In 1887, Harvey Henderson Wilcox and his wife Daeida filed a map of the land they had purchased in the Cahuenga Valley with the Los Angeles County Recorder's office, officially naming their subdivision 'Hollywood.' Wilcox, a prohibitionist from Kansas, originally envisioned the area as a utopian religious community centered around sober Christian values. He even offered free land to anyone willing to build a church. The name itself was suggested by Daeida after she met a neighbor on a train who owned a country estate called 'Hollywood.' It wasn't until the early 1910s that the first film studios moved to the area, attracted by the consistent sunshine and diverse landscapes, forever changing the destiny of Wilcox’s quiet religious retreat into the world's most famous center for cinematic entertainment.