Boyle Heights, Los Angeles, California

Boyle Heights is a district on the east side of Los Angeles, California, USA. Originally owned by the early L.A. Boyle-Workman family, it was subdivided in 1875 and named after Andrew Boyle. Always one of the most heterogenous neighborhoods in the city, it was a center of Jewish and Japanese-American life in the early 20th century, and is now a strongly Latino district. This evolution is evidenced, among many other ways, by the name of the main drag: once Brooklyn Avenue, it was rechristened Cesar Chavez Boulevard. Boyle Heights is crisscrossed by several major freeways, including the San Bernardino Freeway and the Santa Ana Freeway. It is located in the 90033 ZIP Code. As of the census of 2000, there are 87,426 people in the neighborhood. The racial makeup of the neighborhood is 36.50% White (1.61% non-Latino white), 0.98% African American, 1.11% Native American, 2.06% Asian, 0.08% Pacific Islander, 54.75% from other races, and 4.53% from two or more races. 94.95% of the population are Hispanic or Latino of any race.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
international creative management
common public license
subbase
magi network
unitarian universalist christian fellowship
primase
covenant of unitarian universalist pagans
hastings county, ontario
william west skiles
canadian national exhibition
john a. roebling suspension bridge
heath ledger
kalypso (mythology)
jst (disambiguation)
william dillon otter
professor challenger
boleslawiec county
brian helgeland
heavenly mother
2057
exercise physiology
dzierzoniw county
glogw county
environmental effects on physiology
jawor county
gra county
mary ann mobley
legnica county
united future new zealand
annie oakley
powiat of klodzko
kamienna gra county
emmett dalton
peter dunne
god ate my homework
apache kid
jelenia gra county
battle of port arthur
sinclair basic
hiiu county
moric benovsky
luban county
lubin county
milicz county