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As it happens, I'm super-familiar with this location, as my mother worked for a couple of decades a block away, and my father a couple of decades half a block away. e_r, it's Long Beach, adjacent to Signal Hill: https://i.postimg.cc/635gbgyP/Orange-Willow.jpg Google Maps Here's a view from the side, from Orange Avenue: https://i.postimg.cc/Gt4NdDPJ/Orange-Willow2.jpg gsv Most of the oil derricks and so on are long gone, but it used to be a forest of derricks there. (I verified my thoughts at Find-a-Grave for young Miss Burnett; it's Long Beach Municipal Cemetery.) |
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Thanks, odinthor. I was stumped. . |
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Here's another mystery location from abesbooks "Original Photograph- Los Angeles Street Scene With Scavanger, Produce District" https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/8FUG0l.jpg abesbooks A closer look. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/OV3uYt.jpg abesbooks . |
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Ringo Bros Produce (Samuel and Dominick) appears at either 1110 or 1112 San Julian Street in the CDs from the early 1930s to the mid-1950s. |
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Cheers, Earl |
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(Sadly, the WLA location at National & Sepulveda is just terrible, even with the "Best Burger in LA" banner on the building for the past 35 years.):yuck: |
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In the film The Opposite Sex, with Christina Ricci, there's a scene with Lisa Kudrow behind Hamburger Habit (clearly visible) on the alley side. ___ Quote:
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https://commercialobserver.com/wp-co...resize=755,428 Above: This is looking west along Santa Monica Blvd.; across the street is Pavilions grocery store, which went by Safeway before that, and above that in the photo is where the Palm Restaurant used to be. The construction has finished and it's now a several story apt. or condominium bldg. with possible businesses on the first floor. The first crosswalk (in the above) is La Peer and the second Almont, at which point this construction is also underway; below: https://commercialobserver.com/wp-co...ality=80&w=755 This is looking southeast along SMB and Melrose where it intersects with Doheny. This is the area where folks were trying to save the art deco veterinary building located there. A couple articles about these places: https://commercialobserver.com/2021/...opment/#slide1 https://la.urbanize.city/post/west-h...-gets-new-look https://faring.com/portfolio/robertson-lane |
San Julian Street
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As long as we're on San Julian, there's a very unusual brickwork pattern along the top of the building across the street at address 1125:
https://i.postimg.cc/fbLvCcbf/San-Julian1125.jpg gsv I don't believe I've ever seen that pattern before. |
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I like it! The earthquake retrofitting doesn't help the look, but it is necessary. I enjoy looking for movies and TV that takes place in, say NYC, but filmed in L.A. and noticing times when you'll see this retrofitting that isn't in those actual cities. (Not required, but I guess it could be done for other reasons in those places.) I don't recall which one, but in one of the Spiderman movies there's a whole retrofitted brick building I noticed. |
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LOL!
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A mystery location. "Goodhue" shows up often in a search of NLA but the posts all concern Bertram Goodhue, the architect of the Los Angeles Central Library. https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/ziu3Sy.jpg eBay . . .and not one post on the Goodhue Baking Co. Does anyone know where this bakery company was located? :shrug: |
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The 1909 and 1910 CDs have the Goodhue Baking Co (C F & R T Goodhue) located at 1138 W 17th Street. It was run by Chas F Goodhue of 3432 Budlong Avenue and Ralph T Goodhue of 2706 S Normandie Avenue. Both are listed as bakers in the 1908 CD, but there's no business address. It looks like Charles must've died around 1910, because the 1911 CD has his widow, Vashti C Goodhue listed as president and Ralph as VP. Ralph is still listed as a baker in 1915, but I couldn't find the bakery. BTW Ralph appears to have moved in with Vashti. I didn't look any later. When I was young, we acquired a cat called Vashti (named by the original owners). I believe that Vashti was a queen of Persia. |
In re: Vashti C. Goodhue.....
https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...720&fit=bounds Apoplexy = cerebral hemorrhage or stroke. |
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Mr. Goodhue died of apoplexy as well: https://i.postimg.cc/WzySz5mY/Goodhue-Her-1910-5-10.jpg LA Herald, 5/10/1910 He died just about a year after this item: https://i.postimg.cc/xdGs5yYq/Goodhue-Her-1909-5-19.jpg LA Herald, 5/19/1909 About 1138 W. 17th (I wonder if the house behind the delivery wagon in the original photo is perhaps the Goodhue home on W. 17th?), we have some Maurices and Mauricios to talk about: 1906 CD: Maurice C. Mauricio, baker, Superior Bakery, res 1138 W. 17th (the Superior Bakery itself was at 442 S. Spring) 1907 CD: Maurice C. Mauricio, baker, at 1138 W 17th [Goodhue years intervene at the address] 1912 CD: Maurice C. Mauricio (Mauricio & Fox) at 1138 W. 17th 1913 CD: We find at 1138 W. 17th Maurice C. Mauricio as well as Anthony Maurice machinist :eeekk: |
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