Paul de Longpré Residence


Paul de Longpré Residence was a estate located on the northwest corner of Prospect Avenue and Cahuenga Boulevard in what is now Hollywood, California. It is considered Hollywood's first tourist attraction, with the owner stating "the community is new, but time will change this artworld and center it here."

History

The Paul de Longpré Residence was built by Louis Bourgeois for Paul de Longpré in 1901, on three lots obtained from Daeida Wilcox Beveridge in exchange for three of de Longpré's paintings. The estate, which featured an elaborate two-story Mission Revival/Moorish mansion, de Longpré's personal art collection, and flower gardens that at their peak contained more than 4000 roses in 800 varieties, drew not only Hollywood society, but property buyers and tourists as well. So many visitors came that the Pacific Electric Railway added a trolley spur on Ivar Avenue to deposit riders closer to it, and Los Angeles Pacific Railway included it on their Balloon Route as well.
Tours of the estate along with print sales of de Longpré's floral paintings supported de Longpré and his family until his death in 1911. After his death, his family returned to France, and the estate was demolished in 1927 to make way for Warner Brothers Hollywood Theater.

In popular culture

Mary Pickford's Love Among the Roses was filmed in the de Longpré residence gardens. A booklet was also written about the estate, and its first printing was 200,000 copies.