When people picture a typical Southern California scene, chances are they think of Hollywood, Beverly Hills, surfers, sandy beaches, and something they all seem to feature… palm trees. A picture of sunglass-clad drivers in convertibles cruising down a palm tree-lined street practically screams Los Angeles. But did you know that the now-iconic tall, slender palm trees in Los Angeles are not native to Southern California?

This familiar image that people everywhere seem to recognize reflects a purposeful design. Toward the beginning of the 20th century, palm trees had begun to symbolize warm, tropical places and exotic vacations, and Los Angeles wanted to be seen as just that type of destination.

nata_rass/iStock via Getty Images Plus And so it began. In the early 1930s, over 40,000 palm trees were imported from Mexico and planted along streets throughout the city.

The Mexican Fan Palm - the tree that has become a true Los Angeles icon and is still the most populous species of palm in Southern California - grows up to a towering 100 feet in height, and tends to bend and curve as it gets taller.

tiarescott/Flickr

You will find many species of palm trees in Southern California, and almost all of them have been imported from somewhere else, from the tall and skinny Mexican Palms to the stout and leafy Mediterranean Palms to the feathery Canary Island Palms.

Antonio Fucito/Flickr

The Washington filifera - also called Desert Fan Palm, Cotton Palm, and California Fan Palm - is the only palm tree that is actually native to California, though not to Los Angeles.

Ken Lund/Flickr As seen here, these palms, which tend to be shorter and wider than the Mexican palms that have a similar shape, grow in spring-fed oases in California’s Colorado and Mojave Deserts.

Palm trees actually started to be planted in the Los Angeles area in the late 1800s, first planted by Franciscan missionaries, apparently because of their Biblical association and significance with regard to Palm Sunday.

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In the early 1900s, palm trees - especially Mexican Fan Palms, Mediterranean Palms, and Canary Island Palms - began to be used in residential landscaping in Los Angeles and surrounding areas.

ilbusca/DigitalVision Vectors via Getty Images

Fast-forward several decades and these once-foreign trees have literally become part of this city’s skyline.

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What would a classic Southern California beach sunset be without a few palm tree silhouettes? And to think, they were not naturally part of this horizon.

Marc Flores/Flickr

The streets of Los Angeles may never have been lined with palm trees, but we just can’t imagine it any other way, can you? Did you know about the history of SoCal’s famous palm trees? Do you have any other fun facts about L.A.? We do! Check out these 13 things you may not know about SoCal.

nata_rass/iStock via Getty Images Plus

And so it began. In the early 1930s, over 40,000 palm trees were imported from Mexico and planted along streets throughout the city.

tiarescott/Flickr

Antonio Fucito/Flickr

Ken Lund/Flickr

As seen here, these palms, which tend to be shorter and wider than the Mexican palms that have a similar shape, grow in spring-fed oases in California’s Colorado and Mojave Deserts.

ilbusca/DigitalVision Vectors via Getty Images

LeoPatrizi/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Marc Flores/Flickr

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