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http://www.bitsmasherpress.com/LANoir/Higgins.jpg It was somebody's idea of cruising boat, home built on a 42 ft Higgins hull like this model from the New Orleans museum. That spoonbill bow and tall cabin made her a real handful in any kind of a seaway, but handy for riverine work because you could run her up on a river bank. The tank was for propane. And yes, my mates and I were legends in our own time :) Cheers, Earl |
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and camped out on the golf course for the weekend. The Los Angeles Sea Scout boat was on loan to us for the trip. No luxury but it got us there. https://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4052/4...3f5248b5_b.jpg https://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4052/4...3f5248b5_b.jpg |
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Oh, no, don't start me remembering that Pete Ellis jingle! I remember that, especially in the late 70's, early 80's. For some reason it was one of the catchiest ever. I'll bet I remember it now: Pete Ellis Dodge Long Beach Freeway Firestone Exit Southgate Sound like just simple directions? They are, but if you ever want to remember an address, let it have a catchy jingle like this one; just looked it up on youtube. Three versions of it. The second one is what I remember most. The first one shows Pete Ellis at his best. I don't remember that third one at all! :whistle: Long Beach Freeway Firestone Exit Southgate... |
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I grew up between those South Gate and Bellflower dealerships, so I not only heard the jingle on tv and radio, I had the benefit of driving past them frequently. Speaking of noted Los Angeles institutions, does everyone remember Federated and those wacky Fred Rated ads? Here's a lengthy playlist to refresh your memory: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?lis...7EDB77AC5790F7 |
Regarding Pete Ellis — when I was growing up we had a rotating television antenna on our roof, and we would occasionally turn it around and point it toward San Diego to see what could be seen. On one of those occasions I saw a Pete Ellis commercial for a dealership he had in San Diego, quite some time before he opened car dealerships in Los Angeles County. It had one of the most inane jingles I ever heard: "All the other car dealers are jealous...of Ellis in Wonderland!" It's not on YouTube but I remember the tune perfectly. I wonder how many important and useful bits of info have slipped from my memory merely because the Ellis commercial got there first.
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The only commercial I remember from my time in L.A. is Cal Worthington and his dog Spot.
"If your wife has started naggin' and your tail pipe is a draggin"....Go See Cal.....Go See Cal....Go See Cal |
re: Lookout Mountain, 1911
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Look it up under SCVHistory.com and search for Phillips Ranch. It should be the first thing that comes up. |
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"In 1952 Phil & Gladys Phillips built the ranch to be a resort. It was very popular for quite a while, having a pool, a restaurant, an aviary, a shooting range, deer and quail hunting, horse back riding — and far enough away to limit uninvited law enforcement." -condensed from scvhistory https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/apxXNG.jpg scvhistory Why the "uninvited law enforcement" comment? :shrug: Did I miss something? https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/8HWJIT.png scvhistory CHEERS! ( the woman sitting at the bar is Gladys Phillips) re: facebook https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/vZWgnh.jpg scvhistory The two main buildings — the restaurant/bar and the house (shown below) — had been abandoned by the time they were destroyed in the June 2002 Copper fire. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/Nidxks.jpg scvhistory and this is interesting: "The property was originally homesteaded by Ben Hickin, who on July 15, 1912, was granted a patent to 47.56 acres of land straddling San Francisquito Canyon Road (see plat below). A little over a decade later, the property was inundated by the St. Francis reservoir — i.e., it was under water from 1924-1928." https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/lIAIrn.jpg plat map thanks for pointing me in the right direction DavidWilliam. I appreciate it buddy. Special thanks to SCVHISTORY |
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/cNLY49.jpg
Ethereal Reality introduced us to this "mystery photo" of a Richfield gas station at the corner of Hollywood Blvd. and Van Ness on page 1673. Quote:
The new documentary about Scotty Bowers, "Scotty and The Secret History of Hollywood," premiered this fall at film festivals in Toronto and New York, and the reviews have been uniformly positive. Here's one from The Hollywood reporter: https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/re...review-1037277 https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/w310KY.jpg Another view of The infamous Richfield gas station at Hollywood Blvd. and Van Ness, about 1949/50. (A larger photo shows a 1949 Mercury on the Boulevard). https://2.bp.blogspot.com/--AGGkVbmr...we5yhw354y.JPG https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/LVje4X.jpg Scotty Bowers USMC, early or mid-1940's, Hollywood. https://media.vanityfair.com/photos/...tty-bowers.jpg https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/raaULq.jpg Scotty with pals, presumably some of his "studs-for-hire," with unidentified woman, mid 1950's. http://wstale.com/wp-content/uploads...history_01.jpg https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/xfJRXh.jpg Scotty with actresses Valerie Vernon and Constance Dowling at a Hollywood party, mid-1950's. http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2017/...5500805236.jpg The documentary arrives in theatres in April. I watched an after-screening Q&A with the documentarian (nominated for an Oscar for "Valentino: The Last Emporer") on youtube and some formerly-skeptical audience members, previously convinced that Bowers is a liar because some of his stories are shocking and outlandish, spoke up and admitted that the movie changed their views. |
I am very familiar with this place. It's the old Phillips Ranch. You can look it up under SCVHistory.com and search Phillips Ranch. It will probably be the first thing that comes up. Sorry to see it all torn down. It was quite a place in it's day.
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:previous: Did you see my post from last night DW? I posted photographs of the ranch and included links to SCVHistory/Phillips Ranch
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/Cs2v82.jpg craig krull gallery 5041 Felton Avenue, Hawthorne, August 17, 1991 by John Humble GSV took me to this house but there are significant differences. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/MzpXyO.jpg gsv some are obvious; the arches were removed (except for one), the round vent over the garage is gone and the garage door is larger. but why remove the front door and gable? :shrug: https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/qVC1cN.jpg gsv Do you think this is the same house? _ |
[QUOTE=Flyingwedge;8031901]Yes, that is a great snapshot! The place looks full, apparently with spectators even out on the field along the outfield wall. The
ceremonial pitcher is standing on the mound, which was five inches higher back then, so he might have been normal-sized. I guess all the photographers are hiding the catcher? I tried to figure out what game this might have been, but I came up empty. I grew up in South Central LA in the '50s and '60s and attended LA Angels PCL and American League games at Wrigley Field. I recall sitting in the outfield behind a rope when there was an overflow crowd - it was a charity double header of a PCL Angels game preceded by a game played by teams made up of movie stars and other celebrities. Another time there we sat out there for a PCL game against the hated Hollywood Stars. My father told me of big time boxing matches and football games, and barnstorming baseball games featuring black teams playing Major League All-Stars, at Wrigley. Before WWII and marrying my mother he had hung around the fight game and was a habitue of pool halls. Going to games, I recall entering, going through the concourse under the stands, and up stairs to the first level and there was the beautiful, green, cool, manicured baseball field, with crisp white lines, stretched out in front to the walls, and the houses behind. Juxtaposition from the streets to the field. When the AL Angels played at Wrigley it was paradise - we got the see the AL big league players in person that we'd seen on television or read about - Ford, Berra, Maris, Mantle, Colavito, Kaline, Robinson, Aparicio, Minoso, Yastrzemski...plus the Angels Leon Wagner, Ted Kluzewski and PCL Angels star Steve Bilko. For the first Yankees - Angels day game a buddy and I ditched school and went to the game in our parochial school uniform of salt-and-pepper cord trousers and white shirts. After a few innings we left the bleachers and snuck into empty box seats behind first base on the first level. I look around and sitting next to me in the next box is my father - who was supposed to be at work - in all his glory. Neatly attired in his tweed sport jacket and slacks, pencil-thin mustache, shades on, balancing a beer, keeping score on the scorecard, a pint of whisky in the breast pocket of his coat and smoking a cigarette. He looked at me and cooly said, "Don't tell your mother." He gave me a ride home from the game, telling mom he had picked me up at school - something he never did. She intuited something was fishy, but could not figure out what happened. We both got away with it. |
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Love that story, Slauson Slim! Thanks for sharing it, lol! |
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E_R, in the 1991 photo (above) it looks like they're building some freeway lanes or off-ramps and such. I don't know if I ever recall any structures like that being torn down. On the GSV photo there are elevated roadway structures in the distance. Perhaps that's closer to where the house was in the photo? (Despite the address given, of course.) |
Yes, thanks for your recollections, Slauson Slim! Richard Beverage wrote histories of both Pacific Coast League
Los Angeles Angels and Hollywood Stars, for anyone interested in those subjects. |
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The second house is 5001 W. 119th Place at the NW corner of Felton Avenue. |
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You beat me to it FW! Here's 5021 W 117th Street, Hawthorne, not far from the house that Google suggested. The property websites give a build date of 1992, which is a year after the photographer's date. http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...7thStreet1.jpg GSV Looking at Historic Aerials, the street was originally cut about four houses west when the freeway was built. The expansion work seen in e_r's picture made this the corner of the street, and this house appears to be a different shape compared to the one in the 1980 aerial, so maybe it was built around then. The neighboring houses were built in the '40s. NB. GSV insists that this is Tahoe Avenue. |
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Thank, Jeff, I was unaware a documentary was being made about the Scotty Bowers Full Service book. (I'd read it when it came out.) Quote:
I don't suppose it would be possible to identify this red building with the scant lettering seen from a sign on it? |
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