Located in the exact geographical center of Los Angeles County's South
Bay district, Lawndale was originally barley fields, then chicken
ranches and small farms, growing vegetables for sale in nearby Inglewood
and Redondo Beach. Retaining some of its rural character even after
World War II, Lawndale gradually transformed into suburbia along with
nearby communities, fighting all the while to retain its own identity
and staving off aggressive annexation bids by surrounding cities.
Finally in 1959, Lawndale incorporated, ending civic contentiousness.
Despite the bustle of the high-end Galleria at South Bay, as well as
Lawndale's close proximity to some of the most tourism-friendly beach
cities in California and its bisection by L.A.'s busiest freeway, the
I-405, the city's neighborhoods on the outskirts of Los Angeles
International Airport retain the quiet ambiance evinced by its
bedroom-community name.