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  #15381  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2013, 4:24 PM
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ethereal_reality ethereal_reality is offline
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NoirCityDame, here are two more slides from 1959 that were taken by the same person who took the 'Germain's' slide.


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  #15382  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2013, 4:30 PM
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Clifton's policies

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  #15383  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2013, 5:12 PM
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I searched for 'van fleet' under the search option and nothing came up, so here goes..

The Van Fleet Apartments 230 S. Flower Street

http://photos.lapl.org/carlweb/jsp/F...Number=5019820

I am confused by the 'New Hotel' sign. Is it on top of the house or is it at the back of the Van Fleet?
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  #15384  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2013, 5:44 PM
CityBoyDoug CityBoyDoug is offline
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Van Fleet

Quote:
Originally Posted by ethereal_reality View Post
I searched for 'van fleet' under the search option and nothing came up, so here goes..

The Van Fleet Apartments 230 S. Flower Street

http://photos.lapl.org/carlweb/jsp/F...Number=5019820

I am confused by the 'New Hotel' sign. Is it on top of the house or is it at the back of the Van Fleet?
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ER...The Van Fleet apartments are seen briefly in the 35mm film from the 1940s. That "New Hotel" sign does seem oddly placed. See story below. Evidently a woman gassed herself in one of the apartments in the Van Fleet in 1912.


Internet Archive film ~ screen shot

More on the Van Fleet apartments. The Van Fleet, a three-story frame apartment house built in 1911 by Garrett & Bixby for citrus man Nelson Van Fleet. The 29 apartments were split between two- and three-room models, and it was in one of them on March 22, 1912, that Marie Higginson, 40-ish "and quite prepossessing," having failed to shoot herself in San Pedro last week, gassed herself in the kitchen. Her groans alerted Mrs. Francis Passmore across the hall. Found unconscious on a blanket on the kitchen floor with the oven door removed, Marie's purse revealed the gun and a copy of Walter Malone's poem "Opportunity"—a popular verse among self annihilators, for Joseph N. Vincent recently blew his brains out on Silverwood Hill with the last stanzas in his pocket.

Last edited by CityBoyDoug; Jul 1, 2013 at 5:58 PM.
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  #15385  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2013, 5:54 PM
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noirish places: 121 N. Flower Street

http://photos.lapl.org/carlweb/jsp/F...olNumber=33798

This is the apartment house from which Baxter Shorter, an informant in the Mabel Monohan murder, was kidnapped at gunpoint
and never seen again.
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The Mabel Monohan murder
http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=1235
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  #15386  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2013, 7:03 PM
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Interesting to see that old post, ER—I just fixed the broken links in it...



LAPL

Baxter Shorter
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  #15387  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2013, 9:42 PM
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rcarlton rcarlton is offline
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1933 Griffith Park fire of Los Angeles

The recent tragic events in Arizona brought up this information about Griffith Park:

"The National Fire Protection Association website lists the last wildland fire to kill more firefighters as the 1933 Griffith Park fire of Los Angeles, which killed 29. The biggest loss of firefighters in U.S. history was 343, killed in the 9/11 terrorist attack in New York.

From The Detroit News: http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20130701/NATION/307010035#ixzz2XpfZozfq"

LAFIRE.COM
At first, it looked like a small brush fire. And there seemed
to be almost unlimited manpower available to put it out.
Both workers and foremen figured it would be batted out quickly.

LAFIRE.COM

Suddenly, the wind shifted and the fire began to chase the workers.
Those who ran across the path of the advancing flames to the road
below generally found safety and help. Those who tried to run directly
away from the flames--downwind and uphill--were in many cases
less fortunate. This was the scene on the road between the Golf
Clubhouse and Girls' Camp.

LAPL
This panorama shows flame-scourged "death hill" where most of the victims of the Griffith Park fire met death in a raging inferno which caught up with them as they climbed for life up the slope shown in the right foreground. The men, workers on the county charities rolls, were laboring on roads high on the hills in background when a brush fire broke out in the park and they went down through the ravines to fight it. A breeze suddenly lashed the fire around the hill from the right and trapped the victims. The roaring flames spread at a speed of 35 or 40 miles per hour and the men, climbing up the steep hill were enveloped in flames and perished, some of them clutching at bushes and rocks, some of them trying to save fallen comrades. Others who ran sideways to the blaze escaped. When the fire was extinguished the bodies were carried from the hillside to a girls' camp at left. Twenty-six bodies have been recovered from the "No Man's Land" where the flames raged into Dam Canyon and Mineral Wells Canyon. Photo dated: October 7, 1933.

LAPL
Photo of the Griffith Park brush fire on October 3, 1933. View is looking up death canyon--safety on the left, death on the right. Photo dated: October 6, 1933.

USC

Photograph of a view of Griffith Park after the fire, showing the Santa Monica Mountains, October 4, 1933. Two shallow rivers flow in the tree-spotted dust in the bottom right corner of the view. Cylindrical structures can be seen in the short, tree-covered mountains at center. The flat area of the nearby city can be seen in the right distance.
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Last edited by rcarlton; Jul 1, 2013 at 10:40 PM.
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  #15388  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2013, 10:27 PM
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rcarlton, I heard about this on the news and was hoping someone would look it up. -so sad.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Noircitydame View Post
It's great to see that slide and in color! Germain's went in 625-627 S. Hill in 1937, opening May 24. It's the 2-story building we've seen before next to the Banker's Building. 1926 to 1934 it had housed Polly's Cheerio Tearoom upstairs; Joe Pirrone took it over for a nightspot after that but not for long. Downstairs was a National Shirt Shops & New York Hardware Co. store. Germains gave it a streamline moderne makeover when they moved in. They also had a retail shop in the Kerckhoff Building (since 1918).


This one's been posted before - you can just see the "G" to the right.

Source: probably USC. Cropped from a larger photo I'd saved.

NCD, the Polly's Cheerio Tearoom sign has been added to the building by the time this photo was taken. (compare to your photo above)


http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/cdm/si...id/20766/rec/1


it's the sign featured in their ad.

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Last edited by ethereal_reality; Jul 1, 2013 at 11:22 PM.
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  #15389  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2013, 10:47 PM
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...and I just found this May 1938 photograph showing the modernized facade of Germain's.


http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/cdm/si...id/24247/rec/2
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Last edited by ethereal_reality; Jul 1, 2013 at 11:02 PM.
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  #15390  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2013, 10:48 PM
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oops! I just realized I cropped off Germain's rooftop lettering. This is a better view.


http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/cdm/si...id/24247/rec/2
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Last edited by ethereal_reality; Jul 1, 2013 at 11:03 PM.
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  #15391  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2013, 12:41 AM
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People who were around half a year ago will remember I made a bit of a discovery as I was surfing around Google Maps and noticed that there were remnants of the houses that used to exist on Fremont Ave and directly adjacent to the legendary Court Circle. It took me and I think everyone here by surprise how these remains, hiding in plain sight, could have gone so unnoticed and undisturbed after all this time. But once someone made the connection that the property was coming up for redevelopment I made it a point that the next time I was in LA I would get my butt down there and document whatever was left.

Well I'm in and out of town a bunch this month, and this past Saturday, June the 29th I was able to borrow the company vehicle and head down just as the sun was trying to disappear for the day. Laws were broken and one camera battery was drained in order to bring you this overabundance of pictures.

But first a quick recap...this is the image that started my obsession:



You can see the bit of road and stairs next to the twin towers. That then brought me to streetview:



What the area looked like back in 1940:



And an overlay of the remnants still with us circa 2012:



-- --

Now on to the latest evidence, starting at the southern end aka Mignonette Street:









I was dismayed to see how much excavation had already taken place...









This was the most intact of the three stairwells. Also, the longer of the street stubs (the one that led to Court Circle) was virtually unrecognizable at far right.







Families, and perhaps later in its life some more hardscrabble folks, used to walk up and down these stairs every day, all the way up through the 1960s.





Looking north towards Temple Street:









Sadly, none of the bricks I came across had legible stampings on them.



Fragments abounded, however, and I made sure to pore over every one of them for clues of how far they date back.











What the heck are these ^ v things?













I love how these things can be so mundane and yet so damn intriguing.





























What on earth is this?





Back down the stairs one last time...adios, amigo.





From the outside:





And one of the lot on the other side of Temple, also part of the redevelopment:

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Last edited by kznyc2k; Jul 3, 2013 at 6:18 AM.
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  #15392  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2013, 12:51 AM
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Now -- and then -- in color!

Quote:
Originally Posted by MichaelRyerson View Post


The 600 block of North Spring Street, looking south to Sunset Boulevard, circa the 1940s. The Vera Cruz Cafe and the Bamba Club are on the left.

Don't see any evidence of Slim Dundee nor his peripatetic wife Anna today, but there's the backside of the Sentous next door to the club with the Hotel Atlantic next to it and the Hotel Pacific down on the corner at Sunset.

LAPL



North Spring Street Hotel entrance, 1948

Man waiting at hotel entrance. Double-sided sign above door reads "N. Spring Hotel" on one side, and "Spring Hotel" on the other, the "N" having worn away. This is the hotel entrance on N. Spring Street side to the second floor of the Sentous Building. Note the sign above his head which says (PRINT)ING and then compare it to the sign in the pic above (right above the two jaywalking guys) which is the same 'PRINTING' sign. Doubly interesting to consider, Pio Pico himself likely passed through this very door, used those very stairs in the background.

LAPL


View of the 600 block of North Spring Street, looking south to Sunset Boulevard, circa the 1940s. Hotel Atlantic is on the left, and the Pico House is in the background.

Here is a slice of the Sentous on the left with the hotels Atlantic (and the El Patio Club) and Pacific (and the Café Puma) then across Sunset the Pico House and a corner of the church property.

LAPL
Looking at the North Spring St. side of the Sentous Block, with The Sepulveda behind and to the left on North Main St., July 15, 1957:

Huntington Digital Library -- http://cdm16003.contentdm.oclc.org/c...id/6197/rec/12

Here's The Sepulveda on April 20, 1957:

Huntington Digital Library -- http://cdm16003.contentdm.oclc.org/c.../id/6198/rec/7

Back to North Spring Street on July 15, 1957 -- Sentous Block, Hotel Atlantic, Hotel Pacific . . . and a red-and-white 1957 DeSoto (check out those curb feelers!):

Huntington Digital Library -- http://cdm16003.contentdm.oclc.org/c...id/6207/rec/13

North Main Street view of Sentous Block demolition, December 1, 1957:

Huntington Digital Library -- http://cdm16003.contentdm.oclc.org/c...id/6159/rec/19

As we've already seen here, the Sentous Block, Hotel Atlantic and Hotel Pacific are gone, but The Sepulveda is still standing:

GSV August 2012

Last edited by Flyingwedge; Jul 2, 2013 at 1:19 AM. Reason: Stupid, stupid effing Photobucket
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  #15393  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2013, 1:07 AM
tovangar2 tovangar2 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kznyc2k View Post
Laws were broken and one camera battery was drained in order to bring you this overabundance of pictures.
Thank you so much. All your hard work on our behalf is greatly appreciated (the lawlessness too!).
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  #15394  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2013, 1:39 AM
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kznyc2k, excellent exploration! Thank you for all your hard work.
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  #15395  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2013, 1:43 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Flyingwedge View Post
Here's The Sepulveda on April 20, 1957:

Huntington Digital Library -- http://cdm16003.contentdm.oclc.org/c.../id/6198/rec/7
My jaw dropped when I saw the color photographs Flyingwedge. What a stunning find. I had no idea they even existed!
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Last edited by ethereal_reality; Jul 2, 2013 at 2:08 AM.
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  #15396  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2013, 2:27 AM
tovangar2 tovangar2 is offline
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Nathan Masters has a short update on the San Pedro Street palms (including a shout-out to noirish Los Angeles):

http://nathanmasters.me/2013/07/01/t...ree-continues/
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  #15397  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2013, 2:52 AM
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  #15398  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2013, 3:19 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ethereal_reality View Post
My jaw dropped when I saw the color photographs Flyingwedge.
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You mean like this?


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  #15399  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2013, 4:36 AM
CityBoyDoug CityBoyDoug is offline
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Then and now.......

Quote:
Originally Posted by Flyingwedge View Post
You mean like this?

Then and now...


Last edited by CityBoyDoug; Jul 2, 2013 at 6:58 AM.
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  #15400  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2013, 4:45 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ethereal_reality View Post
NoirCityDame, here are two more slides from 1959 that were taken by the same person who took the 'Germain's' slide.


ebay






ebay
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Those are swell, thanks.
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