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https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/3...922/wKwPLR.jpg https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...922/sGRjTf.jpg detail Complete photograph Here . |
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https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...080&fit=bounds
pixels.com As per the website: "This photograph was taken on Tahunga Boulevard in Burbank, California in 1957".....I'm going to respectfully disagree, this looks like mid-Wilshire to me. Another from the same site, also dated 1957..... https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...080&fit=bounds .....a T-Bird approaching Sunset Bl. in Beverly Hills. |
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There is a great blacksmith shop functioning at Rancho Los Alamitos in Long Beach. In addition to supporting the barn, they repair and manufacture new iron work for the house.
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...88b470bc_b.jpg Photo: Facebook https://www.facebook.com/RanchoLosAl...57051615548527 |
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https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...AMariposa1.jpg GSV |
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When I saw Snix' post about Rancho Los Alamitos, I immediately thought about the race track. I assume they use some high tech incarnation of blacksmiths to fit shoes for thoroughbreds. Do they still have someone banging on an anvil with a sledgehammer? |
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"D" is Ann Sheridan.
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I believe the post above is a reference to e_r's picture posted back in February this year. Quote:
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:previous:...Thanks Hoss. You beat me to it. . |
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Agree it is prob. not Burbank. Plus Tuhunga Blvd. is in NoHo, not Burbank. I lived near that area when I was a kid, so I know it well. Everything from Cahuenga to Colfax was my old 'hood. Went to Reed Jr. High and NoHo high back in the '60s. At Walter Reed JH, I vividly remember the awful day that JFK died. They put out the news on the intercom in the classrooms right before lunch, and shortly therafter they lowered the flag to half staff & played "Taps" on the loudspeakers and then let all the students go home. When I got home on the bus, I remember seeing my mom on the sofa watching the news coverage. She had been crying. She was a JFK fan and worked in his 1960 campaign. I also remember watching on Sat. morning when Oswald was being transferred and was shockingly shot by Jack Ruby. Even then we thought it was a setup to quiet Oswald from ratting on his associates. Most people didn't think he acted alone. Anybody remember Mr. Corbin the Physics teacher at NoHo high? Great teacher, as was Mr. Kennedy in biology, Mr. Doucette in English and Lyle T. Wolf, excellent History and Social Studies teacher. Reminded me of Jonathan Winters. Funny guy, great teach. After he retired he moved to Vermont with his wife and ran a B&B inn. Like Newhart in that TV show, but earlier. He died just a few years ago. RIP Lyle. I'll be up there soon enough. Buy you a drink if they serve them up there. Say "hello" to God and tell him to stop this stupid war in Ukraine :wiseman: |
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Spizzerinctum, in one spelling or another, pops up in articles at Newspaper.com as far back as the late 1850s. This article says it's American slang, possibly derived from the Latin specie rectum: https://www.rutlandherald.com/news/s...808c5ff65.html There is something in Mr. Misemer's driveway (lower right) at 5347 Loma Linda Avenue (BP says 5345) in Hollywood -- maybe it's the Spizzerinkum car: https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag..._-_1024(1).jpg https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag..._-_1024(1).jpg March 27, 1914, Hollywood Citizen @ Newspapers.com Mr. Misemer encountered some misfortune in late 1913: https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag..._-_Misemer.jpg December 23, 1913, Los Angeles Evening Express @ Newspapers.com |
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THANKS Flyingwedge! Found on eBay "1942 East LA Los Angeles California Rio Grande Market" https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/sn0O7r.jpg eBay I was able to locate the address in the 1956 directory https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...924/LSBBIs.jpg LAPL Believe it or not, the building (or what's left of it) is still standing at the north end of Bunker Hill Ave! https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/VniSef.jpg You can check it out for yourself, Here Lastly, here's an aerial view. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/p5mZnA.jpg google-earth As you can see, large apartments buildings are sprouting up all around it. I imagine this mostly empty lot will be a construction site in the near future. . |
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Here's another interesting photograph that caught my eye. "RPPC Los Angeles CA DeLuxe Transfer Co. Truck Figueroa Street 1910s" https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/4gWXSV.jpg eBay There's a slight chance that we may be able to figure out where the photograph was taken because if you look closely on the left there is a building that appears to have a name on the roof. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...924/fHlJxv.jpg detail Of course the photograph may have been taken in front of the transfer company at 910-59(?) Figueroa Street. . |
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Maybe this has already been mentioned, but I believe "G" is William Demerast, not George Saunders. Demerast capped his career playing the gruff housekeeper in "My 3 Sons" after William "Bubb" Frawley died or retired. |
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Could the "59" actually be So. (910 South Figueroa)? Look at the characters in the back of the truck! All interesting faces. Maybe people had more individual character back then, before mass communication made us tend to mimic our favorite celebrities knowingly or unknowingly. I also believe states and cities and regional accents were also more distinct back then. Now we are merging into a uniculture. I actually heard somebody in Maine say a Texas style "Y'all" to a group of people. Of course, maybe it was a tourist from Texas. But the point is valid. The "Down East" Maine accent is not as pronounced as it used to be. Southern regional accents are toned down. In 100 years, everybody will talk like midwesterners. Ohio will be the standard. |
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This place started off life as a 1½ story dwelling at 339 S. Wall Street. It was moved to 628 New Depot Street in 1913. https://i.imgur.com/kCSjRVV.jpg ladbsdoc.lacity.org In 1922 the house was jacked ten feet in the air and a store was built under it. https://i.imgur.com/hlIK5BH.jpg ladbsdoc.lacity.org In 1964 the original dwelling part was loped off the top. https://i.imgur.com/mICkkav.jpg ladbsdoc.lacity.org |
HossC, thanks for locating where that photo was taken! I gave it a try for awhile.
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You say Tahunga, I say Tuhunga... Actually the street in NoHo is Tujunga "Ave." (Original post in question has "Boulevard.) And while I was looking yesterday, there actually is a Tujunga Ave. in Burbank. https://www.google.com/maps/vt/data=...Anrh1Y_khzNILJ Or, more precisely, E. Tujunga Ave. |
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I should have questioned why the market/house structure looked so odd. Your findings explain it all. Thanks Noir Noir. . |
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Like the truck full of men, the following photograph involves Figueroa Street. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...922/xlux97.jpg As you can see it's listed on eBay backwards so let's flip it and take a closer look. I tried to adjust the contrast to no avail. (but I was able to lighten it) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...923/IyInOs.jpg eBay The writing on the reverse is what makes this photograph especially interesting. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...924/Wr7gf0.jpg For search purposes:...Ray McClain(?) - 1927 - 5927 Figueroa Street - Los Angeles, California . |
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This next photograph should get the attention of our railway experts. "Original California Southern Railroad train Circa 1890s"...$90.00 Repeat after me:...IGNORE THE COIN. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/pCb7Yg.jpg All kinds of questions come to mind:.. Does the dirt road lead up to a house? - -was the photograph taken from the house? (which would be behind the photographer) Are the wooden(?) things on the right for grape vines? Does the area look familiar to anyone? :shrug: If you look closely at the train it appears to be traveling at a pretty good clip! https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/fAoeBA.jpg Would this type of train be considered an Interurban? (I remember reading that interurbans in Illinois traveled quite fast) . |
New video on youtube:
Los Angeles 1960s, Sunset Strip at Night (4K 60fps, added sound w/ color remaster) I posted some of the following in the comment section: Besides the last 40 seconds, this footage appears to have been filmed as three separate trips from east to west down the Sunset Strip from approximately La Cienega to Doheny--once centered straight on, the 2nd toward the right and the 3rd toward the left, each about 2 1/2 mins.; possibly filmed as background to be seen out of the interior of a car in a film or TV production. The footage was filmed in January of 1966. (The footage goes by The Trip where it shows Wilson Pickett appearing. His engagement there was from January 17-30, 1966.) Later that year Ed Ruscha would be photographing "every building on the Sunset Strip." The Battle of the Bulge billboard seen below is at Sunset and Holloway. The film premiered and opened at the Cinerama Dome on Dec. 16, 1965, which happened to be the 21st Anniversary of the titular battle. (21 years ago from now we experienced 9/11.) |
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Well, scratch another "mystery location" off the list....last year I posted this photo here....https://skyscraperpage.com/forum/sho...73#post9414473 https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...720&fit=bounds |
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He replied, "Thanks so much, I appreciate that. I was with my Dad when he took the picture. I was 5 and my dad frequently drove around to take pictures. I don't believe we knew anyone at that location. I thought it was in Burbank because that's where my sister lived. I will correct the information. Thanks again! Matt |
Great work, Martin Pal....how many of these misidentifications have been corrected due to you reaching out to the posters?.....Gary Winogrand's "Sailor in the Mist" walking over the bridge, Robby Muller's green building that turned out to be in Austin, where you got to his widow, and this one come to mind.....thanks for taking the time to contact these folks.
I knew the Oak's photo i.d. was off right away (well, to be fair we all knew), it could not have been Burbank.....it's a good picture, and the other one with the convertible T-Bird in Beverly Hills approaching Sunset is also nicely composed....these must be slides, the resolution is so good.... Matt Oaks says his father was an avid photographer, maybe he has some others of the city that were not posted on that site....we would love to see them! |
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https://i.postimg.cc/vZQ7mXDs/Deluxe_Transfer.png USC Digital Library Nope, most likely another satisfied customer of Deluxe Transfer. The paint store in the photo is now the Original Pantry. Quote:
https://i.postimg.cc/3R7tQGVS/Doheny_and_Canon.png Google Street View - Click Me! Somebody posted a message which has since disappeared identifying the street as Beverly Dr., based on the mix of palms. So 90% of the credit goes to that NLA regular. This view is indeed on Beverly, looking south toward Canon. The most easily identifiable feature is the leaning tree at the corner on the left above the Thunderbird. The tree is gone after 2011. Columbo is parked by a path leading to Will Rogers Park. In the oldest GSV view, the pilasters on the left aren't hidden by a hedge. Lax Code enforcement, no doubt. |
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I think the locomotive and car belong to the Cahuenga Valley Railroad. __________ |
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I guess it wouldn't hurt to ask Mr. Oaks if he has any other photos like those two that he might be willing to share with us. See what he says...! |
How about this being Lucky Baldwins rancho? -- he had similar railcars on his line too---and those mountains certainly could be due north of his fields and orchards...
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Did early Coca Cola actually have cocaine in it, or is that an urban myth? Apparently cocaine was legal before the 1900s-1920s, as were other drugs.The Pure Food and Drug Act in the 1900s regulated and prohibited some additives, including addictive opiates. Not sure about cocaine though. |
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Some references: Coca - museum.dea.gov The History of Coca-Cola Was/Is there cocaine in Coca-Cola? As an aside, €50m worth of cocaine was discovered in a French Coca-Cola plant back in 2016, but this was not destined for the beverage. |
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https://i.postimg.cc/BQVXF32V/Coca-C...-1902-2-25.jpg LA Times, 2/25/1902. (I believe that, in the last paragraph, "cocoa leaf" is a typo for "coca leaf.") :cheers: The Women's Christian Temperance Union was alarmed: https://i.postimg.cc/bw2N2F00/Coca-C...-1904-7-13.jpg LA Herald, 7/13/1904. |
Willacre Park in Studio City
took a little hike today up into Willacre Park in Studio City --
I wandered a bit off the trail and found this little stack-stone foundation, with some stairs. There was a tree growing behind it -- I assume the tree grew well after the stones were set up. Any thoughts / ideas? Happy 4th ya'll. Was curious if anyone was aware of a home tract up there? https://i.imgur.com/QxZwbtu.jpg https://i.imgur.com/lBPifHg.jpg https://i.imgur.com/8xz1yJR.jpg EXACT LOCATION: 34.13323° N, 118.39315° W |
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Who wants the "real thing", "classic" Coca Cola, pre-1929? Thanks Hoss & Odinthor for the answers to my query. Cocaine was villified and taken out, but they left the other stimulant caffeine in, or added it when they took out the "coca leaf extract". Odd how some drugs are judged OK but others are banned. I have never tried cocaine (and won't as long as it is illegal) but now that I am older and often tired, I think to myself "I wonder if a bit of cocaine (if it was legal) would give me some energy?" Caffeine doesn't work all that well for me. A cup or two of coffee helps me wake up, but often it leaves me nervous but still tired. Wired and tired. It seems to me that adults should be able to choose their energy source as long as they can do so safely and not harm other people. I would love to sample some really "classic" coca cola from the old days of noir to see what I am missing if it was re-legalized, perhaps by prescription. Somebody should start a movement to bring back the original (pre 1929) Coca Cola. People were so depressed by the end of "classic Coke" in 1929 that the Great Depression started. Did "classic" coke gave the 1920s its energetic roar? The formulation apparently gave people an energy boost safely. It must have been good, since few stocks did better than Coca Cola from 1910-1929 as sales boomed. Investing in it made baseball player Ty Cobb a millionaire many times over :wiseman: |
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Remember this? https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...924/4gWXSV.jpg Original post HERE Here's another De Luxe Transfer truck. "Antique Photo Framed 1914 Los Angeles Moving Transfer Truck Wichita Texas"" 8 x 10 https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/xq90/924/XzcOj2.jpg That's a load! "This item is from a local estate and is an original one of a kind photo. The photo is of a Deluxe Transfer Co. Moving truck loaded up and ready to go. Side panel of the truck has the company located at 910 So. Figures [sic] St. Los Angeles. The front of the truck has "Wichita" across it and the back of the photo says this truck was made in Wichita Falls Texas with the photo being taken in 1914." The seller's description seems to imply that the photograph was taken in Wichita, Texas. . .but it could have just as easily been taken in Los Angeles. Does anyone recognize the building? https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/ojywgR.jpg Hey! He looks like the Coca Cola delivery man. Here's the word Wichita on the front of the truck. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/3...924/CT2nR5.jpg . |
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BTW. Happy Birthday, e_r. :cheers: :happybirthday: |
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The article I found stated that the 1914 Harrison Act had a racist basis, not based on medical evidence. It was asserted by the politicians of the time pushing the ban that blacks and Asians were abusing cocaine and opiates. So they banned them. Pure racism, not based on medical facts. All the evidence that I have seen was that the early Coca Cola with small amounts of cocaine ("coca leaf extract") usually dispensed in drug store soda fountains was harmless, and gave people an energy boost without addicting them. Opiates addict, but apparently cocaine doesn't. Maybe Elon Musk can bring back the "real thing", pre 1914 "classic" Coca Cola :wiseman: |
In the 1920s my mother worked as a waitress at a Russian River resort called Lane's Redwood Flat. Coca-Cola used to send "secret shoppers" around to make sure the vendors dispensed a full shot of syrup each order. She said that since the place was way out in the forest and a residence resort, the secret shoppers were not hard to spot. Everybody else got a short squirt -- old man Lane was a notorious skinflint :-)
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My mother told me a similar story as yours Earl. In 1939 she worked in a Kress drugstore in downtown L.A. as a clerk, and she told me how the soda jerks watered down the Coke, Dr. Pepper, etc. with less syrup per serving. One of the soda jerks was friendly with my mom and he told her about how he was told to use less syrup by his boss. Maybe it was a store by store thing. The companies who made the syrup got back at the drugstores by bottling their drinks with standard syrup amounts. The soda fountains were mostly gone by the 1960s. Cheating customers never works in the long run. In the same Kress, my mom's boss expected her to cut her hair for free. 1939 was still the depression, and employees were still exploited. My mom told me how she found a much better job at Title Insurance, and how she shocked her Kress boss by quitting. War would end the Depression, and the power balance shifted back to the employees now in short supply. What I find amazing is that apparently nobody has figured out the exact ingredients and proportions in the Coca Cola syrup. In these days of chemical analysis, you think it would have been discovered. I think most people still prefer the taste of Coca Cola to other cola drinks. Put a blindfold on me and I can immediately distinguish Coke from Pepsi. Sorry Joan Crawford, Pepsi owner for a while...Coke tastes better to me. Don't hit me with a coat hanger. I only buy Pepsi when Coke is not an alternative. Now if it only had some "coca leaf extract". Energetic bliss. Elon Musk, do us a favor and buy Coke and get us the "real thing" back :wiseman: |
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I concur, Happy Birthday E_R! |
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Thanks for the birthday wishes! :) Here's a mystery location from eBay "Vtg 1965 Wilshire Blvd Street Los Angeles CA W/ City Bus Old Cars Photo" https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/xq90/922/rSthEp.jpg eBay So what's going on with that old lamp post? . |
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Here's another mystery snapshot; this one taken down in San Pedro. "1940 Photo San Pedro Mobil Gas Marine Hardware Fishery Supply Warehouse District" https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...922/eLffBw.jpg eBay Do we have any San Pedros (Pedroites?) on the thread who might recognize this area? . |
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From a family album. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...923/pvLPlM.jpg eBay Mt. Lowe Incline. When I enlarged the snapshot in order to read the sign I noticed a second sign a bit farther up and tacked to a tree. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/xMLsUp.jpg The tree sign appears to have a lot of writing on it. I can't imagine what it says. The tree sign is also visible in this hand-colored slide.... but I don't see the bigger sign. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/xq90/922/a06yto.jpg eBay I see the bigger sign!...It appears to have white lettering on a dark background. (opposite of how it looks in the album photo) . |
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https://i.postimg.cc/FRHtkP39/Marine-Hardware-CD46.jpg San Pedro CD, 1946 Note two addresses, one on Beacon (downtown San Pedro), one on Sardine (could be considered the warehouse district). |
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