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^^^ Detective Bureau Police Woman Police Woman? |
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1958It's only the pinterest posts which link it to Los Angeles. BTW e_r, it was GW who recommended 'Above Suspicion', not me. |
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I'm trying to work out a location detail from L.A. history, and hope that those more familiar than I with the area between the San Gabriel River and, say, Boyle Heights will be able to express in today's terms some close approximation to the routes taken, as expressed in the excerpt below, by the Californio forces and the Yankee forces between the battle at Paso de Bartolo and the battle called the Battle de las Lagunas alias the Mesa battle. In particular, where specifically is Cañada de los Alisos?:
It's 1847. After the battle at Paso de Bartolo, "Flores, with a few people who kept together [the other Californios had dispersed], went up a hill where the field hospital was to stay that night and summon the scattered forces. That’s where we were that night; and already the next morning some of those who had scattered had returned. We kept our eye on the enemy, which had struck camp and was heading towards Los Angeles—not by the road that led to where we were in the hills, but rather by the flatland. We went down on the other side of the hills until we got to the Cañada de los Alisos—a gully with water—where we had lunch […]. It was there that we agreed to make one more try against the enemy, and to place the forces along a bluff at a point where the Los Angeles road passes, and to surprise the enemy from there. Once again, our plans were frustrated: The Commodore and his army, in their trajectory from the Paso de Bartolo to the ponds did not go by the road, instead going along the flatland about two or three miles off the road” (from Narciso Botello's Annals), and so they issued forth from the Cañada de los Alisos to meet the enemy at the site of the Battle de las Lagunas. Going by today's roads, what route did the Californios take, what route did the Yankees take, and where was that gol-darned gully with water, the Cañada de los Alisos? :shrug: |
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The Rio Hondo river and Beverly Blvd on the west side of the river is a small plaque about the battle fought there maybe this the water they are talking about. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Rio_San_Gabriel. I took the goggle mobile to that location and the plaque and the cannon are now gone. There is a state park called pio pico house the old governors house on Whittier blvd and just east of the Rio Hondo river. Some organization still support that house- they may have more detailed information that you are looking for. Google Pio Pico state park for more data.
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Marano beach
Now that I think back it could be a place that was popular with Latinos in the 40s called Marano (Mexican slang for pig) Beach, a beach like area in Pico Rivera next to the Rio Hondo River (NKA Whittier Narrows), a tributary of the San Gabriel River. This place was popular then with the Mexicans. I don’t know why it was called Marano Beach because it was a nice place next to the river. Maybe there was a pig farm nearby at one time or the beach is muddy. There was a large body of water there and people would go swimming there and have picnic too.
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http://ibb.co/gYjJuvhttps://ibb.co/gYjJuv
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I think the way that your image host wants you to do it is click on "Embed codes" and copy the code in the "BBCode" box under "Full image (linked)". Then you can just paste the code straight into the NLA reply window (don't use the "Insert Image" button). https://preview.ibb.co/n4XhMa/Cars_p...unset_blvd.jpg Although that's meant to give the full image, I clicked the little button with the down arrow immediately to the left of the "Like" button and got the image displayed at full size. I then copied the address at the top of the screen (the one ending .jpg) and pasted it into the NLA reply window using the "Insert Image" button. Using this method, the image shows up slightly larger. https://image.ibb.co/g2sSnF/Cars_parked_sunset_blvd.jpg Send me a PM if you want any more help. |
:previous: Such a fantastic photograph!
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__ http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...922/9B8PBJ.jpgdetail / 1930 Quote:
Here's another pic of the same station in 1924 (this pic might be a repeat) http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...924/d6NnTz.jpg Water and Power Associates -so what's that hotel on the far left? __ |
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__ Moving the carriage house. March 27, 2006 http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...922/otICiO.jpg http://www.tracystonearchitect.com/res_forthmann.html to see the planned interiors go here: Tracy Stone |
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http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...1.jpg~original GSV |
:previous: I think you're right Hoss...both pics have the side window in the exact same spot.
ProphetM, thanks so much for sharing your personal photographs of the Oaklawn Bridge. So many details I hadn't noticed before. & I loved the river-stone benches. Quote:
East Side Portal http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...924/dqR9Ld.jpg (circled below) http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/800...922/y597Ml.jpg google_earth Oaklawn Bridge lower right (red line) __ |
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1924 photo taken by my dad -Sunset Blvd between north Broadway and hill camera facing west, The hill to the left is Bunker Hill. The sign on top of the building is a Coca Cola ad. https://preview.ibb.co/kfVRz5/scan0002.jpg Google "fort moore hill sunset blvd and hill pl photo" will give you an opposite view. I did not post the photo cause it's a Pinterest photo and I don't know the photo author's name. |
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41 Westmoreland Place
GW, what can you tell us about E. P. Bryan's home at 41 Westmoreland Place? It was on the NW corner of what
is now Westmoreland Avenue and 11th Street, just east of Vermont, right? On the 1907 Sanborn below, what is now 11th Street (then also called Westmoreland Place) is on the bottom: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...psywi3hmno.jpg ProQuest via LAPL Here is architect Charles Whittlesey's now-demolished 41 Westmoreland Place from 11th Street, c. November 1910: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...a.jpg~original UCLA/Islandora/SeeingSunset If you go to the photo at the link, you'll see some backwards writing at the very bottom of the image, which I cut off because it's just more street. Anyway, the writing says, "One of our Beautiful Homes." Here's a closer look at the right half. At lower right, we see a slanted corner that is similar to the sloped corners Whittlesey used on the Alfred Glassel home. Was Whittlesey the only one to do that?: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...8.jpg~original This is a closer look at the left half. It's too bad we can't see the carriage house in back: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...t.jpg~original I believe this c. 1911 postcard looks east on what is now 11th Street: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...0.jpg~original PC-001-877 @ SDSU/John and Jane Adams Postcard Collection |
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