Hancock Park is a historic and affluent urban
neighborhood in Los Angeles, California. Its boundaries are Rossmore Avenue to
the East, Melrose Avenue to the North, Highland Avenue to the West, and
Wilshire Boulevard to the South. Its East and West borders are often confused
with Larchmont Village and Windsor Square to the East, and the Fairfax District
to the West. Contrary to popular usage, Larchmont Village and Windsor Square
are (technically) not part of Hancock Park "proper" ? rather, they are
their own distinct neighborhoods.
Hancock Park was developed in the 1920s by the Hancock
family, with profits earned from oil drilling in the former Rancho La Brea
(much of which is now the Miracle Mile district). Hancock Park owes its name to
developer-philanthropist G. Allan Hancock, who subdivided the property in the
1920s. Hancock, born and raised in a home at what is now the La Brea tar pits,
inherited 4400 acres, which his father, Major Henry Hancock, had acquired from
the Rancho La Brea property owned by the family of Jose Jorge Rocha.
Some 71 oil wells were operating at capacity on the land
from 1905 to 1910. Nine years later Hancock subdivided the property into
residential lots. He leased 105 acres to the Wilshire Country Club with an
option to buy. The Hancock Park development was started on Rossmore Avenue and
moved west to Highland Avenue in 1921. Outstanding
architects of the era designed the palatial two-story, single family residences
in various Period Revival styles (including Tudor Revival, English Revival,
Spanish Colonial Revival, Mediterranean Revival, Monterey Revival, and American
Colonial Revival) for influential members of Los Angeles society.
Architects such as Paul Williams, A. C. Chisholm and John
Austin were hired to design homes for many of the city's pioneer families. The
list of families who moved into Hancock Park's first homes reads like a
"Who's Who" of California: Doheny, Chandler, Huntington, Van Nuys,
Crocker, Banning, Newmark, Van de Kamp and Duque, were some of the early
residents.
In sharp contrast to most Los Angeles neighborhoods, houses in
Hancock Park are set well back from the street, most power and telephone lines
are buried, and fences are strongly discouraged. The area also surrounds the Wilshire Country Club and the Los Angeles Tennis Club. These
characteristics, along with the area's abundance of classic Los Angeles
architecture, have made it one of the most desirable areas in all of Southern
California ever since its development, and the average household income of its
residents consistently ranks among the highest in the United States.
Hancock Park homes have been used for filming of movies
since the beginning including, recently, The
Aviator. This film about Howard Hughes showcased a notorious incident where
Hughes, who indeed owned a large house on the 9th green of the tony Wilshire
Country Club, had to crash land a plane he was piloting on one of the course?s
fairways.
Hancock Park is also the home of the very desirable 3rd St Elementary and
the Marlborough School for girls.