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Hello Matthew. Nice to see you here. This is Scott Shannon. You might remember we talked a little in email early last year about your father and my mother (MHM's executive secretary at Utter-McKinley). You may have found these already, but there's a nice set of photos of 310 on the USC Digital Library website. The photos are from a time before your father owned the mansion, but there's a nice exterior shot, and it's zoomable, so you can see a rich amount of detail on the front of the structure. Have a look: http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/cdm/co...id/72155/rec/1 -JScott |
Rust Never Sleeps
I'm sure we're ready to move on from the topic, but here's one more pic I found of the Rust house, this is from the South Pasadena Public Library and is captioned:
South Pasadena home of Edward H. Rust, about 1890. Rust, who founded the Rust Nursery for citrus trees in 1884 and later palm, oak, and olive trees, was elected first president of the city's first Chamber of Commerce in 1909. https://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4163/3...37863d35_b.jpg this is the same house, with updated porch, yes?? You can just faintly make out the chimney in the above photo. I suppose Edward took ownership after his father died. For comparison: https://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4162/3...e220711f_b.jpg OK. Almost ready for the BADH GIF. |
Pasadena Laundry
And while I was snooping I got lost in this bucolic scene from HDC.
https://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4177/3...04a07726_b.jpg Something about the slogan "Send It To Us" seems faintly ominous and, well, a bit noir. In Pasadena blood stains were removed quietly, and from behind pastoral landscaping. Are those climbing roses I see?? https://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4176/3...c7dfc976_b.jpg Those little windows at the top of the building in the rear are odd.....and did you ever get the feelin' you was bein' watched? https://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4181/3...e09be69a_b.jpg 974 S Fair Oaks today not so pastoral. The empty orange building was the site of the John Bull pub back in my bachelor days. I feel hung over just thinking about it. https://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4178/3...84158d0a_b.jpg |
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Hey wow, that's another great find! But if it's the E. H. Rust home, it might not be the same house as the lower pic, which is identified as the H. N. Rust home. EDIT: After having read t2's post below . . . what about how the chimney straddles the peak of the roof in the older photo, but is clearly in back of the roof peak in the second photo? Also, the 1910 through 1940 censuses show Edward Rust at 1303 Lyndon, the same address he was at in 1906, when his dad Horatio was as 1224 Lyndon. |
Horatio and Edward Rust
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https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/Yd...g=w439-h456-no I see there's a fan palm street tree there on the right, as well as the two in the yard. Pity the home wasn't saved, as it would be very appreciated now. I've been trying to find the borders of the Rust Tract, which seems to have been quite large, but no luck so far. |
Rust Tract
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I'm confused now about my Rusts and which was which. Looking at Find A Grave these are listed as three direct generations: Horatio Nelson Rust (1828-1906) Frank Nelson Rust (1855-1918) Edward Butler Rust (1883-1958), an architect There's nothing for Edward H Rust, yet here is his Bank Street nursery price list for 1922 and also all the other references to him posted here. Calisphere lists the dates for Edward H Rust as 1868?-1932. Elsewhere it's 1864 Terrific booklet on palms from Edward H. Rust here https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/Ix...Q=w362-h501-no paradiseleased Anyway, thank you ScottyB for the bookending images. It was fun to see the Rust place go from a rough and ready rural establishment to a tidy, cared-for suburban home as the environment changed around it. ETA, LOL, now I've seen FW's question about the chimney and the address. Do you think the elder Rust's house was duplicated across the street? I'm really confused now. |
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___________________ Here are the two Rust homes, 1224 and 1303 Lyndon, on the 1910 Pasadena Sanborn Map. I don't know if this helps or not: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...u.jpg~original ProQuest via LAPL |
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About the chimney, FW, I think it may actually be straddling the peak- seems like the roof line gets washed out in the photo. You can see a little more height at the left. https://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4163/3...37863d35_b.jpg |
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Not to mention all the bungalows! .......................................................... FW, I found a detail of one of the pix you posted recently of the Horatio Rust home: Quote:
southpasadena If this is what the house looked like in 1895, it's not the same as the 1890 house ScottyB posted. Of course all the dates could be wrong. Something is squirrely with find a grave too. |
Here's part 2 of my post about Bernard Judge's Tree House. This second Julius Shulman set from four years later is "Job 5370: Bernard Judge, Judge House (Los Angeles, Calif.), 1976". The set includes similar color and black & white images - I've gone for color. I've omitted three of them.
http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...4.jpg~original The construction beams are very much part of the interior. http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...5.jpg~original The upper floor features this relatively small seating area ... http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...6.jpg~original ... and this compact kitchen. http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...7.jpg~original A higher view of both areas. http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...8.jpg~original I love this spiral staircase - it reminds me of a turbine or mill wheel. http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...9.jpg~original I'll finish with these amazing bathroom tiles. http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...0.jpg~original All from Getty Research Institute The house is still standing at 9192 Crescent Drive (the street number is visible on the fence in the first image). It was originally designed as part of a group of interlinked houses which were to form a hunting lodge in Kenya. When that plan fell through, it was suggested that they could be built in tricky locations in the hills above Los Angeles. In the end, this was the only one built, and it was owned and inhabited by Judge himself. There's more information about this house and other's by Bernard Judge at socalarchhistory.blogspot.com. The Googlemobile doesn't go down this part of Crescent Drive, so here's an aerial view. http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...1.jpg~original Google Maps I'm not sure if the addition on the right is an extension to the living space or just a covering for the parking area. The property sites have very little information on the house, and no previous sale prices. Bernard Judge is still with us (he'll be 86 next month), and I think there's a chance that he's still living in the house. Does anyone know? |
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Zillow says it sold for $360K in 2003 The bathroom tile may have been by Bernard Judge's wife, ceramicist Dora de Larios. More info here |
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Thanks, t2. I'm not sure how I missed that. If I scroll down far enough the information is also on trulia.com. Maybe I just wanted Mr Judge to still be living there :). |
North from Olive and 15th St., November 2, 1930
Olive Street used to jog at Pico, then it ended one block farther south at 14th Street:
http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...l.jpg~original 1921 Baist Map at Historic Mapworks In 1930 Olive was extended south to 23rd St. (now Olive looks this). Below, we are looking north on Olive from just south of 15th Street. The commercial building at left with the splotchy white rectangle on the wall is 239-41 W. 15th St. Above that rectangle, and below the HYDRIL roof sign in the distance is the ill-fated Ponet Square Apartments with its concave east side: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...6.jpg~original uclalat_1429_b3715_G2997 at UCLA The two commercial structures above at left are still standing. That's 239-41 W. 15th Street (b. 1928) again with its slanted roofline: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...t.jpg~original Jan 2017 GSV Farther up the block is 1351 S. Olive (b. 1927?), in 1930 the home of the Los Angeles Addressing & Mailing Company: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...k.jpg~original Close-up of uclalat_1429_b3715_G2997 Here's 1351 S. Olive in Jan 2017, with the same lettering still visible: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...t.jpg~original GSV Across Pico, up at 1220 S. Olive we have the Iris Apartments (b. 1929?): http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...x.jpg~original Close-up of uclalat_1429_b3715_G2997 Iris Apartments, March 2015: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...3.jpg~original GSV Iris Apartments, August 2012 (that tree is always in the way): http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...n.jpg~original GSV The January 2017 GSV shows us that the Iris has a new neighbor. |
'mystery' location.
http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...923/IbjDyO.jpg https://www.flickr.com/photos/reddir...album-1106684/ Mary Hockenbery Grandma's store somewhere I have notes that tell me what street this is in downtown Los Angeles long ago....... Peggy WOW! I didn't even know Grandma had a store. Swensen or Dorsey? Mary Hockenbery Swensen :previous: Do you think there's enough information there to figure out the location of this beautiful photo? A close-up of the young man and his dog sitting in front of the store. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/800...923/DyIEjX.png detail I bet it stayed nice and cool under that large shade tree. ------- Six years ago I posted a photograph of Mary's mother walking downtown in 1935. http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=3989 _ |
Following on from last week's Cary Grant discussion, I see that a new documentary called Becoming Cary Grant is playing at next week's Cannes film festival. It includes an exploration of his efforts to find himself through an estimated 100 sessions of LSD therapy between 1958-1961. From an article at theguardian.com:
Turned on to the treatment by his third wife, Betsy Drake, Grant submitted himself to weekly sessions with Dr Mortimer Hartman at the Psychiatric Institute of Beverly Hills. The effects were startling. “In one LSD dream I imagined myself as a giant penis launching off from Earth like a spaceship.”The documentary will be broadcast in the US on Showtime on 9 June. Here's a preview: |
http://i1381.photobucket.com/albums/...psleffbtln.jpg
Rosie the Riveters taking a break at Lockheed in Burbank, 1943. Note the rooftop camouflage. |
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http://photos.cinematreasures.org/pr...jpg?1478211919http://photos.cinematreasures.org/pr...jpg?1478211919 1924 This first version of the Dome Theater well done. http://i357.photobucket.com/albums/o...b.jpg~original http://hdl.huntington.org/cdm/compou...coll2/id/19841 |
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