Main Street (Los Angeles)


Main Street is a major north–south thoroughfare in Los Angeles, California. It serves as the east–west postal divider for the city and the county as well.

Route description

From the northeast, Main Street begins as a continuation of Valley Boulevard west of Mission Road in Lincoln Heights as 'North Main Street'.
Main Street enters Downtown Los Angeles passing by the edge of the Los Angeles Plaza. It continues through the Civic Center area, which is built on top of the site of the buildings — nearly all demolished — that in the 1880s through 1900s formed the city's Central Business District. At 3rd Street it enters the Historic Core district. At 9th Street, it merges with Spring Street in Downtown LA, and between Cesar E. Chavez Avenue and 9th Street, Main Street shares a one-way couplet with Spring Street.
Main Street continues south through South Los Angeles and enters Carson north at the intersection of Lomita Boulevard. In Wilmington Main Street moniker ends, the street continuing on as Wilmington Boulevard.

Landmarks

Buildings and sites north of U.S. Route 101

Buildings and sites south of Third Street

Sources include the Clason map of Downtown Los Angeles:

300 block

On the west side of Main St. south of 3rd Street were:
  • #311–317 - Round House
  • 300 block west side - site of Belasco Theatre
On the east side of Main St. south of 3rd Street were:
  • Panorama Building, 312–324 S. Main, with retail shops and offices such as the Olmsted & Wales Panorama bookstore and the Los Angeles Evening Express offices. In the center of the building was a passage to the back and an exhibition space for a panoramic painting, debuting in late 1887: a copy of the Panorama of the Siege of Paris by Henri Felix Emmanuel Philippoteaux, depicting a battle of the 1870-71 Franco-Prussian War—the last one between the French resistance and Prussian besiegers, which led to the fall of Paris in January, 1871. When attendance dwindled, investors sold the painting to buyers in San Francisco and the rotunda housed at various times the Empire Stables and "Panorama Stables', with stalls for horses in the former exhibition space., in 1906 it was transformed into a state-of-the-art roller skating rink, which was unsuccessful. Owner Adolph Ramish demolished the building in 1907 and the Adolphus Theatre was built on the site. Today the site is a large open-air parking lot.
  • Hotel Westminster at the end of the block, 342 S. Main St., northeast corner of 4th and Main. Robert Brown Young, architect. Opened 1888, demolished 1960. Now the Medallion Apartments, opened 2010.

4th and Main

5th and Main

  • NW corner 5th/Main - former Rosslyn Hotel main building, now The Rosslyn lofts
  • 112 W. 5th Hotel Rosslyn Annex
  • SE corner 5th/Main former Charnock Block a.k.a. Pershing Hotel and Roma Hotel, now New Pershing Apartments, last original two-story 19th-century commercial block left in the Historic Core. The Charnock Block was constructed in two phases, the 5th St. face in 1889 and the Main St. face in 1907. In 1923, it became the Pershing Hotel. It is a rare example of Late Victorian-era commercial architecture and Second Empire architecture still existing in the Historic Core. The Roma was built in 1904 by Fred L. and Frank M. Lee. In 1989, both buildings were joined and renovated and are now apartments; they are contributing buildings to the "5th-Main Street Commercial Historic District", National Register of Historic Places.Burbank Theatre, 548 S. Main, opened 1893, closed 1974, demolished. Now the site of the Topaz Apartments at #550.

6th and Main

7th and Main

8th and Main

  • NW corner 8th/Main, Great Republic Building, now Great Republic lofts
  • NE corner 8th/Main Hotel Huntington Building, now Huntington Apartments
  • SW corner 8th/Main, National City Building, now National City Tower lofts
  • #810, site of California Theatre and
  • #842 site of the Miller Theatre

9th and Main

  • NW corner of 9th/Main, W. M. Garland Building
  • SW corner of 9th/Main Marsh & Strong Building

Theaters on Main Street

While the Broadway Theater and Commercial District several blocks west is famous enough to warrant constituting a National Register-listed historic district, Main Street was home to dozens of theatres and early cinemas as well. The peak era was the early 1910s, before the more upscale cinema market migrated west to Broadway. There were 27 theaters and cinemas running on Main in 1912. In 1939 there were still 18 operating between 2nd and 9th streets.
  • Art Theatre, 551 S. Main St.
  • Banner Theatre, 458 S. Main St.
  • Bijou Theatre, 553 S. Main St.
  • Burbank Theatre, 548 S. Main St.
  • California Theatre, 810 S. Main St.
  • Clune's Theatre, 453 S. Main St.
  • Crystal Theatre, 247 S. Main St.
  • Denver Theatre, 238 S. Main St.
  • Dohs Theatre, 166 N. Main St.
  • The Downtown Independent, 251 S. Main St.
  • Electric Theatre, 262 S. Main St.
  • Estella Theatre, 515 N. Main St.
  • Federal Theatre, 300 N. Main St.
  • Follies Theatre, 337 S. Main St.
  • Galway Theatre, 514 S. Main St.
  • Gayety Theatre, 523 S. Main St.
  • Gem Theatre, 649 S. Main St.
  • Grand Opera House, 110 S. Main St.
  • Happy Hour Theatre, 125 S. Main St.
  • Hippodrome Theatre, 320 S. Main St.
  • Hollander Theatre, 115 E. 1st St.
  • Jade Theatre, 315 S. Main St.
  • Lark Theatre, 613 S. Main St.
  • Liberty Theatre, 266 S. Main St.
  • Linda Lea Theatre, 251 S. Main St.
  • Main Theatre, 438 S. Main St.
  • Merced Theatre, 420 N. Main St.
  • Miller's Theatre, 842 S. Main St.
  • Mott's Hall, 133 S. Main St.
  • Muse Theatre, 417 S. Main St.
  • Nickel Theatre, 255 S. Main St.
  • Novelty Theatre, 136 S. Main St.
  • Olvera St. Theatre, W-10 Olvera St. / 620 N. Main St.
  • Optic Theatre, 533 S. Main St.
  • People's Amphitheater, N. Main St. near 1st
  • Picture Theatre, 545 S. Main St.
  • Playo Theatre, 349 N. Main St.
  • Plaza Theatre, 224 N. Main St.
  • Princess Theatre, 121 W. 1st St.
  • Principal Theatre, 433 N. Main St.
  • Regal Theatre, 323 S. Main St.
  • Regent Theatre, 448 S. Main St.
  • Republic Theatre, 629 1/2 S. Main St.
  • Rex Theatre, 324 S. Main St.
  • Roosevelt Theatre, 212 N. Main St.
  • Rosslyn Theatre, 431 S. Main St.
  • Rounder Theatre, 510 S. Main St.
  • Sherman Theatre, 518 S. Main St.
  • Star Theatre, 529 S. Main St.
  • Star Theatre, 100 block of E. 5th St.
  • Stearns Hall, SE corner N. Main St. and Arcadia St.
  • Tally's Phonograph and Vitascope Parlor, 137 S. Main St.
  • Teatro Hidalgo, 373 N. Main St.
  • Teatro Torito, W-12 Olvera St. / 622 N. Main St.
  • Temple Theatre, 155 N. Main St.
  • Victor Theatre, 1718 S. Main St.
  • Wood's Opera House, 410 N. Main St.

First 2 official Apothecaries on Main Street

The first 2 official Pharmaceutical doctors in Los Angeles, arriving in 1860/61.
Both being German immigrants, were Theodore Wollweber at Main St. / Hall at 59
and Adolph Junge at 99 Main Street. Junge was located at this address from 1861 until
his passing in 1878, whereafter his son Ramon Junge continued the practice as his successor
until ca. 1880.
  • Wollweber, drugs and medicine, Main St. / Hall at 59
  • Junge, drugs and medicine, 99 N. Main St.

Transportation

Main Street carries Metro Local lines: 10, 33, 48, 55, 76, and 92; most of those lines run on Main Street in downtown only, while Line 76 serves Main Street in Northeast Los Angeles and Line 48 in South Los Angeles.
The A Line of the Los Angeles Metro Rail System meets Main Street at its intersection with North Vignes Street near the Chinatown Station. The B and D lines are just past the intersection of Main Street and North Alameda Street near Union Station.