist]] , von Gersdorff, von Breitenbuch ) failed because of the unpredictable behaviour of Hitler, the tide during 1944 was increasingly turning against the conspirators; they were forced to switch from meticulous planning to conspiratorial improvisation.

Stauffenberg had long been convinced of the criminal nature of the Hitler regime, but from 1942 onwards he believed that Hitler's policies were totally ruining Germany and costing millions of innocent lives. As with many of his associates, he felt that there had to be an attempt on Hitler's life. From early September 1943, Stauffenberg was actively involved in the plot and became its driving force. Later, following several failed attempts by others to kill Hitler, Stauffenberg decided, in July 1944, to personally kill Hitler. By then he had great doubts about the possibility of success. His friend [[Henning von Tresckow|Tresckow]] convinced him to attempt the plot even if it had no chance of success at all, as this would be the only way to prove to the world that the Hitler regime and Germany were not one and the same and to demonstrate by this act that not all Germans supported the regime.

In June 1944 the Allies had landed in France on [[Battle of Normandy|D-Day]]. Stauffenberg, like most German military professionals, had absolutely no doubt that the war was lost. Only an immediate armistice could avoid more unnecessary bloodshed and further damage to Germany, to its people and to most other European nations. However in 1943, he had written out demands with which he felt the Allies had to comply as a condition for Germany to agree to an immediate peace. These demands included Germany retaining its 1914 Eastern borders, including the Polish territories of [[Wielkopolska]] and [[Poznań]].<ref>"Review of 'Claus Graf Stauffenberg. 15. November 1907-20. Juli 1944. Das Leben eines Offiziers. by Joachim Kramarz, Bonn 1967' by : F. L. Carsten ''International Affairs'', Vol. 43, No. 2 (April 1967). "It is more surprising that, as late as May 1944, Stauffenberg still demanded for Germany the frontiers of 1914 in the east, i.e., a new partition of Poland."</ref> Other demands included Germany maintaining such territorial gains as [[Austria]] and the [[Sudetenland]] within the Reich, giving autonomy to [[Alsace-Lorraine]], and even expansion of the current wartime borders of Germany in the southern direction by annexing Tyrol as far as [[Bolzano]] and [[Merano]]. Non-territorial demands included such points as refusal of any occupation of Germany by the Allies, as well as refusal to hand over war criminals by demanding the right of "nations to deal with its own criminals". These proposals were only directed to the Western Allies&mdash;Stauffenberg wanted Germany only to retreat from Western, Southern and Northern positions, while demanding the right to continue military occupation of German territorial gains in the East.<ref name="Martyn2"> Martyn Housden,"Resistance and Conformity in the Third Reich";Routledge 1997;page 109-110</ref>

Stauffenberg was aware that by German law (then and now) he was about to commit [[high treason]]. He openly told young conspirator [[Axel von dem Bussche]] in a meeting late 1943: "Let's be blunt, I am committing high treason with all my might and main...." ("''Gehen wir in medias res, ich betreibe mit allen mir zur Verfügung stehenden Mitteln den Hochverrat...''").<ref>Joachim Fest; Hitler - Eine Biographie; Propyläen, Berlin; 2. Auflage 2004; Page 961; ISBN 3 549 07172 8</ref> He justified his project to Bussche by reference to the right under natural law ("''Naturrecht''") to defend millions of people's lives from the criminal aggressions of Hitler ("''Nothilfe''").

From the beginning of September 1943 until [[July 21]], [[1944]], Claus von Stauffenberg was the driving force behind the plot. His resolve, his organizational abilities, and his radical revolutionary approach put an end to inactivity caused by doubts and long discussions on hitherto military virtues made obsolete or not by Hitler's behavior. Helped by [[Henning von Tresckow]], he united the conspirators and drove them into action.<ref>Joachim Fest; "Hitler - Eine Biographie"</ref>

==July 20 plot==
{{Unreferencedsection|date=March 2008}}
{{main|July 20 plot}}
Stauffenberg's part in the original plan required him to stay at the Bendlerstrasse offices in Berlin, from where he would phone regular Army units all over Europe and the Reich in an attempt to convince them to arrest leaders of Nazi political organizations such as the [[Sicherheitsdienst]] and the [[Gestapo]]. Unfortunately, he found himself forced to do both, to kill Hitler far away from Berlin ''and'' to trigger the military machine in Berlin during the office hours of the very same day. He was the only conspirator who had regular access to Hitler (during his briefing meetings) by mid 1944, as well as being the only officer among the conspirators who was considered to have the resolve and persuasive power to convince German military leaders to throw in with the coup once Adolf Hitler was dead.

Thus in 1944 Stauffenberg, who by this time was promoted to [[Oberst]] (colonel), agreed to carry out the [[July 20 plot|assassination of the German Führer]], [[Adolf Hitler]] himself — a need that became further apparent to him after several suicide attempts (e.g. the ones of [[Axel von dem Bussche]] and [[Ewald-Heinrich von Kleist-Schmenzin|Ewald von Kleist]]) had failed. The attempt after several trials by Stauffenberg to meet Hitler, Göring and Himmler at the same time and at the same place, through chance, ultimately took place at a briefing hut at the military high command in Eastern Prussia called ''[[Wolfsschanze]]'' (Wolf's Lair) near [[Kętrzyn|Rastenburg]], [[East Prussia]] (today [[Kętrzyn]], [[Poland]]) on [[July 20]], [[1944]]. [[Albert Speer]] had met Claus in some of the meetings near Berchtesgaden and in Eastern Prussia during summer 1944. He described the tall colonel in his memoirs as a person of "mystical good looks."

On [[July 20]], [[1944]], Stauffenberg's [[briefcase]] contained two small [[bomb]]s, each with a [[United Kingdom|British]]-made [[pencil detonator]] that could be set with a ten to fifteen minute detonation delay once activated. After having traveled that morning from Berlin to Eastern Prussia (today, Poland) by a special plane, he entered the briefing room before Hitler had shown up. The meeting had unexpectedly been changed from the subterranean "Führerbunker" to the wooden barrack or hut of [[Speer]]. He told Hitler's butler that he needed to change his shirt and thus left the meeting room, taking his briefcase with him. Once in a small room Stauffenberg, in the presence of his [[aide-de-camp]] lieutenant [[Werner von Haeften|Haeften]], armed the first bomb with specially adapted [[pliers]]. The pliers were used to activate the pencil detonator, a task made difficult by Stauffenberg not having a right hand and only having three fingers on his left hand. A guard knocked and opened the door, urging him to hurry as the meeting was about to begin. As a result, Stauffenberg was able to arm only one of the two bombs, which he placed back into the briefcase. He left the small room, handing the second, unarmed bomb in the briefcase to his [[aide-de-camp]] Haeften and proceeded back to the briefing room, where he placed his briefcase under the conference table, as near as he could get to Hitler. After some minutes he excused himself, pretending to need to make an urgent phone call to Berlin, and left the meeting room. He waited in a nearby shelter until the explosion tore through the hut. From what he saw, he was fully convinced that no one in the room could have survived. Although four people were killed and almost all present were injured, [[Hitler]] himself was injured only slightly as he was shielded from the blast by the heavy, solid oak conference table.
[[Image:Stauffenberg's office.JPG|thumb|right|Office at [[Bendlerblock]] ]]
Stauffenberg and his aide-de-camp, [[Oberleutnant]] [[Werner von Haeften]], who carried the second bomb, quickly walked away and talked their way out of the heavily guarded compound. They were driven to the nearby airfield. On their way to the airfield, passing through a small forest they got rid of the second bomb. Then they flew back to Berlin-Rangsdorf in the same [[Heinkel He 111]] which had brought them in the morning. Stauffenberg only learned of the failure to kill Hitler at 7 p.m., three and a half hours after he had landed in Rangsdorf airport south of Berlin at around 3:30 p.m. At Rangsdorf he was met by his brother [[Berthold Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg|Berthold]]. While he was still in transit, an order was issued from the Führer's headquarters to shoot Stauffenberg and Haeften immediately, but the order landed on the desk of a fellow conspirator, [[Friedrich Georgi]] of the air staff, and was not passed on.

After his arrival at Bendlerstrasse in Berlin around 4:30 p.m., Stauffenberg, who still mistakenly believed Hitler to be dead, immediately began to motivate his friends to initiate the second phase of the project: to organize the military coup against the Nazi leaders. A short time later however, [[Joseph Goebbels]] announced by radio that Hitler had survived an attempt on his life. At 19:00 Hitler himself personally broadcast a message on the state radio, and the conspirators realized at that point that the coup had completely failed. The conspirators were tracked to their Bendlerstrasse offices and were shortly thereafter overpowered in a short shoot-out during which Stauffenberg was shot in the shoulder.

== Alternative possibilities ==
Some researchers have speculated that if Stauffenberg had placed the briefcase in a slightly different location the bomb might have had its intended effect on the primary target, since the bomb was supposedly placed behind a very thick leg of the heavy [[oak]] wood conference table. The leg apparently deflected the blast and prevented the force from reaching Hitler. This thesis is supported by the fact that others seated in different positions were killed or more seriously injured than Hitler. There is also speculation that had Stauffenberg left the second bomb in his briefcase, even without arming it, the detonation of the first bomb could have triggered the explosion of the second bomb (by sympathetic detonation) and the combined force of the two bombs going off nearly simultaneously might have killed Hitler. An alternate analysis is that the single bomb might have been effective had the meeting been held as originally planned in Hitler's reinforced and subterranean bunker (the "Führerbunker"), instead of the wooden hut that doubled as [[Albert Speer|Speer's]] barracks and makeshift briefing room. Both compact bombs were designed to kill by expansion inside a room encased with reinforced walls. Speer's wooden hut with open windows did not correspond to these specifications, as it allowed a substantial amount of the blast force to escape to the outside by the open windows. Since some of the blast escaped the room, only those who were in the immediate path of the blast were killed or severely injured. In a 2005 episode of the [[Discovery Channel]] TV series ''Unsolved History'', each scenario was simulated in a detailed reconstruction with test dummies. The results supported the conclusion that Hitler would have been killed had any of the three other scenarios occurred.

== Execution ==
[[Image:Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg Sterbeurkunde 1944.jpg|thumb|left|Death certificate]]
In a futile attempt to save his own life, the co-conspirator [[Generaloberst]] [[Friedrich Fromm]], Commander-in-Chief of the Replacement Army present in the [[Bendlerblock]] (Headquarters of the Army), charged other conspirators, held an impromptu court martial, and condemned the ringleaders of the conspiracy to death. Stauffenberg and fellow officers Colonel General Olbricht, Lieutenant von Haeften, and [[Oberst]] (Colonel) [[Albrecht Mertz von Quirnheim]] were shot before 01:00 a.m. that night ([[July 21]], [[1944]]) by a makeshift [[firing squad]] in the courtyard of the Bendlerblock, which was lit by the headlights of a truck.

[[Image:Bendler Block Memorial.jpg|thumb|Memorial at [[Bendlerblock]]]]
As his turn came, Stauffenberg spoke his last words: "Es lebe unser heiliges Deutschland!" ("Long live our holy Germany!") Fromm ordered that the executed officers (his former co-conspirators) receive an immediate burial with military honors in the Matthäus Churchyard in Berlin's Schöneberg district. Today there is a stone in memorial of this event. The next day, however, Stauffenberg's body was exhumed by the SS, stripped of his medals, and cremated.

Another central figure in the plot was Stauffenberg's eldest brother, [[Berthold Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg]]. On [[10 August]] [[1944]], Berthold was tried before Judge-President [[Roland Freisler]] in the special "People's Court" (''[[Volksgerichtshof]]''). This court was established by Hitler for political offenses and Berthold was one of eight conspirators executed by slow strangulation (reputedly with piano wire used as the [[garrote]]) in [[Plötzensee Prison]], Berlin, later that day. More than two hundred (others speak of more than a thousand fellow conspirators) were condemned in mock trials and executed.

In 1980, the German government established a memorial for the failed anti-Nazi resistance movement in a part of the Bendlerblock, the remainder of which currently houses the Berlin offices of the German Ministry of Defense (whose main offices remain in Bonn). The Bendlerstrasse was renamed the Stauffenbergstrasse, and the Bendlerblock now houses the [[Memorial to the German Resistance]], a permanent exhibition with more than 5,000 photographs and documents showing the various resistance organisations at work during the Hitler era. The courtyard where the officers were shot on [[July 21]], [[1944]], is now a site of remembrance with a plaque commemorating the events and includes a memorial bronze figure of a young man with his hands symbolically bound which resembles Count von Stauffenberg.

==Family==
Stauffenberg married [[Nina Schenk Gräfin von Stauffenberg|Nina Freiin von Lerchenfeld]] in November 1933 in [[Bamberg]]. They had five children: [[Berthold Maria Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg|Berthold]], Heimeran, Franz-Ludwig, Valerie and Konstanze. Konstanze was born in [[Frankfurt (Oder)|Frankfurt on the Oder]] after Stauffenberg's execution. Not told of what their father had done, Berthold, Heimeran, Franz, and Valerie were placed in [[foster homes|foster home]] for the remainder of the war, but they were forced to use new surnames, as ''Stauffenberg'' was now considered unacceptable. Nina died aged 92 on [[April 2]], [[2006]], at [[Kirchlauter]] near [[Bamberg]], and was buried there on [[April 8]]. Their eldest son, [[Berthold Maria Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg]], became a general in [[West Germany]]'s post-war army, the [[Bundeswehr]], while his brother Franz-Ludwig became a member of both the German and European parliaments.

Stauffenberg's widow Nina described her late husband:<blockquote>He let things come to him, and then he made up his mind ... one of his characteristics was that he really enjoyed playing the devil's advocate. Conservatives were convinced that he was a ferocious Nazi, and ferocious Nazis were convinced he was an unreconstructed conservative. He was neither.<ref>Quoted from Burleigh (2000).</ref>

</blockquote>There is, however, the declaration of Stauffenberg's elder son that the children were informed by their mother about the assassination attempt and by their father's role in it.

==Assignments, promotions and decorations==
[[Image:Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg - Helmuth James Graf von Moltke.jpg|thumb|A German stamp of Stauffenberg and [[Helmuth James Graf von Moltke]] in commemoration of their 100th birthdays.]]

'''Assignments'''
*01.Jan.1926 17th (Bavarian) Cavalry Regiment, Bamberg
*17.Oct.1927 Infantry School, Dresden
*01.Oct.1928 Cavalry School, Hannover
*30.Jul.1930 Pioneer Course
*18.Nov.1930 Mortar Course
*01.Oct.1934 Cavalry School, Hannover / Adjutant
*06.Oct.1936 War Academy, Berlin
*01.Aug.1938 1st Light Division (18.Oct.1939 renamed 6th Panzer Division) / Second Staff Officer (Ib)
*31.May.1940 OKH / General Staff / Organization Branch / Section Head II
*15.Feb.1943 10th Panzer Division / Senior Staff Officer (Ia)
*07.Apr.1943 Seriously wounded in Tunisia, assigned to Officer Reserve Pool
*01.Nov.1943 OKH / General Army Office / Chief of Staff
*20.Jun.1944 OKW / Chief of Replacement Army / Chief of General Staff
*04.Aug.1944 (Posthumous) Expelled from Wehrmacht by the Führer at recommendation of the Army Court of Honour

'''Promotions'''
*18.Aug.1927 Fahnenjunker-Gefreiter
*15.Oct.1927 Fahnenjunker-Unteroffizier
*01.Aug.1929 Fähnrich
*01.Jan.1930 Leutnant
*01.May.1933 Oberleutnant
*01.Jan.1937 Rittmeister (from 01.Nov.1939 Hauptmann i.G.)
*01.Jan.1941 Major i.G.
*01.Jan.1943 Oberstleutnant i.G.
*01.Apr.1944 Oberst i.G.

'''Decorations & Awards'''
*17.Aug.1929 Sword of Honour
*02.Oct.1936 Distinguished Service Badge, IVth Class
*01.Apr.1938 Distinguished Service Badge, IIIrd Class
*31.May.1940 Iron Cross, Ist Class
*25.Oct.1941 Royal Bulgarian Order of Bravery, IVth Class
*11.Dec.1942 Finnish Liberty Cross, IIIrd Class
*14.Apr.1943 Wound Badge in Gold
*20.Apr.1943 Italian-German Remembrance Medal
*08.May.1943 German Cross in Gold

==In popular culture==
[[Image:Stuttgart Altes Schloss Stauffenberg.jpg|thumb|Stauffenberg memorial site in [[Altes Schloss (Stuttgart)|Altes Schloss]] in Stuttgart]]

===German movies===
* 1955: [[:de:Der 20. Juli]] movie [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0047790/ IMDB]
* 1989: [[Stauffenberg. 13 Bilder über einen Täter]] von Hans Bentzien und Erich Thiede, Eine Dokumentation, DDR
* 1990: [[Stauffenberg – Verschwörung gegen Hitler]]
* 2004: [[Die Stunde der Offiziere]] Semi-documentary movie [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0418203/ IMDB] [http://www.zdf.de/ZDFde/inhalt/7/0,1872,2140103,00.html ]
* 2004: [[Stauffenberg (Film)]] by [[:de:Jo Baier]] [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0388437/ IMDB] [http://www.new-video.de/film-stauffenberg/ ]
* 2005: [[Stauffenberg (Fernsehdokumentation)]] TV documentary

===Other media===
* [[Eduard Franz]] played Stauffenberg in the film ''[[The Desert Fox: The Story of Rommel|The Desert Fox]]'' which starred [[James Mason]] as [[Field Marshal]] [[Erwin Rommel]] a theoretical participant in the plot (although no evidence has ever been found that directly linked Rommel to any of the conspirators). He is shown as missing his right eye, when in fact it was his left.

*Gérard Buhr played Stauffenberg in the film "The Night Of The Generals" (1967), which included as a subplot a recreation of the July 20th bomb plot.

*Stauffenberg was played by [[Brad Davis (actor)|Brad Davis]] in the television film ''[[The Plot to Kill Hitler]]'' (1990).

* In the episode of the [[United Kingdom|British]] TV sitcom ''[[Red Dwarf]]'' entitled ''[[Timeslides]]'', [[Dave Lister|Lister]] steals Hitler's briefcase, which inside, a "package" from von Stauffenberg is found.

* Von Stauffenberg was portrayed by German actor [[Sky du Mont]] in the 1988 television miniseries version of [[Herman Wouk]]'s ''[[War and Remembrance]]'', which included a dramatization of the July 20 plot.

* Stauffenberg was a character in a 1997 episode of ''[[Highlander: The Series|Highlander]]''.

* [[Tom Cruise]] portrays Stauffenberg in the movie ''[[Valkyrie (film)|Valkyrie]]'', based on the plot and events leading up to the attempted assassination of [[Adolf Hitler]]. The film is slated for a December 2008 release.<ref>dpa-Meldung [http://www.nordclick.de/news/archiv/?id=2108715 Cruise schnappt Kretschmann Stauffenberg-Rolle weg] bei nordclick.de</ref><ref>vgl. [http://www.spiegel.de/kultur/kino/0,1518,475038,00.html Kretschmann stänkert gegen Cruise] bei Spiegel Online</ref>

* Projekt recording artist Thanatos on the ''An Embassy To Gaius'' album has a song called "Von Stauffenberg" as the first track on the CD.

* Melodic death metal band [[Heaven Shall Burn]] dedicated Von Stauffenberg and the [[German Resistance]] in a song from their 2008 release of [[Iconoclast (Part 1: The Final Resistance)]] entitled ''A Quest For Resistance''.

==Notes==
{{reflist|2}}

==Literature==

* {{de icon}} Christian Müller: ''Oberst i.G. Stauffenberg. Eine Biographie''. Droste, Düsseldorf 1970, ISBN 3-7700-0228-8. (First great biography)
* Hoffman, Peter (1995). ''Stauffenberg : A Family History, 1905-1944''. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-45307-0. Translation of the German-language original, ''Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg und seine Brüder''.
* [[Roger Moorhouse]] (2006), ''Killing Hitler'', Jonathan Cape, ISBN 0-224-07121-1
* [[John Wheeler-Bennett|Wheeler-Bennett, John]]; Overly, Richard (1968). ''The Nemesis of Power: German Army in Politics, 1918-1945''. New York: Palgrave Macmillan Publishing Company (New Impression edition). ISBN 0-333-06864-5.
* {{de icon}} Hoffmann, Peter (1998). ''Stauffenberg und der 20. Juli 1944''. München: C.H.Beck. ISBN 3-406-43302-2.
* Burleigh, Michael (2000). ''The Third Reich: A New History''. Macmillan. ISBN 0-333-64487-5.
* Stig Dalager, "Zwei Tage im Juli", documentary novel dealing with the 20th of July. Aufbau Taschenbuch-Verlag 2006.
* Gerd Wunder, "Die Schenken von Stauffenberg". Stuttgart 1972, Mueller und Graeff
* Claus Von Stauffenberg, the July 20 plot, and its aftermath are the subject of Paul West's novel ''The Very Rich Hours of Count von Stauffenberg'', New York: Harper & Row, 1980, First Edition. (ISBN 0060145935).
* Von Stauffenberg and other participants in the July 20 uprising are seen planning and executing the assassination attempt in [[Ethan Mordden]]'s novel ''[[The Jewcatcher]]'', published in 2008.
* Claus Von Stauffenberg featured as a character in Justin Cartwright's 2007 novel, The Song Before It Is Sung


==External links==
==External links==
* [http://cityplanning.lacity.org/complan/HCM/dsp_hcm_result_Citywide.cfm?APC=South%20Los%20Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument (HCM) Report for South Los Angeles]
* [http://www.gdw-berlin.de/b12/start-e.php Stauffenberg and the Assassination Attempt of July 20, 1944] &ndash; Featured topic at the [[Memorial to the German Resistance]]'s website
*[http://www.laalmanac.com/LA/lamap2.htm City of Los Angeles Map] at Given Place Media
* {{cite news
|author=
|title=Emerging from the Nazi shadow?
|date=2004-07-19
|work=[[BBC News]]
|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3897885.stm
|accessdate=2008-08-10
}} &ndash; BBC report of 60th anniversary of the 20 July plot; by Clare Murphy, BBC News Online
* [http://s134542708.websitehome.co.uk/berlinphotos/html/20th_july_1944_memorial_.html Photos of the 20th July 1944 Memorial in Berlin] &ndash; Part of the photo collection of Ian J. Sanders
* [http://bumpshack.com/2007/06/25/germany-bans-tom-cruise-and-scientology/ German Defense Minister Bans Tom Cruise from playing Stauffenberg]
* [http://members.tripod.com/~Nevermore/stauffenberg.html Long Live our Sacred Germany: The Claus von Stauffenberg Story]
* {{de icon}} Stauffenberg-Memorial in Stuttgart [http://www.ncb-ge.de/portal/a/streitkraeftebasis/kcxml/04_Sj9SPykssy0xPLMnMz0vM0Y_QjzKLt4g3cQsBSUGYwfqRMLGglFR9X4_83FR9b_0A_YLciHJHR0VFAHZP5NA!/delta/base64xml/L2dJQSEvUUt3QS80SVVFLzZfOF9PSko!?yw_contentURL=%2F01DB040000000001%2FW26VQA8Q957INFODE%2Fcontent.jsp] inaugurated in presence of son [http://www.ncb-ge.de/portal/PA_1_0_LT/PortalFiles/02DB040000000001/W26VQA4H827INFODE/enthuellung_420.jpg?yw_repository=youatweb]
* [http://www.stern.de/politik/historie/:20.-Juli-1944--Das-Attentat-Hitler/526249.html?eid=526246 Photos from the German Stern magazine] to the July 20 plot
* [http://www.sueddeutsche.de/kultur/artikel/18/119870/ Interview with Berthold Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg (the son) concerning the Tom-Cruise-movie]
* {{cite news
|author=
|title=Germany imposes ban on Tom Cruise
|date=2007-06-26
|work=[[BBC News]]
|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/6240312.stm
|accessdate=2008-08-10
}}
* [http://poopdeck90210.com/ww2his/stauffenberg.htm World at War Biography of Claus Von Stauffenberg]

==Related movies==
* Valkyrie (2008)......Tom Cruise.
* {{imdb title|0066694|Operation Walk&#252;re (1971) (TV)}} 199 min. long documentary by [[Joachim Fest]]
* [[Downfall (film)|Untergang, Der (Germany, 2004)]]
* {{imdb title|0418203|Stunde der Offiziere, Die (2004) (TV)}} "The Hour of Officers"
* {{imdb title|0047790|20. Juli, Der (1955)}}
* {{imdb title|0048040|Es geschah am 20. Juli (1955)}} "It happened July 20th"
* {{imdb title|0062038|The Night of the Generals (1967)}}
* {{imdb title|0388437|Stauffenberg (2004) (TV)}}
* {{imdb title|0100376|The Plot to Kill Hitler (1990) (TV)}}
* [http://www.therestlessconscience.com/ The Restless Conscience (USA 1991)]

{{BD|1907|1944|Stauffenberg, Claus Schenk Graf von}}

[[Category:Executed July 20 Plotters]]
[[Category:Failed assassins of Hitler]]
[[Category:German Resistance]]
[[Category:People condemned by Nazi courts]]
[[Category:German military personnel killed in World War II]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Iron Cross]]
[[Category:Recipients of the German Cross]]
[[Category:People from the Kingdom of Bavaria]]
[[Category:German Roman Catholics]]
[[Category:Stauffenberg family]]
[[Category:German amputees]]
[[Category:People executed by firing squad]]
[[Category:German nobility]]
[[Category:Extrajudicial killings]]
[[Category:German Catholics opposed to the Third Reich]]

{{Link FA|de}}


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[[no:Claus von Stauffenberg]]
[[oc:Claus von Stauffenberg]]
[[nds:Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg]]
[[pl:Claus von Stauffenberg]]
[[pt:Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg]]
[[ksh:Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg]]
[[ru:Штауффенберг, Клаус Шенк фон]]
[[sk:Claus von Stauffenberg]]
[[sr:Клаус фон Штауфенберг]]
[[sh:Claus Graf Schenk von Stauffenberg]]
[[fi:Claus von Stauffenberg]]
[[sv:Claus Schenk von Stauffenberg]]
[[vi:Claus von Stauffenberg]]
[[tr:Claus von Stauffenberg]]
[[zh:克勞斯·馮·施陶芬貝格]]

Revision as of 21:18, 11 October 2008

This is a list of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments in South Los Angeles, California, USA. In total, there are 145 Historic-Cultural Monuments (HCM) in the South Los Angeles area, which includes the historic West Adams, Exposition Park, and University of Southern California campus areas. It also includes historic sites in Watts (including Simon Rodia's Watts Towers), Leimert Park, and Baldwin Hills. A number of additional historic sites and districts in the area have been designated as California Historical Landmarks or listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Three sites in the area have received the higher distinction as National Historic Landmarks -- the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Watts Towers and Baldwin Hills Village. A map displaying the historic sites and districts in South Los Angeles can be viewed by clicking "Map of all coordinates" below to the right.

Current and former Historic-Cultural Monuments

HCM #[1] Landmark name[2] Image Date designated[2] Locality[2] Neighborhood Description[3]
15
(1027)
(2373)
Towers of Simon Rodia (Watts Towers) 01 Mar 1963 1765 E. 107th St.
33°56′19″N 118°14′28″W / 33.93861°N 118.24111°W / 33.93861; -118.24111 (Watts Towers)
Watts Towers constructed by Italian immigrant Simon Rodia between 1921 and 1954
18 Hyde Park Congregational Church (site of) May 10, 1963 6501 Crenshaw Blvd.
33°58′49″N 118°19′52″W / 33.98028°N 118.33111°W / 33.98028; -118.33111 (Hyde Park Congregational Church (site of))
Hyde Park Tiny wooden church with two front-corner towers; demolished in 1964; delisted 1/1/1964
28 William Andrews Clark Memorial Library October 9, 1964 2520 Cimarron St.
34°01′59″N 118°18′51″W / 34.03306°N 118.31417°W / 34.03306; -118.31417 (Clark, William Andrews, Memorial Library)
West Adams Renaissance Revival building completed in 1926; designed by Robert Farquhar
30 Oliver G. Posey-Edward L. Doheny Residence January 8, 1965 8 Chester Place
34°01′50″N 118°16′37″W / 34.03056°N 118.27694°W / 34.03056; -118.27694 (Doheny Residence)
West Adams Mansion built in 1899 for oil tycoon Edward L. Doheny; designed by Eisen & Hunt; now part of St. Mary's College campus
35 Birthplace of Adlai E. Stevenson III August 20, 1965 2639 Monmouth Ave.
34°01′54″N 118°17′06″W / 34.03167°N 118.28500°W / 34.03167; -118.28500 (Stevenson, Adlai E., Birthplace)
West Adams-North University Park Site of birthplace of two-time U.S. Presidential candidate Adlai Stevenson
36
(2372)
Watts Station December 3, 1965 1686 E. 103rd St.
33°56′35″N 118°14′34″W / 33.94306°N 118.24278°W / 33.94306; -118.24278 (Watts Station)
Watts Electric railway station built in early 1900s; the only building along the area known as "Charcoal Alley" to survive the Watts Riots
57
(2364)
Second Church of Christ Scientist of Los Angeles File:Second Church of Christ Scientist.jpg July 17, 1968 946-948 West Adams Blvd.
34°01′51″N 118°16′59″W / 34.03083°N 118.28306°W / 34.03083; -118.28306 (Second Church of Christ, Scientist)
West Adams Built in 1910 and designed by Alfred Rosenheim; as of 2008 for sale for $8 million.
70
(1025)
Widney Hall (Alumni Hall) December 16, 1970 650 Childs Way
34°01′08″N 118°16′56″W / 34.01889°N 118.28222°W / 34.01889; -118.28222 (Widney Hall)
USC Campus Oldest university building in Southern California, in continuous use since 1880
72 Automobile Club of Southern California February 3, 1971 2601 S. Figueroa St.
34°01′41″N 118°16′35″W / 34.02806°N 118.27639°W / 34.02806; -118.27639 (Automobile Club of Southern California)
West Adams Spanish colonial headquarters building erected in 1922; designed by Sumner Hunt and Silas R. Burns
90 St. Vincent de Paul Church July 11, 1971 621 W. Adams Blvd.
34°01′43″N 118°16′34″W / 34.02861°N 118.27611°W / 34.02861; -118.27611 (St. Vincent de Paul Church)
West Adams Second Roman Catholic church in Los Angeles to be consecrated; designed by Albert C. Martin, Sr.
95
(2363)
Rindge House February 23, 1972 2263 S. Harvard St.
34°02′03″N 118°18′25″W / 34.03417°N 118.30694°W / 34.03417; -118.30694 (Rindge House)
West Adams Mansion built in 1906 for Frederick H. Rindge; designed by Frederick Roehrig in Chateauesque style
103 Forthmann House (and Carriage House) October 4, 1972 2801 S. Hoover Blvd.
34°01′45″N 118°17′03″W / 34.02917°N 118.28417°W / 34.02917; -118.28417 (Forthmann House)
West Adams-North University Park Victorian house built in the 1880s; designed by Burgess J. Reeve; relocated in 1989 from original location
117 Residence April 4, 1973 2118 S. Harvard Blvd.
34°02′11″N 118°18′23″W / 34.03639°N 118.30639°W / 34.03639; -118.30639 (Residence)
West Adams American Colonial Revival House built in approximately 1905
120 Saint Sophia Cathedral June 6, 1973 1324 S. Normandie Ave.
34°02′44″N 118°17′58″W / 34.04556°N 118.29944°W / 34.04556; -118.29944 (Saint Sophia Cathedral)
Greek Orthodox cathedral designed by Kalionzes, Klingerman & Walker in the Byzantine style, dedicated in 1952
127 Exposition Club House May 1, 1974 3990 Menlo Ave.
34°00′41″N 118°17′23″W / 34.01139°N 118.28972°W / 34.01139; -118.28972 (Exposition Club House)
Exposition Park Spanish Colonial Revival building completed in 1920s in Exposition Park
128 Hancock Memorial Museum May 15, 1974 3616 University Ave. USC Campus Large mansion built by the Hancock family at Wilshire Blvd. and Vermont Ave., circa 1900; razed in 1938, though four rooms were moved in their entirety to the USC campus
131
(2366)
Dunbar Hotel (Somerville Hotel) Dunbar Hotel, 2008 September 4, 1974 4225 S. Central Ave.
34°00′24″N 118°15′24″W / 34.00667°N 118.25667°W / 34.00667; -118.25667 (Dunbar Hotel)
Central Avenue Focal point of the Central Avenue African-American community in the 1930s and 1940s.
139
(2315)
Shrine Auditorium File:Postcard-ca-los-angeles-shrine-auditorium.jpg March 5, 1975 665 W. Jefferson Blvd.
34°01′23″N 118°16′53″W / 34.02306°N 118.28139°W / 34.02306; -118.28139 (Shrine Auditorium)
University Park Theater seating 6,700 is one of the largest in the United States and was the prior site of the Academy Awards. Also known as Al Malaikah Temple.
159
(2321)
Ralph J. Bunche House July 27, 1976 1221 E. 40th Place
34°00′37″N 118°15′13″W / 34.01028°N 118.25361°W / 34.01028; -118.25361 (Bunche, Ralph J., House)
South Los Angeles Home of Nobel Peace Prize winner in his youth
170 Paul R. Williams Residence December 1, 1976 1690 Victoria Ave.
33°59′59″N 118°26′54″W / 33.99972°N 118.44833°W / 33.99972; -118.44833 (Williams, Paul R., Residence)
House built in the International style in 1952; designed by noted African-American architect Paul R. Williams
174 Village Green (Baldwin Hills Village) May 4, 1977 5112-5595 Village Green
34°01′10″N 118°21′39″W / 34.01944°N 118.36083°W / 34.01944; -118.36083 (Village Green)
Baldwin Hills Urban housing project completed in 1942 featuring extensive grassy areas and open spaces
179 Residence (site of) August 17, 1977 919 W. 20th St.
34°02′09″N 118°16′45″W / 34.03583°N 118.27917°W / 34.03583; -118.27917 (Residence (site of))
Site of Queen Anne Victorian house built in 1908; demolished in 1978
185 President's House (site of) April 19, 1978 7851 Budlong Ave.
33°58′05″N 118°17′47″W / 33.96806°N 118.29639°W / 33.96806; -118.29639 (President's House (site of))
South Los Angeles Mission style house built in 1912 (now the location of the Crenshaw Christian Center Faith Dome)
197
(2319)
Britt House October 18, 1978 2141 W. Adams Blvd.
34°01′59″N 118°18′46″W / 34.03306°N 118.31278°W / 34.03306; -118.31278 (Britt House)
West Adams Classical Revival house built in 1910, designed by Alfred F. Rosenheim; used today as the headquarters of the LA84 Foundation
200 Second Baptist Church Building October 18, 1978 2412 Griffith Ave.
34°01′16″N 118°15′23″W / 34.02111°N 118.25639°W / 34.02111; -118.25639 (Second Baptist Church Building)
Lombard Romanesque church built in 1925, designed by Paul R. Williams; long a hub of the African American community
212
(2367)
Stimson House May 16, 1979 2421 S. Figueroa St.
34°01′46″N 118°16′33″W / 34.02944°N 118.27583°W / 34.02944; -118.27583 (Stimson House)
West Adams Richardsonian Romanesque mansion; built in 1891; originally home of lumber and banking millionaire; survived a dynamite attack by a blackmailer in 1896; later occupied by a brewer, a fraternity house, student housing and a convent
214 Mount Carmel High School (site of) June 6, 1979 7011 S. Hoover St.
33°58′33″N 118°17′15″W / 33.97583°N 118.28750°W / 33.97583; -118.28750 (Mount Carmel High School)
South Los Angeles Spanish Revival style Catholic high school built in 1934
229 Westminster Presbyterian Church June 11, 1980 2230 W. Jefferson Blvd.
34°01′31″N 118°19′11″W / 34.02528°N 118.31972°W / 34.02528; -118.31972 (Westminster Presbyterian Church)
First African American Presbyterian congregation in Los Angeles; Spanish Revival style structure built in 1904
230
(2362)
Villa Maria (Durfee House) June 12, 1980 2425 S. Western Ave.
34°02′01″N 118°18′36″W / 34.03361°N 118.31000°W / 34.03361; -118.31000 (Villa Maria (Durfee House))
West Adams Tudor Revival mansion designed by Frederick Louis Roehrig and built in 1908; bought by Brothers of St. John of God in 1978
240 Residence April 9, 1981 2703 S. Hoover St.
34°01′48″N 118°17′03″W / 34.03000°N 118.28417°W / 34.03000; -118.28417 (Residence)
West Adams-North University Park Queen Anne style home built circa 1891, designed by Bradbeer and Ferris
241 Sunshine Mission April 9, 1981 2600 S. Hoover St.
34°01′52″N 118°17′01″W / 34.03111°N 118.28361°W / 34.03111; -118.28361 (Sunshine Mission)
West Adams Built in 1893, it has housed an experimental kindergarten, a prep school for girls, the headquarters of the Dianetics Foundation, and the Sunshine Shelter for homeless women; also known as Casa de Rosas
242
(2354)
Miller and Herriott Tract House April 9, 1981 1163 W. 27th St.
34°01′49″N 118°17′10″W / 34.03028°N 118.28611°W / 34.03028; -118.28611 (Miller and Herriott Tract House)
West Adams-North University Park Eastlake style house built in 1890, designed by Bradbeer and Ferris
258 Fitzgerald House November 5, 1982 3115 W. Adams Blvd.
34°01′58″N 118°19′05″W / 34.03278°N 118.31806°W / 34.03278; -118.31806 (Fitzgerald House)
West Adams Italian Gothic style house built in 1903, designed by Joseph Cather Newsom
264
(2371)
Vermont Square Branch Library June 7, 1983 1201 W. 48th St.
33°59′59″N 118°17′45″W / 33.99972°N 118.29583°W / 33.99972; -118.29583 (Vermont Square Branch Library)
Vermont Square Oldest branch library in Los Angeles; built in 1913 as a Carnegie library; designed by Hunt & Burns in Beaux Arts style with Italian Renaissance influence
273 Durfee House January 4, 1984 1007 W. 24th St.
34°02′01″N 118°16′55″W / 34.03361°N 118.28194°W / 34.03361; -118.28194 (Durfee House)
West Adams Eastlake style wood frame house built, circa 1885
295 A. E. Kelly Residence July 12, 1985 1140 W. Adams Blvd.
34°01′55″N 118°17′06″W / 34.03194°N 118.28500°W / 34.03194; -118.28500 (Kelly, A.E., Residence)
West Adams - North University Park Queen Anne Victorian house built in the 1890s; fish-scale shingles on second floor
296 John C. Harrison Residence July 25, 1985 1160 W. 27th St.
34°01′48″N 118°17′09″W / 34.03000°N 118.28583°W / 34.03000; -118.28583 (Harrison, John C., Residence)
West Adams - North University Park Queen Anne Victorian house built in 1891 with a three-story tower and wrap-around porch
297 West Adams Gardens August 13, 1985 1158-1176 W. Adams Blvd.
34°01′55″N 118°17′08″W / 34.03194°N 118.28556°W / 34.03194; -118.28556 (West Adams Gardens)
West Adams - North University Park Grouping of seven two-story Tudor Revival residential structures built in 1920, designed by L.A. Smith
300 Casa Camino Real October 29, 1985 1828 S. Oak St.
34°02′13″N 118°16′37″W / 34.03694°N 118.27694°W / 34.03694; -118.27694 (Casa Camino Real)
Eclectic structure built in 1923, designed by Morgan, Walls & Morgan; Beauz Arts exterior with elements of Art Deco and Spanish Revival styles
305
(2358)
John Muir Branch Library June 27, 1986 1005 W. 64th St.
33°58′53″N 118°17′31″W / 33.98139°N 118.29194°W / 33.98139; -118.29194 (John Muir Branch Library)
South Los Angeles Italian Renaissance style branch library built in 1930, designed by Henry F. Withey (Ed. note: List of RHPs in L.A. states this built in 1920, here states 1930, which is it?)
306 Original Vernon Branch Library (site of) June 27, 1986 4504 S. Central Ave.
34°00′09″N 118°15′23″W / 34.00250°N 118.25639°W / 34.00250; -118.25639 (Original Vernon Branch Library (site of))
Branch library that housed large collection of books on African American history
307
(2342)
Washington Irving Branch Library June 27, 1986 1803 S. Arlington Ave.
34°02′26″N 118°19′04″W / 34.04056°N 118.31778°W / 34.04056; -118.31778 (Washington Irving Branch Library)
Lombardic Richardsonian Romanesque library branch built in 1926, designed by Allison & Allison
330 Rosedale Cemetery December 1, 1987 1831 W. Washington Blvd.
34°02′26″N 118°17′53″W / 34.04056°N 118.29806°W / 34.04056; -118.29806 (Rosedale Cemetery)
Cemetery opened in 1884 with pioneer families and 19th century funerary architecture; first in the West to operate a crematorium
331 Pacific Bell Building December 8, 1987 2755 W. 15th St.
34°02′44″N 118°18′07″W / 34.04556°N 118.30194°W / 34.04556; -118.30194 (Pacific Bell Building)
Spanish Mission style garage with Churriqueresque details built, circa 1922
335 Henry J. Reuman Residence December 18, 1987 925 W. 23rd St.
34°02′01″N 118°16′49″W / 34.03361°N 118.28028°W / 34.03361; -118.28028 (Reuman, Henry J., Residence)
West Adams Queen Anne and Colonial Revival transitional style house built, circa 1898, designed by August Wackerbarth
341 First African Methodist Episcopal Zion Cathedral & Community Center January 22, 1988 1449 W. Adams Blvd.
34°01′59″N 118°17′35″W / 34.03306°N 118.29306°W / 34.03306; -118.29306 (First African Methodist Episcopal Zion Cathedral & Community Center)
West Adams Richardsonian Romanesque cathedral built in 1930 for the West Adams Presbyterian Church, designed by architects H.M. Patterson and George W. Kelham
344 Institute of Musical Art February 23, 1988 3210 W. 54th St.
33°59′34″N 118°19′43″W / 33.99278°N 118.32861°W / 33.99278; -118.32861 (Institute of Musical Art)
Music school and recording studio founded in 1922
349
(2330)
Fire Station No. 18 March 29, 1988 2616 S. Hobart Blvd.
34°01′55″N 118°18′27″W / 34.03194°N 118.30750°W / 34.03194; -118.30750 (Engine House No. 18)
West Adams Mission Revival fire station built in 1912, designed by John C. Parkinson (Ed. note: List of RHPs in L.A. states it was built in 1904, which is it?. And, coords showed as Fire Station No. 18. Is Fire Station rather than Engine House a valid alt name? Perhaps for mention in article which is official name according to whom.)
350 Ecung-Ibbetson House and Moreton Bay Fig Tree March 29, 1988 1190 W. Adams Blvd.
34°01′56″N 118°17′10″W / 34.03222°N 118.28611°W / 34.03222; -118.28611 (Ecung-Ibbetson House and Moreton Bay Fig Tree)
West Adams - North University Park Richardsonian Romanesque and Victorian home built in 1899
407 Seyler Residence January 20, 1989 2341 Scarff St.
34°01′56″N 118°16′50″W / 34.03222°N 118.28056°W / 34.03222; -118.28056 (Seyler Residence)
West Adams Queen Anne style Victorian home built in 1894, designed by Abraham M. Edelman
408
(2351)
Machell-Seaman House January 20, 1989 2305 Scarff St. or 2341 Scarff St.
34°1′55″N 118°16′46″W / 34.03194°N 118.27944°W / 34.03194; -118.27944 (Machell-Seaman House)
West Adams Assymetrical Queen Anne style Victorian home built in 1888 (Ed. note: Listed at 2341 by NRHP program; listed at 2305 by LAHCM, which is it?)
409 Burkhalter Residence January 20, 1989 2309-2311 Scarff St.
34°01′58″N 118°16′49″W / 34.03278°N 118.28028°W / 34.03278; -118.28028 (Burkhalter Residence)
West Adams Queen Anne style Victorian home built in 1895
410 Distribution Station No. 31 January 20, 1989 1035 W. 24th St.
34°02′02″N 118°16′59″W / 34.03389°N 118.28306°W / 34.03389; -118.28306 (Distribution Station No. 31)
West Adams Industrial building designed by staff architects at Pacific Gas & Electric Company, built in 1925
417 Gordon L. McDonough House February 21, 1989 2532 5th Ave.
34°02′00″N 118°19′19″W / 34.03333°N 118.32194°W / 34.03333; -118.32194 (McDonough, Gordon L., House)
West Adams American Craftsman style house built in 1908, designed by architect Frank M. Tyler
419 Walker Mansion March 3, 1989 3300 W. Adams Blvd.
34°01′56″N 118°19′12″W / 34.03222°N 118.32000°W / 34.03222; -118.32000 (Walker Mansion)
West Adams Grand Craftsman style mansion with Tudor, Mediterranean and Mission Revival influences
434 Colonel John E. Stearns Residence May 5, 1989 27 Saint James Park
34°01′54″N 118°16′49″W / 34.03167°N 118.28028°W / 34.03167; -118.28028 (Stearns, Col. John E., Residence)
West Adams Classical Revival house built in 1900, designed by architect John C. Parkinson
455 Margaret T. and Bettie Mead Creighton Residence October 24, 1989 2342 Scarff St.
34°01′52″N 118°16′48″W / 34.03111°N 118.28000°W / 34.03111; -118.28000 (Creighton Residence)
West Adams Colonial Revival style house built in 1896
456 Ezra T. Stimson House October 24, 1989 839 W. Adams Blvd.
34°01′50″N 118°16′50″W / 34.03056°N 118.28056°W / 34.03056; -118.28056 (Stimson, Ezra T., House)
West Adams Tudor Revival house built in 1901, designed by architect Frederick Roehrig
457 Freeman G. Teed House October 24, 1989 2365 Scarff St.
34°01′54″N 118°16′51″W / 34.03167°N 118.28083°W / 34.03167; -118.28083 (Teed House)
West Adams American Craftsman style house built in 1893
458 Wells-Halliday Mansion November 3, 1989 2146 W. Adams Blvd.
34°01′56″N 118°18′48″W / 34.03222°N 118.31333°W / 34.03222; -118.31333 (Wells-Halliday Mansion)
West Adams Dutch Colonial style house built in 1901; Craftsman style wing built in 1909
466 Henry J. Foster Residence October 17, 1989 1030 W. 23rd St.
34°02′04″N 118°16′58″W / 34.03444°N 118.28278°W / 34.03444; -118.28278 (Foster Residence)
West Adams Queen Anne style house built circa 1889
467 Chalet Apartments October 27, 1989 2375 Scarff St.
34°01′54″N 118°16′52″W / 34.03167°N 118.28111°W / 34.03167; -118.28111 (Chalet Apartments)
West Adams Two-story, 19-unit apartment complex built in 1913; designed by Frank M. Tyler with the appearance of a single-family house
477 Briggs Residence January 30, 1990 3734 W. Adams Blvd.
34°01′56″N 118°19′33″W / 34.03222°N 118.32583°W / 34.03222; -118.32583 (Briggs Residence)
West Adams Alpine Craftsman style house built in 1912, designed by Hudson & Munsell with steep, cross-gabled roof
478 Guasti Villa-Busby Berkeley Estate January 30, 1990 3500 W. Adams Blvd.
34°01′58″N 118°19′20″W / 34.03278°N 118.32222°W / 34.03278; -118.32222 (Guasti Villa-Busby Berkeley Estate)
West Adams Beaux Arts – Italian Renaissance style mansion, designed by Hudson & Munsell; purchased in 1936 by Busby Berkeley
479 Dr. Grandville MacGowan Home January 30, 1990 3726 W. Adams Blvd.
34°01′56″N 118°19′32″W / 34.03222°N 118.32556°W / 34.03222; -118.32556 (MacGowan Home)
West Adams Alpine Craftsman style mansion with Tudor Revival influences, built in 1912 and designed by Hudson & Munsell
487 Sanchez Ranch May 1, 1990 3725 Don Felipe Drive
34°00′25″N 118°20′24″W / 34.00694°N 118.34000°W / 34.00694; -118.34000 (Sanchez Ranch)
Adobe structures once part of the Rancho La Cienega o Paso de la Tijera, built in 1790
489 Richard H. Alexander Residence May 30, 1990 2119 Estrella Ave.
34°01′57″N 118°16′35″W / 34.03250°N 118.27639°W / 34.03250; -118.27639 (Alexander, Richard H., Residence)
West Adams Two-story Eastlake style house built circa 1888
496 Lycurgus Lindsay Mansion May 30, 1990 3424 W. Adams Blvd.
34°01′56″N 118°19′19″W / 34.03222°N 118.32194°W / 34.03222; -118.32194 (Lycurgus Lindsay Mansion)
West Adams Mission Revival style house built circa 1900 with tiles fro Western Art Tile works owned by Lycurgus Lindsay; house designed by Charles F. Whittlesey
497 Charles Clifford Gibbons Residence June 1, 1990 2124 Bonsallo Ave.
34°01′58″N 118°16′37″W / 34.03278°N 118.27694°W / 34.03278; -118.27694 (Gibbons, Charles Clifford, Residence)
West Adams Queen Anne style house built in 1892, designed by J.H. Bradbeer
498 Lois Ellen Arnold Residence June 12, 1990 1978 Estrella Ave.
34°02′00″N 118°16′31″W / 34.03333°N 118.27528°W / 34.03333; -118.27528 (Arnold, Lois Ellen, Residence)
West Adams Queen Anne style house built in 1888
498 Agnes B. Heimgartner Residence June 12, 1990 1982 Bonsallo Ave.
34°02′01″N 118°16′35″W / 34.03361°N 118.27639°W / 34.03361; -118.27639 (Shannon, Michael, Residence)
West Adams Eastlake style house built in 1893
500 John B. Kane Resldence June 12, 1990 2122 Bonsallo Ave.
34°01′58″N 118°16′36″W / 34.03278°N 118.27667°W / 34.03278; -118.27667 (Kane, John B., Resldence)
West Adams Eastlake cottage built in 1892, designed by Fred R. Dorn
501 Michael Shannon Residence June 12, 1990 1970 Bonsallo Ave.
34°02′02″N 118°16′34″W / 34.03389°N 118.27611°W / 34.03389; -118.27611 (Shannon, Michael, Residence)
Eastlake style townhouse built circa 1890
502 Collins-Furthmann Mansion June 20, 1990 3691-3801 Lenawee Ave.
34°01′08″N 118°22′34″W / 34.01889°N 118.37611°W / 34.01889; -118.37611 (Collins-Furthmann Mansion)
507 Hiram V. Short Residence November 2, 1990 2108-2110 1/2 Estrella Ave.
34°01′58″N 118°16′33″W / 34.03278°N 118.27583°W / 34.03278; -118.27583 (Short, Hiram V., Residence)
West Adams
510 Residence January 11, 1991 1157 W. 55th St.
33°59′33″N 118°17′44″W / 33.99250°N 118.29556°W / 33.99250; -118.29556 (Residence)
511 Residence January 11, 1991 1100 W. 55th St.
33°59′31″N 118°17′38″W / 33.99194°N 118.29389°W / 33.99194; -118.29389 (Residence)
512 Church of The Advent January 16, 1991 4976 W Adams Blvd.
34°01′55″N 118°20′58″W / 34.03194°N 118.34944°W / 34.03194; -118.34944 (Church of The Advent)
513 Southern California Edison Service Yard Structure January 15, 1991 615 E. 108th St.
33°56′18″N 118°15′52″W / 33.93833°N 118.26444°W / 33.93833; -118.26444 (Southern California Edison Service Yard Structure)
516
(2708)
Saint John's Episcopal Church January 22, 1991 514 W. Adams Blvd.
34°01′39″N 118°16′31″W / 34.02750°N 118.27528°W / 34.02750; -118.27528 (St. John's Cathedral)
West Adams Romanesque Episcopal church built in 1925; now serves as Episcopal cathedral for Los Angeles
517 Residence January 16, 1991 917 E. 49th Place
33°59′55″N 118°15′34″W / 33.99861°N 118.25944°W / 33.99861; -118.25944 (Residence)
518 Residence January 16, 1991 1207 E. 55th St.
33°59′35″N 118°15′14″W / 33.99306°N 118.25389°W / 33.99306; -118.25389 (Residence)
519 Cockins House February 1, 1991 2653 S. Hoover St.
34°01′49″N 118°17′03″W / 34.03028°N 118.28417°W / 34.03028; -118.28417 (Cockins House)
West Adams-North University Park
548 Korean Independence Memorial Building October 2, 1991 1368 W. Jefferson Blvd.
34°01′31″N 118°17′49″W / 34.02528°N 118.29694°W / 34.02528; -118.29694 (Korean Independence Memorial Building)
551 Thomas W. Phillips Residence November 13, 1991 2215 S. Harvard Blvd.
34°02′08″N 118°18′24″W / 34.03556°N 118.30667°W / 34.03556; -118.30667 (Phillips, Thomas W., Residence)
West Adams
560 Wright House May 26, 1992 2121-2123 Bonsallo Ave.
34°01′59″N 118°16′38″W / 34.03306°N 118.27722°W / 34.03306; -118.27722 (Wright House)
West Adams
561 Allen House May 26, 1992 2125 Bonsallo Ave.
34°01′58″N 118°16′38″W / 34.03278°N 118.27722°W / 34.03278; -118.27722 (Allen House)
West Adams
574 Pierce Brothers Mortuary February 29, 1993 714 W. Washington Blvd.
34°02′07″N 118°16′29″W / 34.03528°N 118.27472°W / 34.03528; -118.27472 (Pierce Brothers Mortuary)
578 Emmanuel Danish Evangelical Lutheran Church May 25, 1993 4254-4260 3rd Ave.
34°00′20″N 118°19′12″W / 34.00556°N 118.32000°W / 34.00556; -118.32000 (Emmanuel Danish Evangelical Lutheran Church)
580 Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Building June 29, 1993 4261 S. Central Ave.
34°00′22″N 118°15′24″W / 34.00611°N 118.25667°W / 34.00611; -118.25667 (Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Building)
Central Avenue Headquarters of one of the city's most successful African American-owned businesses starting in 1927; now a child development center
583 Zobelein Estate September 21, 1993 3738-3770 S. Flower St.
34°00′58″N 118°16′54″W / 34.01611°N 118.28167°W / 34.01611; -118.28167 (Zobelein Estate)
Exposition Park
591 Denker Estate March 8, 1994 3820 W. Adams Blvd.
34°01′56″N 118°19′38″W / 34.03222°N 118.32722°W / 34.03222; -118.32722 (Denker Estate)
West Adams
598 Benjamin J. Waters Residence September 27, 1994 2289 W. 25th St.
34°02′02″N 118°19′02″W / 34.03389°N 118.31722°W / 34.03389; -118.31722 (Waters, Benjamin J., Residence)
West Adams
599 Julius Bierlich Residence September 27, 1994 1818 S. Gramercy Place
34°02′28″N 118°18′45″W / 34.04111°N 118.31250°W / 34.04111; -118.31250 (Bierlich, Julius, Residence)
600 Lucien and Blanche Gray Residence September 27, 1994 2515-2519 4th Ave.
601 Gramercy Homestead Park September 27, 1994 2098-2108 W. 24th St.
34°02′04″N 118°18′43″W / 34.03444°N 118.31194°W / 34.03444; -118.31194 (Gramercy Homestead Park)
West Adams
602 Auguste R. Marquis Residence (Filipino Federation of America) September 27, 1994 2300-2312 W. 25th St., 2501 S. Arlington Ave.
34°02′00″N 118°19′04″W / 34.03333°N 118.31778°W / 34.03333; -118.31778 (Marquis, Auguste R., Residence (Filipino Federation of America))
West Adams
606 Kerckhoff House November 1, 1994 730-746 W. Adams Blvd.
34°01′45″N 118°16′45″W / 34.02917°N 118.27917°W / 34.02917; -118.27917 (Kerckhoff House)
West Adams
607 Powers Apartment #1 November 1, 1994 2325-2329 Scarff St.
34°01′57″N 118°16′50″W / 34.03250°N 118.28056°W / 34.03250; -118.28056 (Powers Apartment #1)
West Adams
608 Powers Apartment #2 November 1, 1994 2326-2332 Scarff St.
34°01′56″N 118°16′48″W / 34.03222°N 118.28000°W / 34.03222; -118.28000 (Powers Apartment #3)
West Adams
609 Powers Apartment #3 November 1, 1994 2308-2312 1/2 Scarff St.
34°01′58″N 118°16′47″W / 34.03278°N 118.27972°W / 34.03278; -118.27972 (Powers Apartment #3)
West Adams
610 Shankland House November 1, 1994 715 W. 28th St.
34°01′38″N 118°16′48″W / 34.02722°N 118.28000°W / 34.02722; -118.28000 (Shankland House)
620 Leimert Plaza February 2, 1996 4395 Leimert Blvd.
34°00′08″N 118°19′51″W / 34.00222°N 118.33083°W / 34.00222; -118.33083 (Leimert Plaza)
Leimert Park
621 Alice Lynch Residence March 6, 1996 2414 4th Ave.
34°02′05″N 118°19′15″W / 34.03472°N 118.32083°W / 34.03472; -118.32083 (Lynch, Alice, Residence)
625 Thomas Butler Henry Residence June 21, 1996 1400 S. Manhattan Place
34°02′46″N 118°18′35″W / 34.04611°N 118.30972°W / 34.04611; -118.30972 (Thomas Butler Henry Residence)
626 Eyraud Residence June 21, 1996 1326 S. Manhattan Place
34°02′47″N 118°18′35″W / 34.04639°N 118.30972°W / 34.04639; -118.30972 (Eyraud Residence)
627 John F. Powers Residence June 21, 1996 1547 S. Manhattan Place
34°02′38″N 118°18′37″W / 34.04389°N 118.31028°W / 34.04389; -118.31028 (John F. Powers Residence)
654 Craftsman Mansion September 18, 1998 4318 Victoria Park Place
34°02′45″N 118°19′47″W / 34.04583°N 118.32972°W / 34.04583; -118.32972 (Craftsman Mansion)
Victoria Park
658 Harry & Grace Wurtzel House November 4, 1998 926 Longwood Ave.
662 Perrine House June 22, 1999 2229 S. Gramercy Place
34°02′10″N 118°18′49″W / 34.03611°N 118.31361°W / 34.03611; -118.31361 (Perrine House)
672 Percy H. Clark Residence November 9, 1999 2639 South Van Buren Place
34°01′53″N 118°17′50″W / 34.03139°N 118.29722°W / 34.03139; -118.29722 (Clark, Percy H., Residence)
West Adams
678 The Furlong House April 25, 2000 2657 S. Van Buren Place
34°01′51″N 118°17′50″W / 34.03083°N 118.29722°W / 34.03083; -118.29722 (Furlong House)
West Adams
679 Maverick's Flat April 25, 2000 4225-4225 1/2 S. Crenshaw Blvd.
688 Holiday Bowl December 19, 2000 3730 S. Crenshaw Blvd.
34°01′09″N 118°20′05″W / 34.01917°N 118.33472°W / 34.01917; -118.33472 (Holiday Bowl)
705 Dryden Residence December 18, 2001 3825 West Adams Blvd.
34°01′58″N 118°19′37″W / 34.03278°N 118.32694°W / 34.03278; -118.32694 (Dryden Residence)
West Adams
725 John G. Jones Lodge October 1, 2002 5900 South Broadway
33°59′11″N 118°16′40″W / 33.98639°N 118.27778°W / 33.98639; -118.27778 (Jones, John G., Lodge)
726 Gilbert W. Lindsay Home October 1, 2002 774 East 52nd Place
33°59′41″N 118°15′40″W / 33.99472°N 118.26111°W / 33.99472; -118.26111 (Lindsay, Gilbert W., Home)
744 Lincoln Theatre March 18, 2003 2300 S Central Ave.
34°01′13″N 118°15′13″W / 34.02028°N 118.25361°W / 34.02028; -118.25361 (Lincoln Theatre)
754 First Presbyterian Church of Los Angeles June 3, 2003 1809 West Blvd.
34°02′26″N 118°20′14″W / 34.04056°N 118.33722°W / 34.04056; -118.33722 (First Presbyterian Church of Los Angeles)
757 Joseph Dupy Residence-South Seas Edwardian July 29, 2003 2301 W 24th St.
34°02′05″N 118°19′03″W / 34.03472°N 118.31750°W / 34.03472; -118.31750 (Joseph Dupy Residence-South Seas Edwardian)
West Adams
761 Kissam House July 29, 2003 2160 W 20th St.
34°02′18″N 118°18′39″W / 34.03833°N 118.31083°W / 34.03833; -118.31083 (Kissam House)
764 Lady Effie's Tea Parlor October 1, 2003 453 E Adams Blvd.
34°01′22″N 118°15′49″W / 34.02278°N 118.26361°W / 34.02278; -118.26361 (Lady Effie's Tea Parlor)
774 Angelus Funeral Home January 6, 2004 1028 - 1030 E Jefferson Blvd.
34°00′42″N 118°15′25″W / 34.01167°N 118.25694°W / 34.01167; -118.25694 (Angelus Funeral Home)
776 Ray Charles Worldwide Offices and Studios January 21, 2004 2107 W Washington Blvd.
34°02′25″N 118°18′22″W / 34.04028°N 118.30611°W / 34.04028; -118.30611 (Ray Charles Worldwide Offices and Studios)
779 Michael J. Connell Carriage House May 19, 2004 634 W. 23rd St.
34°01′51″N 118°16′31″W / 34.03083°N 118.27528°W / 34.03083; -118.27528 (Connell, Michael J., Carriage House)
West Adams
780 Bernays House May 7, 2004 1656 W. 25th St.
34°02′00″N 118°17′57″W / 34.03333°N 118.29917°W / 34.03333; -118.29917 (Bernays House)
West Adams
787 Fire Station 21 August 10, 2004 1187 E. 52nd St.
33°59′45″N 118°15′15″W / 33.99583°N 118.25417°W / 33.99583; -118.25417 (Fire Station 21)
791 Betty Hill House April 13, 2005 1655 W. 37th Place
34°01′12″N 118°18′28″W / 34.02000°N 118.30778°W / 34.02000; -118.30778 (Hill, Betty, House)
798 Mary E. Smith House May 18, 2005 1186 W. 27th St.
34°01′48″N 118°17′10″W / 34.03000°N 118.28611°W / 34.03000; -118.28611 (Smith, Mary E., House)
West Adams-North University Park
811 Tate-McCoy Homestead July 8, 2005 1463-1469 S. Norton Ave.
34°02′40″N 118°19′30″W / 34.04444°N 118.32500°W / 34.04444; -118.32500 (Tate-McCoy Homestead)
818 J.R. Dennison House July 13, 2005 1919 S. Harvard Blvd.
34°02′22″N 118°18′16″W / 34.03944°N 118.30444°W / 34.03944; -118.30444 (Dennison, J.R., House)
819 Vista Magnolia Court July 13, 2005 1201-1215 W. 27th St., 2671 S Magnolia Ave.
820 Williard J. Doran Residence July 13, 2005 1194 W. 27th St.
34°01′48″N 118°17′11″W / 34.03000°N 118.28639°W / 34.03000; -118.28639 (Doran Residence)
West Adams
851 28th Street Y.M.C.A. Building September 27, 2006 1006 E 28th St.
34°01′01″N 118°15′26″W / 34.01694°N 118.25722°W / 34.01694; -118.25722 (28th Street Y.M.C.A. Building)
854 Cline Residence and Museum October 11, 2006 1401-1409 South Gramercy Place
34°02′45″N 118°18′48″W / 34.04583°N 118.31333°W / 34.04583; -118.31333 (Cline Residence and Museum)
855 Statton Residence October 11, 2006 1415 South Gramercy Place
34°02′44″N 118°18′48″W / 34.04556°N 118.31333°W / 34.04556; -118.31333 (Statton Residence)
864 Life Magazine/Leimert Park House March 27, 2007 3892 S Olmstead Ave. Leimert Park
865 Joseph L. Starr Farmhouse April 11, 2007 2801 S Arlington Ave.
866 Glen Lukens Home and Studio April 11, 2007 3425 West 27th St.
34°01′51″N 118°19′19″W / 34.03083°N 118.32194°W / 34.03083; -118.32194 (Lukens, Glen, Home and Studio)
879 Louise Pratt House July 17, 2007 2706 South Menlo St.
34°01′48″N 118°17′24″W / 34.03000°N 118.29000°W / 34.03000; -118.29000 (Pratt, Louise, House)
West Adams - North University Park
880 Bigelow-Wood Residence July 17, 2007 2905 South Hoover St.
34°01′40″N 118°17′03″W / 34.02778°N 118.28417°W / 34.02778; -118.28417 (Bigelow-Wood Residence)
884 Waters-Shaw Family Residence August 15, 2007 2700 S Severance St.
34°01′44″N 118°16′53″W / 34.02889°N 118.28139°W / 34.02889; -118.28139 (Waters-Shaw Family Residence)
West Adams
885 Holmes-Shannon House August 15, 2007 4311 Victoria Park Dr.
34°02′47″N 118°19′45″W / 34.04639°N 118.32917°W / 34.04639; -118.32917 (Holmes-Shannon House)
Victoria Park
924 Bigford Residence July 2, 2008 1546 South Fifth Ave.

Non-HCM sites also recognized

The Historic-Cultural Monuments listed above include many of the most important historic sites in South Los Angeles. In addition, the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum is a U.S. National Historic Landmark in the area. Some other sites and historic districts within the South Los Angeles area have been listed on the National Register of Historic Places or designated as California Historical Landmarks, but were not also listed as HCMs. These are:

Code[4] Landmark name Image Selected date Locality Neighborhood Description[3]
(1010)
(2348)
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Exposition Park 3911 S. Figueroa St.
34°00′50″N 118°17′16″W / 34.01389°N 118.28778°W / 34.01389; -118.28778 (Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum)
Exposition Park
(1029) Vermont Avenue Presbyterian Church 5300-5308 S. Vermont Ave.
33°59′38″N 118°17′28″W / 33.99389°N 118.29111°W / 33.99389; -118.29111 (Vermont Avenue Presbyterian Church)
(1032)
(2712)
McCarty Memorial Christian Church 2002-01-17[5] 4101 W. Adams Blvd.
34°01′58″N 118°19′47″W / 34.03278°N 118.32972°W / 34.03278; -118.32972 (McCarty Memorial Christian Church)
West Adams Gothic Revival church of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ); founded in 1932 as a white congregation; integrated and became a multi-racial congregation in the mid-1950s
(2192) Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 900 Exposition Blvd. Exposition Park Opened in 1913; fitted marble walls and domed and colonnaded rotunda; often used as filming location
(2300) St. James Park Historic District Roughly bounded by 21st and 23 Sts., Mount St. Mary's College, W. Adams Blvd. and Union Ave.
34°01′53″N 118°16′48″W / 34.03139°N 118.28000°W / 34.03139; -118.28000 (St. James Park Historic District)
West Adams
(2301) Twentieth Street Historic District 912-950 W. 20th St.
34°02′09″N 118°16′47″W / 34.03583°N 118.27972°W / 34.03583; -118.27972 (Twentieth Street Historic District)
(2304) Van Buren Place Historic District 2620-2657 Van Buren Place (Both Sides of St.)
34°01′55″N 118°17′50″W / 34.03194°N 118.29722°W / 34.03194; -118.29722 (Van Buren Place Historic District)
West Adams Craftsman style homes built from 1903-1916 in 2600 block of Van Buren Place
(2307) Exposition Park Rose Garden 900 Exposition Blvd. Exposition Park Sunken rose garden created in the 1920s, featuring more than 20,000 rose bushes and 200 varieties of roses
(2311) Menlo Avenue-West Twenty-ninth Street Historic District Bounded by Adams Blvd., Ellendale, Thirtieth Ave., and Vermont West Adams-North University Park
(2506) Moneta Branch Library 4255 S. Olive St.
34°00′20″N 118°16′46″W / 34.00556°N 118.27944°W / 34.00556; -118.27944 (Moneta Branch Library)
Helen Hunt Jackson Branch 1987-05-19 2330 Naomi St.
34°01′07″N 118°15′05″W / 34.01861°N 118.25139°W / 34.01861; -118.25139 (Jackson, Helen Hunt, Branch)
South Los Angeles Former branch library; built in 1926; currently a church
North University Park Historic District 2004-02-11 Roughly bounded by Hoover St., Adams Blvd, 28th St. and Magnolia Ave. West Adams-North University Park Historic district with many Victorian homes, also the birthplace of Adlai Stevenson

See also

References

  1. ^ Numbers in 1-999 series are L.A. Historic-Cultural Monuments; CHL numbers are state-designated California Historical Landmark sites; 2000 series denote LAHCM assigned numbers for Federally-designated sites. Blue colors represent higher designations as National Historic Landmarks and/or listing on the National Register of Historic Places; yellow represents sites that are L.A. Historic-Cultural Monuments without a higher designation. No color represents information is unavailable or the monument has been delisted. To resort on this column, refresh your browser.
  2. ^ a b c Los Angeles Department of City Planning (August 14, 2008), Historic - Cultural Monuments (HCM) Listing: City Declared Monuments (PDF), City of Los Angeles, retrieved 2008-09-22{{citation}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  3. ^ a b Various sources cited in articles, retrieved on various dates.
  4. ^ Numbers in 1000 series denote LAHCM assigned numbers for state-designated sites; 2000 series denote LAHCM assigned numbers for Federally-designated sites. Blue colors represent higher designations as National Historic Landmarks and/or listing on the National Register of Historic Places. No color represents information is unavailable or the monument has been delisted. To resort on this column, refresh your browser.
  5. ^ National Register listing date

External links