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Lane Theater???
Was there a Lane Theater in L.A.? I haven't been able to find evidence of one.
The way it's being touted as a big fancy "Hollywood premiere" with "celebrities, lights, parades" I'm thinking maybe this wasn't in LA at all. "Garden of the Moon" was a Busby Berkeley-directed movie from 1938. http://www.martinturnbull.com/wp-con...ne-theater.jpg |
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Here she is as a burlesque house in 1975. |
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And as for the space sitting empty...well, wait till you get to about late June of '14 on this thread. The whole tale of that lot takes quite a turn... |
A new angle on the past.
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BTW....as a public service announcement, this reply is an example of how to edit a previous post to reflect only the specific points of the post you are commenting on. It takes a few tries, but it is well worth it in the end. Fare thee well, good companions! |
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Hmmm. I look forward to seeing what new developments are brewing for that lot. |
I think part of the 1887 building may have lasted longer than just 20 years? The second floor of the new building, in the 1906 photograph, looks exactly like the second floor of the 1887 building? Was part of the old building reused for the new building? I looked for the original 1887 cast-iron column (at the entrance) in the 1927 photograph and it also appears to be there?
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Looks a little different in 1965: http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3464/...b2dc83b2_o.gifcalstatelibrary Note that in both images, about center/top, is the Stanley at Flower & 2nd. Also, the building directly above the motor officer is the same remaining structure in the 1965 shot at lower right. That's the Berman Apts at 336 South Flower. |
http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics05/00022021.jpg
As long as I'm on the subject...next to the aforementioned Berman is a building with bays, and north of that one with "WE" -- that's the Westmund at 322 and the Glenview at 330. Here they are in Feb '63, so, before their 1965 demo in the William Reagh photo. https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3861/...a4efe2e6_b.jpghunt As I also mentioned the Drive Through Bunker Hill, despite our collective having done that about a billion times, let's do a little bit of that, just for fun: https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3844/...24faf924_b.jpg I'd say our threewheeler was parked about where that driveway is, south of that lampost kittykorner from the Berman. As in, a driveway was added -- into the gas station? between 1940 and '49. https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3915/...82d96398_b.jpg The "X" on the building in 1940 shot, that's the building on the right, the Hotel Lennox, at 315/319. https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3909/...b3dffcd9_b.jpg Then after crossing Third, you make the trek up the hill and there's the Stanley, sitting atop the 2nd St Tunnel. |
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http://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2013...epartment.html This is the sole survivor of only five, according to the source above. This one indeed went to the Beverly Hills FD. These were United Aircraft builds on Kenworth chassis. Like those sunshades? |
A couple more amateur slides I came across on ebay. The seller dates them as 1960.
http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...661/xuKWe0.jpg http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...743/BhnXXy.jpg |
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Los Angeles Sheriffs Dept. weapons inspections. (no date)
http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...540/mVMBUK.jpg www.badgehistory.com I have NO idea why they're posed in front of a feed store. __ |
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http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-LSVqz843jK...ruck+Owner.jpg Gilmore obviously had a thing about "flashy" trucks. http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-apaXx9J4ZC.../s1600/gil.jpg http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-19HC6vml_8...RUCK+OWNER.jpg Above three images from: http://georgedennis.blogspot.com/201...2_archive.html Can anyone come up with a photo of The company's building? |
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Attorney Henry G. Bodkin, Water & Power commissioner (taller man of the two) and Edgar Konouse, general manager & chief engineer of the DWP inspects the "Volts Wagon," an electric truck used to research the feasibility in relation to city. Photo dated: May 22, 1967. http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics52/00075941.jpg LAPL A view under the hood of an experimental electric powered auto being promoted by the Department of Water and Power. Called an "electrauto," it is smog-free and economical. http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics21/00060069.jpg LAPL And it looks like others were trying electric too: http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics52/00075943.jpg LAPL http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics52/00075942.jpg LAPL http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics52/00075937.jpg LAPL http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics52/00075938.jpg LAPL http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics52/00075939.jpg LAPL http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics52/00075940.jpg LAPL |
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Robert Drifka pedals his bicycle down the 400 block of North Wilton Place. Drifka, who works as an electronic tech, says he wears the mask because of the pollution in the air. Photo taken at 1 p.m. on an unidentified day in July 1984. http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics21/00060082.jpg LAPL 1966 In the smog battle a Los Angeles commuter wears an only slightly satiric gas mask on October 2, 1966. Automotive experts show how a new smog device cuts down on the emission of car fumes, while testifying before the California Assembly. http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics21/00060074.jpg LAPL 1954 Northern California ships pure air to smoggy Los Angeles in cans on November 15, 1954, in an all out public service campaign put on by the Committee to Send Pure Air to Southern California Smog Sufferers in Los Altos http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics21/00060071.jpg LAPL |
A Few Comments on Recent Posts
Remember when the signs on freeways headed north gave the mileage to Bakersfield? They were all changed to Sacramento years ago because it was
claimed that no one knew where Bakersfield was. Four or five years ago, I was lost somewhere underneath the 5 freeway leaving a Dodger game (I get lost every time) and ran into a sign that still pointed to Bakersfield. I wonder if it has survived. http://i129.photobucket.com/albums/p...ps418f4ed2.jpg Ebay These Volkswagen buses with all the windows (something like 17 or 19) are worth a fortune now. http://i129.photobucket.com/albums/p...ps9160ddfd.jpg LAPL The guy in the gas mask is driving an MGA. I had one (I think it was a 1957) a long time ago. You could drive about 150 miles between major breakdowns. http://i129.photobucket.com/albums/p...ps6aabefbb.jpg LAPL |
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*Farmer John meat packing is covered in a mural, done in 1963. That may be it for Vernon's contribution to the Arts. The mural does not cover the stockyard smell, which was actually less than what I expected. I also remember a dirt road in the mural (now painted over) that some Wile E. Coyote-type tried to drive into. |
Crandall Aylsworth Company sign
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USC Digital Library, "Intersection of Spring Street and First Street looking south, ca.1900-1904". This rooftop sign has been a puzzlement to me since I first saw it. Was it electrified and illuminated? I'd think it almost had to be, because in broad daylight, with its see-through letters, the sign would be barely readable (below). And yet it was clearly a very fancy (and probably quite pricey) piece of metalwork, so why would a business spend good money to make a sign for its store that is difficult for people to see? Obviously it wouldn't – the sign must have stood out in some way, but the only way it could would be if it were illuminated at night. http://otters.net/img/lanoir/CHS-154_detail_sky.jpg USC Digital Library, "Hamburger's Department Store seen from down a very busy street ca.1890-1899" (detail, enhanced). And what's that apparatus at the top? It looks like a canvas shade on a roller. It's affixed in such a way that it would cover the sign from the front, which makes even less sense, as when let down, that would make the sign flat-out impossible to read. What the hey is going on with this thing? http://otters.net/img/lanoir/CHS-2856_detail_sky.jpg USC Digital Library, "Intersection of Spring Street and First Street looking south, ca.1900-1904" (detail). But, if it was an electric sign, what was the source of illumination? It couldn't be neon – in the aughts, that type of lighting hadn't been introduced to this country yet. Anyway, there aren't any glass tubes to be seen. It doesn't even have any light bulbs, like the sign on the cornice of the store next door in the second photo, or on Hamburger's rooftop sign in the background. Not even sockets for lights. The sign does appear to be electrified, though. See the power line coming in from lower left, connecting to the insulator on the roof line, then appearing to connect to the metal frame of the sign? There also appears to be another smaller insulator on the frame a couple of feet above the connection point. And the rest of the wires connecting to various parts of the sign. A few of those seem to be for structural support, but others appear to have no other function than to connect one part of the metal sign to another (presumably to conduct current). http://otters.net/img/lanoir/CHS-2856_detail2_sky.jpg USC Digital Library, "Intersection of Spring Street and First Street looking south, ca.1900-1904" (detail, enhanced). But again, if the sign was electrified and meant to be seen at night, what could the source of illumination have been? I'm baffled, myself. Ideas, anyone? |
http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...ostcount=23356
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Gilmore Oil Company was purchased by Socony-Vacuum (later called Mobil and even later EXXON-Mobil) in 1940. The Gilmore trucks were repainted and remained in service. The below is a similarly designed delivery truck bearing the MOBILOIL trade name and belonging to a gasoline wholesaler known as General Petroleum. Barely visible above the windshield on this truck is the Pegasus logo of the old Magnolia Oil Company which had been acquire by Mobil in the 1930s. http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-GtE8nEipAc...0/Mobiloil.jpg http://georgedennis.blogspot.com/201...2_archive.html I'm guessing that all three truck designs were from the mind and hands of Wellington Everett Miller who was also associated with a truck builder by the name of Advance Auto Body of Los Angeles, California, last located at 4700-4950 Anaheim-Telegraph Rd. |
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