CA California Porch

Almanac note · History and culture

The Hay Tree explains Paramount's dairy-market past

Paramount's Hay Tree landmark points back to the city's Hynes and Clearwater roots, dairy industry, hay prices, and 1948 unification story.

ParamountHay Treedairy history

Paramount has a local landmark that sounds small until you know what it stood for. The Hay Tree is tied to the old dairy and hay-market economy of Hynes and Clearwater, the communities that later unified as Paramount.

In the early 1900s, this area was a major Southern California dairy center. Hay prices were set each morning at the Hay Tree, and the California landmark listing places the camphor tree at 16475 Paramount Boulevard. Paramount unified in 1948 and incorporated in 1957.

The tree opens a bigger local story. It is a way to see how agriculture, markets, and small communities shaped the city before the modern Southeast LA landscape filled in. Check the city and state landmark pages for the careful version of the history.

The landmark is also useful because Paramount’s older communities are not always obvious from today’s street grid. Hynes, Clearwater, dairy land, and the Hay Tree give the city a before-and-after shape.

Use the tree as the first clue. Then look at the old place names. Hynes and Clearwater show what Paramount became.

Where to see it

The Hay Tree landmark on Paramount Boulevard. Check the city profile and California historical landmark listing for context.

Official sources

Official source trail

Reviewed July 1, 2026

California Porch explains the path. The official source is still the place to confirm the current rule, fee, form, map, deadline, or office decision.

Use the official page before you spend money, file paperwork, rely on a deadline, or change a property.

Connected places

Where it fits on the map

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