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'mystery' location
"Two negatives, Wedding in Los Angeles." http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...922/PTdSlq.jpg ebay not sure if this is in front of the church or an apartment.....someone's hanging their laundry out to dry.....cars sure leaked oil back then. And the second one is inside the church. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...924/CuImaR.jpg ebay I'm surprised by the complete lack of religious iconography. __ |
Here's one more 'mystery' wedding photograph for tonight.
"Wedding, Los Angeles 1940s" http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...922/dMctES.jpg ebay Best hint: There appears to be a park across the street. |
1910 milk delivery
This is near Lankershim and Ventura Blvds. in 1910. It looks like he's pouring the milk into the girl's glass pitcher.
On a side note, most people in 1910 Los Angeles had ice delivered to keep their food cool. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v4...psontxomtn.jpg CD file |
:previous: That's a great photograph CBD. I'm trying to figure out the girl's hair situation.
"Original 35mm Slide-1959 Hollywood Blvd. California Street Scene - Dodge Royal" http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...924/0dHHB8.jpg http://www.ebay.com/itm/1959-Hollywo...UAAOSwo4pYYCPY I tried (without success) to find a vintage advertisement for Mannis Furs. (visible on the right--> but I did find this tag at least. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...921/B2luaO.jpg etsy The tag is from this 1950s 'bolero' mink fur. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...924/bvWMbS.jpg etsy http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...923/wPAS0y.jpg https://www.etsy.com/listing/2161931...hollywood-mink I don't know furs, but I like this shawl-like 'bolero' design. |
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Photo location
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My Favorite Old Building in DTLA
The blue Eastern Columbia Bldg. Too bad they tore down the Richfield Tower, that was even better. But we did get the ARCO twins. Is the clock building that Harold Lloyd dangled from still around?
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:previous:
The clock in 'Safety Last' was a set built on the roof of 908 S Broadway, very close to the Eastern Columbia building. You can see that and several more Harold Lloyd locations in the video below which was originally posted by GW in post #1294. The clock location comes at around the 6:30 mark. There's a fuller explanation of the filming tricks used on silentlocations.wordpress.com. |
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http://www.plosin.com/beatbegins/projects/haine/50.htm Cheers, Earl |
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These posts over the last few days are crisscrossing my life in LA and environs.
We went to the show at the 5th Avenue and Academy Theaters on Manchester Blvd. in Inglewood. I used to go to the YMCA at 7th and Hope in downtown LA for day camp during Summer and Christmas school vacations for number of years as a child - mom got me out of the house. We swam, shot pool, boxed, wrestled, did crafts - a key lanyard anyone?, played dodge ball, went on field trips, did calisthenics, etc. I took the bus. The Barker Brothers store behind the Y was where mom and dad furnished the house they bought in the late '40s. I took a music class from Phil Spector in 1971, and a couple of sessions were taught at Village Recorders. Very cool unihikid that your dad worked with Phil. |
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We even still have those adjustable candle holders like those in the pictures and still use them for weddings. We had the flags on both sides as well. The one on the right is the "Christian Flag". While we did not have the wooden individual seats in the main sanctuary, we did have ones just like them in the room where the older members had a Sunday School class. |
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That said, our church sanctuary in my small hometown had flags. The United States flag on one end and if I remember correctly a white flag with a red(?) cross on a blue square on the other side. It was a Methodist church. *I just noticed oldstuff's post. |
Admission Day
To go along with my previous post, here is another parade from the Daily News photo archive at UCLA. It is captioned "California citizens carrying a huge state flag in the Admission Day parade, Santa Monica, September 9, 1937". Note the boy scouts holding one edge; they seem to have stopped the parade just to take this picture.
http://i.imgur.com/g5UrflB.jpg UCLA Special Collections Looking at the current view, the 1937 picture was taken looking north on Ocean Ave. just below Broadway. The Clock Tower Building is just barely visible (lightning bolt); also the Castle Hotel and the beveled building at the NE corner of Ocean and Broadway are still standing. http://i.imgur.com/D35IT6S.jpg GSV |
The above photo jogged a memory...
In the late 70's back when Santa Monica was still a sleepy, down at its heels seaside town and Third Street consisted mostly of used bookshops and yarn stores, there was a bar called (I believe) the Wind and Sea. It was located on Ocean and either Arizona, Santa Monica or Broadway. It was a real dive bar like something out of O'Neill's "The Iceman Cometh" and the patrons were real down and outers. For years, I've been looking for photographs or other evidence of its existence but never found anything. Ring a bell with anyone? |
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Due to the lack of marriage laws (no three day waiting period..no blood tests...) Yuma, Arizona was the marriage haven of the Southwest back in the early 1930’s-1950’s. Lovebirds flocked in by plane, train or automobile for a quickie elopement. below: Rev. Gillis' "Mecca of Romance" http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...922/Tv5FOn.jpg http://oncestarted.blogspot.com/2006...a-arizona.html This was written on the back: "This is a town where one can secure a marriage license immediately and they have several places like this where couples from all over the Southwest get married. Many movie stars come here to marry. They have very large signs along the highway coming from Calif and just inside the city of Yuma to advertise the ease with which once can get married." Backlog at a Yuma wedding chapel- http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...921/LOVGXU.jpg LOOK_magazine Here's Rev. Coleman's money-maker. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...924/WmL9Ab.jpg http://nostalgia.esmartkid.com/azroute80pc11.html :previous: Rev. Coleman married 18,000 and buried 805 people, as he was also a local coroner. ...and the famous Gretna Green. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...923/vkjZzx.jpg http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...924/3pow3d.jpg Robert Florczak at http://www.theerrolflynnblog.com/wor.../gretna-35.jpg Errol Flynn and Lili Damita were married here in 1935. But in this view of Gretna Green the building looks entirely different! (yet the trellis looks the same) http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/800...922/py7nX7.jpg ebay above: This building looks like Gillis' place (in the first photograph above) so I'm confused. Quote:
http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/800...924/PADf0Y.jpg http://anselmarshall.blogspot.com/20...nd-40s_02.html "R.H. Lutes presided at some 60,000 weddings at Lutes’ Gretna Wedding Chapel and was consummating about 150 weddings a week in those times. He reportedly slept on the couch in his bathrobe and learned to sleep about 15 minutes at a time. Not only did the people flock in consistently but Lutes also had his sons running to the railroad or bus station to pick up those eager to wed. The rush was constant as Gretna was open 24 hours a day during the war years." http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/800...921/TtfPKs.jpg http://nostalgia.esmartkid.com/azroute80pc11.html R.H. Lutes served as Justice of the Peace for 14 years. Charlie Chaplin, Stan Laurel, Bette Davis, Loretta Young, John Barrymore, Franchot Tone, and Victor Mature were among some of the celebrities to elope at the Lutes family’s chapel. besides the speedier process, another reason to come to Yuma was to escape publicity. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...921/9uht9I.jpg ebay "In 1956 the law passed in Arizona demanding a blood test in order to legally constitute a marriage. Many competitors stood no chance against this law. However, Lutes saw this as an asset to his business as his son Bill studied biological sciences at the University of Arizona, and thus opened a serology lab. With the help of Dr. Roy R. Knotts, a former physician at the Yuma Prison, Lutes chapel was a success. If by any chance the test came back positive for disease, Knotts would simply give them a shot and send them on their way to the altar. The law stated that as long as you were receiving treatments you could get married." :previous: lol..can you imagine! sources: http://yumanews.net/2014/05/19/lutes...tory-unveiled/ http://www.theerrolflynnblog.com/201...a-az-then-now/ There's still some confusion though. I'm not 100% convinced Lutes chapel was ever called Gretna Green. |
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