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AMAZING photograph, sopas. Thanks for posting them. :) |
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No prob! :) I am sooo glad this thread is still going. :tup: |
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The energizer bunny of threads keeps on going. |
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https://www.perrymasontvseries.com/w...tras/TheHouses It was apparently on the Fox lot. |
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The OP is North of the tunnels. We've already passed the left exit for Riverside Drive (which is now that horrible exit for I-5 North). That left hand exit we see for Figueroa Street is still there. The traffic entering from the left looks like it's coming from Riverside Drive (now the horrible ramp from I-5 South). |
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My money is on West 6th Street. |
Those freeway lanes are so luxuriously wide.
And traffic is so light. It's like another world. |
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https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...64ecd95f_h.jpg At the bottom left corner is the ramp from Golden State Freeway/I-5 south to the 110 south, just as in the older picture. And you can see the Figueroa St. offramp and the 110 North thru-traffic lanes to its right. For a modern perspective, looking south, here's a Google Earth image, looking south, towards the northern end of the tunnels: https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...ce9a8dde_h.jpg And here's an image from 1941 of the same view, back when the Figueroa tunnels still had 2-way traffic, and the Arroyo Seco Parkway ended north of the tunnels (before the southbound lanes were extended into downtown and the tunnels became one-way northbound). You can see an offshoot ramp/road from the tunnels to Riverside Drive. And Mackerm, if you follow the northbound lanes past the tunnel, you can see the Figueroa offramp. You can even make out the back of the original exit sign that's in the photo you posted; I guess there was a period when some of the original signs on the Arroyo Seco Parkway co-existed with the newer, larger/easier-to-read signs. https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...b81fc6eb_b.jpg Arturo Salazar Facebook |
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Stumbled upon this fascinating document from 1893 while searching for something else. In the British Library under:
"The Land of Sunshine. Southern California; an authentic record of its natural features, resources and prospects ... Compiled for the Southern California World's Fair Association" http://www.boebertandblossom.com/LANoir/Cover.jpg Here are two illustrations of interest: http://www.boebertandblossom.com/LANoir/Pasadena.jpg http://www.boebertandblossom.com/LANoir/Street.jpg A real mass of detail about the area from Santa Barbara to San Diego in 1893. You can read the whole thing here: https://access.bl.uk/item/viewer/ark...%2C4932%2C3015 Cheers, Earl |
Nice job, Sopas.
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Also, I'm thinking that maybe you're thinking of the 110 Freeway as being one bridge in this area, when it's actually two parallel bridges, and are at different inclines. It's very apparent here: https://www.google.com/maps/@34.0798...4!8i8192?hl=en This is the view as if you were standing on the northbound lanes of the 110 past the tunnels, looking at the southbound 110 lanes, which do slant uphill to go over the hill; the northbound lanes don't slant that way because they shoot out from the tunnel which bore through the hills rather than going over it. This is the view looking back towards the tunnels: https://www.google.com/maps/@34.0798...4!8i8192?hl=en You can see really see the difference in the inclines here, and then here's the view going north, towards that Figueroa exit: https://www.google.com/maps/@34.0798...4!8i8192?hl=en |
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This snapshot recently popped up on eBay. ..."Antique Hollywood California H B Gordon Sunset Market Arden Milk Photo 1940's" https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/xq90/924/y2GCwj.jpg eBay I'm gonna to go out on a limb and say the Sunset-Kingsley Market was located at Sunset and Kingsley. (hold your applause).... but what caught my eye was the other business. Has anyone heard of the H.B. Gordon MFG. Co.? ...I'm intrigued that it says "laboratory" beneath the company's name) Let's take a closer look because something else caught my eye. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/meDfSL.jpg There's no question that the Gordon Co. building was repurposed. . . but what I originally thought was merely a decorative facade might be an addition instead. Unless I'm seeing things, it appears to juts out from the original diagonal corner about twenty feet. . .um. .even though the left end (next to where the car is parked) appears flush with the building. (optical illusion?) Plus, that right door is awfully high. . |
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Maybe this alternate version of the photo has some clues to its location. Nah, me neither. The photo is on the IMDB page for Bitter Apples (1927) https://i.postimg.cc/XJK8MmZd/Myrna-...e-standing.jpg IMDB |
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Nice addition, Mackerm. I'd always wondered if there might be some additional information if we could see more of the signage on the corner building without the telephone pole in the way. Answer: No. :) (But if we can watch Bitter Apples...maybe?) ETA -- The wikipedia page says: Preservation status The film is currently lost. In February 1956, Jack Warner sold the rights to all of his pre-December 1949 films to Associated Artists Productions. In 1969, UA donated 16mm prints of some Warner Bros. films from outside the United States. No copies of Bitter Apples are known to exist. Which prompts a question: How do films not known to exist get IMDB ratings from 27 people? |
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Probably this is the flooding reported February 1, 1926, from which reportage here is a pertinent clip: https://i.postimg.cc/50yChXFw/Flood-LAT-1926-2-1.jpg LA Times, February 1, 1926. |
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https://i.postimg.cc/G2ykTvnR/Freeway-View.jpg Google Street View |
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You've got it, Mackerm. I might nudge that red rectangle up just a tad, but that's it. My mistake was concentrating too much on the subject and not the position of the photographer. Standing at Park Row, the photographer would be over the 2nd tunnel. The full Google Street View shows the portals to the 3rd and 4th tunnels. You've cropped the 3rd tunnel out; the 4th is still visible. That horrible left exit to Riverside Drive (now to I-5) occurs immediately at the North portal of the 4th tunnel. So, my original supposition that we've already passed the Riverside Drive (now I-5 North) exit on the left was incorrect. That ramp, once it passes under the Southbound Pasadena Freeway lanes would be almost adjacent to the cars entering the Freeway we do see on the left in both the OP and the GSV. But, the Southbound onramp is elevated as compared to the Northbound offramp, so we don't see it because of the camera position from the Park Row overcrossing. I'd illustrate some of what I just said, but my hosting of images always ends in disaster. Once again, congratulations HossC & Mackerm. |
The moving of houses and the companies that performed the task come up here often but I don't recall seeing a related matchbook before. Here's an eBay listing for a company that seemed to have a good run doing so under two different names. There is no date on the matchbook but it looks to be a fair bit later than the 1913 date on the cover.
https://i.imgur.com/8S5xoF8.png https://i.imgur.com/2nUB0CF.png https://i.imgur.com/bZysLgr.pnghttps://www.ebay.com/itm/18553546761...c05a%7Ciid%3A1 |
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Bristolian--in re the M&M House Moving Company: https://i.postimg.cc/xd3XfCpF/M-M2-LAT-1948-10-19.jpg LA Times, 10/19/1948 https://i.postimg.cc/MTsXBLS7/M-M1-LAT-1948-10-19.jpg LA Times, 10/19/1948 1141 N. Ditman Avenue now: https://i.postimg.cc/qqzqxGJ9/M-M-1141-NDitman-Ave.jpg gsv They have a nice view: https://i.postimg.cc/1zszjSR0/M-M-11...tman-Ave-2.jpg gsv |
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