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https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-Q...2520PM.bmp.jpg From post 8032 |
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You can never have too much Guy Madison...although poor Gail Russell apparently couldn't get any.... Quote:
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A group of Sea Scouts ca. 1955 display various ways of wearing the iconic "dixie cup" cap, most with the proper "four square" roll:
http://www.bitsmasherpress.com/LANoir/Argonaut.jpg Cheers, Earl |
Photo I.D.
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Someone used the phrase "OCD" here today, and I caught it. Anyway, here's the deal. I've decided that our sailor boy was photographed at the southwest corner of the freeway and Hill Street, not on the overpass itself. I've counted the number of lampposts from the north end of the east-side railing (and that about 14 railing verticals appear between each lamp in the sailor pic and in current views)... the freeway is streaming southeasterly/northwesterly below and behind our boy, with the Brunswig Building north of it.
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/6D...1tA=w1366-h768 http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...923/yPAnia.jpg In this view, the tree stands in for the sailor... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/FQ...lcw=w1366-h768 Just want to make sure we cross every t and dot every i so as to get the best champagne at Romanoffs |
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OK. That's it. The future site of the Ft Moore Memorial was't working for me, but the above does. |
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http://i.imgur.com/1AciNvs.jpg The lightning bolts indicate a metal expansion joint which is also visible on the original picture. So the sailor has just crossed over the overpass. |
http://imageshack.com/a/img923/5750/QpYazY.gif
Good eye, Lorendoc...after adjusting the sailor's spot a little southward, a modest monument proposal: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/jS...366-h768-rw-no (In final form, to be rotated 90° with the image facing south) |
Here's another angle on the area (much enlarged detail of an image at http://framework.latimes.com/2013/09...center-images/ ):
http://i1104.photobucket.com/albums/...psfzfbemgr.jpg LA Times |
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Now everyone is charged with going to at least one site where this photo appears and, if there's a "comments" section, correcting the location. That'll keep us out of trouble and off the streets for an hour :-) |
Since GW is in NYC, he should contact John Haber at The New York Photo Review.
http://www.nyphotoreview.com/NYPR_RE...R_REV3911.html http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...922/kiT1Gp.jpg This discovery makes me wonder what else was on that particular roll of film. __ |
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I actually just got from a museum friend here a contact at the SFMOMA, which as far as I can tell owns the image or is promised it or some such. Just sent an email about it & will keep the thread posted if I hear anything back. (Frankly, I'm not going to hold my breath. Firing off corrections to libraries etc has had only limited effect, I've found--understandable given volunteer staffs etc.) Anyway, I'll see if I can find John Haber here. PS Excellent illustration, odinthor |
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It was the bit of fencing on the left that confused me. I thought it was blocking off a hillside. I didn't realize it blocked the 101 trench. The west railing has been extended a bit south, I think (freeway widening?) as it is now a match for the east railing, unlike in the Winogrand photo. Too bad that so many of the street lamps are missing. I guess they have better bulbs now (?) https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/lw...Gg8=w1366-h768 gsv 2014 The horse is well and truly dead now, for me anyway. . |
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http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3251/...ccb91255_m.jpg I believe other clients were John Gavin and James Darren. Mike Connors, mentioned above, was first given the name Touch Connors. He's credited as that in a Joan Crawford film titled Sudden Fear. Three client names I'm not familiar with are Yale Summers, Rad Fulton and Race Gentry. Quote:
True! GW, the GM photos in your post are linked to A Certain Cinema...that was a trove of Hollywood photo shots in a dozen or more categories, a film site founded by Sérgio Leemann, and two years ago, maybe even longer, there was some hosting problem or something and the entire site unfortunately has disappeared, to my chagrin. It was linked to a Facebook page where the entry says "We have a new website," but do not. Quote:
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LAPL has been adding all sorts of new things as they digitize their Valley Times collection. While perusing, found some new images of a structure dear to my heart, the 1928 Dodd & Richards Sons of the Revolution HQ on Bunker Hill. We've seen the Hope Street structure before (read all about it here).
https://c6.staticflickr.com/1/781/31...a2d46bfd_b.jpgPhotograph caption dated August 10, 1964 reads, "Joseph H. Jenkins, right, president of California State Society of Sons of the Revolution, points out cornerstone of Hope Street replica of Philadelphia's Independence Hall to society member. The building is threatened by the Bunker Hill renewal project." lapl https://c2.staticflickr.com/1/383/31...b0a74471_b.jpgPhotograph caption dated August 15, 1964 reads, "Hall to fall - Downtown Los Angeles replica of historic Philadelphia Independence Hall is doomed by urban renewal plans. And the city's Cultural Heritage Board sees no reason why not." lapl The SotR library is one of the handful of Bunker Hill structures that made it into 1969—its demolition permit issued in January. Other stragglers include the fabled Stuart K Oliver house nearby, and the Hotel Northern, of course the ill-fated Castle and Salt Box were up on blocks, and the Belmont Hotel made it all the way till '71. |
Lorendoc, thanks for finding the locations of the 1970s color slides I posted last night.
Did ya'll notice how the stone chimney was removed from the house (and replaced with gang graffiti :() 3rd & Breed http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...923/86jHom.jpg and the front porch was enclosed http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...921/AhbLKZ.jpg ebay/gsv detail The graffiti covered house (red circle on roof) is but a few hundred feet from the Breed Street Elementary School. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...924/WpDM2o.jpg google_earth Here's a glance back in time: Students and two teachers at Breed Street School, 1891. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...922/R1q52Z.jpg http://boyleheightshistoryblog.blogs...e-heights.html "Breed Street School in Boyle Heights might just be the oldest continuously operating elementary school in the city of Los Angeles. The school began sometime in the 1870s as simply Boyle Heights School, though there isn't much information out there about those early days. An 1880 history of Los Angeles County, for example, merely noted that "Boyle Heights has but one school and one department," this latter meaning there were no divisions and all grade levels were located in a single classroom with one teacher. In June 1883, the Los Angeles Times devoted significant space to the end of school year activities among the city's public schools, but noted that none of the reporting staff attended the festivities at the Boyle Heights School." __________________________________ :previous: Well that stinks, why didn't they attend the festivities at Boyle Heights? ___ |
NLA is making its mark. I just spent twenty minutes wandering around online posting two or three corrections of the location of the sailor pic, and a moment ago ran across a comment posted today by what must be one of our colleagues here. Yay for LA and NLA!
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https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/j-...366-h768-rw-no 360 . |
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http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...924/cgqGl9.pnghttp://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/640...923/NtI6fX.jpg A 'homage' yes, a 'replica' no. Made me think of this thing down in Anaheim. http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/800...924/dRpaJS.jpg Knotts http://www.yesterland.com/independence.html :previous: Dedication day on July 4, 1966 (my 6th birthday ;)) _ |
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