Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Building (1928) Explained

Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Building
Location:4261 S. Central Ave., South Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California
Coordinates:34.0064°N -118.2558°W
Built:1928
Architect:Garrott, James H.; Blodgett, Louis
Architecture:Mission/Spanish Revival
Added:June 26, 1998
Refnum:98000712
Designated Other1:LAHCM
Designated Other1 Date:June 29, 1993[1]
Designated Other1 Number:580

The Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Building was built in 1928 and for many years housed one of Los Angeles's most successful African American-owned businesses, the Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Company. The building is located in the heart of the city's Central Avenue commercial district that was a center of the jazz world in the 1930s and 1940s. The two-story building was designed by architect James H. Garrott and constructed by Louis Blodgett (both African Americans) in the Mission Revival style.[2] The company occupied the second floor, while the first floor was rented out to local merchants.[3] The noted Dunbar Hotel is located on the next block to the north.

In 1949, the Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Company moved to its new headquarters at 1999 West Adams, now also an historic building. The structure was later converted into a child development center known as the Dunbar Child Development Center. In 1998, the building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Department of City Planning . Designated Historic-Cultural Monuments . City of Los Angeles . 2010-06-15 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100609160708/http://www.preservation.lacity.org/monuments . 2010-06-09 .
  2. Web site: Blackpast.org / Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Company . Blackpast.org . 2015 . 19 June 2015.
  3. Book: Spurlock Wilson, Dreck. African American Architects - A Biographical Dictionary 1865 to 1945. 1994. Routeledge. New York. 0-415-92959-8. registration.