Northridge, Los Angeles

Northridge is a neighborhood of Los Angeles, California in the San Fernando Valley. It is the home of California State University, Northridge, as well as eleven public and eight private schools.

Originally named Zelzah, the community was renamed North Los Angeles in 1929 to emphasize its closeness to the booming city. This created confusion with Los Angeles and North Hollywood. At the suggestion of a civic leader, the community was renamed Northridge in 1938. Northridge can trace its history back to the Gabrielino (or Tongva) people and to Spanish explorers. Its territory was later sold by the Mexican governor to Eulogio de Celis, whose heirs divided it for sale.

The area has been the home of notable people, and it has notable attractions and points of interest. Residents have access to a municipal recreation center and a public swimming pool.

Population
The 2000 U.S. census counted 57,561 residents in the 9.47 sqmi Northridge neighborhood—or 6,080 /sqmi, among the lowest population densities for the city. In 2008, the city estimated that the population had increased to 61,993. In 2000 the median age for residents was 32, about average for city and county neighborhoods; the percentage of residents aged 19 to 34 was among the county's highest.

The neighborhood was considered "highly diverse" ethnically within Los Angeles, with a high percentage of Asian people. The breakdown was whites, 49.5%; Latinos, 26.1%; Asians, 14.5%; blacks, 5.4%; and others, 4.6%. Mexico (24.7%) and the Philippines (9.8%) were the most common places of birth for the 31.8% of the residents who were born abroad—an average figure for Los Angeles.

The median yearly household income in 2008 dollars was $67,906, considered high for the city. Renters occupied 46.4% of the housing stock, and house- or apartment-owners held 53.6%. The average household size of 2.7 people was considered average for Los Angeles.

In 2000 there were 3,803 military veterans, or 8.5% of the population, a high percentage compared to the rest of the city.

Geography


Northridge touches Porter Ranch and Granada Hills on the north, North Hills on the east, Van Nuys on the southeast, Lake Balboa and Reseda on the south and Winnetka and Chatsworth on the west.

Indigenous peoples
The area now called Northridge was first inhabited about 2,000 years ago by the Native American Gabrielino (or Tongva) people. Totonga was their tribal village and where Northridge eventually became located. The Gabrielino-Tongva people, who lived in dome-shaped houses, are sometimes referred to as the "people of the earth". They spoke a Takic Uto-Aztecan (Shoshonean) language.

American conquest
When American and naval military forces decided to occupy California in the late-1840s, representatives of the Mexican Governor Pio Pico broke with the tradition of "granting" land and, instead, sold it, without the usual area limitations to Eulogio de Celis, a native of Spain. By 1850, de Celis was listed in the Los Angeles Census as an agriculturist, 42 years old, and the owner of a real estate worth $20,000.

Land division
A few years later, the land was split up. The heirs of Eulogio de Celis sold the northernly half - 56,000 acre - to Senator George K. Porter, who had called it the "Valley of the Cumberland" and Senator Charles Maclay, who exclaimed: "This is the Garden of Eden." Porter was interested in ranching; Maclay in subdivision and colonization. Francis Marion ("Bud") Wright, an Iowa farm boy who migrated to California as a young man, became a ranch hand for Senator Porter and later co-developer of the 1,100 acre Hawk Ranch, which is now Northridge land.

Growth and metamorphosis
In 1951, a local reporter reported that Northridge's population had reached 5,500 residents, an increase of 1,000 people from 1950. In addition, it was around this time that Reseda Boulevard had been paved at its full width and become the main business street of boulevard proportions. The need also arose for Northridge to accommodate the new population, so in 1954 the first middle school opened in the rapidly growing town. Northridge Junior High School, later known as Northridge Middle School, opened with 1,000 students who had been brought all the way from Fulton Middle School in Van Nuys.

Education
Thirty-four percent of Northridge residents aged 25 and older had earned a four-year degree by 2000, an average percentage for the city but high for the county. The percentages of the same-age residents with a bachelor's degree and a master's degree or higher were high for the county.

Primary and secondary schools
In 1962, Nobel Junior High School in Northridge became the first air-conditioned school in the Los Angeles school district.

In 1982 the board considered closing Prairie Street Elementary School in Northridge. It was located on the California State University, Northridge campus, and that university used Prairie as a laboratory school. In April 1983 an advisory committee of the LAUSD recommended closing eight LAUSD schools, including Prairie Street School. In August 1983 the board publicly considered closing Prairie, which had 280 students at the time. In 1984 the board voted to close the Prairie Street School. In 1985 some parents were trying to have Prairie Street School re-opened.

Secondary and lower-grade schools within the Northridge boundaries are:

Public

 * Andasol Avenue Elementary School, 10126 Encino Avenue
 * Alfred Bernhard Nobel Middle School, 9950 Tampa Avenue
 * Topeka Drive Elementary School, 9815 Topeka Drive
 * Balboa Gifted / High Ability Magnet Elementary School, alternative, 17020 Labrador Street
 * Northridge Academy High School, 9601 Zelzah Avenue
 * Oliver Wendell Holmes Middle School, 9351 Paso Robles Avenue
 * Dearborn Street Elementary School, 9240 Wish Avenue
 * Calahan Street Elementary School, 18722 Knapp Street
 * Napa Street Elementary School, 19010 Napa Street
 * Northridge Middle School, 17960 Chase Street
 * Parthenia Street Elementary School, 16825 Napa Street

Private

 * Casa Montessori, 17633 Lassen Street
 * Our Lady of Lourdes, 18437 Superior Street
 * Highland Hall Waldorf School, K-12, 17100 Superior Street
 * Art of Learning Academy, 9535 Alden Avenue
 * St. Nicholas School, elementary, 9501 Balboa Boulevard
 * First Presbyterian Church of Granada Hill, elementary, 10400 Zelzah Avenue
 * Cornerstone Christian Academy, 11031 Yolanda Avenue
 * East Valley Academy, K-12, 20212 Londelius Street

University


California State University, Northridge, or CSUN, part of the California State University system, offers bachelor's and master's degrees in a number of disciplines. The school is a major producer of K12 teachers in the region and the nation as a whole. CSUN also has engineering, business, and film programs.

CSUN had its beginnings as a college on Nordhoff Street and Etiwanda Avenue and officially opened in 1956 as "San Fernando Valley Campus of Los Angeles State College of Applied Arts and Sciences." Two years later it separated from its parent and became "San Fernando Valley State College." By the early 1970s, however, this institution became known as "California State University, Northridge." By fall of 2016, CSUN had reached enrollment of almost 40,000 students.

A 2004 study revealed that CSUN is a major contributor to the local economy: between $663 million and $686 million annually. Additionally, CSUN employs 5,800 people directly through the university and adds another 5,700 to 6,000 jobs into the local economy.

Social Change in Cal State Northidge
California State Northridge is considered one of the most diverse and has one of the largest number of cultural classes in the Cal State School Systems now but before it was different. During 1906, many black students considered Valley State College (CSUN) the most racist local institution. Fall of 1968, only 200 out of 18,000 students were African Americans. Not only did the school stay silent during the assassination of Dr. King, but six months after, it ignored the allegations of the football coach abusing its players. That’s when the school’s conditions changed because of protests by the Black Campus Union. They asked for a black studies department leading to a degree, recruitment of 500 new black students a year, firing the coach, immunity from prosecution for black students, and more. There was a lot of racial tension between blacks and whites, Life magazine announcing, “People of the San Fernando Valley-suburban, conservatives, largely white- are upset, confused, and angered by what has happened at Valley State”. A rally was held at the school in January of 69’ (2 months after) in support of the 27 black students arrested. This time 286 students and faculty were arrested during the protest and surprisingly the majority were white. That’s when Valley State became an activist campus and had changed its name to California State University of Northridge. The campus since then, was never again the white conservative campus it had been.

Motion pictures and television
Silent star Janet Gaynor and her costume-designer husband Adrian were the first owners of a spacious estate in Northridge, which was later sold to Barbara Stanwyck and Robert Taylor. Later, actor Jack Oakie owned the property and lived on it. The Oakie house was set for the wrecking ball, but in 2010 the city agreed to buy the Tudor-style stone landmark and its 10 acre ranch estate.

Mrs. Zeppo Marx and Barbara Stanwyck started Marwyck Ranch as a horse breeding farm. Northridge was known as the "Horse Capital of the West," with regular Sunday horse shows, annual stampedes, and country fairs.

Devonshire Downs
In the late 1960s, Devonshire Downs was the site of two major rock music festivals. The little-known two-day 1967 Fantasy Faire and Magic Music Festival (at "Devonshire Meadows") featured The Doors, Jefferson Airplane, Country Joe and the Fish, The Grass Roots, Canned Heat, Iron Butterfly and several other bands. The better-known but confusingly named 1969 Newport Pop Festival was a massive three-day event that featured Jimi Hendrix and many other top acts. It took place in June and was briefly the largest music festival ever held before losing that distinction to Woodstock the following August. Like its famous successor, it had problems with large numbers of gate-crashers, and some young attendees far from home camped out nearby in sleeping bags. Unlike Woodstock, "nearby" included parts of suburban Northridge, where most of the local residents were horrified to find their neighborhoods invaded by "hippies". A ban on rock music festivals soon followed.

Earthquakes
The 1994 Northridge earthquake was named for Northridge based on early estimates of the location of the quake's epicenter; however, further refinements showed it to be technically in neighboring Reseda. The earthquake, which occurred on a blind thrust fault, was one of the strongest ground motions ever recorded in North America. Freeways collapsed, and many buildings suffered irreparable damages. Vertical and horizontal accelerations lifted structures off their foundations. During the 1994 quake, the Northridge Hospital Medical Center remained open and treated more than 1,000 patients who came to the facility during the first few days after the 6.7-magnitude quake.

This was the second time in 23 years that the area had been affected by a strong earthquake. On February 9, 1971 the San Fernando earthquake (also known as the Sylmar earthquake) struck, having a magnitude of 6.5.

Points of interest

 * Brent's Deli, famous deli in Northridge
 * CSUN Botanic Garden
 * California State University, Northridge (CSUN)
 * Donald E. Bianchi Planetarium at CSUN
 * Northridge Fashion Center, Regional shopping mall.
 * Northridge Hospital Medical Center
 * Studio 606 West, the recording studio of rock band Foo Fighters
 * U.S. Metric Association is based in Northridge.

Hospital
Northridge Hospital Medical Center consists of a 411-bed hospital and serves 2 million residents of the Valley. The hospital is one of only two facilities in the Valley certified as a trauma center for treating life-threatening injuries.

Parks, recreation and sports
The Recreation Center is located in Northridge. It has an indoor gymnasium, without weights, which may also be used as an auditorium. Its capacity is 400. Doc Green is the commissioner of the youth sports leagues at Northridge Recreation Center. The park also has barbecue pits, a lighted baseball diamond, lighted indoor basketball courts, lighted outdoor basketball courts, a children's play area, a community room, picnic tables, a lighted soccer field, and lighted tennis courts. The Northridge Pool, on the recreation center grounds, is an outdoor heated seasonal pool.

Dearborn Park is located in Northridge. The unstaffed, unlocked park has lighted outdoor basketball courts, a children's play area, picnic tables, and lighted tennis courts. Vanalden Park, an unstaffed pocket park, has a horseshoe pit, a jogging path, and picnic tables.

Local government
Los Angeles Fire Department Station 70 (Northridge) and Station 103 (Northridge/CSUN) serve the community.

City of Los Angeles Neighborhood Councils that cover Northridge:


 * Northridge East Neighborhood Council
 * Northridge West Neighborhood Council
 * Northridge South Neighborhood Council

The Los Angeles Police Department operates two police stations that serve Northridge:
 * Devonshire Community Police Station serves residents north of Roscoe Boulevard.
 * West Valley Community Police Station serves residents south of Roscoe Boulevard.

County, state, and federal representation
The Los Angeles County Department of Health Services operates the Pacoima Health Center in Pacoima, serving Northridge.

The United States Postal Service Northridge Post Office is located at 9534 Reseda Boulevard.

The U.S. Census Bureau operates the Los Angeles Regional Census Center in Chatsworth, adjacent to Northridge.

Notable people

 * Mike Bercovici, football quarterback
 * Hal Bernson, Los Angeles City Council member, 1979-2003
 * Bob Brunner, producer and screenwriter
 * Matt Cassel, professional football
 * Jarron Collins, professional basketball
 * Jason Collins, professional basketball
 * Jim Davis, actor
 * Linda Fratianne, silver medal Olympian figure skater at the 1980 Winter Olympics
 * Brian Grazer, film and television producer
 * Mike Houghton, professional football
 * Ryan Kalish, professional baseball
 * Casey Matthews, professional football
 * Clay Matthews, professional football player
 * John H. Meier, business adviser to Howard Hughes
 * Lynn Carey Saylor, singer, guitarist and composer
 * Bob Skube, professional baseball
 * Malcolm Smith, professional football
 * Eric Steelberg, cinematographer
 * Brian Vranesh, professional golfer
 * Duffy Waldorf, professional golfer
 * Jeff Weaver, Major League Baseball
 * Jered Weaver, Major League Baseball
 * Danny Worth, professional baseball
 * Ariane Andrew, professional wrestler