Culver City has rivaled Hollywood for nearly a century as the Heart of
Screenland--a center of the movie and television trades. Here, the giant
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer evolved into Sony Pictures, and the Ince and
Selznick movie empires became today's Culver Studios. But the same lands
along Ballona Creek had been a wilderness traversed by Native Americans
and settled by hardy Spanish pioneers named Machado, Talamantes and
Higuera. Union soldiers occupied the area's Civil War-era Camp Latham.
By 1910, visionary Harry H. Culver saw possibilities for these
ranchlands and led Culver City to incorporate in 1917. Join official
city historian Julie Lugo Cerra, a descendant of early settlers, as she
relates the fascinating stories of how and why Culver City grew and
prospered.