My wife got a last-minute call this morning for a temp job. We hopped int the car and I drove her there. Afterward, I headed out to explore a city that is an important part of Hollywood history and the history of my own family:
Culver City.
First a bit of history:
Harry Culver first to California in 1910 and learned Real Estate and sought to create a grand “balanced community”. Then in 1917 he drew up the Articles of Incorporation for Culver City. Then in 1924, Harry Culver moved his real estate office into the Hunt Hotel, which would later be named the Culver Hotel which has become a local landmark and is on the National Register of Historic Places.

Culver endorsed Thomas Ince’s establishing the first of three movie studios in the town that would be known as “The Heart of Screenland.”
Besides the fact that I love the movie industry, why is this so important to me? Well, let me tell you.
After my grandparents moved out to California from New York city, and settled in my home town, they showed interest in other parts of Southern California.
Not long after my second uncle was born, they were invited to Culver City to consider purchasing lang there. (Who invited them, and what the original reason, I do not know.)
They would tell the story of taking my baby uncle with them and visit a Real Estate agent’s office in the building we know as the Culver Hotel.


Two statements came out of that event.
At one point my grandfather said: “The carpet in the office was too plush. I don’t trust him.”
The second came from my grandmother, after they were taken to the top of the hotel to look out at all the land around the fledgling community and the vast emptiness up against the nearby hills and rolling fields of barley. Thinking of the baby in her arms she said; “Who would want to live here.”
What makes my grandmother’s statement so fascination and prophetic is because the child that was in her arm that day would grow up and after returning from World War II would marry and raise his family in Culver City.

I wonder also about my grandfather’s opinion of the office they were in. Could that real estate agent have been Harry Culver himself? We don’t know, but there is a strong possibility that they were in his offices inside the hotel that would later bare his name.
So, after dropping off my wife I drove down to Culver City. I had worked in a temp job there years ago at the Sony Studios corporate offices. The studio has since sold off what we called SPP (Sony Pictures Plaza). I wanted to wander around the area. As I entered the heart of the city, I was looking for a place to park and followed the signs until they pointed to a drive into a building I had never seen before. Parked, I entered an elevator back to the surface. When the doors opened, I was greeted by an old familiar site. The front gates of the Culver Studio.

While I had worked in SPP, my wife had worked for Sony owned animation company just around the corner from the studio on Ince Blvd.
Remember Thomas Ince? He started the what would be known as the Culver Studios. Ince was a pioneer in the silence film era. The studio would go through many hands over the coming century, from Cecil B. DeMille, to RKO, Desilu Studios (Lucille Ball and Desi Arnez), and others. It continues to be a working studio today.
I didn’t have as much time to wander about as I would have liked, but I enjoyed lunch in a restaurant in that new building over the parking structure. My greatest problem with the building is that you can’t see the Culver Studio’s ‘colonial’ front building from Culver Blvd as you could have for nearly a century.

It was a nice day out, bringing back many family memories, and of my own working around the area.
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