
Sergio De LA Torre
1 Google Rating
This place totally changed for the worse. It use to be so nice to stop by this location. Now its dif
This place totally changed for the worse. It use to be so nice to stop by this location. Now its different and nearly gone. I'm not so sure that this place was saved or preserved. From a cultural perspective it was needed as an anchor to show where we have progressed to as humans and specifically in this region of Los Angeles. Highland Park always and will be ghetto. It's in the neighborhood that honestly has nothing high-end and still is ugly. You see changes being done throughout the neighborhood but in reality it is doing nothing. Streets are still dumped and consumed in graffiti drugs and homeless people no matter how hard the authorities may try to reduce the appearance of morbidness in the streets of Highland Park. North East Los Angeles has a reputation and has been constant keeping it. You still find out about horrible events here that could bring anyone down. Consumed by sadness that follows with countless tear drops. Highland Park can't and won't be messed with. I grew up in these streets and you find out about the truths that many don't want to know about but they matter. It's always good to know what's going on around your surroundings. This museum was closed to make it a storage. The Autry museum now own the main artifacts. The location should be well intact with the artifacts. It makes sense to keep the artifacts at home. This Southwest museum needed to be saved. Very few stood up when they needed to speak up and to be heard, but Highland Park and the Latinos will prevail. -Sergio Antonio De La Torre