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mystery rppc.
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/D2eg4P.jpg eBay The writing on the back says this is the Lookout Mountain Inn, Los Angeles. But the land around it appears to be flat. :shrug: Could this be some sort of a station down below? Here's the writing on the reverse side. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...921/8gnm4C.jpg To see 3940dxer's comprehensive poston Lookout Mountian Inn start HERE. . |
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Photobucket says: "Free accounts are limited to 25MB of bandwidth per month." How many photos is that? Quote:
I don't trust ANY photo hosting site...free or not...as I posted in July: Quote:
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As you correctly state, Martin, using any hosting site is a dangerous game. Imagine someone with 2250 photos in PB. If you want to go to a Free account, PB makes it almost impossible to delete those extra 2K photos. They only allow you a 5 minute session online to delete photos. At the end of each 5 minute interval you have to reinstate a new 5 minute session. PB is a total scam. If you fail to pay your monthly dues to PB they put into a type of Internet jail. |
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It was built by an Elizabeth Emens in 1904 on a lot that was at the very edge of the city limits (and would be until the Colegrove Addition of 1909). Looks like she was a speculator...George W. Perkins, a real estate man, was living there by the time the '07CD was issued. He died in 1916... https://i.postimg.cc/0NLx9Vdm/perkins-bmp.jpg LAT March 24, 1916 His wife and a daughter remained in the house, the daughter with her husband until about 1930 it seems. Thing is, the two Perkins girls were born in 1885 & 1887, so the kids in the pic can't be them.... |
Lookout Mountain Inn
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As its name suggests, Lookout Mountain was, like the Griffith Observatory or the Getty Center, a prime location from which to gaze down on Los Angeles and make a little sense of this famously incomprehensible city. Before roads reached the summit, hikers scaled Lookout Mountain, a 1,500-foot promontory rising above West Hollywood just west of Laurel Canyon, on foot to inhale its fresh mountain air and commanding views. Eventually, a growing streetcar network and the advent of the automobile—not to mention an experimental trackless trolley line in Laurel Canyon—made the peak accessible to the less adventurous. It also made the land irresistible to subdividers. In 1908, a syndicate of developers bought a 280-acre tract encompassing Lookout Mountain and sliced the land into 700 housing lots, offering them for $250 each. But the developers reserved the best vantage point for a grand hotel that would advertise the subdivision’s charms. The 24-room Lookout Mountain Inn opened in 1910, and its design took full advantage of the ridge-top location. Wide verandas on three sides of the main structure offered 270-degree views of the lowlands below and the ocean beyond. Guests, who paid $15 per week for room and board, could savor their chicken dinners while the city lights of Hollywood and downtown Los Angeles twinkled in the distance. The Lookout Mountain Inn met a fiery end on October 26, 1918, after only eight years of business. A brush fire—reportedly started by a group of boys cooking sausages in the foothills—raced up the canyons and reduced the wooden structure to charcoal. It was never rebuilt. Today, a six-bedroom, 9,300-square-foot house occupies the site, its once-famous views hidden behind security gates and privacy walls. |
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Going from this, I figured the location of the CA Shoe Manufacturing Company building as being here: https://i.imgur.com/Txd86nQ.jpg?2Google Maps Some of the street names have changed slightly and the property is now a gated community. Both El Prado and 212th st. from the Sanborn map are now parts of Border Avenue. Interestingly, the building sat between two still standing Pacific Electric landmarks, the bridge over Torrance Bl: https://i.imgur.com/TZjq1xQ.jpg?1 Pintrest ...and the Torrance Depot, now the Depot restaurant. I was able to find this image dated between 1912 & 1916 with the shoe factory in the background. You can also catch just a tiny bit of the bridge at the far left. https://i.imgur.com/F1dL7gz.jpg?1http://blogs.dailybreeze.com/history...rrances-depot/ |
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Here's how the area looked in 1941. The shoe factory is roughly at the center of this detail. https://i809.photobucket.com/albums/...oeFactory1.jpg mil.library.ucsb.edu |
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Now you guys have me curious about what's going on in this area behind the shoe factory. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...922/tXinWh.jpg :shrug:...................................................................................................................................................... Any ideas?....................................................................................................................................................... Could it be storage for the lumber yard that was in the vicinty?................................................................................................................................................. (I'm still a bit confused by Bill's map / especially the inserts)................................................................................................................................................. . |
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I'll have to check the later Sanborns, but I believe that area* has long been an auto camp/mobile home location(it's current use). *The 1932 Sanborn lists the area as "cabins". There was a lumber yard, but it was south of 213th Street at Bow. |
:previous: Thanks for the clarification(s), Bill. I appreciate it.
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Can't find the link now but there was a reference in an article to skilled shoe workers from Lynn, Massachusetts being brought in to staff the factory. Maybe the cabins originally housed those workers. :shrug: |
Mini-Me Gaylord
While I was snooping around Torrance I happened upon a distinctive apartment building named the GAYLORD.
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/8OrXEY.jpg GSV GW, did you know there was a Mini-Me Gaylord in Torrance? It's visible in Hoss' 1941 aerial. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/JZ88GE.jpg The Torrance GAYLORD was built in 1927. & Today https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...924/wWPzy7.jpg google_earth Quote:
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I located the Lookout Mountain Inn and posted a 3 part history of it back on page 811 six years ago. 3940dxer and I did some exploring around there as well, but those were my posts. |
Thanks Lorendoc.
Noirishers, you can see part one of Lorendoc's AMAZING post HERE. It's truly one of the best in the whole thread! . |
Lorendoc, what did you think of the photograph I posted? ...Have we seen this photograph before?
Lookout Mountain Inn, Los Angeles California. (written on the reverse) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/bMwNAd.jpg eBay I mentioned earlier how flat the land was..but I failed to mention the body of water! I wonder if this photograph was simply mislabeled. :shrug: . |
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/Wh0B6v.jpg
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1916 Building Permit to extend the rear bedroom by 8' and add on a sleeping porch. (I wasn't able to locate the original 1904 building permit) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...923/mcPUKX.jpg . |
Howdy Partners
Sorry posters. I didn't see the Lookout Mountain Inn post by Lorendoc. I was just responding to ethereal_reality. Nothing to see here, let's keep moving. https://coolrain44.files.wordpress.c...pg?w=270&h=314
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Lee Bigler's Community Brake and Speedometer Service at 1218 Santa Monica Blvd. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...921/EJPfn2.jpg santmonicalibrary You're going to think I'm nuts, but that large window facing the street reminds me of the famous window at Hitler's Berghof. ....(I like WWII history) This one. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...923/fZKfPH.jpg argunners Guess what, folks! Lee Bigler's building, and the window, have survived with very little changes. ...(except the TILE is missing from the roof) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/ycCMaE.jpg GSV After all these years I expected the window to be blocked up..like so many other windows in vintage bldgs in L.A. . |
I am hoping someone can find a better scan of this intriguing bit of ephemera I re-discovered in one of my old files the other day.
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/3...921/T2S6At.jpg I've enlarged it the best to my ability but the overall text is too blurry to read. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/mPuNGN.jpg https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/cJZTIx.jpg OLD FILE / UNKNOWN MOTION PICTURE MAGAZINE This must be the restaurant where the fight took place. Does anyone recognize it? https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...922/tghalO.jpg DETAIL I tried squinting. And who's this dude? https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...921/X83spP.jpg DETAIL He must be the guy that got clobbered. I believe it says, C. C. Julian. Also too..... The MMM (in my file description) is the infamous Mary Miles Minter (the lover of murdered film director, William Desmond Taylor) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...921/LSBt87.jpg TIMELINE Mary Miles Minter as Cleopatra............................................................................ One more mystery: I wanted to find the date of the photograph so I checked IMPD but I don't see 'Cleopatra' as one of her credits. :shrug: . |
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https://i.imgur.com/KRCyGjH.jpg for sale at amazon.com The fight with Chaplin took place at the Club Petroushka, 7016 Hollywood Boulevard. It made the front pages of all the local newspapers on 23 Jan 1924. It looks like the building survived. https://i.imgur.com/Vd25Z1d.jpg GSV As to the "Lookout Mountain Inn" photo, I have no idea other than it is nowhere near where I live. |
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