HAPPY THANKSGIVING! A police officer writes a turkey a ticket in this undated LAPL photo. (Can we date it or locate it?) https://media.licdn.com/dms/image/C5...MFY1EkcTTQJH7k LAPL/Security Pacific CollectionViaPBSSoCal Patt Morrison has an interesting article in today's Los Angeles Times: What gives L.A. That Thanksgiving Feeling? by Patt Morrison | Los Angeles Times 11/23/23 https://www.latimes.com/california/s...nt-the-weather Also on AOL: https://www.aol.com/news/patt-morris...110042478.html It has this postcard in it: Union Station ushered in the holidays with its 8th Annual Tree Lighting Ceremony on Monday, Nov. 20. [LAist] https://scpr.brightspotcdn.com/dims4...day-hero-3.JPG |
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Happy Thanksgiving! |
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Thanks, unihikid and a Happy Thanksgiving to you, too! https://scontent-lax3-2.xx.fbcdn.net...QA&oe=658724A2 Quote:
In this article Patt Morrison mentions this film: There’s a charming movie from 2000 called “What’s Cooking?” It’s set in Los Angeles, with a damn fine cast playing four families — Black, Vietnamese, Jewish and Latino — bringing their own varied flavors of life and food to the Thanksgiving table, trying in the midst of family freak-outs and cooking catastrophes to pull off the impossible: a perfect Thanksgiving. Every year I keep recommending people watch this film. I think it's great. It's from the same director who did Bend It Like Beckham. The film is very entertaining. You can also call it a "food movie." If you haven't heard that term: The ingredients for the best "food movies" are universal: visual vitals crafted with care by relatable protagonists. Whether it's the trials of a French chef or the story behind a family recipe, the best food movies center on people, not just pleasing plates." Examples: Babette's Feast, Big Night, Chocolat. What's Cooking? is great for Thanksgiving and in the article Morrison has a link, which I thought would give information about it, but apparently the whole film is available to watch on youtube for FREE. Let me know what you think if you watch it. PLUS: I cannot believe the film is 23 years old already. I remember seeing it when it came out in 2000. I have the DVD and watch nearly every year. The DVD has recipes on it for things made in the movie! Here's the link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4NTVe43SIhA |
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https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...924/gdUKns.jpg detail These three seem happy with their jobs. :) . |
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https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...Warehouse1.jpg lamag.com There's some extra information and more pictures here and here. https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...Warehouse2.jpg lamag.com |
I need the help of NLA folks with vintage (Baist?) LA street maps.
Below (was) a small section of west Olympic Blvd (my neighborhood) west of Century City. Can someone post the same section from BEFORE Olympic went through (or was widened into a major blvd)? There are orphaned and/or realigned streets as a result. I want to see what it looked like originally. TIA! :image: (GSV, hosted by me, until my website expired) |
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The Baist maps don't go that far west, but here's a 1927 aerial. Click the link below the image for a wider, higher resolution version. NB. I've tweaked the contrast. https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...lympic1927.jpg mil.library.ucsb.edu |
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The David Rumsey Map Collection has the 1938 Thomas Brothers Map, which also shows the area. |
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A couple of issues, though: (1) We don't see the ornate upward extension of the elevation, on both visible sides here; however I think we can probably explain that away by the distance with the added effect of a sharpening filter. In the original B&W image it's too blurry to even make a guess about this detail. (2) We don't see as many windows in the photo as in the line drawing of Naud's. However, that can easily be explained by the possibility of a large wagon, or possibly a train, passing in front of the building as the photo was being taken. I don't know how extensive the freight rail system was in 1880, but in the 1910 Baist map there appear to be major rail routes crossing here. (3) More critically, in both the line drawing and the photo, the building looks perfectly rectangular, but in both the line drawing map from L.A. Mag and in the 1910 Baist map, the building is missing its SE corner. I think we can infer from either map that North Main was widened at the point where the tracks cross, because it seems that if the width of the street stayed uniform, then there would be room the "missing" corner of the building. It would be nice if we could see an "after" illustration of the Naud building. Notwithstanding these minor issues, I think this must be correct. There just isn't anything else I think it could possibly be. |
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A No Nonsense House and a Mystery Location. "c1890 ANTIQUE LOS ANGELES CA PHOTO VICTORIAN HOUSE ARCHITECTURE DORING GENEALOGY" https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/izgvo8.jpg link And the reverse. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/MrWprj.jpg So far I've only found this. (information) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...922/AVXp9K.png lapl . |
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https://i.postimg.cc/2yMYvCF9/Church-to-Warehouse.jpg LOC |
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Now some of the chaotic streetscapes make a little more sense in my 'hood. Also, it appears the section of Louisiana Avenue in my area was renamed Olympic Blvd. sometime after 1938. |
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Whoever captioned the back of the photo by handwriting should have printed instead! Doring? Doming? Downing? Dunning? Well, I think the name was Dominy. How old does Eddie ("Drowned at Redondo") look in the photo, maybe about 10? https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...at_Redondo.jpg June 22, 1903, Los Angeles Record @ Newspapers.com https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...ndo_-_copy.jpg June 26, 1903, Los Angeles Evening Express @ Newspapers.com I think the ebay photo shows 1269 E. Adams, the address mentioned in the first article above. The two-story house and the house on its left seem to match the 1900 Sanborn Map (the 1906 Sanborn shows the two houses eight feet apart, not the 16 feet indicated below): https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...9_E._Adams.jpg Library of Congress |
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That said, it's very helpful to see that a different company was occupying the parcel immediately south of the Naud/Union building, but still north of the crossing, and that the Naud building was rectangular. That second company must have either merged with Union Warehouse or transferred their property or lease to them before 1910, when the Baist map published that year shows the entire property occupied by Union Warehouse. You have to wonder what all of those little houses or shelters were between Olvera and Main, about halfway along. Were they growing hothouse vegetables? They look like little greenhouses. |
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https://i.postimg.cc/FKq71vyD/EAD126...ompton-bmp.jpg The name Dominy rang a bell. I have some notes on 1269 E Adams--seems it may still stand down at 5511 Compton Avenue. An ad in the Times on Aug 14, 1916, advertised 1269 E Adams as being for sale--"can be moved anywhere." A building permit was issued to (indecipherable) on Aug 24, 2016, to move the house to 5511 Compton Avenue. Arrella, Joe, Edwin and Frank were the children of Alfred and Margaret Banks Dominy. There was also an older son, Charles. Alfred was a prospector by 1900; Sarah Anne Dominy was his mother. Grider & Dow's Subdivision of the Briswalter Tract opened in 1894; Alfred was listed on Elmyra Street off N Main in the 1894 CD, then at 1269 E Adams in 1895, with his occupation as a laborer at the Ganhal Lumber Co. Confusing is that the LA Record of Dec 5, 1902, and the Times of Dec 21 reported that Mrs. A. L. Dominy was having a $1000 "cottage" built at 1269. The 1921 Baist indicates that the lot was empty. |
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:previous: Excellent discoveries about the Dominy Family and their home, Flyingwedge and GaylordWilshire. :worship: I hadn't noticed the note on the back of the photograph about Eddie drowning. I should have read it more closely. (but now I'm sad for poor Eddie) .. The biggest surprise was that the house is still standing! . |
The thing that's confusing me about Naud Warehouse is that the original photo shows it at a severe angle compared to the plaza church. The Birdseye map shows the Union Warehouse in line with the church.
Could the building be this one, which is at a funny angle for some reason? https://i.postimg.cc/q7KcRFBG/Screen...125-104102.png Huntington digital library [Oops. Somebody wrote the Naud's Warehouse was built in 1878, and this map is from 1873. :( ] https://i.postimg.cc/BQj8qPQ5/p15150...extralarge.jpg Huntington Another update. This 1881 map shows the warehouse up against the railroad tracks, which is different from the Birdseye map, but matches the photo. |
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When it comes to details like the exact placement and footprints of individual buildings, the 1909 bird's eye map is mostly booster hogwash, intended to make the city look as up to date as possible, Buildings are shown to be uniform and rectilinear whether they were or not and I suspect taller in many cases. I wouldn't rely on a bird's eye map from this era in the same way as a Baist or Sanborn map. |
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Another Thomas Bros Map, circa 1943, depicts further development. https://digital.library.ucla.edu/cat...21198/z1r25h3v Although unrelated, both the '38 map and '43 map includes the vestigial "Barnes City" which is/was south of Culver City and Mar Vista. https://lamag.com/news/citydig-barne...ng-lost-circus Barnes City was evidently the home of Tusko the elephant. https://skyscraperpage.com/forum/sho...ostcount=27214 https://lamag.com/.image/c_limit%2Cc...barnescity.jpg https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-4...2/SAVE2882.JPGhttp://www.westland.net/venicehistor...oo-ground.jpeg |
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