Mar 18, 2022
Mar 18, 2022
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Mar 04, 2022
Mar 04, 2022
- Charmaine Bantugan
Hershey Arms (Demolished)
The Hershey Arms launched a new era in the history of Wilshire Boulevard, introducing a fine hotel to what had been a residential boulevard. The hotel was named for Mira Hershey, a transplant from Muscatine, Iowa, who invested her inheritance in the construction of magnificent homes on Bunker Hill and hotels. She ran the landmark Hollywood Hotel and endowed the first women's dormitory at UCLA, but never took any role in managing the Hershey Arms. It was a rambling brick edifice surrounded by semi-tropical gardens and decorated with Japanese furniture by proprietor Helen Mathewson, herself an interesting figure in early twentieth-century Los Angeles. Mathewson was president of the Humane Animal League and argued strenuously for the proper treatment of horses and stray animals. The Hershey Arms became popular with visiting society ladies before newer hotels opened along the boulevard. It was razed in 1957 and replaced with the Western and Southern Life Insurance Company, now used by the L.A. Housing Authority and the Social Security Administration. Photo from J. Eric Lynxwiler Collection
Hershey Arms (Demolished)
The Hershey Arms launched a new era in the history of Wilshire Boulevard, introducing a fine hotel to what had been a residential boulevard. The hotel was named for Mira Hershey, a transplant from Muscatine, Iowa, who invested her inheritance in the construction of magnificent homes on Bunker Hill and hotels. She ran the landmark Hollywood Hotel and endowed the first women's dormitory at UCLA, but never took any role in managing the Hershey Arms. It was a rambling brick edifice surrounded by semi-tropical gardens and decorated with Japanese furniture by proprietor Helen Mathewson, herself an interesting figure in early twentieth-century Los Angeles. Mathewson was president of the Humane Animal League and argued strenuously for the proper treatment of horses and stray animals. The Hershey Arms became popular with visiting society ladies before newer hotels opened along the boulevard. It was razed in 1957 and replaced with the Western and Southern Life Insurance Company, now used by the L.A. Housing Authority and the Social Security Administration. Photo from J. Eric Lynxwiler Collection
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