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Thanks for letting me know Scott Charles. I'll fix the link. (although Hoss, being the pro that he is, figured out the elbow macaroni ;) sight unseen)
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We discussed the theater building (red arrow below) a long long time ago on nla. If I remember correctly it used to be known as the Paramount Ballroom. contemporary view 2017 https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/28ixH1.jpg GSV Here's a look at both Lupe's Tortilleria and the theater building. (from the opposite direction / looking west) 2014 https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/2wRa1z.jpg GSV I love the theater building. (sadly, it's still MISSING it's second story windows in Dec. 2017. What's going on :shrug: Does anyone know? ___ F.Y.I. in 2012 the sign was still in pretty good shape. (from this to what you see in 2014 is a BIG difference. I think someone tried to paint over it) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...922/v95dZO.jpg GSV I can't remember all the different names the theater used to go by. I know, I know, research is my friend. [UNFORTUNATELY SO IS SLOTH] __ I've never had a Lupe Taco. :( |
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It took me a bit to figure out what the boys did wrong. "Three hours after starting new patrol of slough area, LAPD crew makes first haul of juveniles from dangerous slough." so...trespassing(?) Did anyone notice the huge sign in the distance? https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/FocmZX.jpg USC I tried to enlarge it. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...923/XbhnOM.jpg It's either a huge double-sided 76 sign...or...maybe an ESSO sign. __ Charles Shanholtzer, Mike Shanholtzer, Robert Shanholtzer, and Jimmy Johnston in the future.https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/1arWAl.jpg |
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https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...-Logo_Esso.gif [Wikimedia Commons] I'd go with 76. https://s9.postimg.cc/ixxr6dp73/76sm.jpg [ebay] What's the origin of the name Bixby Slough? Any connection to nearby Bixby Knolls? |
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The lower floor is 2708 and the upper floor is 2606 Cesar Chavez. The building, according to the Assessor's office, was built in 1925. It appears to be the current home of the Boyle Heights Arts Conservancy. The Assessor's office also notes that the taxes are delinguent. |
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What's the origin of the name Bixby Slough? Any connection to nearby Bixby Knolls?[/QUOTE] Bixby Knolls and also Bixby Slough were both part of a huge rancho owned by Jotham Bixby. The property was 16,000 acres which had originally been part of land owned by the Sepulveda family. The property was partitioned out in 1882 and that part went to Bixby. (information from an article in the Daily Breeze) |
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https://farm1.staticflickr.com/952/2...1cccfde0_b.jpg https://farm1.staticflickr.com/964/4...03d581f1_o.png usc |
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https://s9.postimg.cc/976g3sk9r/bix.jpg [source: USC Digital Library] |
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A man is sitting on top a stack of automobile tires at Muller Brothers Super Service Station at the corner of Sunset and Cahuenga Boulevards. The stack is about 150 feet high. Across the street is the Hollywood Laundry Company. http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...TireStack2.jpg LAPL This is looking more toward Vine Street. It ties in reasonably with the 1927/28 aerials I posted at the weekend. I think 150 feet is quite an exaggeration. Assuming that the man on the right is about six feet tall, I think that 50 feet is nearer the mark. It's still better that the 30 feet achieved in 1942! http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...TireStack3.jpg LAPL |
:previous: Ahhh, so they did put a man on top!
________ I didn't realize the laundry company had those three tall smoke stacks and boilers. (or whatever they are) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/F4fRbQ.jpg detail I really like the old chop suey building. (I see there's a sign shop over there too) __ |
Speaking of unsolved postwar murders and disappearances...
We don't seem to have ever seen on NLA the "fruit murder"--to quote LAPD detective Ed Jokisch, in a late-in-life interview late with Larry Harnisch--of William H Bonsall II.... I came across the case while researching the house (still) at 1315 West Adams Boulevard (story here). The Harvard-educated lawyer apparently shopped for companionship in Pershing Square one too many times. Found naked, beaten, bloody, and about to die in the driveway of the house his great-grandfather, an owner of the Times-Mirror Co, had built at the sec of today's West Third and Lucas. There seems to have still been plenty of money, so it seems odd that the family would return to the declining neighborhood--and allow a filling station to be built in the front yard--after living in West Adams and Beverly Hills... family noir.... Has anyone got anything on this victim of his times? https://s7.postimg.cc/44moqjdpn/bonsallmurderlat.jpg LAT Feb 17, 1946 |
This photograph I happened upon this morning made me think of the recently discussed Horticultural Hall.
1889 original photo AGRICULTURAL FAIR LOS ANGELES CALIF note the room appears to have an upper and lower row of windows on the sides and a stage at one end. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/GnUDGo.jpg EBAY "An 1889 photo by Dewey, 147 South Main St., Los Angeles, Cal., apparently of an indoor agricultural fair display. A sign on the wall at right center gives figures for the 1889 production of oranges, apples, peaches, pears, etc., in a 2-square-mile area." I thought this was the type of display that would have been held at Horticulture Hall, but Horticulture Hall was GONE by 1889, right? I ask because the main hall in Hort Hall also had a stage at one end (I = stage) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...922/OMx7aJ.jpg as well as windows along the sides. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/3...924/VOn9y0.jpg Here's a closer look at the 1889 exhibit room. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/loGdWV.jpg detail I don't believe that fountain over there------> is the one mentioned earlier (with the 25 ft. spray and 'lakelet') [BUT I DREAM OF POSSIBILITIES] ___ The other location that came to mind was the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce. for example: Here is the exhibit room of the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce in 1900 - 1905. (located on Broadway between First Street and Second Street) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...921/Hsju2Z.jpg wikipedia Could someone tell me where the chamber of commerce was located in 1889? (and whether or not it had an exhibit room) ___ |
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e_r, according to the whimsical site http://web.csulb.edu/~odinthor/socal6.html, and talking about the most familiar site (well, to me) of the C of C: "The Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce building, on the east side of the 100s block of Broadway. The building, also known as the Southwest Building, had 130 S. Broadway as its address; the Chamber of Commerce, which moved here in 1903, and stayed until January 31, 1925, used 138 S. Broadway as its address. Previously, the Chamber, founded in 1888, had been sited initially on N. Main Street, then at what was to become the Tajo Building lot at 1st and Broadway, moving in 1890 to the Mott Building at 131 S. Main Street, and moving in 1894 to the then-new Mason Building at the southeast corner of Broadway and 4th." Exhibit room in the older building(s)? Hmmm . . . [begins clicking around] |
:previous: Thank you odinthor. (so the only information for 1889 is N. Main St?)
I'M CLICKING AROUND LIKE A MAD MAN TOO] ;) |
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Is this the 76 Sign in question? https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...921/vg7Fnf.jpg i.pinimg. I ask because that sign :previous: looks alot closer to the actual refinery than the sign in the 'boy gang' photo. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...921/8qqI6s.jpg or perhaps the photographer used a special camera lens)..maybe __ |
A tale of two cities' pavement
Pavement on West 64th Street marks the borders of Los Angeles and Inglewood. [June 5, 1961]
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...921/glLz0U.jpg latimes "The inferior pavement - the one with the holes on the right - is in Los Angeles. The left side of the street is Inglewood. Chester Ave. in Inglewood becomes Verdun Ave. in Los Angeles. That's Bob Cox of the Southern California Gas Co. just inside Inglewood." -JOHN MALMIN Believe it or not they're still doing it the same way after all these years. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/zGAQGo.jpg GSV _ |
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https://s26.postimg.cc/6rzqg4os9/Cof_C.jpg LA Times July 6, 1890, via ProQuest via CSULB Library |
:previous: Good find odinthor. thanks for the additional information.
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