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November 1948
I just saw this on ebay.
"Original Photograph First Congregational Church Los Angeles Street View 1948" https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/xq90/922/gTHTNL.jpg For horizontal version go HERE __ as an aside: The oldest continuous Protestant church in Los Angeles, First Congregationl Church, was located at New High (later Spring St), north of Temple St. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...922/N2qNsM.jpg W and P [ca. 1875] _ |
rabbit hole
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As a reminder, here's Jack Dempsey's home in Los Angeles. It was located at 2415 S. Western Avenue. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...923/zdaezy.jpg 1920s postcard The boxing champ used this photograph in his autobiography, DEMPSEY https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/okoMxI.jpg paradise leased "The Dempsey home had been built by local businessman A.B. Tomlinson at the turn of the Twentieth Century. The most dramatic feature of the Mission Style house was an elaborate heraldic crest emblazoned in bold bas relief above the entry portal. Prior to Dempsey’s arrival, the home had a colorful ownership history that included newspaper magnate John Bradbury of the L.A. Herald, and “Copper King” Colonel W. C. Greene." paradised leased Sadly, the home was torn down in 1968. :( :( :( (I hope someone had the sense to save the herald crest) It looks like a real work of art. Today, a healthcare center sits where Jack Dempsey's home used to be. looking west / north is at right https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/x9LA3C.jpg gsv SIDENOTE: The mansion you see next door is the 1908 Frederick L. Roehrig designed William E. Ramsey (Ramsey-Durfee) Estate at 2425 South Western Avenue. Anywho, in 1978 St. John of God bought the Ramsay-Durfee property from the Estate of Nellie Durfee for $470,000. Long story short - the St. John of God website has an aerial that also captures Jack Dempsey's home. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/13qRhD.jpg It's over on the right--------> Here's a closer look (pretty cool, huh :)) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/Wpq4Ua.jpg detail More googling led me to a couple old postcards. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/uIarWE.jpg hippostcard This must be the beautiful white mansion in the aerial. (if the postcard shows the side view; where the heck is the front?) :shrug: https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...924/sLxbcU.jpg detail Have we discussed this mansion on nla? -perhaps under a different name. Postcard #2 https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/xxb4Ai.jpg hippostcard At first I was confused by this postcard, but now I believe it's the building that I circled in red. [shown below] https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...924/PJlEHi.jpg detail So what estate was that one? (GW?) St. John of God Retirement and Care Center More Ramsey-Durfee details HERE |
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Charles Everett Barnard was born in Maine in 1857. In the above voter registration, he is described as being 5' 9" with a fair complexion, blue eyes and dark hair. He is listed in the censuses as a bookkeeper, but in directories as a liquor dealer. His residence, as found in the census, was 301 E. 4th Street, Los Angeles |
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Mount Saint Mary's College
Located at 12001 Chalon Rd, Los Angeles, the college changed it's designation to University in 2015. It also has a downtown campus, the Doheny Campus, in Chester Place.
In 1928, the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet purchased 36 acres of land along the foothills of the Santa Monica Mountains from the Rodeo Land and Water Company for $162,000. In 1947, an additional 20 acres was acquired to complete what is today the university's Chalon campus. The campus contains a blend of architecture familiar to Los Angeles, largely in the tradition of the Spanish Colonial Revival and Mission Revival styles. The unique location of the Brentwood campus, on a 1,100-foot ridge, provides an overlook to both the Getty Center and 40 miles of the Pacific Ocean. Wikipedia Images from a scanned 1949 yearbook The Mount. https://i.imgur.com/6kkSbSB.jpg https://i.imgur.com/vGZUbDY.jpg https://i.imgur.com/wg5ez0S.jpg https://i.imgur.com/eUjyYmU.jpg https://archive.org/stream/mount1949...ge/n0/mode/2up |
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Yes, it doesn't feature the church as prominently, but as a period photograph I like the horizontal version better. |
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Thanks for showing us the Dempsey house, e_r. Here's the 1921 Sanborn Map that covers much of what's in the aerial view. At lower right is Dempsey's 2415. In the middle, 2425's property extends all the way west to St. Andrews Place (not shown). At lower left, the home on the NW corner of Adams and Western is shown here as 2465 S. Western, but it apparently was also numbered 2443 and 2445. To the west is 2025 W. Adams, from your Postcard #2: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...b.jpg~original ProQuest via LAPL In this early view the home on the NW corner of Adams and Western, from your first postcard, is numbered 2443 S. Western. I believe we are looking SW: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...psh7pvdvzg.png Catalog Number SCWHR-P-005-N0232 at Seaver Center Here is a later view where the building is described as the "Mount St. John of God Sanitarium etc., 2445 South Western Ave.": http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...psfdsqtiqz.jpg Islandora/UCLA |
:previous: Oh man, thanks so much FW. The Sanborn map helps a lot.
A somewhat humorous ad from the 1960s. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/32QaY7.jpg annualmobiles / school yearbook ads Note the beautiful architectural detail above the front entrance of the showroom. Here's a look at the entry before it was painted monochromatic. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/6gLqsG.jpg originally posted by BiffRayRock / calisphere If you look closely at top photograph, I believe you can see the work bays in the distance (beneath the Sopp neon sign) Oh what the heck. I'll just show you. ;) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...922/8MvJpE.jpg detail Here's a closer look at the bays, circa 1930. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/oSPIdp.jpg LAPL I just checked the intersection of Pacific & Slauson and there was no trace of the Sopp dealership. :( For search purposes: Sopp Chevrolet, Pacific and Slauson, LU 8-1191 |
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but I don't recall the 'Southern Manor' photograph. Is this the first time you posted it? By the way, I searched for the Southern Manor without success. sidenote: I wonder what happened to the bird? __ |
Calle de los Negros
Forgive me if this is a stupid question - I searched this thread and read five pages of search results for “negro”, and one page of search results for, um… “n-word”… and I didn’t find an answer.
I understand that the tallest pole, almost dead-center in the photo, is some kind of early lighting fixture… https://i.imgur.com/6BNb57kl.jpg http://hdl.huntington.org/cdm/single.../id/3704/rec/1 …but I couldn’t find any answer to what these two, shorter poles are: https://i.imgur.com/SEJiFWz.jpg Obviously, they look like telephone poles, but if there are any wires running between them I can’t make them out. Additionally, one has five crossbeams, while the other has only four, which seems odd. The Huntington says that the photo was taken in 1882. This website says: Quote:
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I came across a 1920s Santa Monica snapshot of a young man (lifeguard perhaps) on the beach with C C on his beach attire. I wonder if that might have stood for Crescent Bay Yacht Club :shrug: (you couldn't very well fit the whole name on a lifeguard swimsuit) The problem is...I found the pic while I was visiting my Mom and it's on my laptop I keep at her house. __ |
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(I wanted it to be a saloon...something slightly wicked and mysterious) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/3...923/AKBvlf.jpg lapl |
'mystery' street corner.
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/zZZKse.jpg EBAY "ORIGINAL SLIDE 1980's SANTA MONICA POLICEMAN 563A" __ |
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I’m no expert sleuth like the rest of you folks here, but after I posted that photo the other day, I decided to try my best to find out ANYTHING about the Crescent Bay Yacht Club (I mean, Google literally has NOTHING on it). Eventually, I discovered the Santa Monica Image Archive, a website with a photo interface identical to the Huntington site. Sadly, there weren’t any photo matches, but there were a number of newspaper pages. According to the articles I found, the club opened on January 31st, 1925. They opened at a “temporary clubhouse” location just below the so-called “99 steps” at the juncture of Arizona Ave and Ocean Front Walk, with the permanent location ending up a block north at the juncture of Wilshire Blvd and Ocean Front Walk (as noted previously by HossC). https://i.imgur.com/pFZEAHc.jpg_LINK I’ll go to Mount Lowe for $2.50! I also found that the Crescent Bay Yacht Club was just south of the Gables Beach Club: https://i.imgur.com/tIL5dFf.jpg_LINK Why is is so easy to find pictures of the Gables Beach Club, but perfectly impossible to find even a single photo of the Crescent Bay Yacht Club??? :mad: Speaking of young men in beach attire, look what I found here, ER: https://i.imgur.com/FEcl0TF.jpg_LINK I want that shirt! |
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http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...1.jpg~original GSV |
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By the way, the restaurant name in that photo,"Ma'kai" is Hawaiian and means toward the sea, or by (next to) the sea. The opposite is "mauka" meaning inland or toward the mountains. Both are usually used in giving directions. FYI. |
So I live in Westchester and love the place for all it's abandoned neighborhoods (thanks LAX) and architectural remnants. For instance, last week I was at Kohl's
https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4765/...77941bcb_c.jpg and noticed the entryway https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4765/...dc8430e3_c.jpg What we have here is a remnant of the original building that was really cool. Here's a Julius Shulman shot of the place: http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...5.jpg~original You'll notice the really cool ramps that used to lead to the rooftop parking. https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-kWceUFMJz...vynsStore7.jpg https://i.pinimg.com/564x/06/c9/29/0...377646b2dc.jpg http://donosdump.com/Westchester/sit...ad-503x356.jpg Well, sometime in the 80's or 90's, they abandoned the rooftop parking, tore off the outer ramp and put on the ugly glass entry that's there now. And here's the side today: https://farm3.static.flickr.com/2654...a2415c5b_b.jpg And the front, sometime between when it was Mervyn's and Kohl's http://laforum.org/wp-content/upload...13-395x197.jpg |
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Back in 2015, I posted Julius Shulman photos of that store when it was Milliron's. You can see them here. Here's one of the interior images: Quote:
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It's really too bad this particular building wasn't kept in pristine condition. :( I also revisited HossC's excellent Schulman post on Milliron's Hoss included this photograph of the Terrace Restaurant which looked out on the roof-top parking lot. http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...6.jpg~original __________________________________________________________________________________ Here's a 2nd, more expansive, view of the Terrace Restaurant. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/7yXzmR.jpg juliusschulman.org The lighting situation on the right is pretty impressive [and remember, this is 1949!] In 1947, at the time that J. W. Milliron commissioned the architectural firm of Guren and Krummeck to design his first branch of Milliron’s department Store, he noted that “Treatment of this suburban location should be one of complete Suburnanity”. Located at 8379 South Sepulveda Blvd. in the city of Westchester, the design was considered a “Modernist Work of Art”. hmmm...I don't believe I've ever heard the word "Suburnanity" before. :shrug: update: If you google "Suburnanity", a bunch more Schulman photographs show up. Perhaps there are some we haven't seen on nla. like this one https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/3aSAXr.jpg juliusschulman.org Look at the 1940s print on the curtains....so cool! ( they're stylized leaves....odinthor?) Hoss, do you know if Mr. Schulman took any color photographs of Milliron's Terrace Restaurant? I'd love to know the color motif. Whoa, I just noticed those striped chairs. I'm guessing the motif was Green and a Cream color |
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