The short history of West Adams and Sugar Hill Curbed LA
Table Of Content These are the California cities where $150,000 still buys you a home. Could you live here? Birkin bag thieves prowl L.A.’s rich neighborhoods, fueling a bizarre black market How ‘Shiny Happy People’ pieces together the most damning exposé of the Duggars yet Christina Applegate contracts virus after eating food contaminated with fecal matter She is a senior at the University of Southern California studying international relations, where she has served as the news assignments editor and magazine editor at the Daily Trojan. During the 1910s and ’20s, West Adams Heights saw its status as one of the premier addresses in Los Angeles decline. There was an exodus westward to new tony neighborhoods like Beverly Hills. With the coming of the Depression, many of the remaining West Adams Heights homeowners were forced to sell their homes. In need of cash, they were willing to sell to anyone who could pay, regardless of what their deeds said. These are the California cities w...