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You can read about the history of Burrito King here and here. - - - PS: I've been going to Burrito King for over 25 years. It was always great, in that greasy, sloppy, but GOOD way. With them staying open until 3:00 AM, many of my late nights with friends ended there. Since maybe 18 months ago, the food became awful. This Yelp review sums up my recent experiences there: https://i.imgur.com/mFRdSjs.jpg Does anyone know if Burrito King has new owners? I can't think of any other reason for such a sudden drop in quality. |
Three, maybe four, boys notice the photographer in the trees taking their picture.
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...921/Mc1HXe.jpg Quote:
abc7 pleasing Art Deco. Thanks FW. :) __ |
Oil wells amongst houses in Inglewood, Calif. neighborhood, circa 1925
UCLA attaches a circa 1925 date to its title of this photo, and I believe it may have been taken in 1929. We're looking NW
from just a bit NW of what is now the intersection of Manchester Blvd. and Prairie Ave. in Inglewood. The street in the foreground is now Manchester Terrace (on the 1923 Inglewood Sanborn Map it's called East Pimiento). The next two streets north of Manchester Terrace are East Queen, then Aerick. Mostly hidden in the trees in the undeveloped area north of Aerick is the old Daniel Freeman Mansion. The house above the lower right corner is 661 Manchester Terrrace, built after 1923: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...psdnwiavhm.jpg UCLA/Islandora/Los Angeles Times Photographs Collection Here's a closer look at the home to the left (west) of 661; in 1923 it's 653 E. Pimiento, but by 1950 it's been renumbered and renamed 651-53 Manchester Terrace. The home behind it on East Queen, in the upper right corner, looks like it is ready to be moved away: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...n.jpg~original According to the October 7, 1929, Los Angeles Times, 651-53 Manchester Terrace was known as the Cook homestead. Unfortunately, there is no mention of the Cook house in the article accompanying the photo, and I found no information on the Cook family of Inglewood. Anyway, the UCLA photo showing the Cook home seems to have been taken around the same time as this photo: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...psbzqq397u.jpg October 7, 1929, Los Angeles Times @ ProQuest via LAPL To the west of the Cook home is 645 Manchester Terrace, seen here in the center, behind the oil derrick and utility poles (atop which two men are working): http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...psxdj4j6vk.jpg This is 645 Manchester Terrace in December 2016. It was built in 1924 according to the LA County Assessor: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...psu19f5kro.jpg GSV Despite the doom predicted for 651-53 Manchester Terrace in the 1929 Times article, the home survived until at least May 13, 1957, when this photo was taken. North is at the top, and Prairie Avenue runs north/south along the side of the cemetery. Both 651-53 and apparently 661 Manchester Terrace are above the two red dots. According to the text that accompanies photo 00097853 at the LA Public Library, the Potrero Country Club golf course in the lower right corner operated from 1925-63. The Forum was built on the site of the golf course in 1966-67: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...ps98lullfv.jpg Flight pai-85v-8 Frame 68 at UCSB Queen Park now occupies the site of 651-53 Manchester Terrace. According to a July 25, 1974, Los Angeles Times article, "Queen Park has recently opened," and I believe both 651-53 and 661 Manchester Terrace were gone by the mid-1960s. This is from the same October 7, 1929, Times article that has the photo of the Cook homestead and discusses the origin of the East Inglewood oil boom: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...ps24b8hx7c.jpg ProQuest via LAPL |
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http://tessa.lapl.org/utils/ajaxhelp...X=0&DMY=512&DMhttp://tessa.lapl.org/utils/ajaxhelp...512&DMY=512&DMLAPL Quote:
http://tessa.lapl.org/utils/ajaxhelp...DMX=0&DMY=0&DMhttp://tessa.lapl.org/utils/ajaxhelp...X=512&DMY=0&DM http://tessa.lapl.org/utils/ajaxhelp...X=0&DMY=512&DMhttp://tessa.lapl.org/utils/ajaxhelp...512&DMY=512&DMLAPL |
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The building now abutting the 101 appears to be a dormitory addition made to the Hollenbeck Home in 1923, as described in several LAT items, including this one of Sept 3, 1923 (partial, and, unfortunately, the image accompanying it doesn't show up).... https://s22.postimg.cc/dne3ujhoh/hollenbeck1.bmp.jpghttps://s22.postimg.cc/i9a82ynsx/hol...nonpic.bmp.jpg It's hard to tell what's left of the home from the 1923 period...one source says that the "Morgan Walls buildings were torn down in 1985".... |
Beatle Boots
BURRITO KING.....1970s to 2017 https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...923/YQeQ5B.jpghttps://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...922/BUp7Mi.jpgdetail / detail :) "Gram Parsons, Burrito King 1969" https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...921/9tXZf7.jpg YELP __[/QUOTE] Nice boots. Do you know how hard those were to find once the Beatles showed up in America on Ed Sullivan's show? These were everyday wear for the Mods in England, but us Yanks searched every Thom Mcan's from Bangor to San Diego to no avail. I do believe, however, by 1969 some semblance of Beatle boots had made appearances in major city shoe stores. |
Yo Adrian!
. A little over a month ago there was discussion of Jack Doyle's Bar, the Vernon Boxing Club, Vernon Coliseum at 2340 E. 38th Street that opened in 1923, Maier Park and a fire that happened in 1927.Quote:
A Mediterranean Revival-style home, a two-story mansion, which blends Palladian and Italianate design elements, was designed by architect Richard D. King and built in 1926 for J.B. Leonis. It was located at 647 S. Hudson Ave. in the Hancock Park Area of Los Angeles. It has remained in the Leonis family for close to 100 years until last week when it was sold. https://playerswiki.com//uploads/201...1535612799.jpg Within the 8,500-square-foot interior are a beamed-ceiling entry hall, a paneled library with a fireplace, five bedrooms and separate staff quarters. Built as a showplace for entertaining, the home boasts a large-scale living room and dining rooms and multiple loggias set beneath groin vault ceilings. [groin vault ceilings?] All of the pictured upstairs rooms have an old-style telephone in them: https://ap.rdcpix.com/543660517/2d35...0_h770_q80.jpg Rolling lawns, specimen trees, fountains, a swimming pool and a pool house make up the grounds. A three-car garage and detached cottage sit at the rear of the property. https://ap.rdcpix.com/1341445831/2d3...0_h770_q80.jpg I would like to see this, but not pictured anywhere I could locate: On the basement level remains a holdover from the prohibition era: a walk-in liquor vault. Recreation and media rooms also lie on the lower floor. The property was purchased by recent [5 1/2 years] Los Angeles Dodger first baseman Adrian Gonzalez. Info and photos from these site links: Realtor PlayersWiki Zillow |
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Wow, it looks like the kind of place crazy movie people built in the crazy twenties! |
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Dang, it's off the market? :( [puts away checkbook] I was thinking it would make a nice NLA clubhouse. |
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The Leonises--father, grandson, and great-grandson--seem by all accounts to have been sleazebags par excellence. At least according to the Times via Wikipedia, they were: "Leonis C. Malburg (1929-2017) was a former mayor of Vernon, California, and the grandson of the city's co-founder John B. (J.B.) Leonis.... In 2009 he and his wife Dominica Malburg were convicted of conspiracy, perjury, and voter fraud. Leonis's son, John Malburg, was sent to prison for child molestation of boys in 2009. The offenses were discovered during the same family voter fraud investigation." But the house and its grounds are great--the interior needs help, although I hope something that appears this original won't be ruined...the old intercom phones are a nice touch. It seemed odd that such a substantial house and its connection to Leonis wasn't mentioned in the Times until Sept 24, 1943... https://s22.postimg.cc/tmiz97he9/leonis1.bmp.jpg https://s22.postimg.cc/lh0xb33g1/leonis2.bmp.jpg https://s22.postimg.cc/ia6drhdv5/leonisart1.png https://s22.postimg.cc/qgydiqypd/leo...ndobit.bmp.jpg LAT Nov 11, 1943/Oct 20, 1953 https://s22.postimg.cc/a787g7j01/leonis_BP.bmp.jpg And...the Times ran a story on other of King's projects on Aug 10, 1924--can't tell if his Vernon City Hall got built. (Leonis was good to him.) https://s22.postimg.cc/i18t1dtb5/leo...llking.bmp.jpg |
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This one Handsome Stranger?
I had to go back to 2009 to get this clear of a view. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...921/Slg0ba.jpg GSV Yes. I think this place will do. ;) If anyone's interested, here's the same view today. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/i0WYys.jpg GSV A professional landscaper must not have been in their budget. __ |
AAA Automobile Club of Southern California reproduction of a 1930 map of Los Angeles
For those of you haven't heard and for those of you who have heard and have been wondering, AAA Automobile Club of Southern California have released a limited edition reproduction of a 1930 map of Los Angeles. I have to admit, there are more streets in 1930 LA than I would have imagined, especially from downtown to the Long Beach area.
https://martinturnbull.com/wp-conten...30-map-1-1.jpg https://martinturnbull.com/wp-conten...1930-map-2.jpg |
Excellent post on 645 and 651-53 Manchester Terrace Flyingwedge.
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This is all I found. "James Cook was one of the financial backers of the Inglewood Water Company." from History of Inglewood "The James Cook coorporation, owners of a wool-pulling factory in Los Angeles." from extended_history and he had a daughter named Daisie. "The residence erected in Inglewood by Mr. H. L. Martin in 1904, Secretary of the Inglewood Water Co., is presided over by Mrs. Martin, formerly Miss Daisie E. Cook of Los Angeles, daughter of James Cook." from extended_history I wish someone with vision would have stopped the destruction of the Cook residence. -although it's a bit large, it would have made quite an impressive club house/community center in the center of Queen Park. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...923/gENyCp.jpghttps://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...922/JiQhn1.png The center building in the modern aerial is a restroom [below]...which could have easily been located within the Cook house. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...921/c28teq.jpg |
:previous: Thanks, e_r. I tried to build on what you found but struck out again. :(
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https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1873/...280a2fa9_b.jpgvernon_city_hall_1962_detail by BillinGlendaleCA, on Flickr Unfortunately it's been replaced, not sure when. Update: Looks like it was replaced by the current building in the late 70's to early 80's. |
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401 S Hudson was built in 1929 by Fred S Albertson, the Dodge dealer whose Figueroa building we've seen on NLA before. A few items about the house: https://s22.postimg.cc/hx6pw3oup/401...rticle.bmp.jpghttps://s22.postimg.cc/njkpal2z5/401hammer.bmp.jpghttps://s22.postimg.cc/t7r01mk81/401finished.bmp.jpg LAT Apr 28, 1929/May 30, 1929/May 4, 1930 From post 17857 (2012): https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-V...2520AM.bmp.jpg Wider view from post 10624: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-C...2520PM.bmp.jpgUSCDL Another view I thought we'd seen here before, but couldn't find... https://s22.postimg.cc/dnjmb6hu9/401dodgelineup.jpg Seen on various automotive history sites, if not here before--an interior view out toward the corner of Figueroa and 16th St soon after opening in 1920: https://s22.postimg.cc/y7og9vv35/401...oninterior.jpg Rainy afternoon addition...very soon--appearing the next year--the Flint dealer seen above would appear through the southerly showroom windows; out of the westerly windows and over on the swc of Figueroa & 16th (Venice Blvd) is brewer Edward Maier's house at 1605 S Fig--it became a rooming house before it was demolished in 1926. https://s22.postimg.cc/uiq2pdhld/160..._Maier.bmp.jpgLAPL |
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401 South Hudson is even more impressive viewed from the 4th Street side...I'll try to snap a photo or two when I have a moment. Google Maps shows that the lot it sits on is one of the largest in the area.
How is creeping fig best removed? I assume withering stares won't do. |
re: Gram Parson's boots / Beatles
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https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/DQPICQ.jpg PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF BONNIE COWAN FLEMING via LAMAG "Road manager and personal assistant Mal Evans leans down to speak to Ringo Starr; road manager Neil Aspinall looks cool in shades standing next to band manager Brian Epstein. Bonnie Cowan Fleming speaks to Paul McCartney while her father, publicist Warren Cowan, greets everyone in line; Jayne Meadows stands behind McCartney." A bit of INFO: Guests paid $100 each to bring their kids to see the Beatles; kids got in for $25 a head with all proceeds going to the Hemophilia Society. The party was held at Nancy Olson's mother's home at 415 Avondale Avenue. When Nancy asked her Mom if she could use her garden...her Mother said "I would love to host them and as she walked into her garden she said, “I have the perfect spot to put four stools, one for each of the boys. We will put them under the Deadora tree.” (Deadora tree? calling odinthor!) __ p.s. Why Nancy Olson? She was married to Alan Livingston, president of Capitol Records. |
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