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Crab Cooker is going to re-build, I hope it's in the same spot. I took a photo of the area after they demolished the place but cannot find it. Thanks for the old photo.
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To see the Hatchimonji Dance Party L.A. 1923 photo go HERE
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What caught my eye [in the obituary] was the mention of Heart Mountain Relocation Camp. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...922/Tw5WzU.jpg fukuimortuary This photograph is from the same repository as the 1923 Dance Party photograph. Caption by Ike Hatchimonji: "May 1942 - El Monte, California" In front of family store. Hatchimonji family about to leave for the Pomona Assembly Center then the WRA camp at Heart Mountain, Wyoming. L-R: Tasuke Ike, Megumi Mike, Kumezo father, Nobue mother, and daughter Gloria, wearing the family ID tags. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...921/8MGVLX.jpg Densho :previous: The man in the 2018 obituary is Tasuke Ike.[far left] from the funeral home https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/3...921/BYEjmb.jpg IKE TASUKE HATCHIMONJI R.I.P. Good Man |
Does anyone have an idea where the KNX Transmitting Station was located in the 1920s? Multiple photographs in this group.
"KNX Radio, Los Angeles, Transmitting Station, orig Photo Lot, c1921" https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/0Xjp72.jpg EBAY Is this the station? (why the water tower?) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/spuCWN.jpg EBAY The view from the station? https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...921/wdl3ka.jpg EBAY Was the station near Palomar observatory? https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/GOtG7v.jpg EBAY Is this, in fact, Palomar....or some other observatory? https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/NtbeLx.jpg EBAY I'm asking too many questions. I'm guessing this one was taken inside the station. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/JUcpay.jpg EBAY And lastly, this one showing...umm..people. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/3wFNll.jpg EBAY Early history. KNX began as a five-watt amateur radio station, 6ADZ, which Fred Christian put on the air on September 10, 1920, broadcasting on a wavelength of 200 meters (1500 kHz). In December 1921, the station moved to 360 meters (833 kHz) and became KGC, sharing time with other stations that broadcast on the same frequency. On May 4, 1922, the station increased power to 50 watts and became KNX. The seller has additional information on KNX HERE (scroll down) Unless I missed it, the actual location of the early transmitting station is never mentioned. __ |
I'll end the day with this enigmatic photograph.
As you can see, it shows a group of tourists sitting inside a faux-street car. [c1900s] https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/4avgjG.jpg EBAY Does this little streetcar look familiar to anyone? reverse https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...921/gJ0cZb.jpg EBAY PRINTED BY Mc_ _ _ _ Reynolds, Jr. 2 = 2 So. Broadway, LOS ANGELES, - CAL. The seller mentions both Los Angeles and San Francisco....so the photograph could have been taken anywhere along the coast of California. "Photograph of men and women posing in a small train caboose. Los Angeles photographer stamp on reverse. I had similar photos in the past and some were identified on the back as California scenes (LA and SF) in 1904." . |
Given the terrain and the proximity both to the L.A. market and to an observatory, Mt. Wilson comes to mind. The larger (100 inch) telescope at the Hale Observatory dates to 1919, so there's a potential match. OTOH, I don't see anything in the outdoor photos presumably of Mt. Wilson that tie to a commercial broadcast tower. Per the site linked below, the KNX transmitter has been located in Torrance since sometime in the 1930s...
https://www.fybush.com/site-020313.html The seller's brief description appears to have been abstracted from Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KNX_(AM) As with your own search, e-r, I was unable to definitively locate the KNX transmitter from the date it became a full-time operation until it moved to Torrance. I got the sense that the earlier, lower-power transmitter(s) might've been co-located with the studio(s). Sorry I couldn't be more help. |
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https://farm8.staticflickr.com/7837/...c30c4271_c.jpg |
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Which only heightens my curiosity of just what and where the dome in the photos was (or still is, for all I know). |
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Perhaps a chance that the c1921 date on the picture and the others in the group are well off the mark. I think this might be the Torrance transmitter facility that HenryHuntington referenced in his post. This would date the picture to 1938 or later. This 2002 picture from inside a later building at Torrance shows the original preserved name plate. https://i.imgur.com/doFkuuj.jpg www.fybush.com https://i.imgur.com/53d54Pf.jpg :hmmm: Picture maybe taken at the left side of the front door of the original 1938 building. :shrug: https://i.imgur.com/NLPbGac.jpg Detail from calisphere.org |
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Here's a 1938 Dick Whittington shot of the KNX building. USC also have some interior images dated 1938 which may show the inside of this building. Outdoor photo showing the complete building of KNX radio station http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...XBuilding1.jpg USC Digital Library |
Thanks for the follow-ups to the KNX Transmitting Plant snapshots Henry Huntington...Otis Criblecoblis....Noir Noir...and HossC.
Here's a thought....perhaps the seller threw in the observatory snapshots as an enticement..and have nothing to do with the radio transmitter. :shrug: Quote:
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/3...924/0Xjp72.jpg Earlier today I happened upon another interesting KNX photograph. The date on this one is 1925. (close, but no cigar) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/at4PxZ.jpg homesteadmuseum "The photo shows a couple of employees poring over what appears to be a newspaper in the midst of the station’s control room. An inscription along part of the newspaper (or whatever that is) reads, “A token of friendship / to ‘Dad’ Allen / Van of KNX / 6/26/25.” _ |
Here's another interesting tid-bit.
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...922/MfsZpD.jpg Read more HERE :previous: A long...long...time ago, on NLA, someone posted an early photograph of a neighborhood in Hollywood. Behind one of the houses on this particular block (near a garage, if I remember correctly) there was a small transmitting tower. I wonder if this could have been Fred Christian's home? Does anyone remember that photograph? _________________________________ p.s. I tried to locate Fred Christian's address in the city directories without success. There are just too many damn Christians. :pissed: .............I'm going straight to hell. |
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http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...servatory1.jpg archives-dc.library.caltech.edu |
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On his lapel is a badge I can't quite make out, but the first letter might be a W. This might identify the guy's own Federal ham call sign. The FCC divided the country into ten or so sections--California and the West Coast was W6 and then three individual letters, so his badge might read W6XYZ. I agree this collection is a hodgepodge. I was a ham when I was a kid--now I've gone and revealed my ultimate geekness. Although messing around with radios was a lot of fun |
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Here's Fred in the 1922 CD. https://i.imgur.com/23KQBMD.jpg rescarta.lapl.org |
Wasn't there a thread a year or two (they all run together now) back about a preacher in East Hollywood or environs that used a low-power radio broadcasting setup as part of his ministry? Harold Way sounds familiar. Or maybe I'm just conflating this thread with that one.
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https://www.oldradio.com/archives/st.../LA/kfipix.htm More history: https://www.thebdr.net/articles/prof...ry/HPH-KFI.pdf This article by KFI engineer Newcome Weisenberger might explain the water tower. http://antiqueradios.org/gazette/water.htm |
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Thanks, Hoss!
Speaking of things running together, it was KHJ that began in Silver Lake, not KNX. This Getting Old process can have some cerebral drawbacks for sure. Some of the radio stations that we take for granted today certainly had some interesting beginnings just about a century ago: back yards, back rooms, real breadboards, Amateur Nite at the Bijou programming somehow spawned a medium that helped an anxious population pull through the Depression a few years later.That seems like a pretty fast adoption rate even by today's standards. |
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