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http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2738/...2b166175_o.jpg (from here ) |
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Here's some random noir...nothing says noir like neon in the night...
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2486/...efb55f1b_o.jpg http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2635/...8b6e8b82_o.jpg http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2567/...7926b449_o.jpg (This was the Wayne McAllister-designed VDK at Fletcher and San Fernando. Demolished.) http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2791/...7785f2d5_o.jpg Check out how this became this. Of course now it's a parking lot for an Office Depot (west side of Vine south of Fountain). The Art Linkletter Playhouse, aka the Filmarte, didn't fare so well either. http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2547/...dde4bf6e_o.jpg Further up Vine, at Al Levy's Tavern, this guy needs a drink. |
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You've made me very happy. :D |
(Neglected to archive this one. It was probably just conversational in nature.)
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I like this simple skyline, with the new United California Bank building standing tall and apart from the other skyscrapers. It really was a sight to behold when it first went up. -Scott |
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https://otters.net/img/lanoir/southofangelsflight.jpg Library Of Congress Oh, and there's "The Ems" again, up there on Olive within a stone's throw of Angels Flight. Might its name perhaps refer to the plural of the letter "M," rather than a misspelling of elm? -Scott |
"Los ANN-gliss"
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Beaudry, thanks for answering my questions from several posts back.
I'm a bit embarrassed I didn't know the Bradbury Building in that photo. Anyway.... I appreciate all this information from every one of you...Sopas_ej....Beaudry.. Los Angeles Past. My head is spinning! That said.....the map Scott posted from the Library of Congress is killer. Are there other areas featured in that map as well? I'd love to see them. :) (Scott, I just noticed you have a link to the map...but I can't download it for some reason...go figure) Here are a few more photos I found. http://img137.imageshack.us/img137/9...useviewoil.jpg usc digital archive Above: My first question is.....are those oil wells in the foothills? Also, I was able to place the following photo because of the handsome building in the lower left hand corner in the above photo. The usc archive didn't know exactly where to place this photograph....they were confused because the firemen in the parade are from San Francisco. http://img137.imageshack.us/img137/5...eptinparad.jpg usc digital archive In the first photograph I recognized Los Angeles' first High School as the white building with the cupola on the far left hand side of the pic. But it didn't seem to be in the right location. http://img265.imageshack.us/img265/6...ghtemplean.jpg usc digital archive Above: Los Angeles High School on Fort Moore Hill. http://img233.imageshack.us/img233/7...oolfromtem.jpg usc digital archive http://img291.imageshack.us/img291/1...oolonfortm.jpg usc digital archive I was confused until I found the next two photographs. http://img145.imageshack.us/img145/9...oolonnbroa.jpg usc digital archive http://img145.imageshack.us/img145/9...oolmoving1.jpg usc digital archive They moved the damn thing! Do any of you in Los Angeles know the story behind this? |
Oh...and here's one more I just found in my file.
http://img80.imageshack.us/img80/910...tmoorehill.jpg usc digital archive I would certainly think twice before I posed beneath it. |
Amazing how they moved these buildings-- there were a number of big houses moved from the MacArthur Park area to around Hancock Park when that developed--which is why you see the odd Victorian in that area--but the school is really huge. I think the school building was on "Poundcake Hill" first and then moved to Ft Moore Hill-- not sure exactly where Poundcake is/was-- Ft Moore Hill was in the path of the freeway I think--not that that's why they moved the school, of course. Scott? Beaudry?
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I think you're correct GaylordWilshire, several of the glass negatives
had 'Pound Cake Hill' as a location. I thought perhaps 'Pound Cake Hill' was the same location as Fort Moore Hill, just a different/earlier name. It could very well be an entirely different location. One negative mentioned it being moved to Sand Street. ?? |
The school was originally at Broadway & Temple, built in 1870 (or 1873).
That was Pound Cake Hill and the school had to be moved because that's where they decided to drop the new courthouse, so it was raised on a rolling trestle and moved across Temple to the bluff of Ft. Moore Hill in 1887, pretty much just above Olive. Then in 1891 they built that other brick HS with the square tower you always see. That one I believe burned in 1937. I'll take a page from the Scott playbook and give you some Worthington-Gates: http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2695/...d6ca8f79_o.jpg There's the 1891 HS rightish-center, and the 1870 HS is about an inch above the tunnel on the left...pretty much like in the first photograph. Things got really nasty in 1949, I mean, they moved it up a giant hill in the 1870s for crying out loud...there was a plot of land just north of the proposed freeway, west of Grand, owned by the State, the California State Historical Association appealed to Governor Warren to move the school, there was a whole preservation movement...but there were also endless Letters To The Editor going on about the silly, vile movement that was preservation. I guess they thought it smacked of Communism, anything delaying for five seconds the demolition of the Old. Before 1950 the old HS was toast, and we've all driven over the site a hundred times on the Hollywood Fwy. (Apparently the doorway of the HS went to the new HS at 4600 W Olympic, though I haven't been over to check it out...) ...I think I've got it pretty well covered but I'd welcome corrections or additions. Hey, it's one in the blessed AM. |
Seeing those pics of the old LA High School being moved reminded me of a story I read some years ago about a moving company in LA that used to move houses, and in the 1920s, made headlines by moving a multistory building in downtown LA.
I didn't remember the name of the company or the building that was moved, but doing a search on the USC digital archive I came across two pics of the Alhambra Hotel being moved in 1924 by the Kress House Moving Company; this has to be what I read about a few years ago. The 1920s and 1930s was the golden age of house moving because back then it was actually cheaper to move a house than to build them, according to what I read. But moving the Alhambra Hotel was a big deal. I don't remember why it had to be moved. http://img200.imageshack.us/img200/5593/chs43831.jpg USC archive http://img91.imageshack.us/img91/9986/chs43832.jpg USC archive OK, now I remember the story I read; it had to do with a building called the Commercial Exchange Building at 8th and Olive; this from the Larchmont Chronicle: "In a 1925 newspaper story, Kress was said to have moved about 250 structures the previous year, earning his firm more than $1 million. The widening of Spring, Olive and Flower streets brought Kress plenty of work. He saved the 13-story Commercial Exchange Building at Eighth Street and Olive from demolition in 1935 by cutting a five-foot section from its middle and sliding the west half of the building toward the eastern half. The half he moved weighed 5,000 tons." From the USC archive, the Commercial Exchange Building: http://img145.imageshack.us/img145/5...gcitbui059.jpg |
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Yep, those are derricks, a lot of people assume that LA oil production is Wilmington/Long Beach/Signal Hill, and those are important to be sure, but later in the grand scheme of things... There was nothing but a little seepy brea until Doheny's first shaft, fall of '92, which was near where Beverly crosses Glendale; by '95 derricks lined First Street. By '97 the area bounded by Figueroa, First, Union and Temple held over 500 producing wells--one could climb between derricks without touching the ground. Three out of every five barrels produced in California came from that field, and California produced a quarter of the country's oil. The big strikes in Signal Hill, Huntington Beach et al were still twenty years away. Check out this map, 1906: http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2490/...fe593f85_o.jpg http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2459/...ef087f6a_o.jpg http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2648/...308dd10f_o.jpg ...and this isn't even all of them (you'll notice there are none around the aforementioned Fig/Temple area, this is just a map of a certain sand, that is, a particular stratigraphic substructure). |
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http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2730/...48dd60f4_o.jpg (from here) |
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