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"View of the residence of Don Agustine (Augustine) Olvera on the corner of Los Angeles Street and Marchesault Street, ca.1880" http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...Residence1.jpg USC Digital Library From the description: Photograph of the residence of Don Agustine (Augustine) Olvera on the corner of Los Angeles and Marchesault streets, ca.1880. Built by Don Tiburcio Tapia in 1854(?--source Bill Mason lists Tapia as having died in 1847), the long, one-story house appears to be engaging in commercial interests: café tables are visible beneath its covered porch, at one of which several people are sitting. Signs adorn the outside of the house and read "Murray & Ready", "Other Offices", "Sohombres", "If your [...] call me early [...] for to morrow [...]". Both streets are unpaved. Telephone poles are visible to the front and side of the house, and man riding a bicycle can be seen at the extreme left with is back to the camera. The site would later become the location of the Mexican Methodist Church and Clinic. |
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....................................................................................................................'Katherine Higgins holds baby Virginia Argilez, 1918." https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/OKZXEw.jpg museumofsocialjustice "Virginia's mother was sent to the Plaza Community Center for care, two weeks after giving birth to Virginia on the train from Mexico. Katherine and others brought them to the clinic for medical attention and promised the mother a job mending clothes in the Goodwill Industries. Virginia was the first child put in the Day Nursery and her mother "headed the list as the first employee at the Goodwill Industries.” |
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Mystery building on Bloom St. The following photographs show a building on Bloom St. that had some sort of connection to the early days of Goodwill Industries in Los Angeles. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/IgqERz.jpg museumofsocialjustice.......................................................................................................................................................................................It resembles a mini-me alamo. hrmmph. but no street address. 2nd photo. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...921/X65IRM.jpg museumofsocialjustice Supposedly, the woman standing second from the left is Katherine Higgins, the lady holding baby Virginia in my prev. post All from museumofsocialjustice (direct link to this story) . |
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https://i.imgur.com/syQ4Re7.jpg rescarta.lapl.org The Spanish (a.k.a. Mexican) Mission was established in 1903. https://i.imgur.com/cgdI8GP.jpg cdnc.ucr.edu - Los Angeles Herald - 9 January 1904 https://i.imgur.com/nSsaFtR.jpg cdnc.ucr.edu - Highland Park News-Herald - 23 May 1908 "In 1914 the mission moved to a rented hall closer to the Plaza at 110 Commercial Street and was renamed the First Mexican Methodist Episcopal Church. Evangelistic meetings were held in the Plaza and Bloom Street was converted to a free clinic and welfare center." https://www.museumofsocialjustice.org/about.html |
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Symmetrical red dots are always a nice touch. https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.for...babaac13b4.jpghttps://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.for...babaac13b4.jpg |
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1954? according to source. Maybe earlier. :shrug: https://www.ford-trucks.com/forums/a...1&d=1401359049https://www.ford-trucks.com/forums/a...1&d=1401359049https://i.ytimg.com/vi/qRrR4arsbv4/maxresdefault.jpghttps://i.ytimg.com/vi/qRrR4arsbv4/maxresdefault.jpg |
As a 45 year resident and proud Angeleno, I have to say this one really stings...from the front page of a Madison WI. newspaper....dated May 7, 1937....
http://i1381.photobucket.com/albums/...psy7axbh7h.jpg |
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"1954? according to source. Maybe earlier. " Based on that Ford making a right turn, it's not earlier than 1952. Cheers, Earl |
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https://i.imgur.com/PE3AJeu.jpg?1 https://www.brandeating.com/2017/04/...ent-tacos.html |
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You mean we're being fooled? :shrug: Or should I say "I'm" being fooled? Oops. Quote:
Yikes! Lots of vitriol in that column! The author's name or byline isn't listed, but the writer was probably someone who was told they were the best looking person in their hometown, came to make it big in Hollywood and their dreams were thwarted. Quote:
"You've heard the notion that the best looking person in their hometown's always encouraged to go to Hollywood and make it big. That's what I was told." (...pause...) "Imagine what the other people in my hometown look like." :laugh: Quote:
Congratulations! I am a 42 year resident...as of today! I arrived April 1, 1977! (Many of my friends seem to find that amusing.) |
Nancy's Stand and George's Garage - Little Tokyo
http://i445.photobucket.com/albums/q.../nancys2_1.png
I found this L.A. Times article a few weeks ago it was written five days after I started working in Little Tokyo in 1985. http://i445.photobucket.com/albums/q...okyo%201_1.png http://i445.photobucket.com/albums/q...0Tokyo%202.png Nancy was friendly and seemed to know almost everyone. She served good fast food, but if you were looking for vegetables, your choices were potatoes (french fried) or pinto beans. Mas labored away in incredibly tight quarters. You could fit maybe two vehicles in the shop. The rest was crammed with tools and spare parts. Our company had a Volkswagen pick-up that seemed to spend a lot of time in his garage, so I got to know Mas a little. He was always in good spirits and never seemed flustered by the amount of work he had lined up behind the shop. When I read the article, I was surprised to learn that both Nancy and Mas had been interned as children during World War Two. Neither one seemed to hold a grudge or was inclined to play the victim. I don't know where they ended up after they closed up in Little Tokyo. They were both good people. Little Tokyo back in the day: http://i445.photobucket.com/albums/q...Capture3_2.png Earl Witscher, Modernage Photo Service Little Tokyo now: http://i445.photobucket.com/albums/q...Capture2_2.png Google Maps As you can see, the old Brunswig Drug warehouse was right across the street from Nancy and Mas. In 1986, it was stripped down to the steel frame and rebuilt as a beautiful office building, now called Brunswig Square. Yeah, I liked the old Little Tokyo better. |
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Didn't mean to suggest that "much" earlier. I was focusing on the purported fact that most (maybe all) of the semaphore signals were being replaced around that time. I could have sworn I read on NLA that '56 was the "final" curtain, but for every rule there seems to be an exception. :shrug: Previous NLA post: Quote:
https://tessa.lapl.org/utils/ajaxhel...X=0&DMY=512&DMhttps://tessa.lapl.org/utils/ajaxhel...512&DMY=512&DM https://tessa.lapl.org/cdm/singleite...hotos/id/12717 |
Was it a Dream?
On one of my routes from Culver City (where I worked) to West Hollywood, I remember that I would pass Chippendales strip club. (this would have been around 1984 or 85).
It might have been their original location. If I remember correctly, the street was Overland Ave. (I worked in a building just inside the Overland Gate at MGM) -so it makes sense. This rather nondescript building...about a block north of Venice Blvd.... comes closest to what I remember as Chippendales. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...921/wb2ohI.jpg GSV The word, CHIPPENDALE'S...was painted in LARGE black lettering, horizontally across the top third of the bldg. Before I found out it was a strip bar I thought it was a furniture store. (you know, Chippendale's..like the famous chairs) lol Did I dream this location? :shrug: Was Chippendales really located in Culver City? (not exactly a hot spot back in the 1980s) Here's an aerial to give you an idea of how the building is situated on the west side of street. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...923/x4Aogw.jpg So far, I haven't found any proof that Chippendales was located in Culver City. (this would have been before they became world famous) I eventually switched to Robertson Blvd. as my escape route. ;) . |
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A 1982 episode of CHiPs, "Trained for Trouble", visited Chippendales - the storyline involved a stripper who looked like Ponch. According to this Wiki page about the episode, "...the club finally closed its doors on December 15, 1988, located at 3739 Overland Avenue...". That's only 100 yards north of the building you posted, e_r. It's now an adult day care. http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...ppendales1.jpg GSV Here's a screengrab I made of the sign. http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...ppendales2.jpg chips-tv.com |
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Does anyone know the history of the Brunswig buildings in Los Angeles? In the photo above (behind Katherine), we have the original Bruswig warehouse next to the Plaza Church. http://i445.photobucket.com/albums/q...y/download.jpg LAPL In this 1979 photo, the warehouse has been converted into a Juvenile Courts Building. http://i445.photobucket.com/albums/q...rts%20bldg.png LAPL This area is now a vacant lot. http://i445.photobucket.com/albums/q...nckley/lot.png Google Maps Just down the street is the old Brunswig office building/lab, which has been recently renovated http://i445.photobucket.com/albums/q...swig%20lab.png LAPl Lastly, we have the remodeled Brunswig warehouse/factory building in Little Tokyo that I noted in a recent post. Does anyone have the dates (and or details) on all this? I have no idea why they went over to Little Tokyo to build their "new" warehouse. |
Gun Crazy .....dedicated to all the Noirishers
https://media.giphy.com/media/13k9ocbzdq5n2g/giphy.gif |
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And then there's this house https://i.postimg.cc/ZYxLFYFT/2711-WBnow.jpg Once at 2711 Wilshire Boulevard, now at 222 S Gramercy Read all about it here: https://wilshireboulevardhouses.blog...e-see-our.html |
123 Fi.
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