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Los Angeles Holiness Church

1921 establishments in CaliforniaChristianity in Los AngelesChurches in Los AngelesHoliness organizations established in the 20th centuryMethodist churches in California

Los Angeles Holiness Church was founded in 1921 in Los Angeles, California. The roots and theology of the church go back to John Wesley, founder of Methodism. Los Angeles Holiness Church is a multi-generational church with English and Japanese congregations and partnering with a Spanish-speaking congregation. Los Angeles Holiness Church is the mother church and headquarters of the OMS Holiness Church of North America which has churches throughout California, Hawaii, and Arizona. It is the only denomination that was founded by and focused towards Japanese and Japanese Americans. Currently, English congregations in the OMS Holiness Church of North America have grown with Asian Americans and other ethnicities as part of its membership.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Los Angeles Holiness Church (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Los Angeles Holiness Church
South Gramercy Place, Los Angeles Exposition Park

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N 34.02152 ° E -118.313586 °
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South Gramercy Place 3658
90018 Los Angeles, Exposition Park
California, United States
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Engine House No. 18 (Los Angeles, California)
Engine House No. 18 (Los Angeles, California)

Engine House No. 18 is a fire station in the West Adams section of Los Angeles, California. Built in 1904, the station was designed in the Mission Revival style by architect John Parkinson, whose later works included Los Angeles City Hall, Union Station, and Bullocks Wilshire. In 1915, Engine House No. 18 was one of a dozen stations closed because of budget cutbacks resulting from the "two-platoon ordinance" passed by the Los Angeles City Council in 1915. The station re-opened in 1920 and remained an operating fire station until 1968. In 1932, former fireman James F. Fourong was arrested for burglarizing Engine House No. 18. Fourong had looted other fire stations by phoning in false alarms and then entering the firehouse while the men responded to the call. In February 1932, Fourong attempted a robbery at Engine House No. 18 but was surprised by a fireman while burglarizing the lockers. After the building had been vacant for sixteen years, the Community Redevelopment Agency in 1984 agreed to a $28,000 contract with Woodford & Bernard, architects, to prepare construction documents for the restoration of Engine House No. 18. The plan was to restore and convert the firehouse into a community-oriented professional training center at a cost of $225,000.Through a competitive bidding process that began in December 2009, the Community Redevelopment Agency of the City of Los Angeles (CRA/LA) awarded the Exceptional Children's Foundation (ECF) the opportunity to purchase Engine House No. 18. ECF purchased the property in 2011 with the goal of converting the cultural landmark into a fine arts training center for adults with special needs and a community creative space for the residents of South Los Angeles. Renovations of the site began in June 2012. ECF re-opened Engine House No. 18 as its South L.A. Art Center in the spring of 2013. Approximately 50 participants with developmental disabilities annually are provided with daily fine art instruction, life skills training, and case management services at this location. The center also hosts exhibits of the participants' artwork along with creations by other community artists.