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I used to eat at Lindy's Deli in Culver City.
Great fries. Probably unrelated.... |
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I Take to You at Internet Archive. (Her vocal stylings are pretty much as I expected.) I take to you Like eggs take to bacon Like cocktails take to shakin' I take to you! |
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:tup: |
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We do see the street lights with their original globes in the 1957 film "No Down Payment" during the opening credits. As a bonus, the soon to be unhappy couple played by Jeffrey Hunter and Patricia Owens also take the Marianna Avenue onramp to the Southbound Santa Ana Freeway. That ramp used to deposit drivers into the left lane. It was abandoned for many years and finally demolished. Some of the ghost remains. My attempts to post photos always end in disaster, so if a fellow noirisher can find the clip from "No Down Payment" and post a screen grab, that would be awesome. |
Is this the shot you were referring to from "No Down Payment"? I love the Anaheim housing tract billboards a few seconds later.
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...80404fa6_b.jpg YouTube |
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"No Down Payment" Jerry Wald Productions (for) 20th Century-Fox. Released by 20th Century-Fox. Thanks! |
Found this on eBay today.
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...b94966ba_b.jpg Listing says: "Unmounted Photograph of Los Angeles Wharf Bait Shop, Restaurant, & Wharf Office >> Interesting b/w unmounted photograph of a few businesses on a Los Angeles wharf. Looks to be 1930-40s. One the far right is the Wharf Lunch Room. They offer red hot clam chowder for 10 cents. The chef stands in front with a large chef’s knife. Next door is a bait shop. Numerous very large fishing poles stand in front of the shop. One pretty large fish hanging there as well. One the left is the Los Angeles & Redondo Railway Company Wharf Office. Three men stand in front here too. 4 ½” x 8” and unmounted. No photographer noted. Clean." https://www.ebay.com/itm/304724622596? |
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odinthor's recent posting of some images from Robert G. Cowan's quaint 1969 book of reminscence and random images, A Backward Glance: Los Angeles: 1901-1915, prompted me to go looking for my own copy. Here are two more images from it that depict houses. I'm wondering about the caption of the first view--I can't reconcile it with 1910 or later Baist maps of the intersection indicated and am curious about that big Colonial house closest--anyone have any ideas about it?
https://i.postimg.cc/rp21jFFs/nlapicwestlake2.jpg Below is a pic is a side view of Elden P. Bryan's wild house at 41 Westmoreland Place--we've seen it before on NLA but perhaps not a closeup of its south side. More pics of the house are in my history of it here. Bryan was one of the developers of gated Westmoreland Place, which was a big flop--9 houses built on 64 lots. A history of the tract is here. https://i.postimg.cc/9f6VnKwL/WP41-N...911-NLAUTT.jpg https://i.postimg.cc/D0bGKtxm/Abackwardglancecover1.jpg The title page has this notation: "Issued to commemorate the 200th anniversary of the founding of California for the Historical Society of Southern California." |
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Hmmmm. GW, for what it's worth, here's the stretch of Westlake Avenue from 7th (lower left) north to . . . ummmmm . . . I think it's W. Maryland St. (upper right), the crossings between being Orange (Wilshire), and 6th. https://i.postimg.cc/MKNNncYN/Westlake-Avenue.jpg 1909 birdseye map :shrug: |
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Here's an amazing photograph postcard of an apartment building that we've only see once from a distance. "1910s LOS ANGELES rppc NOLEN APARTMENT BLDG 512 W FIRST ST. California" https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/xq90/923/XJoyMz.jpg eBay . .and the reverse. . https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/e6Iq9V.jpg . .turned to avoid neck discomfort. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...922/qtqrxy.jpg Go HERE to see HossC's earlier post with the Nolen. . |
Dating the photo by the LA&R sign doesn't help much unless we're on Wharf Three. Just to clarify, the LA & Redondo only ever ran between its namesake cities though it did offer three different routes to make that trip. Through service began in 1890, and the company itself was apportioned between PE and LARy in late 1910 preparitory to the Great Merger of 1911.
Wharf Three was a latecomer, having been built c1902-05. So if you can locate the bait shop on that wharf, you're in business for banding the date of the photo. Note that LA&R owned the Redondo wharves, so they likely had offices on all three. Sorry I can't be more help! |
In re: The Nolen Apts., 512 W. 1st. St., of e_r's posting two up :previous:
The postcard is signed by whom I take to be the wife of the owner of the apartment building. Going by the CDs, the Nolens appear to have started living at 512 W. 1st. St. about 1906, and the place was advertised in the LA Herald as the Nolen Apartments from 1909 to 1915. But as the years in that term went on, it seems the Nolens tired of the property: https://i.postimg.cc/jjWRrBtN/Nolen-...1912-11-14.jpg LA Herald, 11/14/1912 In 1924 (see last two paragraphs of article) . . . https://i.postimg.cc/Zq14Yj5Q/Nolen-...T-1924-2-3.jpg LA Times. 2/3/1924 :drunk: |
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Thanks so much for information on the Nolen Apartments, odinthor! .. Excellent sleuthing. :) And I love the moonshine story. ...hic-cup . |
438 S. Westlake Avenue?
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The 1906 Sanborn Map matches odinthor's 1909 map in showing just three homes on the east side of S. Westlake Avenue between Maryland and 6th. The big Colonial would be 438 on the left: https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...h_3_houses.jpg ProQuest via LAPL Oscar and Alice Farish appear to have built 438 S. Westlake in 1896; Oscar's last listing there is in the 1900 city directory: https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...d_Maryland.jpg May 9, 1896, Los Angeles Evening Express @ Newspapers.com https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...8_Westlake.jpg 1897 LA City Directory at fold3.com By 1901 it was advertised as a lodging house: https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...ake_Avenue.jpg May 20, 1901, Los Angeles Times @ Newspapers.com Its demolition permit is dated October 16, 1923. |
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Excellent sleuthing FW. All seems to add up. "438" became "538" between the 1910 and 1914 Baist maps, apparently in the citywide post-annexations rejiggering of streets and addresses. The house was technically south of Fifth Street.... Interesting that the 1923 demo BP indicates "438" (no lot number indicated on it to confirm--permit-pullers and the building dept were incredibly sloppy back then, and, really, all through the decades). I was hoping to find another image of it but no luck. 1910 & 1921 Baist maps https://i.postimg.cc/J7B9s37j/538as438-bmp.jpghttps://i.postimg.cc/3x9qsn9Q/538-21baist-bmp.jpg LAT 4-5-14 https://i.postimg.cc/hPDbkgYh/538aucad-bmp.jpg |
Anything remain of these 1900-1910 homes along Westlake?
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Apropos of, well, very little...I just noticed that by the end of the year this forum thread could reach 3000 (!) pages. Or 6000 if you set the posts per page at ten instead of twenty like I do. So that would mean there's 17 or 34 pages to go, or 340 more posts to make. Which would be around 14.2 posts a day. However, 340 posts previous to this one occurred around October 12th. So unlikely.
Anyway, I saw this interesting article: The Japanese Fishing Village That Vanished From Los Angeles Link HERE. https://www.messynessychic.com/wp-co...71-930x735.jpg© National Archives 80 years ago: View of main street at Terminal Island in Los Angeles Harbor, 1942. |
There was a big super bright moon like this over Los Angeles last night!
1947 https://bizarrela.com//wp-content/up...yHallCross.jpgLubbil-com |
KNX broadcast Paris Inn
We've seen images of Bert Rovere's Paris Inn at 210 East Market St before (there certainly seem to be a lot of them. Ol' Bert must have been quite the showman. They even had their own theme song!) But I don't think we've seen this fold-out advertisement for a KNX broadcast from the mid 1930s. It came to me as a PDF but to convert it to JPGs, I had to divide it into two images:
https://martinturnbull.com/wp-conten...30s-part-1.jpg https://martinturnbull.com/wp-conten...30s-part-2.jpg |
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