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It all adds context. I find I remember more about the photos where someone has had a personal or family connection to them and I can relate an actual person to them, like some of Odinthor's recent photo's or the ones CBD and E_R have posted. I remember some personal stories of those who have visited certain department stores, nightclubs and eating establishments, simply because they wrote of their experience there or have a photo of themselves or a family member who had. I don't think I am speaking for myself, when I say, don't hesitate to post something if you want to. It's all good. |
More family photos !
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"The Whisky A Go-Go is between Clark & Hilldale. Love used to play there."
Whisky at corner of Clark and Sunset. I spent a lot of time there seeing bands and hanging out outside. There was a low brick wall next to the Whisky where folks would sit and chat. I got into a bit of a row there once with Kim Fowley. I saw LOVE at the Whisky, and at Bido Lito and Hullaballoo...a long time ago. |
. It's Oscar day in Los Angeles, Hollywood to be exact, and after three days of cloudy days, overcast skies and steady periods of rain, the sun is out for the red carpet today, with a high of 62° and after party temperatures down to 47°!The Academy Awards are currently held right next door to the Chinese Theatre which held them for three years, from 1944-46. It's possible a phot below was previously posted, but I don't recall seeing many photos of the interior of one of those ceremonies, before. At least not a long shot. Here's your ticket to the first awards held at the Chinese Theatre, March 2, 1944, 74 years ago: http://www.hollywoodgoldenguy.com/si...ow-518x296.jpgHollywood Golden Guy Notice it says -INFORMAL-! It's the first year that the Oscars weren't being held as a banquet. Being wartime they decided to make it more low key and less ostentatious, so I'm guessing that's the reason for that note. And here's your Police Pass: http://www.hollywoodgoldenguy.com/si...ss-465x310.jpgHollywood Golden Guy Outside the Chinese Theatre that night: http://www.graumanschinese.org/acade...ds-photo-1.jpgGraumansChinese.org Here's your program for the evening. IMO, a little Germanic, isn't it? (Click on the photo for larger image.) http://www.graumanschinese.org/acade...16-program.jpgGraumansChinese.org Click HERE for a look at the inside pages. Inside the Chinese: I'm rooting for "The Ox-Bow Incident" to win Best Picture. :cheers: http://www.graumanschinese.org/acade...ds-photo-2.jpgGraumansChinese.org Here are the programs for the following two ceremonies held at the Chinese Theatre, March 15, 1945, and March 7, 1946. http://www.graumanschinese.org/acade...17-program.jpg http://www.graumanschinese.org/acade...18-program.jpgGraumansChinese.org |
Louis Fleckenstein home
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HERE ARE THE TWO PICS SIDE BY SIDE https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...922/kAJ5Xe.pnghttps://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/8...924/OG0Fus.jpg Let's step back and take a look at the whole place. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/DCUHXD.jpg GSV I'm surprised by the underground parking. ___ |
Harry Raymond Detective Agency
Has anybody encountered a pre-1933 photograph of 238 W 1st Street, which would have been directly across from the old LA Times building at the corner of 1st and Broadway? The building was destroyed in the March 1933 earthquake. It housed the Harry Raymond Detective Agency at the time.
Patrick Jenning |
3301 Waverly Drive
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___ Here's a brief video [1:17] of young men searching the LaBianca's yard for evidence. The video is silent except for 10 seconds [0.28 to 0.38]. & the audio is really faint. The man instructing the group says something about UCLA and huddles....so I'm wondering if the young men are UCLA football players. The LaBianca murders happened a day after the Tate murders....so maybe the department was short handed. :shrug: Otherwise I can't think of any other reason why they'd use university students. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/2...924/q7JWtG.jpghttps://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/2...923/5vzAlB.jpg https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/2...922/bbV9r1.jpghttps://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/2...924/q7JWtG.jpg A question for odinthor. At 1:07 a man plucks strange looking flowers-like-thingys out of a bush. (they appear wilted) https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/6...922/ZUd1Wm.jpg Do you have any idea what these odd looking 'flowers' might be? (and do they belong to that bush?) __ |
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https://s26.postimg.org/uu5112hop/ismene.jpg http://www.theflowerbulbcompany.co.u...mene-festalis/ |
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A white Van de Kamp's delivery truck and a convertible wait in traffic for pedestrians to pass on Broadway and 1st Street. A "classic" Coca-Cola sign is on the corner building. Cevola Shoe Repairing will work "While-u-wait". http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...rBlock1920.jpg LAPL ETA: Are you sure that the building was demolished in 1933, pjenn? It's still standing in this undated image which shows the 1935 LA Times building behind it. http://i809.photobucket.com/albums/z...rBlock1935.jpg USC Digital Library |
Louis Fleckenstein 'mystery' location.
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/ufbQpc.jpg Title: [California Landscape] Artist/Maker: Louis Fleckenstein (American, 1866 - 1943) Date: 1907 - 1943 Medium: Toned gelatin silver print GETTY |
Harry Raymond Detective Agency
My info comes from the San Francisco Chronicle, March 14, 1933. I'll try to post it.
It may be that the building, though condemned according to the Chronicle, survived for a few years. https://nam04.safelinks.protection.o...%3D&reserved=0 Was the current Times building built on the same lot as the one that stood in 1933? Pat |
238 W 1st Street at SE corner of Broadway
:previous:
Photo 408193 at the Huntington Digital Library shows that building standing in March 1956. Photo 411230 at HDL shows the building almost completely demolished on July 1, 1958. Here's the SE corner of 1st and Broadway in February 2017. |
Harry Raymond Detective Agency
I found a photograph on the DWP site that shows both the 1933 and the current Times building along with the 238 1st Street building.
http://waterandpower.org/Historical%...d_New_1934.jpg Thanks very much for figuring this out! |
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First Street Police Station
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that opened in 1896. In this c. early 1920s photo we're looking west up First Street at the 1896 LAPD HQ: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...i.jpg~original uclalat_1429_b3715_G2897 @ Los Angeles Times Photographic Archive. Department of Special Collections, Charles E. Young Research Library, UCLA. Since we're approaching the 85th anniversary of the 1933 Long Beach Earthquake (March 10, 5:54 p.m.), here's the First Street Police Station shortly after the quake: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...9.jpg~original uclamss_1429_2088 @ Los Angeles Times Photographic Archive. Department of Special Collections, Charles E. Young Research Library, UCLA. The parapet: http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...3.jpg~original Can anyone ID this car? http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...7.jpg~original We've seen this police station before at NLA many times, such as here and here and also here. |
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So :tup: to e_r for creating a really special place where we truly get to the heart of L.A.! |
I've spent way too much time in that police station playing LA Noire.:shrug:
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OK, I'll bite...........based on the shadows I figure we're looking East, and the hills make me think of the Eagle Rock Valley. So perhaps Mr. Fleckenstein was on the hill above Las Colinas looking down towards Eagle Rock Blvd. https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4774/...a63faba5_b.jpg The palm trees got me excited, and the hills make some sense, though the zoom lens of the original is hard to match. Maybe? https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4771/...3065f5ac_b.jpg |
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Marty and Elayne were very nice and quite supportive when I sang with them, and I too hope they hold forth there for many years to come. |
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I'm going to go out on a limb to say that this thread is one of the most magnificent corners of the Internet. It should be backed up every night and preserved by the Library of Congress, for it is an invaluable resource. I can't count how many times someone has posted a photo showing a curb and an outbuilding and some mountains in the background, and within 24 hours at the outside someone has identified the location. The members of this thread, collectively, are the memory of this great city, and the longer it gets, the more completely the history of Los Angeles is recorded. |
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