
Issue
Los Angeles Women鈥檚 Landmarks Project
The L.A. Conservancy and the National Trust for Historic Preservation launch a new project to address the significant underrepresentation of women and their contributions to Los Angeles landmarks.
In 2024, the SA国际传媒, together with the initiative of the National聽Trust聽for Historic Places, launched the Los Angeles Women’s Landmarks project. This ambitious, multi-year effort addresses the inherent biases that have historically skewed the landmark designation process.
Of the 1,300 places in Los Angeles designated as Historic-Cultural Monuments, less than three percent represent women鈥檚 history.
Working with the L.A. City Office of Historic Resources, the University of Southern California, and many others, the project makes Los Angeles a laboratory to create a new national model for a more gender-equitable historic designation process, looking at both the existing HCMs to add diverse women鈥檚 history that was omitted, as well as sites of women鈥檚 achievement that should be designated as new HCM鈥檚.
The project will also generate new public-facing interpretive and student educational programs that communicate the critical role that women have played in shaping Los Angeles.
In the summer of 2024, the Conservancy took a major step forward. Thanks to a grant from the National Trust’s 鈥淲here Women Made History鈥 initiative, we were thrilled to welcome Arabella Delgado, an intern from USC, who studied forty-three Historic-Cultural Monuments (HCMs) in Los Angeles. Her goal? To understand how HCM sites represent women鈥檚 heritage and to find ways to better acknowledge women鈥檚 contributions to the city鈥檚 history.
Join her in this short video that takes a closer look at five landmarks in Los Angeles and explores how each site either celebrates鈥攐r overlooks鈥攖he remarkable contributions of the women behind these HCMs.
Photo credits: 鈥淪isterhood is Beautiful.鈥 Alcoholism Center for Women, circa 1974. Courtesy Carolyn Weathers private collection; The Woman鈥檚 Building, 2017. Source: Laura Dominguez/L.A. Conservancy, Sumi (Sakai) Kozawa at Tokio Florist, February 14, 1999. Photo courtesy of Giovanni Jance.聽聽International Institute, Los Angeles Times, August 1, 1937; Marilyn Monroe Residence, Photo by Mercer/Vine.
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How You Can Help
Make a tax-deductible donation today and join us in recognizing and preserving women’s heritage in Los Angeles and beyond. The Los Angeles Women’s Landmarks project is creating a new model for gender equitable designation that can be replicated throughout the country.
Your gift today will make a big difference in ensuring women’s history gets the recognition and respect it deserves.