| 
Whittier is located in Los Angeles
County, about 12 miles southeast of the City of Los Angeles.
A five Member City Council under the Council-Manager form
of government directs the City. Whittier is a charter law
city and was incorporated in 1898. The Charter form of City
government was ratified in 1955. The City covers 14.8 square
miles and has an estimated population of 87,190. Businesses
and industries in the area include 443 professional services,
539 retail stores, 186 family-type restaurants, 46 manufacturing
plants, 10 hotels and motels, 8 automobile dealerships and
over 276 specialty shops and boutiques, predominantly located
in Uptown Whittier, the Quad shopping mall, as well as the
Whittwood Town Center.
In 1784 Manuel Nieto, a retired
captain who served in the Portola Expedition, was granted
300,000 plus acres of land by the King of Spain. The land
grant, in what is now California, stretched from the hills
north of Whittier to the sea, and from the Santa Ana River
to the San Gabriel River. By 1822 Mexico had achieved political
independence from Spain, recalled the Spanish-appointed Governor
from Alta California and appointed its own. In 1834 Mexico
began to "secularize" the missions and issued land
grants to individual rancheros. Juan Crispin Perez received
a grant for Rancho Paso de Bartolo in 1835 for land that had
initially belonged to the San Gabriel Mission. Perez eventually
sold five parcels of the Paso de Bartolo land to Pio de Jesus
Pico (1801-1894), a ranchero who had already served as Governor
once (1832-33) and was to become last Mexico-appointed Governor
of California (1845-46). Pico built his home east of the San
Gabriel River and South of Whittier Boulevard (El Camino Real),
now the Pio Pico State Historic Park. The Park has recently
undergone extensive renovations and re-opened in September
2003. For more information on the Pio Pico Adobe and Gardens,
please click here.
Modern Whittier roots can be
traced to 160 acres of public land acquired in 1868 by Jacob
Gerkens. Gerkens was a German immigrant who paid $234 to the
U.S. government for the land under the auspices of the Homestead
Act. Mr. Gerkens built a small cabin on the property which
stands today as the Jonathan Bailey House. The land changed
hands several times before 1,259 acres were acquired in 1887
by a group of Quakers interested in founding a new community
in California. The group acquired the land as the Pickering
Land and Water Development Company. Many "Friends"
on the East Coast bought lots from the Company sight unseen,
but all "fair-minded people" were invited to settle
here. Farmers in the area planted barley, beans, cabbage,
corn, oats, peanuts, tomatoes and citrus. The town was named
after fellow Quaker John Greenleaf Whittier, a famous poet,
writer and newspaper editor. John Greenleaf Whittier never
had the opportunity to visit the town that bears his name
but he did write and dedicate a poem in honor of the new City.
"My Name I Give
To Thee"
Dear Town, for whom the flowers are born,
Stars shine, and happy songbirds sing,
What can my evening give to thy morn,
My Winter to Thy Spring? A life not void of pure intent
With small desert of praise or blame;
The Love I felt, the Good I meant,
I leave Thee with My Name.
Southern Pacific Railroad built
the first railroad spur to Whittier in 1887. The railroad
spur helped promote the boom of the 1880's; lots were sold
and resold and the community flourished. Whittier's first
commercial enterprise, a cannery, was followed by a lumber
mill then a grist mill. By the 1890s the citrus industry was
taking over and by 1901 the Whittier Citrus Association was
formed and "Quaker Brand" citrus was known around
the world. By 1906, 650 carloads of oranges and 250 carloads
of lemons were shipped annually by rail. Harriet Russell Strong
began growing walnuts in the area in 1887 and others soon
followed, eventually Whittier was known as the largest walnut
growing area in the United States. In 1904 the Pacific Electric
opened the trolley line known as "Big Red Cars"
from Los Angeles to Whittier. In the first two decades over
a million passengers a year rode to and from Los Angeles on
the Whittier line.
In 1884 an old shack (10' by
12') was converted into a schoolhouse, near what is now Painter
Avenue, with Miss Georgia Freeman as the school teacher. This
first school in Whittier was only used for two years until
the Evergreen School was constructed. The Evergreen School
was also quickly outgrown and construction began on the Bailey
School in 1889. The Jonathan Bailey School was the primary
school for much of Whittier until it was eventually demolished.
The schoolhouse bell from the original Bailey School can be
seen at City Hall.
In 1887 the Pickering Land and
Water Company set aside a 20-acre parcel of land for the development
of a college, but a collapse in the land boom stalled construction.
Progress on developing a college was sporadic, but on July
30, 1896 the Whittier Academy, operating since 1891, officially
changed its name to Whittier College with 100 students enrolled.
By 1906, Whittier College was an educational institution with
laboratories, boarding halls, a large gymnasium and athletic
fields. Due to an economic depression in the 1890s, the first
bachelors degrees were not awarded at the college for 17 years.
After World War II Whittier
grew rapidly and the sub-dividing of orange groves began,
driven by housing shortages in southern California. In 1955
the new Civic Center complex was completed and the City Council
met in new chambers for the first time on March 8, 1955. The
City continued to grow as the City annexed portions of Whittier
Boulevard and East Whittier, the 1961 annexation added over
28,000 people to the population, bringing the total to about
67,000.
Whittier's strong sense of history
and vision for the future has made it an up-scale and dynamic
residential community. Throughout the years, the City of Whittier
has striven to provide a healthy and safe community and a
well-maintained infrastructure enhanced by planned patterns
of growth and development. Through a balance of economic,
social, political, cultural and recreational opportunities,
the City Council has encouraged an atmosphere conducive to
community spirit and active participation in the affairs and
progress of the community. Such efforts have been made to
ensure a visually pleasing community in which the City's identity
and character are preserved and enhanced.
For more information about
Whittier's History, please visit the Whittier Historical Society's
website at www.whittiermuseum.org.
|