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Willows
and a slow, shallow brook distinguished this portion of the Los Angeles
plain long before it was given the name "Willowbrook." A lone-standing
streamside willow tree near the present intersection of 125th
Street and Mona Boulevard was an original rancho boundary marker in the
1840s. Willowbrook was probably named after the willows that grew
around the many springs that watered the area prior
to extensive agricultural and suburban development, beginning in the
late 1800s. In earlier years, the land that is now Willowbrook was part
of the 4,500 acre Rancho Tajauta, granted to Anastacio Abila in 1843.
The first subdivisions in the Willowbrook area were filed in 1894 and
1895 and the first official use of the name Willowbrook came in 1903,
when the Willowbrook Tract was recorded with the County Recorder. The
deep lots in the Willowbrook subdivision enabled residents to grow
fruits and vegetables, run hogs, and raise chickens behind their homes.
This mixture of suburban and rural land uses continued in Willowbrook
into the early 1980s. At that point, Willowbrook began to lose its
rural character due to redevelopment that introduced an increasing
number of new commercial and residential facilities into the area. As a
result, present-day Willowbrook appears similar to other communities in
the South Central section of Los Angeles.
Images:
- Exterior of the first county
library in Willowbrook, 1929
[County of Los Angeles Public Library]

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