As we've been talking about Bunker Hill, here's what's left of its southern tip (AKA Normal Hill) in a couple of 'thens' and a 'now'. At one time the hill crossed W 6th, at least, and probably went further still. The hill's southern flank has been cut back in this 1893 view (taken from the NW corner of W 6th and Hope), leaving a very steep slope, which looks much too fragile to have such a great load of bricks piled on it. It seems like some grading has been going on and the excess earth sent cascading down the slope. A retaining wall was built after Preston and Locke's addition to the 1882 State Normal School was finished (The expanded school must have been a rather overwhelming neighbor for the frame homes on Hope.). BTW, the addition is listed by
Beaudry as being built in 1893, so I'm assuming that's the date of the photo, not USC's date of ca 1898:
uscdl (detail)
uscdl (detail)
A second shot shot looking east from Hope 30 years later. The Normal School has been cleared, the site now being graded for the new Central Library. A sliver of BIOLA is on the right margin and the Engstrom is in the distance on the right side of the photo:
lapl
And now. Central Library's retaining wall (punctured by the entrance to the former loading dock) holds up a much reduced Bunker Hill fragment, severed from the main Bunker Hill remnant by the W 5th Street cut. (The Sunkist Building has come and gone, we missed it entirely) The buildings left to right are now 444 S Flower, 333 S Hope, Central Library, Library Tower and 550 S Hope:
gsv