Downey
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Downey, city, Los Angeles county, southern California, U.S. Situated about 10 miles (16 km) east of the Pacific Ocean, it lies just southeast of central Los Angeles. The area became part of Rancho Los Nietos, a Spanish land grant to Manuel Nieto, in 1784, and, when Nieto’s lands were subdivided among his heirs, part of the Mexican Rancho Santa Gertrudes (1834). In 1859 the rancho was purchased by James P. McFarland and John G. Downey, an Irish immigrant who became governor of California (1860–62), and in 1873 the city was founded. Once the domain of cattle ranchers, the city’s rancho lands were subdivided into farms, and the region developed as an agricultural community, with crops that included grain, corn (maize), beans, mustard, and various fruits (particularly oranges). A railway link was completed in 1874, enabling greater access to markets for the city’s products, which also included poultry. Beginning in the 1920s, agriculture gave way to the aircraft industry, and the city’s oil industry also expanded. After World War II, light industry developed. Downey played a pivotal role in the U.S. space program by being the site for the building of Saturn V booster rockets and lunar-landing modules for the Apollo program; Downey aerospace workers also built five space shuttles (including the ill-fated Columbia and Challenger). The facilities were closed in the late 1990s. Retail businesses, service industries, and manufacturing are now the city’s economic mainstays. Downey is home to the oldest surviving McDonald’s restaurant (opened 1953), a large Coca-Cola bottling factory, and a municipal art museum that houses works by local and national artists. The city’s library contains a collection devoted to the 1970s pop duo the Carpenters, who lived in the city in the 1960s. A community college was established in neighbouring Norwalk in 1955. Inc. 1956. Pop. (2010) 111,772; (2020) 114,355.