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  #20081  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 3:14 AM
Tetsu Tetsu is offline
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A photo from the Palmer Conner collection at the Huntington Digital Library, depicting an "East Los Angeles, old Victorian in decay."

HDL

Not much info to go on for location, but I think I accidentally stumbled upon it while driving around in the Google mobile:

GSV

It's the southeast corner of Avenue 21 & Vallejo Street in Lincoln Heights. Though the main house in the photo is long gone, compare the house at far left in the Palmer Conner shot with the green house in the Google street view. Looks to be the same house, just with a more John-Deereish paint job.
And, sorry I couldn't screen shot the GSV from closer to where the original photo was taken - that tree in the middle of my screen shot obscures the house from that angle.
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  #20082  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 3:59 AM
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Deleted post

Last edited by Wig-Wag; Mar 11, 2014 at 4:26 AM. Reason: Photo Error
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  #20083  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 4:03 AM
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See above. If anyone can provide directions to completely remove a post it would be greatly appreciated as the on-site instructions did not yield a successful outcome.

Thanks,
Jack

Last edited by Wig-Wag; Mar 11, 2014 at 4:31 AM.
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  #20084  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 4:13 AM
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PE Mount Lowe Ads

Quote:
Originally Posted by Flyingwedge View Post
In the past we discussed the north portal at Sunset Blvd., but I don't think we ever found a good shot of it:


Now, thanks to Longrifle's heads-up, here's a shot of the sealed-off north portal from July 1, 1958, with a Mt. Lowe ghost ad to the right along with the Hill Street/Sunset intersection:

Huntington Digital Library -- http://hdl.huntington.org/cdm/single.../id/7933/rec/3
Thanks, Flyingwedge for posting, and Longrifle for the link to the photo showing the Mount Lowe advertisement at the north portal of the Pacific Electric Hill Street Tunnel.

A similar advertisement once graced the south abutment of the PE over crossing of the Southern Pacific Railroad's Sunset Route along Valley Boulevard. The Company saw the abutment as a perfect venue for an advertisement for their Mount Lowe excursions and the supporting hotel and tavern. It offered the enticement of a Southern California mountain adventure to automobile drivers on Valley Boulevard and to the patrons of passing SP passenger trains as well.

Believe it or not, there was a time when the taggers in East Los Angeles had respect for a bit of history. Although surrounded, if you will, his advertisement for the long vanished Mount Lowe line survived into the early 1970's unfazed by the gang graffiti that was rapidly covering the walls throughout the city. Unfortunately, the respect for history would not last. By mid decade the writing was, "on the wall" and another bit of history had been all but obliterated.

My photo dates from 1971.

Cheers,
Jack

[IMG]http://[URL=http://s1315.photobucket.com/user/jgn151/media/Mt_Lowe_Ad_zps0f8af57a.jpg.html][/URL][/IMG]

Last edited by Wig-Wag; Mar 11, 2014 at 8:41 PM.
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  #20085  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 4:40 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Wig-Wag View Post
Thanks, Flyingwedge for posting,and Longrfile for the link to the photo showing the Mount Lowe advertisement at the north portal of the Pacific Electric Hill Street Tunnel.

A similar advertisement once graced the south abutment of the PE over crossing of the Southern Pacific Railroad's Sunset Route along Valley Boulevard. The Company saw the abutment as a perfect venue for an advertisement for their Mount Lowe excursions and the supporting hotel and tavern. It offered the enticement of a Southern California mountain adventure to automobile drivers on Valley Boulevard and to the patrons of passing SP passenger trains as well.

Believe it or not, there was a time when the taggers in East Los Angeles had respect for a bit of history. Although surrounded, if you will, his advertisement for the long vanished Mount Lowe line survived into the early 1970's unfazed by the gang graffiti that was rapidly covering the walls throughout the city. Unfortunately, the respect for history would not last. By mid decade the writing was, "on the wall" and another bit of history had been all but obliterated.

My photo dates from 1971.

Cheers,
Jack

[IMG]http://[URL=http://s1315.photobucket.com/user/jgn151/media/Mt_Lowe_Ad_zps0f8af57a.jpg.html][/URL][/IMG]
Very nice "F" series, looks like southern pacific livery..
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  #20086  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 6:35 AM
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Billy Sunday and Douglas Fairbanks

[IMG][/IMG]
From family album. My Grandfather is shaking the hand of Billy Sunday, Douglas Fairbanks is other ball player. The event was honoring WW1 Marines in Hollywood. Anybody have an idea where they were playing?
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  #20087  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 6:45 AM
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Hill St. and Sunset / Mt. Lowe

Quote:
Originally Posted by Wig-Wag View Post
Thanks, Flyingwedge for posting,and Longrfile for the link to the photo showing the Mount Lowe advertisement at the north portal of the Pacific Electric Hill Street Tunnel.

A similar advertisement once graced the south abutment of the PE over crossing of the Southern Pacific Railroad's Sunset Route along Valley Boulevard. The Company saw the abutment as a perfect venue for an advertisement for their Mount Lowe excursions and the supporting hotel and tavern. It offered the enticement of a Southern California mountain adventure to automobile drivers on Valley Boulevard and to the patrons of passing SP passenger trains as well.

Believe it or not, there was a time when the taggers in East Los Angeles had respect for a bit of history. Although surrounded, if you will, his advertisement for the long vanished Mount Lowe line survived into the early 1970's unfazed by the gang graffiti that was rapidly covering the walls throughout the city. Unfortunately, the respect for history would not last. By mid decade the writing was, "on the wall" and another bit of history had been all but obliterated.

My photo dates from 1971.

Cheers,
Jack

[IMG]http://[URL=http://s1315.photobucket.com/user/jgn151/media/Mt_Lowe_Ad_zps0f8af57a.jpg.html][/URL][/IMG]
Your photo is awesome W-W!

Here's a closer view of the Mt. Lowe ad from the 1958 photo I posted; perhaps the right panel also said Marvelous Panoramic Views:


Speaking of Mt. Lowe:

From Los Angeles Then and Now (Geo. Rice and Sons, 1897) @ HathiTrust -- http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/imgs...=1190;orient=3

A somewhat random sampling of previous posts on Mt. Lowe:
http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...&postcount=745
http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=5890
http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=6653
http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=7002
http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...ostcount=10262

For more:
http://www.mountlowe.org/
http://waterandpower.org/museum/Mt_Lowe_Railway.html

# # #

I found another view of the Sunset/Hill intersection, dated July 23, 1961. The source identifies the brick building as the Croyden Apartments @ 620 W. Sunset and the larger building behind
it as the LA School District HQ at 450 N. Grand. The Hill St. tunnel portal was just off the left edge of the photo:

Huntington Digital Library -- http://hdl.huntington.org/cdm/single.../id/7936/rec/2

The concrete wall at the base of what is now N. Hill Place is the same, as is the railing above it and at least the base of the streetlight (and Sunset is now Cesar Chavez Ave):

GSV

The School District HQ has been replaced by the Ramon C. Cortines School for Visual and Performing Arts. The block is bounded by the 101 at top left, Cesar Chavez at bottom right, and
Hill and Grand at lower left and upper right, respectively. Above the lower right corner, N. Hill Place hits Cesar Chavez from the north/right, with the southern end of N. Hill Place coming
down from the other side to meet Cesar Chavez:

Bing
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  #20088  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 7:14 AM
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Washington Park I or II

Quote:
Originally Posted by Hollywood Graham View Post
[IMG][/IMG]
From family album. My Grandfather is shaking the hand of Billy Sunday, Douglas Fairbanks is other ball player. The event was honoring WW1 Marines in Hollywood. Anybody have an idea where they were playing?
That's a great photo HG. Fairbanks is wearing a Vernon Tigers uniform, but I don't know about Sunday's uniform. Your grandfather was tall!

If the photo was taken no later than 1920, it appears they're playing in Washington Park (I), south of Washington Blvd and between Grand and Main. But if the photo was taken
after 1920, it would be Washington Park (II), which was a couple hundred feet southeast of Washington Park (I).

Washington Park (I) vs. Washington Park (II): http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...ostcount=19307
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  #20089  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 12:29 PM
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GaylordWilshire GaylordWilshire is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ethereal_reality View Post
This is an odd little slide.

Is that the La Brea Tar Pits in the foreground?
ebay

I am especially intrigued by that boarded up house. I'm hoping one of you nla scholars can pinpoint the location.
__




ER--With your image flipped, you can better see that it shows the Henry Hancock ranch house at the tar pits:




Seen here earlier: http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=8910


LAPL


http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=8914
http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=8915
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  #20090  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 1:10 PM
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MichaelRyerson MichaelRyerson is offline
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Hotel Snow looking overwhelmed by it all.

Quote:
Originally Posted by HossC View Post
Just a few years later. This is one of the recently added Palmer Conner slides. The caption reads: "Richfield-Bank of America excavation site. Plaza construction site encompassed by 5th Street, Flower Street, 6th Street, and Figueroa Street. Double bottom dump trucks used to haul away dirt."


Huntington Digital Library
The very definition of standing on the edge.
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  #20091  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 1:17 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Flyingwedge View Post
# # #

I found another view of the Sunset/Hill intersection, dated July 23, 1961. The source identifies the brick building as the Croyden Apartments @ 620 W. Sunset and the larger building behind
it as the LA School District HQ at 450 N. Grand. The Hill St. tunnel portal was just off the left edge of the photo:

Huntington Digital Library -- http://hdl.huntington.org/cdm/single.../id/7936/rec/2

The concrete wall at the base of what is now N. Hill Place is the same, as is the railing above it and at least the base of the streetlight (and Sunset is now Cesar Chavez Ave):

GSV

The School District HQ has been replaced by the Ramon C. Cortines School for Visual and Performing Arts. The block is bounded by the 101 at top left, Cesar Chavez at bottom right, and
Hill and Grand at lower left and upper right, respectively. Above the lower right corner, N. Hill Place hits Cesar Chavez from the north/right, with the southern end of N. Hill Place coming
down from the other side to meet Cesar Chavez:

Bing

Beaudry posted this beauty very early in the thread...


Looking east on Sunset Boulevard at Grand Avenue, 1955

Croydon Apartments on the right at 620 Sunset Boulevard, Chevy panel truck is turning onto Hill Street as it comes down off of Fort Moore Hill.

NLA Beaudry
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  #20092  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 1:31 PM
CityBoyDoug CityBoyDoug is offline
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A night at the movies.....

Quote:
Originally Posted by Wig-Wag View Post
Doug, The theory was that the streetcar patron would remain safely on the sidewalk until he saw the destination sign of the car he wished to board and then cross with the light to wait out the remaining seconds until boarding. In the main it worked quite well. However, inevitably there were those times when streetcar patrons fell victim to an inattentive or drunk driver, with predictable results.

I especially like this photo for not only the PCC car but also the 1950 Pontiac Streamliner alongside the streetcar "safety zone", as this year and model was my first car!

Cheers,
Jack


Jack, thanks for your nice reply.....I'm a bit sensitive to this issue for a personal reason.
My brother and I were taken one night to a movie at the Glendale Alex Theatre by our babysitter. The movie was a Disney feature and an animated live-action film called Bill and Coo. It was a bizarre film about birds, yet strangely fascinating.

After the film, we were crossing the street when a 16 year old drunk driver plowed through us in the crosswalk [driving his first -day, brand new Pontiac]. Many people were sprawled on the pavement...popcorn was everywhere. I was tossed around but not injured. My older brother was injured and taken by ambulance to the hospital. There were some serious injuries for others. Fortunately my brother only had some cuts and bruises.

Our mother was furious that the babysitter had taken us to a movie without her permission. She called the local newspapers and pleaded for them not to name us in any story as we were hiding from her violent former husband [ there was a warrant out for his arrest concerning a bloody assault on her father]. The papers printed our names anyway and my mother promptly received a hostile call from her former husband's relative. The woman caller inquired, sneeringly asking, "Are the little boys alright?". My mother was not amused. Later that same night my brother and I were driven 60 miles east of Glendale to stay with relatives for the remainder of that year....and hopefully out of harms way.

Who would have thought that an evening at the movies could have turned into a nightmare.


Lobby Cards images

A short clip of the movie....


http://youtu.be/Ppkea9nH0mY

Last edited by CityBoyDoug; Mar 11, 2014 at 4:54 PM.
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  #20093  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 3:46 PM
oldstuff oldstuff is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ethereal_reality View Post
Does anyone recognize the buildings behind these three sun-bathers?


ebay
There is a picture in the Water and Power collection taken from a different angle which shows the "Over the Waves" Lunch and the larger, gabled, half-timbered building. This was taken in about 1920, looking from south to north and is labeled "Vista Tea Room Santa Monica". The electric tram is seen in front of the gabled buiding. I can't get pictures to post or I would add it here. Some of you more capable people will be able to find it and put it in, I'm sure.

UPDATE:
Another picture dated 1924, in Santa Monica, shows the building with the gables. It is an aerial view and is labeled Santa Monica Pier. The pier, Roller Coaster and a corner of the still existing carousel building (Looff Hippodrome) are visible to the left side of the picture. The gabled building is now gone, replaced by a parking lot, of course.

Last edited by oldstuff; Mar 11, 2014 at 4:19 PM.
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  #20094  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 4:33 PM
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Here's the first picture you mention. It's originally from the LAPL collection.


LAPL
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  #20095  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 4:45 PM
Godzilla Godzilla is offline
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City Councilman Ernest [Eugene] Debs. No relation to the controversial Gubernatorial candidate, Eugene Debs, was quietly controversial in his own way concerning the shape of LA. He pushed for Beverly Hills and Laurel Canyon Freeways and attempted to stifle the so-called 60's youth movement. Per Wiki, not surprisingly, Debs' political career touched many NLA topics, including the Black Dahlia, Pandora's Box and Century City. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernest_E._Debs

Quote:
Debs was in the forefront of a City Council move against J. Paul de River, the only Los Angeles Police Department psychiatrist at the time, whose activities during the Black Dahlia murder case were said to have resulted in the arrest of two men later released for lack of evidence. He criticized de River for having written a "luridly illustrated" book on criminal sex cases, using Police Department files as source material. "The book is filthy and shocking," said Debs, "an obvious attempt to pander to depraved tastes."

Debs called for the investigation of what he said were 3,000 to 4,000 unvented gas heaters installed in the city schools in ‘57.

During the counterculture era of the 1960s, centered on the county-administered Sunset Strip, Debs was an implacable foe of the youth movements of the time and had several rock-and-roll venues, such as Pandora's Box and coffeehouses shut down. Debs ordered the Sheriff's office to crack down on the counterculture-oriented nightlife, which led to the 1966 Sunset Strip riot. Debs ardently backed the construction of the Laurel Canyon Freeway and Beverly Hills Freeway and sought to turn the Sunset Strip into a new office district. With the cancellation of both freeway projects and competition from the nearby and newly built Century City as a premium office market, Debs' plans for the Strip were only partly realized.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Flyingwedge View Post

Here's a closer view of the Mt. Lowe ad from the 1958 photo I posted; perhaps the right panel also said Marvelous Panoramic Views:



1951, Debs (on left) was part of City Council's tribute to Louella Parsons.


http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/6...20242130.2.jpg http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/6...20242130.2.jpg




Quote:
Originally Posted by gsjansen View Post
here is a photo of the groundbreaking of the fort moore pioneer memorial on 1953


Quote:
[Left to right foreground are Supervisor John Anson Ford, Councilman Ernest Debs, Mrs. Moses Davis, originator of the memorial idea; Sheriff Eugene Biscailuz, Arthur Gardner, school board member; rear left to right are H. A. Van Norman, Memorial committeeman, and William Himrod, Water and Power Commission vice president. The project cost $373,887.]

LAPL


1954 - Councilman Debs pictured with arguably subversive publications. http://boards.collectors-society.com...092080&fpart=3
http://i116.photobucket.com/albums/o...cilman1954.jpg





1962, the "New" Hall of Records. Board of Supervisor's Chairman Debs officiated the dedication ceremony.
http://jpg1.lapl.org/pics46/00042925.jpg


1970 - Frankenstein's Monster breaks barricade to Hollywood Freeway-Lankershim Blvd. access ramp. Among those present, Elena Verdugo of "Marcus Welby M.D." and Mr. Debs. (Was Frankenstein's Monster or similar characters ever depicted in comic books?) (The fact that Marcus Welby was portrayed by Robert Young, who is a famous Abraham Lincoln HS alum, is probably best reserved for another post. )




A park bears Councilman/Supervisor Debs' name.
http://www.debspark.org/images/fig1.gif



http://photos.imageevent.com/andrews...e/DSC01359.jpg

Last edited by Godzilla; Mar 11, 2014 at 5:15 PM.
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  #20096  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 7:30 PM
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weather stripping ad.

ebay
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  #20097  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 7:49 PM
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We haven't seen many nightclubs on West Adams Street.



ebay
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  #20098  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 8:31 PM
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Debs—de River—Chloe Davis


What a puss for an 11-year-old girl.... It seems that we've never run across Chloe Davis here before:




LAT Apr 4, 1940 x2/Apr


She may have been exonerated, but it seems there was always suspicions about her. The house is gone....

The story is told here in detail in four parts:
http://criminalconduct.blogspot.com/...l#.Ux9sEPmwI7s

Apparently Chloe grew up to have three husbands, marrying the last three months before she died in Indianapolis in 1987.


De River is a piece of work himself. Seems he started out as a plastic surgeon. After the Dahlia event, there is a suggestion that whatever he knew about the story was quashed by a corrupt LAPD...



LATimes May 13, 1924/March 31, 1950




De Rivers's book, so offensive to Debs, is still available at Amazon.
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  #20099  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 9:10 PM
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[QUOTE=CityBoyDoug;6488414]Jack, thanks for your nice reply.....I'm a bit sensitive to this issue for a personal reason.
My brother and I were taken one night to a movie at the Glendale Alex Theatre by our babysitter. The movie was a Disney feature and an animated live-action film called Bill and Coo. It was a bizarre film about birds, yet strangely fascinating.

After the film, we were crossing the street when a 16 year old drunk driver plowed through us in the crosswalk [driving his first -day, brand new Pontiac]. Many people were sprawled on the pavement...popcorn was everywhere. I was tossed around but not injured. My older brother was injured and taken by ambulance to the hospital. There were some serious injuries for others. Fortunately my brother only had some cuts and bruises.

Our mother was furious that the babysitter had taken us to a movie without her permission. She called the local newspapers and pleaded for them not to name us in any story as we were hiding from her violent former husband [ there was a warrant out for his arrest concerning a bloody assault on her father]. The papers printed our names anyway and my mother promptly received a hostile call from her former husband's relative. The woman caller inquired, sneeringly asking, "Are the little boys alright?". My mother was not amused. Later that same night my brother and I were driven 60 miles east of Glendale to stay with relatives for the remainder of that year....and hopefully out of harms way.

Who would have thought that an evening at the movies could have turned into a nightmare.


Doug, I can see why you would be very sensitive to the placement of the loading zone after your experience. The Bill and Coo clip is as you say, strangely fascinating and you must have been in good spirits after exiting the Alex but the accident ruined that in an instant. Moreover, I am sure it all comes back every time you pass the theater today.

Thanks for the explanation.

Cheers,
Jack
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  #20100  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2014, 9:14 PM
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After searching the USC Digital Library for pictures of The Club Lounge on West Adams, I could only find one of its neighbors. The building on the northwest corner of South Hill and West Adams is seen here in 1929. The 1929 CD has an entry for the Hill-Adams Pharmacy at 2535 South Hill.


USC Digital Library

A better view of the entrance. It looks like the traffic signal has been caught mid-change.


Detail of picture above.

On the lamp post there's a sign for Wrigley Field.


Detail of picture above.

The signage hides it well, but it looks like the building still stands. The house on the left also looks the same.


GSV

The brickwork and decorations are still visible at the north end, but it looks like it's lost a foot or two off the height.


GSV

While I was looking for pictures, I noticed Google Maps-like indicators at the top of the USC's thumbnails. Clicking on one of them brings up a Google Maps view showing where all the locatable pictures on the current page were taken. I haven't spent much time playing with this feature yet, but it promises to be very handy.

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