215 SOUTH WILTON PLACE, as the historic home looked when sold on March 1, 2021.
There is a disturbance in the atmosphere of the leafy community of Wilton Place. A house has been brutally vandalized.
Tragically, it is a familiar story: 215 S. Wilton Pl., a treasured historic home, built in 1907 and designated a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument in 1992, and also within the Wilton Place National Historic District, was sold by its devoted owner to a new buyer who, the seller and her real estate agent believed, also loved the home and only planned to add a bathroom and renovate the kitchen.
Well, the reality turned out to be something different, as concerned neighbors in early April began to see demolition activity removing hardwood floors, mahogany details etc. Further investigation revealed that the majority of the historic interior had been brought down to the 100-year-old studs, causing an irreparable loss of historic fabric, a monument plundered.
Fern Glen house near La Jolla High School is designated historic
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The man behind the Mills Act
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In this era of ideological polarization and perpetual partisan warfare, itâs difficult to grasp the collegial, bipartisan ambience that once prevailed in Californiaâs Senate.
Democrats usually occupied most of the Senateâs 40 seats, but Republicans were accorded virtually equal opportunities to carry significant legislation and even chaired major committees. Leaders of the two parties maintained the clubby atmosphere with an informal prohibition on partisan challenges of incumbents.
A rebellious Republican senator named H.L. Richardson disliked the no-challenge understanding and sponsored Republican candidates who defeated three Democratic senators in the 1978 and 1980 elections, exploiting Californiaâs rising crime rates.