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:previous: Thanks for reversing the images odinthor. I appreciate it. :)
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It turns out that the car is not a Stutz at all. The slogan on the card identifies this as advertising the HCS Motor Car Company, which Harry Stutz created after abandoning his namesake company amid financial malfeasance by others. HCS made cars from 1920 to 1925. The car on the postcard resembles a Series 4 touring car, two of which are pictured on the Wikipedia page for HCS: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H._C._...or_Car_Company |
:previous: Thanks for the correction and superb information, ProphetM.
The silent film, The Roaring Road [1919], starring Wallace Reid, features both a Stutz-Bearcat and a Stutz-Bulldog. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...922/jeC61W.jpg LINK (51 min.) I haven't watched the complete film but from what I have seen, I believe it was filmed at the annual Santa Monica Street Races in 1916. Here's a screenshot showing both cars. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...921/Q6Xk3Q.jpg oldmotorcar In the movie Wallace Reid drives a Stutz Bulldog Touring Car and the object of his affection Dorothy Ward is behind the wheel of a Stutz Bearcat. "Wallace Reid, in his action-hero roles as the dashing race-car driver drew huge audiences to theaters to see his daredevil auto thrillers such as The Roaring Road (1919), Double Speed (1920), Excuse My Dust (1920), and Too Much Speed (1921). One of his auto-racing films, Across the Continent (1922), was chosen as the opening night film for San Francisco's Castro Theatre, which opened 22 June 1922."....wikipedia https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...921/gaD1ov.jpg IMDB Mr. Reid died in Los Angeles on January 18, 1923. He was only 31 years old. (drug addiction) . |
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https://imagizer.imageshack.com/img923/2690/xD85Hw.gif ........................................Wallace Reid in The Roaring Road. [1919] ............................................Directed by Cecil B. DeMille. . |
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Some Harry E. Herndon related material. https://i.imgur.com/hi77ilj.jpg Los Angeles Herald - 15 December 1920 "Harry Herndon's sales organization and the new H. C. S. with Herndon at wheel; G. F. Stephenson in front seat, and Harry Heber in rear." https://i.imgur.com/0XFGirO.jpg Los Angeles Herald - 28 August 1920 |
Hey, thanks for the additional information, Noir Noir. I appreciate it.
A Mystery location. (from a group of six negatives dated 1947) "Looking down on an unnamed street in downtown Los Angeles." [c.1947] http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...922/Pbtb29.jpg eBay Below:...Here's a closer look of the bottom half third of the photograph. I can't tell if the marquee belongs to a theater or some other business. (like a cafeteria) http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...923/CYORI4.jpg detail And, unless my eyes are tricking me, I believe the sandwich shop is named. . .Veronicah(?) :shrug: I'm working on the other images. . |
Ok, here are the second and third mystery locations.
The first shows a small parking lot behind some run-down buildings. Downtown Los Angeles [c.1947] http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...922/xIunY3.jpg eBay This next one shows pedestrians crossing the street at a busy street corner. Downtown Los Angeles [c.1947] I made it extra-large so you can pick out Elizabeth Short. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...924/iWfwYv.jpg eBay I don't see her. (but I always look) . |
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there is something very familiar about that larger building with the round balcony, but I haven't been able to locate it with the GoogleMobile. EDIT: Beaten! |
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"The Metropolitan Building on the northwest corner of Fifth Street and Broadway". https://i809.photobucket.com/albums/...hBroadway1.jpg USC Digital Library |
Thanks for tour help Lorendoc, ProphetM and HossC.
Here is the 4th photograph. Looking down an unidentified street. Los Angeles [c.1947] http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/xq90/921/eQBMFM.jpg eBay And 5th. Downtown Los Angeles [c.1947] http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/xq90/921/iQUnfr.jpg . |
Here is the sixth and final 1947 snapshot.
http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/xq90/923/ZTdZ5Z.jpg eBay I thought the date might be wrong because the movie Dillinger with Lawrence Tierney was released in 1945. . . but the headline movie, Tarzen and the Huntress was released in 1947. :) so the date is correct. . |
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Edit: Oh, golly, Hoss beat me by a split second! |
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411 W. 4th Street, Los Angeles. The Original Spanish Inn, and a selection of items pertaining to its address.
https://i.postimg.cc/BvxwRYW9/411W4th001.jpg odinthor collection 1893: https://i.postimg.cc/FFPntk6R/411W4th8-13-1893.jpg LA Herald, 8/13/1893 1894: https://i.postimg.cc/vHkqTFbw/411W4thHer6-22-1894.jpg LA Herald, 6/22/1894 1898 (January): https://i.postimg.cc/rmfgL7Qb/411W4thLAT1-6-1898.jpg LA Times, 1/6/1898 1898 (December): https://i.postimg.cc/XvcQsrFn/411W4thHer12-25-1898.jpg LA Herald, 12/25/1898 1903 (May): https://i.postimg.cc/661zbJ74/411W4thLAT5-6-03.jpg LA Times, 5/6/1903 1903 (October): https://i.postimg.cc/mg9dFXgz/411W4thHer10-1-03.jpg LA Herald, 10/1/1903 1922: https://i.postimg.cc/m2zj0XMX/411W4thLAT6-17-22.jpg LA Times, 6/17/1922 1926: https://i.postimg.cc/9F6bVdYW/411W4thLAT11-24-26JPG.jpg LA Times, 11/24/1926 1927, not about 411 W. 4th but rather about the owner of the restaurant, Charles B. Aber and his family: https://i.postimg.cc/155qVJym/Aber-LAT12-23-1927.jpg LA Times, 12/23/1927 Sadly, the boy, Walter Texas Aber, died, indeed had died the day before the above item was published. 1933: https://i.postimg.cc/nr5kXB8G/411W4thLAT1-11-33.jpg LA Times, 1/11/1933 |
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SYNCHRONICITY: It just so happens that I'm working this week on the story of 60 Westmoreland Place...and have been intrigued by the tangential story of the wife of a short-term owner of the house, olive-oil producer Sherman E. Knapp, She happens to have been...Kate Lampman. She advertised in LA papers from at least 1893 until the month before marrying Knapp on Christmas Day 1900. She died a few years before Knapp acquired 60 Westmoreland...but in 1910 was arrested in New York on a charge of being "a dangerous person pretending to foretell the future"; she claimed she was a minister of spiritualism and a teacher of metaphysics and was quoted in a wire dispatch appearing in the LA Times: "For many years I have taught the beautiful, constructive philosophy of practical idealism, unfolding lives into fuller consciousness of boundless love, wisdom, health, happiness and life more abundant." More on 60 Westmoreland Place will soon appear at westmorelandplacelosangeles.blogspot.com https://i.postimg.cc/Bvss8ZRK/WPHEAD...XXXREV-001.jpg |
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The Manning's in e_r's photo shows up for the first time in the 1938 CD at 319 W 5th. This agrees with the earliest date possible inferred by the presence of the streetcar. I thought the location might have been a movie theater with a stripped-down marquee, but it turns out to have been a Boos Brothers cafeteria for many years before 1938. |
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I try to keep my excitement to a very low level. Be careful guys of too much excitement in your lives.....it can KILL. That's what I like about NLA...not too much excitement. Good that his friend Frank was there to catch Bill's fall. Frank [a barber] was a boy from Needles. I've been to Needles....the village is microscopic in size. |
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