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Hollywood, Florida

City in Florida, United States


City in Florida, United States

FieldValue
nameHollywood, Florida
settlement_typeCity
image_skylineHollywoodBM.jpgalt=HBMBR
image_captionSkyline
image_flagFlag of Hollywood, Florida.svg
image_sealSeal of Hollywood, Florida.svg
nicknameDiamond of the Gold Coast
image_mapMap of Florida highlighting Hollywood.svg
map_captionLocation of Hollywood in Florida
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameUnited States
subdivision_type1State
subdivision_name1Florida
subdivision_type2County
subdivision_name2Broward
established_titleFounded
established_dateFebruary 18, 1921
established_title2Incorporated
established_date2November 28, 1925
government_typeCommission-manager
leader_titleMayor
unit_prefImperial
area_footnotes
area_total_km279.71
area_total_sq_mi30.78
area_land_km270.58
area_land_sq_mi27.25
area_water_km29.13
area_water_sq_mi3.52
area_water_percent11.23
population_as_of2020
population_total153067
population_footnotes
population_rank176th in the United States
12th in Florida
population_density_km22162.79
population_density_sq_mi5601.83
pop_est_as_of2022
population_est152650
pop_est_footnotes
timezoneEST
utc_offset−5
timezone_DSTEDT
utc_offset_DST−4
coordinates
elevation_footnotes
elevation_ft13
postal_code_typeZIP codes
postal_code33004, 33009, 33019-33021, 33023, 33024, 33312, 33314, 33316
area_codes954, 754
blank_nameFIPS code
blank_info12-32000
blank1_nameGNIS feature ID
blank1_info2404719
website

12th in Florida

Hollywood is a city in Broward County, Florida, United States. It is a suburb in the Miami metropolitan area. The population of Hollywood was 153,067 as of 2020, making it the third-largest city in Broward County.

History

In 1920, Joseph Young arrived in South Florida to create his own "Dream City in Florida". His vision included the beaches of the Atlantic Ocean stretching westward with man-made lakes, infrastructure, roads, and the Intracoastal Waterway. He wanted to include large parks, schools, churches, and golf courses, all industries and activities that were very important to him. After Young spent millions of dollars constructing the city, he was elected its first mayor in 1925. The town quickly became home to northerners known as "snowbirds", who fled the north during the winter and then escaped the south during the summer. By 1960, Hollywood had more than 2,400 hotel units and 12,170 single-family homes. Young bought up thousands of acres of land around 1920, and named his new town "Hollywood by the Sea" to distinguish it from his other real-estate venture, "Hollywood in the Hills", in New York.

The Florida guide, published by the Federal Writers' Project, describes the development of Hollywood, an early example of the planned communities that proliferated in Florida during the real-estate boom of the 1920s:

Prospective purchasers of land were enticed by free hotel accommodation and entertainment, and "were driven about the city-to-be on trails blazed through palmetto thickets; so desolate and forlorn were some stretches that many women became hysterical, it is said, and a few fainted." Young had a vision of lakes, golf courses, a luxury beach hotel (Hollywood Beach Hotel, now Hollywood Beach Resort), country clubs, and a main street, Hollywood Boulevard. Hollywood was severely damaged by the 1926 Miami hurricane; local newspapers reported that it was second only to Miami in losses from the storm. After Young's death in 1934, the city encountered other destructive hurricanes, and the stock market crashed, causing personal financial misfortunes.

Hurricane Irma hit Florida in 2017, causing damage and power outages in Hollywood. 12 residents of the Rehabilitation Center at Hollywood Hills died of heat exposure. Four nursing-home staff were charged with negligence and manslaughter. Charges were dropped against the 3 nurses and the nursing home chief was acquitted.

The Florida Department of Economic Opportunity created Rebuild Florida, an initiative to provide aid to citizens affected by Irma. Its initial focus was its Housing Repair Program, which offered assistance in rebuilding families' homes. The program prioritized low-income vulnerable residents, such as the disabled, the elderly, and families with children under five. The program had varied results across the state, with hundreds of citizens claiming they were left without help.

Timeline

  • 1921 – Hollywood by the Sea platted on land of Joseph Wesley Young
  • 1923
    • Hollywood Hotel opens. Later renamed the Park View Hotel when the Hollywood Beach Hotel opens.
  • 1925
    • Hollywood incorporated
    • Hollywood Police Department established
    • Hollywood Boulevard Bridge built (approximate date)
    • Joseph Wesley Young becomes mayor; C.H. Windham becomes city manager
    • Joseph Wesley Young House built
  • 1926
  • 1928 – Port Everglades opened near Hollywood
  • 1930
    • Hollywood Hills Inn built
    • Population: 2,689.
  • 1932 – Riverside Military Academy Hollywood campus established
  • 1935 – Fiesta Tropicale began
  • 1937 – Florida Theatre built
  • 1947 – Hurricanes occur
  • 1948 – Broward County International Airport opened
  • 1950 – Population: 14,351
  • 1952 – Joseph Watson became city manager (until c. 1970)
  • 1953 – Hollywood Memorial Hospital opened
  • 1957
    • Seminole Tribe of Florida gained official recognition by the federal government, with tribal headquarters located in Hollywood.
    • McArthur High School opened
  • 1958 – Diplomat Hotel in business
  • 1959 – Seminole Tribe's Okalee Indian Village in business.
  • 1960 – Population: 35,237
  • 1962 – Arrow Drive-In cinema in business
  • 1964 – Home Federal Tower hi-rise built.
  • 1967 – Hollywood West Elks Lodge founded
  • 1970 – Population: 106,873
  • 1971
    • Pageant of the Unconquered Seminoles held in Hollywood
    • Topeekeegee Yugnee Park opened
  • 1972 – Broward County Historical Commission established
  • 1974 – Broward County Library System established.
  • 1975 – Art and Culture Center of Hollywood opened
  • 1981
    • July 27: Murder of Adam Walsh
    • "U.S. Supreme Court affirms Tribe's right to high-stakes bingo at Hollywood in Seminole Tribe of Florida vs. Butterworth"
  • 1982 – West Lake Park opened
  • 1983 – Seminole Tribune newspaper begins publication.
  • 1996
    • Kolb Nature Center opened in West Lake Park
    • City website online (approximate date)
  • 1997 – New Times Broward-Palm Beach newspaper began publication
  • 2004 – Seminole Tribe of Florida's Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Hollywood in business
  • 2010 – Population: 140,768
  • 2013 – Frederica Wilson became U.S. representative for Florida's 24th congressional district
  • 2016 – Josh Levy became mayor
  • 2018 - The first hotel in almost 50 years, Circ By Sonder, opens in Downtown Hollywood.
  • 2019 – Hard Rock Live guitar shaped hotel opened, with pool and manmade lake

Geography

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has an area of 30.8 sqmi, of which 3.46 sqmi are covered by water (11.23%).

Hollywood is in southeastern Broward County, and includes about 5 to of Atlantic Ocean beach, interrupted briefly by a portion deeded to Dania Beach.

Climate

Hollywood has a tropical rainforest climate (Köppen climate classification Af), with long, hot, humid, and rainy summers and short, warm, and dry winters.

|Jan avg record high F = 84.7 |Feb avg record high F = 85.7 |Mar avg record high F = 87.7 |Apr avg record high F = 89.2 |May avg record high F = 90.5 |Jun avg record high F = 92.1 |Jul avg record high F = 93.4 |Aug avg record high F = 93.3 |Sep avg record high F = 92.4 |Oct avg record high F = 91.1 |Nov avg record high F = 87.1 |Dec avg record high F = 86.0 |year avg record high F = 94.7

|Jan avg record low F = 42.9 |Feb avg record low F = 45.5 |Mar avg record low F = 50.3 |Apr avg record low F = 57.5 |May avg record low F = 64.6 |Jun avg record low F = 70.6 |Jul avg record low F = 71.9 |Aug avg record low F = 72.5 |Sep avg record low F = 71.9 |Oct avg record low F = 63.2 |Nov avg record low F = 53.4 |Dec avg record low F = 49.5 |year avg record low F = 40.3

|Jan record high F = 87 |Feb record high F = 88 |Mar record high F = 91 |Apr record high F = 96 |May record high F = 98 |Jun record high F = 98 |Jul record high F = 97 |Aug record high F = 97 |Sep record high F = 95 |Oct record high F = 93 |Nov record high F = 91 |Dec record high F = 90 |year record high F = |Jan record low F = 34 |Feb record low F = 35 |Mar record low F = 40 |Apr record low F = 49 |May record low F = 56 |Jun record low F = 63 |Jul record low F = 64 |Aug record low F = 69 |Sep record low F = 65 |Oct record low F = 52 |Nov record low F = 46 |Dec record low F = 34 |year record low F =

Demographics

|align-fn=center

1960–1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 2022

Historical racial composition20202010200019901980Population153,067140,768139,357121,697121,323
White (non-Hispanic)37.2%47.5%61.6%78.5%90.0%
Hispanic or Latino39.9%32.6%22.5%11.9%5.3%
Black or African American (non-Hispanic)16.5%15.4%11.5%8.1%4.0%
Asian and Pacific Islander (non-Hispanic)2.6%2.4%2.0%1.2%0.8%
Native American (non-Hispanic)0.2%0.2%0.2%0.2%
Some other race (non-Hispanic)0.9%0.4%0.3%0.1%
Two or more races (non-Hispanic)2.8%1.5%1.9%N/AN/A
Demographic characteristics20202010200019901980Population153,067140,768139,357121,697121,323
Households72,58571,07068,42652,90450,764
Persons per household2.111.982.042.302.39
Sex Ratio94.996.194.190.087.8
Ages 0–1719.1%20.3%21.3%19.1%19.8%
Ages 18–6462.8%64.6%61.4%57.8%55.0%
Ages 65 +18.1%15.1%17.3%23.1%25.1%
Median age42.641.139.240.143.1
Economic indicators2017–21 American Community SurveyHollywoodBroward CountyFlorida
Median income$32,371$36,222$34,367
Median household income$56,912$64,522$61,777
Poverty Rate12.4%12.4%13.1%
High school diploma88.2%90.0%89.0%
Bachelor's degree29.9%34.3%31.5%
Advanced degree12.2%13.1%11.7%
Language spoken at home20152010200019901980
English52.5%56.9%66.5%78.1%85.1%
Spanish or Spanish Creole33.9%30.2%21.5%11.1%4.7%
French or Haitian Creole4.8%4.5%3.5%2.7%1.4%
ItalianN/A0.6%1.1%1.9%2.8%
Other Languages8.8%7.8%7.4%6.2%6.0%
Nativity20152010200019901980
% population native-born64.8%66.8%73.7%82.2%86.4%
... born in the United States61.0%63.2%70.2%79.5%85.1%
... born in Puerto Rico or Island Areas2.3%2.4%2.6%1.8%1.3%
... born to American parents abroad1.4%1.2%1.0%0.9%
% population foreign-born35.2%33.2%26.3%17.8%13.6%
... born in Cuba5.0%3.8%2.8%2.1%1.5%
... born in Colombia3.6%3.2%2.8%0.8%N/A
... born in Haiti2.5%2.4%1.1%0.4%N/A
... born in Jamaica2.2%2.3%2.0%0.8%0.3%
... born in Peru1.8%2.0%1.1%0.4%N/A
... born in the Dominican Republic1.7%1.4%0.9%0.4%0.1%
... born in Canada1.3%1.2%1.9%1.9%1.6%
... born in other countries17.1%16.9%13.7%11.0%10.1%

As of 2000, Hollywood had the 75th-highest percentage of Cuban residents in the U.S., at 4.23% of its population, and the 65th-highest percentage of Colombian residents in the US, at 2.26% (tied with both the town and village of Mount Kisco, New York.) It also had the 57th-highest percentage of Peruvian residents in the US, at 1.05% (tied with Locust Valley, New York), and the 20th-highest percentage of Romanian residents in the US, at 1.1% (tied with several other areas).

Economy

Before it dissolved, Commodore Cruise Line and its subsidiary Crown Cruise Line were headquartered in Hollywood.

Aerospace and electronics parts manufacturer HEICO is headquartered in Hollywood.

Since 1991, the Invicta Watch Group, a manufacturer and marketer of timepieces and writing instruments, has been headquartered in Hollywood, where it also operates its customer-service call center.

Top employers

According to the city's 2019 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, its top employers are:

#EmployerEmployees
1Memorial Healthcare System4,124
2City of Hollywood1,446
3Chewy1,200
4Publix Supermarkets1,098
5Diplomat Resort & Spa Hollywood960
6Memorial Regional Hospital South766
7Great Healthworks430
8BrandsMart USA351
9Toyota of Hollywood333
10HEICO320

Tourism

Guided tours along the Intracoastal Waterway are common in Hollywood. The waterway, parallel to the ocean, allows people to explore nature and observe their surroundings.

Young Circle, named after the city's founder, is surrounded by shops, restaurants, and bars. A Food-Truck Takeover occurs every Monday, during which dozens of local food trucks offer a variety of cuisines, including Cuban, Venezuelan, Mediterranean, Mexican, Jamaican, and Peruvian, in addition to barbecue, burgers, gourmet grilled cheese, and desserts.

Parks and recreation

Hollywood has about 60 parks, seven golf courses, and sandy beaches.

Hollywood Beach has a broadwalk that extends about 2.5 miles along the ocean. Parking is available on side streets or in garages for a fee, and public trolleys run through the day. Restaurants and hotels line the broadwalk, along with a theatre, children's playground, and other attractions, including bicycle-rental shops, ice-cream parlors, souvenir shops, and a farmer's market. The broadwalk is used for walking and jogging, and has a bike lane for bicyclists and rollerbladers.

Government

City Hall in Hollywood in 2010

Mayor

  • Joseph Wesley Young Jr., circa 1925
  • Arthur W. Kellner, circa 1935
  • Lester Boggs, 1943–1947, 1949–1953
  • Alfred G. Ryll, 1954–1955
  • William G. Zinkil Sr., 1955–1957, 1959–1967
  • E. L. McMorrough, circa 1959
  • Maynard Abrams, 1966–1969
  • David Keating, 1971–1986
  • Mara Giulianti, 1986
  • Peter Bober, 2008–2016
  • Josh Levy, 2016–present

Education

Hollywood has 32 public (and charter) schools and 24 private schools. The public schools are operated by the Broward County Public Schools.

Public schools

Broward County operates 24 public schools, consisting of four high schools, six middle schools, and 14 elementary schools.

The public high schools in Hollywood are Hollywood Hills High School, McArthur High School, South Broward High School, and Sheridan Technical College and High School.

The public middle schools include Apollo Middle School, Attucks Middle School, Driftwood Middle School, McNicol Middle School, Olsen Middle School, and Beachside Montessori Village.

Infrastructure

Transportation

Sheridan Street Station

Hollywood is served by Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport, the nation's 22nd-busiest airport. Broward County Transit operates several bus routes that pass through the city, such as the 1 on US 1 (federal highway). It is also served by Tri-Rail stations near Sheridan Street and Hollywood Boulevard.

Police department

The Hollywood Police Department is an entity within the city government tasked with law enforcement in Hollywood.

Notable people

  • Davey Allison (1961–1993), racing driver
  • Jayne Atkinson (born 1959), actress
  • Herbert L. Becker (born 1951), magician
  • Steve Blake (born 1980), basketball player
  • Lauren Book (born 1984), politician
  • Ethan Bortnick (born 2000), pianist
  • Chris Britton (born 1982), baseball player
  • Marquise Brown (born 1992), American football player
  • Janice Dickinson (born 1955), model and television personality
  • Joe DiMaggio (1914–1999), baseball player
  • Mike Donald (born 1955), professional golfer
  • Scotty Emerick (born 1973), singer-songwriter
  • Seth Gabel (born 1980 or 1981), actor
  • Josh Gad (born 1981), actor
  • Matt Gaetz (born 1982), U.S. representative for Florida
  • Adam Gaynor (born 1963), guitarist
  • Alan Gelfand (born 1963), skateboarder, racing driver and entrepreneur
  • Michael Heverly, model
  • Rosemary Homeister Jr. (born 1972), jockey
  • Erasmus James (born 1982), American football player
  • Evan Jenne (born 1977), politician
  • Victoria Justice (born 1993), actress, model and singer
  • Abraham Katz (1926–2013), diplomat
  • Joe Klink (born 1962), baseball player
  • Veronica Lake (1922–1973), actress
  • Bethany Joy Lenz (born 1981), actress and musician
  • Jeff Marx (born 1970), composer and lyricist
  • Oddibe McDowell (born 1962), baseball player
  • Bryant McFadden (born 1981), American football player
  • Danny McManus (born 1965), American football player
  • Fred Melamed (born 1956), actor
  • Tracy Melchior (born 1973), actress
  • Billy Mitchell (born 1965), video game player
  • Michael Mizrachi (born 1981), poker player
  • Mike Napoli (born 1981), baseball player
  • Norman Reedus (born 1969), actor and model
  • Moshe Reuven, rapper and entrepreneur
  • Ian Richards (born 1975), judge
  • Patti Rizzo (born 1960), golfer
  • Jon Pernell Roberts (1948–2011), drug trafficker
  • Latrice Royale (born 1972), drag queen
  • Jabaal Sheard (born 1989), American football player
  • Joe Trohman (born 1984), musician
  • John Walsh (born 1945), television producer
  • Scott Weinger (born 1975), actor
  • Robert Wexler (born 1961), politician
  • Lorenzo White (born 1966), American football player

Crime and terrorism

Sister cities

Hollywood's sister cities are:

  • ROU Baia Mare, Romania
  • URY Ciudad de la Costa, Uruguay
  • VEN Diego Bautista Urbaneja, Venezuela
  • GTM Guatemala City, Guatemala
  • ISR Herzliya, Israel
  • DOM Higüey, Dominican Republic
  • MAR Laayoune, Morocco
  • ALB Vlorë, Albania

Notes

References

Bibliography

  • {{cite book
  • {{cite book|author=C. Richard Roberts|title=Hollywood|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qe__IzSNb08C|series=Images of America |publisher=Arcadia |location=Charleston, South Carolina |isbn=978-0-7385-1482-6 |year=2002
  • Florida, DK Eyewitness Travel Guides, 2004, pg. 132
  • {{cite book
  • {{cite book |author=Joan Mickelson |title= Joseph W. Young, Jr., and the City Beautiful: A Biography of the Founder of Hollywood, Florida|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RHgWAZhOblgC |publisher=McFarland|isbn=978-0-7864-6880-5 |year= 2013

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