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That's the Chapman Park Hotel in the background, to the left of the Derby. |
Union Square /Hoover Triangle
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The "Union Square" label is on the 1910 and 1914 Baist maps, but not on the 1921 version. I'm not sure why it was dropped. The robbery of the Union Square branch of the Hellman Bank, at 2412 W Hoover, occurred in late 1919 and the fallout was much in the Herald into 1921. Maybe that tainted the name. There were businesses on the actually triangle back then, "Union Square" referred to the big intersection where the three streets meet. Maybe P.E. wasn't using this for a hub anymore and the name faded. A few local businesses used the "Union Square" name. Union Square Investment Company, Union Square Realty, Union Square Wet Wash Company, Union Square Garage, Union Square Electric, Union Square Painting and Decorating, Union Square Dye Works, etc. |
re: 'mystery' fire
http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/800...922/H2RBb4.jpg :previous: Quote:
I especially liked this pic (from your lafd link) http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...923/PWupab.jpg http://www.lafire.com/stations/FS028...i-ELA_1500.jpg And two more from the 1959 Popular Science article. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...923/fRxWNa.jpg https://books.google.com/books?id=sC...20fire&f=false inside the school http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...923/bZX72t.jpg https://books.google.com/books?id=sC...20fire&f=false --- While 'thumbing' through the magazine a couple tobacco ads caught my eye. Why are tomatoes featured in this ad for Pall Mall cigarettes? http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...924/llM9Kn.jpg http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...923/H6Wx8z.jpg Popular Science 1959 "You can light either end." -say what!? :shrug: Here's the second ad. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/xq90/924/OWR6CS.jpg Popular Science 1959 A SQUARE cigar?? I had no idea such a thing ever existed. __ |
Today's Julius Shulman post is an unusual one. It's a mystery location, despite having the address on the building. This is "Job 3695: Flewelling and Moody, Centinela Valley Union High School District Offices, 1964".
http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...1.jpg~original Getty Research Institute There doesn't seem to be a 365 Hawthorne Way any more, and I can't find the building at the several addresses I've tried around Hawthorne. Does anyone know where it is/was? |
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:previous: LOL
"Vintage Photo LOS ANGELES POLICE MOTOR SQUAD MACHINE GUN INVENTION 1931" http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/xq90/923/KtPdvM.jpgebay http://www.ebay.com/itm/VINTAGE-REAL...kAAOSwLEtYh97a Lieutenant Jack Lyons machine gun invention, 1931. reverse http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/800...924/Y8sCvL.jpg I'm not entirely sure how this pistol machine gun was suppose to work. -why the large triangular brace? __ |
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As we know, smoking was once considered seductive and even romantic. Doctors recommended smoking for weight reduction. Lovely idea. Many Hollywood movies usually featured a romantic smoking scene back in the 1940s. Walt Disney was a heavy smoker and died as a result from it. Besides that, he had a secret side to his personal life that few knew about. He was definitely a noir character in Hollywood. Two people who knew were actor Fess Parker and Walt's drinking buddy director George Cukor. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v4...pst25hyd2s.jpg LIFE |
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Cheers, Earl |
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The building has been remodeled into an Islamic School, and Hawthorne Way certainly seems to have been renumbered (it's now the 12200 block). The old Centinela Valley Union High School District building is to the left of the green dot: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...b.jpg~original GoogleMap This is how it looked in 2004: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...y.jpg~original Historic Aerials Here it is in Dec 2016, looking south at the two-story addition in the front, which went in about 2012. The brick on the one-story north wall matches the vintage photo: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...z.jpg~original GSV The brick on the one-story south wall matches as well, and I think the edge of the roofline is the same, too: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...m.jpg~original Dec 2016 GSV The best match might be the concrete panels to the right of the entrance. Below and in the vintage photo, starting at the top we see three full panels, with the fourth at the bottom partially buried: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...y.jpg~original Dec 2016 GSV |
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Actually, if you look close in the Google Maps photo, you can still see the bottom row of signage with the address still there (looks like the street number was updated and it was shifted to the right). |
:previous: Good find FW. I looked for it & wasn't able to find it.
I don't believe we have discussed compass trees on NLA, right? "Last of the Four Compass Trees in Burbank." [1956?-1965?] http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...923/Tnvfud.jpg http://digital-library.csun.edu/cdm/...n/SFVH/id/4117 "These sycamore trees marked the gateway to the San Fernando Valley and served as a guide for travelers, as well as the padres who traveled from mission to mission. The trees also provided shade, wood to cook with, and water because they were located near fresh water springs. The trees were planted in a "V" formation and each tree pointed to a direction on the compass. The padres chose to plant the sycamores because they were used for this purpose in Europe. In Europe they were called the "plane tree" because they were one of the easiest trees to recognize and they stood out from the rest. The spot were these four trees were planted in Burbank was used as a camp and resting place. Don Juan Bautista de Anza, Frontier Captain and Military Governor of Sonora, was one among many who made camp here." Location: "This particular tree was planted around 1817 and was located at 715 South Lake Street. Many of the trees branches were cut because they were deteriating and endangering the residents. Mrs. Pierina E. Lo Piccolo, founder of the Burbank Historical Museum, rescued the tree and paid for its removal after the owners of the property, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lurtsema, graciously donated the tree to the museum. The tree is now located on West Magnolia Boulevard in Burbank." :previous: So was this information written back when the photograph was taken (1950s/60s), or written recently (if recently, it implies the compass tree is still standing somewhere on W. Magnolia) I have to say, if that's what the tree looked like 50 years ago, I can't image what it looks like today. (a stump?) __ |
Speaking of Triangles (Hoover), this is the Melrose Triangle area where Melrose Ave,, Doheny Dr. and
Santa Monica Blvd. come together, looking northwest, on the border of Beverly Hills and West Hollywood. I do not believe we've seen this photo before, though the location has been covered. http://i129.photobucket.com/albums/p...646a3432a8.png Anyone have an approximate idea of the date the photo may have been taken? I came across this photo on Pinterest. A Google photo search doesn't up come with any other places this photo appears online. (Google photo search also guesses this photo might be a snow scene. :yes: ) |
:previous: Interesting photograph Martin. My old neck of the woods.
I took Doheny from WeHo nearly everyday when I worked in Culver City. __ "Sunset Blvd. near it's terminus with PCH, Pacific Palisades." http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...922/suPhZT.jpg paul delameter, flickr https://www.flickr.com/photos/12210945@N02/ I tried to find this same curve today (using the google-mobile) but I couldn't find it. Just for fun: Famous race scene on the curves of Sunset. 'Against All Odds' [1982] _ |
2500 W 7th Street
I was very put out a few days back about the plans for 2500 W 7th St and the catastrophic effect this would have on McManus & Morgan (75 years at this address) and Aardvark Letterpress, and also the integrity of this intact, architecturally significant block.
After being in communication with the architecture firm (they're based in Madrid) involved in the project (I'm sure I'm not the only one who wrote with concerns), one of the principals wrote back to say, that after consulting with the new owner of the building, both McManus & Morgan and Aardvark Letterpress will be allowed to stay after all. He met with the business owners yesterday to give them the good news. The rest of the block will also be taken into consideration as they move forward with their design. If the firm does as good a job with No. 2500 as Ragnar Qvale did with the 1958 update to the Morgan, Walls and Morgan (Stiles O. Clements, not yet a partner, was probably supervising architect) at No. 2515-2525 W 7th, I'll be very pleased. Here's hoping. Right now I'm feeling nothing but relief. Three cheers for Gary and Cary and their continuing tenancy at 2500 W 7th. Quote:
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Sunset Blvd. photo
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I think the location is above the Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine, about there. |
Oh, snap FW. LOL
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https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/uV...=w1123-h618-no gsv |
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That's the Doheny Fountain across the way in Beverly Gardens: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/TY...Q=w628-h606-no fobgp The building on the extreme upper-right margin is still there (NE corner Doheny and SM Blvd), stripped of ornament, but painted a satisfying shade of barn red. The gas station on the right has given way to surface parking. The point emerging from the center-left margin, then hosting tracks, is now much reconfigured. Out of shot to the left is a PetCo now. In the late 70s it was Carl's Market, scene of a notoriously gruesome shootout involving machine guns, all for control of the Beverly Hills drug trade. Behind the photographer is the former site of the much-missed Writers' Guild Theater. I spent hundreds of rapt hours there in the theater's Old Hollywood embrace. https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/fW...A=w802-h633-no google maps |
:previous:
Do you mean the Academy Awards Theatre not the WGA? I initially pooh-poohed the fact that google image search thought the period photo was a snow scene, but it certainly looks from the car tracks on the road they are tracking something around. Could it be sand or? Could it be snow? 1949? I don't know a lot about Pinterest, but it seems there isn't any way to contact a person who's posted something. They only had the location info, but no date. Anyway, I had not heard about the late 70's shootout at the Carl's Market. (?) Sometime last week I veered onto a website that had some news film of a fire that demolished the market in 1959. (Same year as the recent fire pictures.) I thought I saved the link, but I've tried to find it in my history all day and can't, nor on any search engine. Why, I don't know. The fire, though, was pretty devastating, they must've rebuilt. The film footage had a crowd of people watching from across the street at the Beverly Terrace, still there. (This website with film shorts/clips had many sundry clips of all sorts of things, sort of like the Producer's Guild Library does. Strange I can't locate it in my history.) |
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http://www.skyscraperpage.com/forum/...ostcount=21494 http://www.skyscraperpage.com/forum/...ostcount=37331 |
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