![]() May 8, 1959: Councilman Edward R. Roybal meets with the Arechiga family at Curtis Street and Malvina Avenue, where they camped out in their fight against being evicted from Chavez Ravine.
Photograph by Harry Chase / Los Angeles Times
Sept. 16, 1959: Groundbreaking for Dodger Stadium. |
Eric Avila is an associate professor of Chicano studies, history and urban planning at UCLA. His book, “Popular Culture in the Age of White Flight,” deals in part with the Dodgers’ decision to move to Los Angeles and the construction of Dodger Stadium in Chavez Ravine. He answered questions about the Dodgers and Chavez Ravine in an e-mail interview with Keith Thursby.
I realized that Dodger Stadium was another component of this new suburban culture that was taking shape in L.A. during the postwar period. Along with shopping malls, television, theme parks, movies, Dodger Stadium emerged as one of the new cultural institutions that defined the identity of Los Angeles during the 1950s. Thus, I saw the need to include it in my book. 2. There’s a wonderful passage in your book from a former Chavez Ravine resident describing life there before many of the residents were moved out for a housing project that never happened: “There were dances in the churchyard. Pageants held in the streets. Weddings in which the whole community joyously participated.” Reading The Times’ coverage in 1958-59 provides no idea what the community was like at that point. Can you describe life for the remaining residents. How many people were still fighting the Dodgers’ planned move? Photograph by Hackley / Los Angeles Mirror-News Jan. 9, 1952: Homes being cleared from Chavez Ravine. It’s not surprising to me that the Times didn’t cover the conditions of community life in the Chavez Ravine during the 1950s, except to emphasize that the ravine was a worthless piece of land — a “junkyard,” I think it called that neighborhood — in need of redevelopment. But it’s important to remember that by the time the Dodgers had agreed to move to Los Angeles, most of the residents of the ravine had already moved out, based on an earlier promise from the city that public housing was going to be built in the area. I can only speculate on their disappointment when they learned that the project was canceled, fueled by the later discovery that the city was going to subsidize O’Malley’s bid to build a stadium on the site. And that was the crux of the opposition to the “Sweetheart deal” between O’Malley and City Hall: that the city reneged on its promise to build housing for poor people because government-subsidized housing was “socialistic,” then turned around and subsidized (Walter) O’Malley’s bid to build a stadium in the area (I spell out the terms of that deal in my book). Many Angelenos saw that as pure hypocrisy (and it very much reminds me of current accusations of “socialism” in the U.S.). 3. How would you describe the role of The Times?
4. The campaign for the stadium included the passage of Proposition B, which approved the Dodgers’ deal with the city. How did the city leaders approach that campaign and what did you think of the tactics that were used? The city and The Times used scare tactics to the effect of “if you don’t vote for Proposition B, then the Dodgers will leave L.A. and find another city more willing to accommodate their interests.” No evidence of this, of course, but that’s how The Times advocated its side of the controversy. What many people don’t realize is that Proposition B passed by a narrow margin: Many people did not approve of the deal between the city and the Dodgers, as they felt that the city was giving away too much to bring the Dodgers to L.A. In other words, the Dodgers arrived amidst a great deal of controversy and by no means was there any kind of consensus about their arrival in Southern California. 5. You linked the building of Dodger Stadium to the development of high culture in neighboring Bunker Hill. Can you explain the connection?
6. We’re approaching the anniversary of the Arechiga family evictions. What were the longer-term implications of those evictions, which many people outside Los Angeles saw on television? The long-term reverberations of the evictions left a residue of bitterness among many local Mexican Americans, who remember a much longer history of displacement and dispossession in California and the U.S. West. For many of these people, the televised spectacle of this Mexican family being forcibly evicted from their homes resonated within a larger historical context of the American conquest of Mexico and the subordination of Mexican Americans within a new political, economic and racial order. 7. How did the Dodgers’ move to Los Angeles fit in the cultural changes happening in the region in the late ’50s and early ’60s? This essentially is what my book is about, so I can’t recite the entire argument for you here, but basically, Dodger Stadium was another component of a new suburban culture that took shape in Southern California that catered to white middle class suburban consumers who sought safe, convenient and controlled cultural experiences that were removed from the historic diversity and perceived dangers of the city. Disneyland, shopping malls, freeways were all part of this new suburban culture. True, Dodger Stadium was in the heart of the city, but it was a self-contained island of sports entertainment (defined at the time as “wholesome family entertainment”), lodged upon a hilltop ravine, insulated by a massive parking lot and easily accessed by the new freeways. Photograph by Steve Fontanini / Los Angeles Times
May 2, 1964: A large crowd packs into Dodger Stadium for a Sunday afternoon game. It looks like every parking spot is taken.
8. Let’s talk about another scenario. What do you think the Dodgers would have done if they were somehow not able to play in Chavez Ravine? What might have become of the area and the people still living there? And would the Dodgers playing somewhere other than Chavez Ravine been better for the region in the long run?
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“The city, however, boosted by the cheerleading of the L.A. Times, proposed what was essentially a gift of the Chavez Ravine (since it had already been cleared initially for a defunct public housing project) to O’Malley, which O’Malley accepted in exchange for the 11 acres in South-Central.”
Basically a swap of at least 300 acres (ballparks.com) to as much as 352 acres (wiki) to Walter O’Malley for 11 acres and a 35 year old minor league stadium in South Central Los Angeles to the City of Los Angeles. The stadium in South-Central was demolished in 1969 and the 11 acres redeveloped as a Community Rec Center.
There were some extras that the City got from O’Malley but mostly minor things.
O’Malley did keep his end of the bargain and built Dodger Stadium (and the giant parking lot surrounding it). Dealings of other professional sports franchise owners that came and went in Southern California wouldn’t end so well. Al Davis, one time USC assistant football coach, comes to mind for some reason.
If Chavez Ravine hadn’t become Dodger Stadium, it would have been “redeveloped” in some other way. If the City didn’t “sell” the land to O’Malley, it would have been sold to some other developer or group of developers and turned into something else. Probably some sort of upscale residential community not unlike Bunker Hill (which, although primarily commercial development does have a lot of residential units). CRA, eminent domain, tax revenues and all that.
Its all Frank McCourt’s now. For $355 Million (Forbes.com), he now has some 300 plus acres of land in the vicinity of Downtown Los Angeles, a 47 year old stadium (third oldest in MLB) and a major league baseball team. One of his employees just flunked a drug test. I saw the story in the news.
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It is also important to remember that the big busniess and political movers and shakers essentially facilitated the removal of the Ravine residents by labeling the proposed housing project as socialistic (i.e. communist). Chandler and his cronies prety much hand-picked Norris Poulson to run against Mayor Bowron under an anti-public housing campaign essentailly guaranteeing a victory and elimination of the Ravine residents. The Dodgers did not displace the residents – they merely were opportunists. The real villains are the businessmen and politicians (like Chandler) who wanted the residents out of the ravine for their own personal gain.
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… the city reneged on its promise to build housing for poor people because government-subsidized housing was “socialistic,” then turned around and subsidized (Walter) O’Malley’s bid to build a stadium in the area (I spell out the terms of that deal in my book). Many Angelenos saw that as pure hypocrisy (and it very much reminds me of current accusations of “socialism” in the U.S.).
But in what way is government-run housing and eminent domain transfer of property to a private entity not socialism? The moral here is that the well-connected do well under socialism, and the poor and powerless do not. Government promises to the former residents of Chavez Ravine were forgotten the second the possibility a major league team — and not just any major-league team, but the Dodgers, a team with a first-class pedigree in late seasons — could be attracted.
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I believe it was fairly well known that O’Malley had bought Wrigley Field. If it was not, that was the fault of the media, because it was not a secret deal.
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There are craftsman homes in the middle of Elysian Park! Some of Chavez Ravine survives on the north side of Dodger Stadium, by Amador Street. Some of the residents that were displaced moved there, to Elysian Heights, Angelino Heights, and the greater Echo Park area. There are also craftsman and Victorian homes on the south side of Dodger stadium, walking distance to Elysian Park! Not to mention a sliver of Chavez Ravine right between the old Naval Reserve Armory and the Pasadena Freeway.
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My Grandparents were one of the families evicted from Chavez Ravine. I would like to have more information on the situation. She was the last one to wed in
the Chapel that was in the Ravine. I find it fascinating. Thank you very much.
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