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  1. It is located at 4334 Whittier Boulevard west of Interstate 710 in East Los Angeles, California. It is across from Calvary Catholic Cemetery and next to Beth Israel Cemetery and Mount Zion Cemetery. History. In 1853, the first and oldest Jewish cemetery in Los Angeles was established in Chavez Ravine, near the present-day Dodger Stadium.

    • Home of Peace

      Home of Peace may refer to the building below or following...

  2. United States of America. California. Los Angeles County. East Los Angeles. Home of Peace Memorial Park. Added: 1 Jan 2000. Find a Grave Cemetery ID: 8044. Opened in 1855, at current location from 1902. Home of Peace is the successor to the first Jewish cemetery in Los Angeles.

    • Home of Peace Cemetery (East Los Angeles) wikipedia1
    • Home of Peace Cemetery (East Los Angeles) wikipedia2
    • Home of Peace Cemetery (East Los Angeles) wikipedia3
    • Home of Peace Cemetery (East Los Angeles) wikipedia4
    • Home of Peace Cemetery (East Los Angeles) wikipedia5
  3. By the 1960s, the Home of Peace cemetery had almost 10,000 graves and its mausoleum had over 6,000 crypts, housed in both the original mausoleum and a second, modern style building added to the grounds. But Home of Peace, along with the other Jewish cemeteries in East Los Angeles, also faced new financial pressures in the postwar era.

  4. Research and Images by Rachel Trombetta, with editorial support from Caroline Luce. Although located east of the city limits, just outside of Boyle Heights, the Home of Peace, one of the city’s oldest Jewish cemeteries, was among the most important Jewish institutions in the neighborhood.

  5. With this land they established the first Jewish cemetery in Los Angeles at Lilac Terrace and Lookout Drive in Chavez Ravine. The site now includes Dodger Stadium and the Los Angeles Fire Department 's Frank Hotchkin Memorialized Training Center .

  6. Surrounded by 100 year-old palm trees, Home of Peace Memorial Park holds the proud distinction of being the oldest Jewish cemetery in the Los Angeles area. At the end of the 19th century, when the original site of the Hebrew Benevolent Society’s sacred burial grounds filled to capacity, the society purchased a tract of land at the corner of ...