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Here are a few more.
http://img227.imageshack.us/img227/5274/la0524nbci2.jpg calisphere http://img529.imageshack.us/img529/2...bcinterior.jpg calisphere http://img80.imageshack.us/img80/300...cinterior1.jpg calisphere http://img227.imageshack.us/img227/2...0524nbci9m.jpg calisphere |
columbia square
and just down sunset boulevard east of vine street NBC's rival, CBS's Columbia Square design by William Lescaze
Grand opening night 1938 http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4038/...8becd3e8_b.jpg USC Digital Archives site under construction 1937 http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4005/...631ff002_b.jpg LAPL Sunset Boulevard elevation 1939 http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4012/...e18f4b6a_b.jpg LAPL sunset boulevard night time elevation 1939 http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4048/...05c62688_b.jpg columbia square cut away image http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4047/...36216329_o.jpg California State Library columbia square noir http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4016/...8bd60150_b.jpg LAPL |
going back to page 42 and Ciro's
ciro's cigarette girl 1940 http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4063/...9f9dfc2c_b.jpg Calishere ciro's entry 1940 http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4025/...0b14574c_b.jpg LAPL just your average southern california suburban couples out for date night at ciro's http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4007/...249f86d6_b.jpg USC Digital Archives |
Here are a few more.
Below: The stage area. http://img231.imageshack.us/img231/4...eearlcarro.jpg calisphere Below: A detail of the stage area. http://img80.imageshack.us/img80/5861/la0524ea1b.jpg calisphere Below: Another great photo of the bar area. http://img248.imageshack.us/img248/8...arrollbar2.jpg calisphere Below: The telephone room. http://img149.imageshack.us/img149/8...olltheatet.jpg calisphere |
earl carroll, moulin rouge, hullabaloo, kaleidoscope, aquarius, nickelodeon........
these are the names that venue has been known as,
during the 1960's when it was still known as the moulin rouge, the most depressing television game show ever, queen for a day was filmed here http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3089/...fe642cc0_b.jpg unknown when it was the aquarius, the doors recorded their live from the Aquarius here. in 1969 the exterior got a new paint job for the play hair which played here for several years. The exterior painting was done by the dutch outfit known as the fool, the same folks who painted the exterior of the beatles shop in london http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3330/...a22873cd_o.jpg unknown here's a scan from the book Dreams of Laurel Canyon showing the Fool paint job on the sunset boulevard elevation. this is where the wall of fame used to be http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4055/...555a38cf_b.jpg from the same book is a scan of the band the turtles by the wall of fame when it was the hullabaloo club, (yes this is the place where they taped the television show hullabaloo) http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4047/...bb8f709e_b.jpg Earl Carroll noir 1939 looking se across sunset boulevard from NBC http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4069/...85f8a1bd_o.jpg LAPL |
Man, how I love the architecture of those 1930s studios. Streamline art moderne kicks ass.
Is that Ronald Reagan? I guess in 1940 he would have been in Hollywood. I feel like I am wrong and am going to sound like a huge idiot, but that is who the dude second to left looks like to me anyways. I'm not versed in ancient hollywood celebrity history like some people. |
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note the smoke nancy is holding................just say no................................. |
a couple of interior lobby photos of the edison building, (one bunker hill)
http://jpg1.lapl.org/00083/00083563.jpg LAPL ceiling detail http://jpg1.lapl.org/00083/00083562.jpg LAPL |
Mansion on right
What about the mansion on the right? It is seen here and in another older view from Poundcake Hill. Was it also on Hill Place? What family built it?
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what is the history of the house on the right in this photograph?
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Wow. The George Mann photo below "Second Street and South Grand".
Isn't that the Frontenac north of the Hotel Melrose? If so, that would be where my greatgrandfather Daniel Webster McMillan lived in 1918. Great! Quote:
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Oops. Think not. Going back to previous posts, the Frontenac would be just to the right (south) of 2nd street. The Melrose was across from what is now Disney Hall. Am I getting this right?
Thanks for all of the wonderful images everyone. This is my weekend activity now. |
From the Pyrenees to Hollywood
https://i.postimg.cc/Vk16G7hH/glessboyle-bmp.jpgGSV Jan 2019
131 S. Boyle Avenue http://historicparks.org/imagegaller...Family_jpg.jpgLos Encinos State Historic Park I seem to keep running into actress Sharon Gless. While I knew she was a native Angeleno, with forebears figuring in the history of L.A.--there is a Gless Street on the east side of the river--I wasn't aware of just how illustrious her extended family was in terms of that history. She grew up on Muirfield Road in Hancock Park (in the house her mother, daughter of entertainment lawyer Neil McCarthy, grew up in); nearby in Windsor Square and frequently mentioned in architecture guides is another Gless house, this one designed by Arthur Heineman and built by her great grandmother at 627 S Ardmore before being moved to the southwest corner of Plymouth and 6th in the '30s, where it still stands. (I can find no vintage image of it to post.) Researching the origins of this house led me to Boyle Heights and the discovery of Los Angeles's newest Cultural-Heritage Landmark: yet another Gless house, this one at 131 S. Boyle Avenue, seen at top. http://historicparks.org/imagegaller...aGless_jpg.jpgLos Encinos State Historic Park Simon and Juanita Amestoy Gless--their wedding photograph. Simon Francois Gless, Sharon's great grandfather, built the Boyle Heights house soon after inheriting the property from his uncle, Gaston Oxarart, who died in 1886. Gless farmed the land for a while; the family retained the property until 1916, when it became part of the Hebrew Shelter Home and Asylum. Included in the legacy from Uncle Gaston was a bonus--the Rancho Los Encinos, which Uncle Gaston had acquired from Eugene Garnier (of the Garnier Block at the Plaza), who had gone bankrupt. Gless married Juanita Amestoy in 1889, and, preferring the Heights of Boyle, sold the ranch to his father-in-law, Domingo Amestoy...later, of course, the ranch became that jewel of the San Fernando Valley, Encino. Anyway, it seems that after Simon died in 1903, Juanita tired of Boyle Heights and commissioned Arthur Heineman to build 627 S Ardmore. She later sold it to department-store magnate John G. Bullock, who a few years later moved it to Windsor Square next door to one he'd just moved from 3200 Wilshire Boulevard (check it out here). By all accounts the Glesses and Amestoys were close, but if one is in a noirish frame of mind while reading the history of the Valley--so fraught with Chandler/Mulholland/Chinatown intrigue--it's hard to shake the idea that the Amestoys might have had ulterior motives in allowing Juanita to marry Simon. Were they after the Encino property all along? It was conveyed to them within months of Juanita and Simon's marriage, and Simon declared bankruptcy about 10 years later. In any case--even if indirectly--he left Juanita enough money to build an architecturally significant house even if she only lived in it a few years. Interestingly, the Glesses, the Oxararts, and the Amestoys were apparently all French Basques who emigrated first to Argentina, and then, so the story goes, all arrived in Southern California on the same ship. |
some Dick Whittington aerials over the years
the gold standard for los angeles aerial photography over the years is Dick Whittington Studios.
here are some aerials that focus on the west side of bunker hill generally centered on an area between sunset boulevard to the north, figueroa to the west, 2nd street to the south, and grand avenue to the east. these aerials were taken between 1946 and 1971. all images are USC Digital Archives looking east 1946 http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/assets...11-6-ISLA?v=hr looking east 1959 http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/assets...-1-6-ISLA?v=hr looking north/east 1952 http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/assets...3-30-ISLA?v=hr looking north/east 1962 http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/assets...-1-2-ISLA?v=hr looking north/east 1963 http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/assets...13-1-ISLA?v=hr looking north/east 1964 http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/assets...5-42-ISLA?v=hr looking north/east 1971 http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/assets...14-1-ISLA?v=hr this last aerial is a long range shot looking east towards downtown from the wilshire business district. it was taken in 1970 http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/assets...75-7-ISLA?v=hr |
gsjansen--Great pictures. Somewhere in at least one of those Whittington shots might be the Oliver house. Do you think we'll ever find out more about it?
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gsjansen--Great pictures. Somewhere in at least one of those Whittington shots might be the Oliver house. Do you think we'll ever find out more about it?
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here is his last paragraph in his 6/15/10 "144 S. Grand Revealed" post over at onbunkerhill.org (Speaking of modern structures on the Hill, remind me sometime to tell y'all about 353 South Hope. The Stuart K. Oliver residence was built on the site of the Hildreth mansion's adjacent carriage house ca. 1952, and Oliver didn't want to sell or move. Stalled the CRA for years. The house was demolished around 1969.) ok beaudry, consider this sometime and now's i'm remindin' ya! do tell....do tell! :yes: the house is visible in all except the 1971 north/east aerial views above, (most notably the 1964 image) here is the link to my original posting about the Stuart K. Oliver House http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=1314 |
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Mullen & Bluett stor , located at 3639 Wilshire at Harvard http://helios.library.ca.gov/soca/mo.../1992-1655.jpg California Sate Library Columbia clothing shop at 6332 Hollywood Blvd. near Vine http://helios.library.ca.gov/soca/mo.../1992-1236.jpg California State Library of course they also dabbled in quite a bit of diverse cultural inspired design themes throughout los angeles........................... such as; farmers and merchants bank 4th and main http://jpg2.lapl.org/pics26/00047831.jpg LAPL Bullard building at spring and court, (or is it franklin?) http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics37/00068494.jpg LAPL Hotel Nadeau 1st and spring http://jpg1.lapl.org/pics15/00007400.jpg LAPL Ralphs hollywood 5711 Hollywood Boulevard http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics44/00071527.jpg LAPL The Dominguez Wilshire Building located in the Miracle Mile http://jpg2.lapl.org/pics18/00018549.jpg LAPL Samson tire and rubber company located at at 5675 Telegraph Road, City of Commerce, (it's now the Citadel outlets) http://jpg1.lapl.org/pics41/00040048.jpg LAPL The Pellissier Building at wilshire and western http://jpg2.lapl.org/theater3/00015641.jpg LAPL The Leimert Theatre, located at 3341 W. 43rd Place http://jpg2.lapl.org/theater2/00015009.jpg LAPL oh yeah....................and this building as well http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics50/00074539.jpg LAPL |
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The Basques actually have a long history in Calfornia, even many of the French settlers were actually ethnic Basques. ___________________________ Great pictures and posts yet again! I haven't really been going into this thread for the past week or so because I've been busy with family visiting from Hawaii. Now I can give it more than just a quick glance. |
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