Itâs hard to imagine Inglewoodâan area The Times named as one of the âlast black enclavesâ in Los Angeles, and the site of Sunday's Super Bowlâas Klanland, but thatâs what it was.
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[Essential California Newsletter] February 7, 2022
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[Click to view images]( 6, 1922: Members of the Ku Klux Klan at funeral services for a member at Inglewood Cemetery. (Los Angeles Times) Good morning, and welcome to the Essential California [newsletter](. Itâs Monday, Feb. 7. Iâm Justin Ray. On Feb. 13, thousands of people will descend upon Inglewood to see the nationâs biggest annual sporting event. The city, with a population of about 108,000 people, will grow substantially as sports fans flock to SoFi Stadium to see the Los Angeles Rams take on my hometown, the Cincinnati Bengals in Super Bowl LVI. The entire city of L.A.[looks to gain financially from the circus]( but itâs a big moment specifically for Inglewood. The area that gave us music stars [Becky G]( Swae Lee and model turned TV host Tyra Banks will finally be on the national stage itself. The area has seen a previous boom, but that was long ago. During the 1920s, Inglewood was an agricultural hub, and the nationâs fastest-growing city. But there was a sinister side to Inglewoodâs new prosperity. At the time, the [Ku Klux Klan]( had a strong presence in Southern California, and Inglewood was one of its main stomping grounds. The Klan first emerged during the Civil War era, [then had a revival in the 1920s partly because of Black northward migration](. Itâs hard to imagine the area The Times in 2019 named as one of the [âlast black enclavesâ]( in Los Angeles as Klanland, but thatâs what it was. In fact, to keep it a white Protestant town, Klansmen posted signs that read âCaucasian-only.â The group lost prominence in the state due to a brutal raid the KKK carried out on immigrant bootleggers. There are many details about it [here]( but Iâm going to give you a quick version. On April 22, 1922, more than 100 Klansmen came to the Inglewood home of Fidel and Angela Elduayer, Basque immigrants from Spain. On that cold night, they ransacked the house and beat Fidel and his brother. They also forced the coupleâs two teenage daughters to disrobe (accounts from that time donât say what happened, but we can imagine). Inglewood police arrived, bullets were fired, and a Klansman was killed. A foe of the Klan, Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Thomas Woolwine, launched an investigation, along with state and federal agents. This forced 150 reluctant Klansmen to testify about the incident. Investigators from Woolwineâs office searched the Klanâs headquarters, located in the Haas building at 7th Street and Broadway in Los Angeles. They found robes and hoods, crosses, membership cards and dues receipts of several hundred Los Angeles, Kern and Orange County men who had paid $10 to join. Many of them were exposed as a result of the entire debacle. But thereâs more. A 1922 edition of The Times that I found through a service I have through my library card includes a quote from then-Sheriff William Traeger about the raid. âI regret that in Los Angeles county, in this day of civilization, that any number of men should bind themselves together for the purpose of committing an affront to law, order and decency, such as occurred at Inglewood,â Traeger said. âIf I can ascertain that any peace officer, over whom I have control, is a member of a secret organization, which countenances such procedure, or is present at any meeting at which such conduct is planned, and still retains his membership, I shall dismiss him immediately from public service.â It should be noted that Woolwineâs crackdown on the Klan in L.A. County uncovered the fact that Sheriff Traeger and L.A. Police Chief Louis D. Oaks [had themselves been KKK members](. Both claimed that they had resigned from the organization. The raid eventually led to the group being outlawed in California, The Times reported in 1949. Related reading: [From the KKK to skinheads, a century of fighting hate in Orange County.]( The area is still more Republican and conservative than California as a whole â supporting local and national candidates who oppose COVID-19 health orders, for instance â though it is far from the political monolith it used to be. But itâs home to some fringe groups with extreme views that have damaged the countyâs overall reputation. And now, hereâs whatâs happening across California: Note: Some of the sites we link to may limit the number of stories you can access without subscribing. ADVERTISEMENT
L.A. STORIES The Silicon Valley suburb of Woodside has come up with a novel way to block plans that would potentially bring in more affordable housing: Declare itself inhabited by mountain lions.[Los Angeles Times]( [A young deer bounds across a meadow]
A young deer bounds across a meadow at Filoli Historic House and Garden in Woodside, Calif. (Christopher Reynolds / Los Angeles Times) Outlining how health and safety rules could be loosened as the coronavirusâ Omicron variant continues to wane, Los Angeles County officials said Thursday that face coverings may no longer be required in certain outdoor settings once COVID-19 hospitalizations drop, and indoor mask rules could be loosened after further gains. [Los Angeles Times]( Our daily news podcast If youâre a fan of this newsletter, youâll love our daily podcast âThe Times,â hosted every weekday by columnist Gustavo Arellano, along with reporters from across our newsroom. Go beyond the headlines. Download and listen [on our App]( subscribe [on Apple Podcasts]( and follow [on Spotify](. POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT Knock LA reports that in June 2016, senior aides at Mayor Eric Garcettiâs office used their private email accounts to suggest âproactivelyâ leaking information to the media on the Department of Water and Power billing scandal. The outlet claims the mayorâs staffers wanted to shape the narrative through journalists. The scandal involves an employee of a consulting firm who allegedly used money from a DWP contract to pay for prostitutes and parties in Las Vegas. [Knock LA]( How oil lobbyists continue to exert influence on California regulators and lawmakers. While California leaders hail the stateâs progress on reducing emissions, emails obtained by Capital & Main show that the oil and gas industry continues to exert influence over critical climate policy. An email exchange from last spring âconfirms that the industry was able to win a subtle but significant change to a bill that would have codified Californiaâs 2045 net-zero greenhouse gas emissions goal into law before it even went to a committee hearing.â [Capital & Main]( CRIME, COURTS AND POLICING A suspect has been arrested in connection with the SoFi Stadium violent altercation that left a San Francisco 49ers fan in a medically induced coma, officials said. The suspectâs name has not been released. The fan, 40-year-old Daniel Luna, was hospitalized after he was found bleeding in the stadium parking lot about half an hour into the Rams-49ers showdown last Sunday. [Los Angeles Times]( [SoFi Stadium]
SoFi Stadium, the scene of a violent incident on Jan. 30. Support our journalism [Subscribe to the Los Angeles Times.]( ADVERTISEMENT
HEALTH AND THE ENVIRONMENT Dr. Nadine Burke Harrisâ interview before resigning as Californiaâs first surgeon general. The stateâs top physician, whose last day will be Feb. 11, spoke to KCRA a week before announcing her resignation and mentioned some of the problems that may have been weighing on her. âMy biggest challenge is that there are never enough hours in the day. Iâm working as state surgeon general during a pandemic. Iâm also a mom â my husband and I have four boys,â she told [KCRA]( In rural California, the unvaccinated and ill overwhelm hospital staff. âThis is not ideal for us,â said emergency room Dr. Leroy Pascal. [Los Angeles Times]( [Nurses Amber McCarter Rebekah Seyler attend to a COVID-19 patient.]
Nurses Amber McCarter Rebekah Seyler attend to a COVID-19 patient at Desert Valley Hospital in the Victor Valley, where half of residents are fully vaccinated. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
CALIFORNIA CULTURE Column: Extremists are set to take over this California county. Will more of the state be next? âWhen conservatives fight one another over God and country, my general reaction is â have at it, and whereâs the popcorn,â Times columnist Anita Chabria writes. âBut the recent recall election in Shasta County that pitted a Republican ex-police chief against a far-right faction backed by a local militia is different. Itâs a wake-up call ahead of the 2022 midterms that elections can go very wrong, even in liberal California.â [Los Angeles Times]( The industry helping workers avoid vaccine mandates. Through public records requests, The Times amassed more than 2,200 pages of emails, letters and other records related to religious waivers from vaccine rules. The documents show just how complicated it can be to review vaccine exemption requests. They also reveal a cottage industry that has sprung up to help people justify decisions to refuse vaccination. [Los Angeles Times]( [An illustration of a syringe and coronavirus with a Catholic cathedral in the background.]
âThey didnât want to vaccinate and went looking for something that sounds convincing as a way to get out of it,â said a professor at UC Hastings College of the Law. (Ross May / Los Angeles Times; Unsplash.com) Free online games Get our free daily crossword puzzle, sudoku, word search and arcade games in our new game center at [latimes.com/games](. CALIFORNIA ALMANAC Los Angeles: Sunny 78 San Diego: Sunny 74 San Francisco: Sunny 63 San Jose: Sunny 70 Fresno: Sunny 71 Sacramento: Sunny 68. [Perfect 10!]( AND FINALLY Also, I recently [asked readers for the music they listen to]( when they want some nostalgia in their lives. Here is a response from Clark James Mishler: When I grew up in a Detroit suburb in the â50s and â60s, Los Angeles might as well have been a million miles away. But when I was 20, the mailman delivered a ticket to another universe. The Los Angeles Arts Center had accepted me. It was late August, â68 when my friend, Bill Brenner, and I headed west in our new âdrive-awayâ Dodge Charger. We didnât have a clue about what to expect but we knew weâd never be the same. High in the mountains west of Denver, the sun was setting as we searched the radio for any station with a detectable signal. As we approached the top of a ridge a crystal clear voice introduced the newest song by the Beatles. Neither of us had heard the song so we pulled over, turned off the engine and, while sitting in the twilight, listened to the entire seven minutes and eleven seconds of âHey Jude.â When two suburban kids rolled into Los Angeles the next evening the change had begun. We may not have had the script to the future but at least we had a soundtrack. If you have a memory or story about the Golden State, [share it with us](. (Please keep your story to 100 words.) Please let us know what we can do to make this newsletter more useful to you. Send comments to essentialcalifornia@latimes.com. ADVERTISEMENT
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