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Apartments
[QUOTE=Flyingwedge;7824325]Does anyone recognize this building, pictured in the September 1919 Architect and Engineer of California?
My parents lived in an old apartment building at 440 South Bonnie Brae back in the early 50's...wondering if anyone has a history of the building and if it is still standing... |
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Speaking of not hearing about that restaurant, does anyone know about this? I was reading a blog post concerning the upcoming complete series release of Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In and one poster, if their memory is correct, talked about visiting Southern California in 1969 or 1970 and visiting a "Laugh-In" restaurant. :shrug: Has anyone heard of such thing before? This was news (of the past) to me! I found a website that has scant information except that it was formed under the name "Laugh-In Restaurant Corporation of California" on Thursday, August 7, 1969. https://bestbusinessca.com/company/C...alifornia.html I also found a handful of mentions on lists of defunct restaurant chains. A pinterest site had this on it--looks to be from a marketing catalog or magazine perhaps? http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Kg00Ll385n...restaurant.jpgPinterest A Bippy Burger...Yum? On eBay there was also a Laugh-In Restaurant napkin and French Fry bag, not to be confused with ones sold in stores as novelties. Does anyone remember a Laugh-In restaurant in Southern California and where it might have been. I've been unable to come up with any addresses or photos of one...anywhere, not just SoCal. |
:previous: I've never heard of a Laugh-In restaurant Martin, but I noticed Lums is mentioned.
http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...924/seSzZS.jpg http://www.kevmania.com/remembering-lums/ Lums was one one of my favorite places to eat when I was a kid. Roast Beef sandwiches and the best seasoned fries. |
I believe one of the clues in finding the Shulman House is it's geographic orientation. I have overlaid a compass to give some idea of how the front of the house is facing the street. This is based on the shadows of the trees.....which I assume is around mid-day.
Thanks Hoss, ER, PM, Earl B for your input. The Shulman house appears to be facing in a northerly direction.....so it could be on the south side of a street....or a cul de sac. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v4...psajzyeez9.jpg all...previously posted This house appears to be facing south, therefore its on the north side of a street. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v4...psc7erwrlz.jpg |
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https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/8J...A=w802-h392-no gsv LOL, too many choices. Now I'm convinced it's 501 Maxzim. Yeah, that's it: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/yM...=w1004-h405-no gsv |
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While I was snooping around Midland Meadows this place on W. Roberta Ave. caught my eye.
http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...924/c1mzYU.jpg gsv What first crossed my mind is that the owner might work for a salvage company (and he got a good deal) #2 http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...922/WL6n7Q.jpg gsv Here'a a closer look at the twin orb-topped columns (behind them on the right is a wooden pergola supported by equally ornate Corinthian columns. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/800...922/PWHHcj.jpg detail Or is all this faux? -ordered from Home Depot Either way it stands out like a sore thumb in this mid-century neighborhood . __ |
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I was shaking my head in amazement at that one too. IMO, it's all fake. |
I think the neighboring roofs line up better in the Maxzim St set-up CBD, but who knows? Is there a word for when people pave their yards and then load them up with potted plants? It's done often.
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gsv |
Clarification please:
Sunset Lime Co. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...923/JXLS0H.jpg http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/cdm/si.../id/2396/rec/1 USC says "Old Southern Pacific Railroad Station on Alameda Street near Commercial Street, Los Angeles" So was the Sunset Lime building considered the actual depot... or was it just near the depot? Here's a comparison of the Commercial Street Depot and the Sunset Lime Co. building http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...924/5dNST6.jpg https://www.kcet.org/shows/lost-la/l...of-los-angeles They look like two different buildings to me. __ |
Here's another sideshow at Ocean Park Pier, Santa Monica [c.1936]
DOPE http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...923/jNagRC.jpg "See how the other half lives. Hop Joints in full operation!" http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...924/Zxiugz.jpg Califboy101 / flickr note the little girl looking at the placards. for closer inspection: (I thought one of you might be able to read some of the placards) http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/xq90/922/AfD7rp.jpg detail So what do you suppose was inside- people lying around pretending to do drugs? _ |
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Paul C. Koehler |
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Sunset Lime first appears there in the 1906 city directory, which also shows Montgomery and Mullin Lumber on E. 5th St: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...w.jpg~original 487980 at HDL Below at left we see the same building's south and east sides (the building has a small LA LUMBER CO sign on top) in this photo looking west on 5th Street (in the foreground) from near Towne in 1890. Please note the dark doorway on the right side of the building's south wall: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...psxdobh2z0.png P-010-1291-58 at Seaver Center This undated photo shows ex-LA Police Chief John Skinner, apparently outside that same doorway, at the "old San Pedro [sic] + Independence Depot at 5th and San Pedro": http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...psyib0a9b6.jpg P-034-077 at Seaver Center The old Los Angeles and Independence RR depot burned in a fire on October 30, 1888," but the LA Times article the next day notes that " . . . the south end of the building, which was cut off by a partition, and filled with lime, cement and other articles, was saved . . . ." Here's the 1888 Sanborn, drawn before the fire. The ex-depot that burned, then occupied by the California Door Co., is above the "306"; the south end of the building is used for lime, cement, and plaster storage. There is also a lime warehouse below the "306," but that's a different building. Just below it, 5th Street crosses San Pedro Street: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...w.jpg~original ProQuest via LAPL On the 1906 Sanborn below, 440 S. San Pedro Street, then home to Sunset Lime, is marked with a red line. So, perhaps the north end of that building is the south end of the old LAIRR depot. After the 1888 fire, the rump end of the depot may have been expanded south and remodeled into the building Sunset Lime would occupy: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...v.jpg~original ProQuest via LAPL Sunset Lime is last at 440 S. San Pedro in the 1913 city directory, and the building is missing from the 1914 Baist Map, so that makes sense. |
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Thank you Flyingwedge! I knew I'd seen that combination of roof pitch and door shape before...I just couldn't place it: Quote:
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http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...1.jpg~original Historic Aerials/Google Maps It looks like the road layout only changed around 2010. There are GSV images from 2008 which show some of the original route, but they're a bit blurry. |
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Talman played the role of Hamilton Burger with the interesting twist of being a massive pain-in-the-ass for Perry Mason, but also fair and willing to concede when he was wrong. I would occasionally hope that he'd whip Perry in the courtroom more often--just to hear Raymond burr take that suck of breath he always seemed to do before starting a sentence. I still watch Perry Mason reruns since I'm fascinated with that time period in TV series. Did you know that William Hopper (who played private investigator Paul Drake) was Hedda Hopper's son? Gail Patrick Jackson, who produced the series, once acted with William's Dad, Wolfe Hopper in some obscure 1930's movie. William actually tested for the title role of Perry, but the author of the books, Erle Stanley Gardner, thought Raymond Burr fit the role perfectly. |
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