Welcome to L.A. Street Names, the origin stories of street names across Los Angeles County, from the shortest cul-de-sacs to the longest boulevards. Mysteries solved, myths debunked, scandals exposed, history revealed. This is an ongoing project with more than 1,700 streets – and growing. See FAQ for more information.
Featured Major Street
Holt Avenue
Luther Myrick “L.M.” Holt (1840-1920) earned this namesake street while helping found Pomona in 1875 – but his influence over Southern California went much further than that. Born in Michigan, Holt got into the news business in Iowa. In 1869, he and his first wife Libbie (1843-1902) moved to NorCal, where he ran a newspaper in Healdsburg. But it was the SoCal citrus industry that really excited him. Moving to Los Angeles in 1873, Holt partnered with various grangers and businessmen to establish Pomona and Artesia, then moved to Riverside in 1882 to take over the Riverside Press (today’s Press-Enterprise). The Holts were back in L.A. by 1892. Overseeing countless periodicals and investment syndicates, L.M. Holt was one of the great early champions of California horticulture and irrigation. He helped the powerful developer George Chaffey subdivide Ontario, Corona, and Etiwanda and is also credited with coining the names of Imperial County and Valley (after his Imperial Land Company) as well as the cities of Redlands, Calexico, and Mexicali. Pomona’s Monterey Avenue was originally called Libbie Street, after the first Mrs. Holt; the second Mrs. Holt was the wonderfully named Mary B. Proud.