The Mission San Fernando was founded on September 8, 1797, as an outpost
of New Spain, in the vast expanse between the San Gabriel and Santa
Monica Mountains. Northwest over the Hollywood Hills from downtown Los
Angeles, this land was developed into a vital farming and citrus
breadbasket. After 1900, real estate developers began subdividing the
Valley, as it is popularly known, and by 1940, communities of Los
Angeles proper and new cities formed into models of suburbia: Van Nuys,
North Hollywood, Burbank, Studio City, Sherman Oaks, Encino, Northridge,
Roscoe (Sun Valley), Tarzana, Canoga Park, Chatsworth, Calabasas, Hidden
Hills, San Fernando, Glendale, Canoga Park, Pacoima, Toluca Lake, and
Woodland Hills. The film industry built studios, location ranches, and
support facilities in the valley. The aviation industries grew too, and
the Hollywood, Ventura, and Golden State Freeways redrew the map. Songs,
movies, and television shows have helped ingrain the Valley into L.A.
lore.