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Krell58 Aug 21, 2013 4:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ProphetM (Post 6239034)
Hmm, that wasn't as hard as I thought it was going to be.

https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-6...2520PM.bmp.jpg
Google Maps

Your photo made it easy to find.
http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2819/9...05bb64ef_o.jpg
Google Maps

Lorendoc Aug 21, 2013 5:02 AM

Lookout Mountain Inn FOUND - part 1
 
As it has for many others, this thread has been a source of much enjoyment for me.

My favorite kind of post is when a mystery gets solved.

As a long-time resident of Laurel Canyon, I am pleased to contribute the answer to a nagging, if hyperlocal, puzzle: Exactly where was the Lookout Mountain Inn?

http://i.imgur.com/JAVtn7s.jpg
(From Hollywood Then and Now by George Jezek)

This research builds on my earlier (re)discovery of "Double Bow Knot Boulevard" at http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...ostcount=15423 and Wulff's Peak at http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...ostcount=15564 and http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...ostcount=15754 in the thread.

The issue of the location of LMI was first raised here at http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=6473 by 3940dxer, with whom I have enjoyed correspondence and a couple of exploratory walks in the area. He has helped me greatly with what follows below. In his original November 2011 post, he wrote:

There are several myths that surround this place [the LMI], starting with its name. In my opinion, Lookout Mountain is not a mountain at all. Facing southeast, it most certainly is a lookout -- a very dramatic one, with jaw dropping views of Hollywood and downtown...I'd guess that the site of the Inn was chosen for its dramatic drop off -- a picture window facing town would give impressive head to toe 270 degree views of West Hollywood, Hollywood, downtown, Santa Monica, the Pacific, and more.

Exploring this area, I was repeatedly struck something I've mentioned here before -- the "vanished views" that result from development of the hills. Looking at old photos of the area, you see that anyone walking or driving around Lookout Mountain would have had nearly unobstructed views in most every direction. In their natural state the hills were mostly bare; there were few trees or manmade obstructions. If you went for a walk around the hills and ridge tops up there, you'd easily see much of L.A. and its environs from almost any spot along the way -- like Griffith Park today. But the Hollywood Hills are up here completely transformed, especially this neighborhood. The hills themselves are still there, but development and landscaping have completely changed the features of the area. Homes were built at nearly all the good view spots, which now block the view from the street. Between houses you have privacy walls, trees, and garages. I don't mean to complain, and I would love to live in one of those homes someday. I'm just startled by the way that development in this area has erased nearly all the street views. Walking along the streets of Lookout Mountain can be a weird experience you're wedged between vertical elements, as if you were in twisting corridor with high walls. I suppose it is like the "canyonization" effect that large buildings have upon cities -- you can be a few blocks the Empire State Building in Manhattan, but unable to see it at all.


When I moved to Laurel Canyon in 1988, I was furnished with two pieces of neighborhood lore: Ginger Rogers had lived nearby, and that there had been a speakeasy at the hairpin curve on Appian Way east of Lookout Mountain Avenue where the movie stars had privacy to have an illicit drink and whatever.

Like most legends, these stories had a grain of truth. For Ginger, see below. A quick search of the LA Times showed that the Lookout Mountain Inn was consumed in a brush fire on October 27, 1918 and never rebuilt. Since prohibition didn't start until 1919, it's likely the stars had no qualms about having a few adult beverages there, along with the reportedly delicious chicken dinners. The paper also mentioned that the Inn was owned by the Lookout Mountain Park Land & Water Co., and was run by a concessionaire.

Why is the location of the LMI a mystery? It was far from the beaten track. Contemporary street maps are non-existent. Newspaper articles, what few there are, are maddeningly imprecise. The rare photographs we have lack obvious landmarks. Access was difficult, as it only came from Laurel Canyon; Holly Vista Drive (later Sunset Plaza Drive), connecting Sunset Boulevard with Appian Way, was only carved out of the hills in 1925, seven years after the hotel burned. Map sketches of the Lookout Mountain Park Tract exist, but involve a trip to the County Assessor's office in Norwalk to see them - and they're unfortunately in poor condition. The area did not become a part of the City of Los Angeles until 1923 when it was included in the Laurel Canyon Annexation.

So I should start with some historical context to the Inn and its neighborhood.

In the 19th century, Laurel Canyon was lightly populated. There was no transportation to downtown, and more importantly, there was no water and there were no roads, only bridle paths. The first decade of the 20th century saw a county-wide real estate boom. A Dr. Yoakum bought much land in the canyon to set up what he hoped would be a sanitarium for alcoholics. Before this dream was realized, he sold his land to a syndicate composed of local and out-of-state real-estate speculators/investors: The Lookout Mountain Park Land & Water Co. The Company filed articles of incorporation in Los Angeles on October 27, 1908, exactly a decade before the Inn was destroyed. This syndicate of "eastern men plus one local" in the xenophobic view of the LA Times purchased 280 acres on the west side of Laurel Canyon for development. They called it Lookout Mountain Park. The deed indicates they obtained the SE 1/4 of section 6, Township 1 South, Range 14 West of the San Bernardino meridian plus the east half of the SW 1/4 of the same section, plus the SE 1/4 of the NE 1/4 of the same section 6, 280 acres in all, just as the Times said.

After the Hill Street tunnels were built, it was only a 30 minute drive from downtown to Sunset and Laurel Canyon. The promoters built a "track-less trolley" which for a dime hauled prospective buyers to the corner of Laurel Canyon and Lookout Mountain Avenue. Then the visitors were driven the rest of the way up to the Inn.

I first wanted to see what the original boundaries of the LMP tract looked like superimposed on a modern map. So I found the following sketch map attached to the deed:
http://i.imgur.com/bUsFrcP.jpg

The Lookout Mountain Park Tract consisted of subdivided lots (given 3 digit numbers) and non-subdivided lots, which were assigned letters. The lots were tiny, generally 25' by 100' in size. Since most of them were not built on for 10 or 15 years, it's safe to conclude they were mostly bought as speculations, and just as quickly sold at a profit. The un-subdivided lots were Lot A, Lot C, and the largest, Lot D.

I am not a fluent photoshopper, but eventually I was able to produce this:

http://imgur.com/37mD217.jpg



--------------------------------------------------------

In Laurel Canyon, we have a very active neighborhood association. Rick Seireeni, a local architect and land-use expert for the Laurel Canyon Association has also been interested in the location of the LMI. He summarized the issue as follows in a round-robin email last year to members of his Association:

The location of the Lookout Mountain Inn has been hotly debated over the years.

There are four thoughts on this.

1) The oldest conjecture had it above Appian and Barcelona, at the location of the brown house at the top of the hill [2020 Cyprean Drive]. The problem is that none of the pictures that show access roads supports this very well. Plus, the photographer needs to be above the hotel to get the shot looking down on the Inn. There is nothing above that site. This also ties in with a story that the Lew Ayres and Ginger Rogers homes were built on or near the site of the old Inn.

2) Related to this is the theory that it was immediately below a spot on Appian above Blue Heights [8766 Appian Way]. This is possible, but some of the pictures of access streets don't seem to line up.

3) Another theory is that it was above the intersection of Appian and Sunset Plaza where that large home was recently built [2355 Sunset Plaza Drive]. This is certainly plausible as there is a higher point looking down on this site. (Sunset Blvd did not connect to Lookout and Appian until around 1927 [sic - it was 1925]).

4) Another theory puts it directly in front of the City Marker marking the location of Lookout Mountain at the intersection of Blue Heights and Cole Crest.


Here is a Bing map view of the candidate sites:
http://i.imgur.com/nKAXYBq.jpg

Both 3940dxer and Rick S. agreed that #4 was the site of the vanished Inn. They pointed to the similarity of the roads leading to/from the Inn seen in old pictures with the current alignment of Cole Crest and Blue Heights, down from the hairpin turn on Appian Way.

http://wwww.dkse.net/david/Lookout/PanoramaB4.jpg


I thought there might be another line of evidence that could be used to help locate the LMI.

LA County has always needed property tax revenue, and I reasoned that a big hotel up in the hills must have been noticed by an assessor with greedy eyes. So I went downtown to Assessor's Map Archive under the County Hall of Administration and the Hall of Records:

http://i.imgur.com/YCLH4ps.jpg

...and to my surprise, I found Raul and Fred, two very knowledgeable employees in the archive, who quickly found the Assessor's Map Book for the area among the 12,000 books under their charge.

These map books are large, unwieldy and falling apart. Each consists of about 80 plates which, when open, have a sketch map on one side and a line listing of properties on the other. Each property row has columns for the owner’s name, the year’s assessment (each year subdivided into real estate value and improvements value) and an additional column titled “trees and vines.” Each book seems to cover a fairly compact geographic area – only a few tracts – and each has a range of about 8 years. These map books confirmed the deed information that the LMPL&W Co. land was limited to section 6.

3940dxer's and Rick S's proposed site at Cole Crest and Blue Heights was not in section six, or even close to it.

Here is the assessor's index map for this intersection. The section lines are marked in red, and clockwise from upper left, the quadrants are sections 6, 5, 8, and 7.

http://i.imgur.com/JgPXh9t.jpg

Candidate site #4, marked in yellow with a red star, is in section 8 and was not part of Lookout Mountain Park. Most of the parcels around the Blue Heights/Cole Crest intersection were owned by a Mrs. Alice McGuigan, and none of them had improvements. They were just bare hillside lots from 1908 to 1920. So #4 has to be discarded.

Referring again to the topo map above of the boundaries of Lookout Mountain Park, one can see Lot D occupied half the Tract and also contained the highest land. Could the Inn have been located there?

Assessor's Map Book 310, page 36, covering the years 1912 through 1920 contains the following entry for Lot D:

1. (Owner) LMPL&WCo – 112.02 acres being the un-subdivided portion of that part in the E½ of Section 6 S of the East-West center line of [Lot] D

Here are the assessed values:

Year Land Value Improvements
1912 $5200 $2150
1913 $3200 $2040
1914 $11120 $3040
1915 $11120 $3040
1916 $11120 $3040
1917 $11120 $1410
1918 $11140 $1410
1919 $11000 ”GONE” “hotel burned”
1920 $11000 x

So from this we see that the Inn was contained in LMP lot D, as it accounts for the improvements recorded there. And here we have independent evidence of the burning of the Inn in 1918, just days before the end of WWI.
-----------------------------------------------------

The next step in identifying the Inn's location came from examining 3940dxer's excellent photo collection of the area, and my chance discovery of a 1924 USGS topographic map, which will be described in the next part of what I will post soon.

Otis Criblecoblis Aug 21, 2013 7:59 AM

Great work, Lorendoc! I can hardly wait to read the next part!

GaylordWilshire Aug 21, 2013 10:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CityBoyDoug (Post 6239280)
Dr. George Hodel was arrested for incest and child molestation in 1949--....booking photo.
Incidentally, Dr. Hodel is considered by many to be the prime suspect in the Elizabeth Short murder case....better known as the "The Black Dahlia" which was the nickname given to Elizabeth Short (July 29, 1924 – c. January 15, 1947).

Excerpt from Commander Tom Vetter's television interview, September 2, 2004: "I was a detective then in 1962 and I was driving Undersheriff Jimmy Downy and he was going to lunch with then Chief of Detectives, Gordy Bowers and they were good friends. As we were driving along somehow the Black Dahlia murder came up in their conversation. And I heard Jimmy say that, "Oh that [Black Dahlia case] had been solved, but it will never come out, because it was some doctor they all knew out in Hollywood."


You've given Steve Hodel a thrill by putting up such big pics of his father... hard to know who's creepier, father or son. Anyway, I was reminded of Hodel's promised and yet to be delivered results of soil samples from the Sowden house.... I checked with Mr. Harnisch to see what the latest is:

http://ladailymirror.com/2013/08/09/...els-murder-hq/


A few priors (there are quite a few):

http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=4100

http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...ostcount=12252

CityBoyDoug Aug 21, 2013 3:14 PM

Film noirish
 
Film set of Sunset Blvd.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v4...ps71e04b67.jpg
From old CD

Earl Boebert Aug 21, 2013 3:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fhammon (Post 6239221)
Brilliant, ProphetM!
Good work.
Only do us this one favor: Should you go there, please don't tag it with your spray can, just this once.

Harold Lloyd supposedly shot a lot of girlie pictures by that pool in the 50's.

Cheers,

Earl

rcarlton Aug 21, 2013 3:34 PM

I tried my hand at fixing the magenta photo's.

http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3827/9...5f73b42d_o.jpg

CityBoyDoug Aug 21, 2013 3:37 PM

Noir light for the Flight.
 
Angel's Flight in a noirish photo.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v4...ps66f12a4a.jpg
DWP from CD

Blaster Aug 21, 2013 5:05 PM

[QUOTE=GaylordWilshire;6239490]You've given Steve Hodel a thrill by putting up such big pics of his father... hard to know who's creepier, father or son. Anyway, I was reminded of Hodel's promised and yet to be delivered results of soil samples from the Sowden house.... I checked with Mr. Harnisch to see what the latest is:


I just read that Hodel is appearing tomorrow, August 22 at 7 PM at the South Pasadena Library to present "The Third and Most Conclusive Installment of His Black Dahlia Trilogy."

According to the announcement...

"The author promises to introduced new, never before released findings, further linking Dr. George Hodel directly to the crime-scene and victim. This news-breaking information is being held as an "exclusive" for those attending the talk, who get to "scoop" the general public."

fhammon Aug 21, 2013 7:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Earl Boebert (Post 6239714)
Harold Lloyd supposedly shot a lot of girlie pictures by that pool in the 50's.

Cheers,

Earl

I'm sure!
Just Google "Spider Pool" and you'll come up with a lot of cheesecake.

Earl Boebert Aug 21, 2013 9:31 PM

[QUOTE=Blaster;6239859]
Quote:

Originally Posted by GaylordWilshire (Post 6239490)
You've given Steve Hodel a thrill by putting up such big pics of his father... hard to know who's creepier, father or son. Anyway, I was reminded of Hodel's promised and yet to be delivered results of soil samples from the Sowden house.... I checked with Mr. Harnisch to see what the latest is:


I just read that Hodel is appearing tomorrow, August 22 at 7 PM at the South Pasadena Library to present "The Third and Most Conclusive Installment of His Black Dahlia Trilogy."

According to the announcement...

"The author promises to introduced new, never before released findings, further linking Dr. George Hodel directly to the crime-scene and victim. This news-breaking information is being held as an "exclusive" for those attending the talk, who get to "scoop" the general public."

I can't wait to see what Harnisch has to say about this :-)

Cheers,

Earl

BifRayRock Aug 21, 2013 11:06 PM



Treatment for spider bite, in 1929? Ask the druggist at

Arnold Drug Company! 2528 South Grand Ave. ( Nice scale and double bubble gum. Wonder how much of that gum remains on the nearby sidewalks?:shhh: :blink:)

http://catalog.library.ca.gov/exlibr...RM89L2NSFI.jpghttp://catalog.library.ca.gov/exlibr...RM89L2NSFI.jpg

2528 South Grand recently occupied by Bembi's Meat Market.

http://pics3.city-data.com/businesse.../4/6810354.JPGhttp://pics3.city-data.com/businesse.../5/6810355.JPGhttp://pics3.city-data.com/businesse.../5/6810355.JPG


Location is apparently no stranger to noir, circa 2011.
http://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2012/06/13/240892/


BifRayRock Aug 22, 2013 12:14 AM




Sam Kress the retail druggist, and "five and dime" magnate, not George Kress the house mover.

Quite a number of Kress stores in the So Cal area, e.g., downtown and on Miracle Mile. But Hollywood may have been one of the biggest Kress magnets. Cahuenga and Hollywood (6400 block Hollywood Blvd) Hollywood and Sycamore (7046 Hollywood Blvd)? Yes, there is the better known 6600 address formerly known as Fredrick's)


'37
http://www.martinturnbull.com/wp-con...1937-kress.jpghttp://www.martinturnbull.com/wp-con...1937-kress.jpg

Nov 24, 1922- article about Sam Kress and his store on Hollywood and Cahuenga.
http://books.google.com/books?id=fhp...lywood&f=false



1928 - SE corner of Hollywood and Sycamore. 7046 Hollywood Blvd. (Currently residential)
http://catalog.library.ca.gov/exlibr...5MRN9NFVGF.jpghttp://catalog.library.ca.gov/exlibr...5MRN9NFVGF.jpg

Decoration not often found on modern construction.

http://www.justabovesunset.com/20081...8_rrBldg01.jpghttp://www.justabovesunset.com/20081...8_rrBldg01.jpg


Unclear when Liggetts took over.
http://catalog.library.ca.gov/exlibr...99HM544KHS.jpghttp://catalog.library.ca.gov/exlibr...99HM544KHS.jpg


Krell58 Aug 22, 2013 3:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fhammon (Post 6240097)
I'm sure!
Just Google "Spider Pool" and you'll come up with a lot of cheesecake.

I found a bunch of interesting articles on the history of the pool, the house made of old movie sets, and the owners of the property over the years.

BifRayRock Aug 22, 2013 4:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sopas ej (Post 4901163)

Western Avenue looking north from 9th St., 1937
http://img571.imageshack.us/img571/6...lookingnor.jpg
USC Archive




Late '20s early '30s - 9th and Western Long gone?

http://catalog.library.ca.gov/exlibr...25Y5TEADEG.jpghttp://catalog.library.ca.gov/exlibr...25Y5TEADEG.jpg


But there is an interesting building at or near the same location, worth exploring. Could Western Discount Store occupy what was once the Chevrolet Dealer pictured above? :bowtie: Zig Zag Zig


http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2257/2...6b2_z.jpg?zz=1http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2257/2...6b2_z.jpg?zz=1


BifRayRock Aug 22, 2013 4:41 AM







Circa 1900 - Spring and Fourth Streets. (Don't believe it has been previously posted. ) Name on the multi-story building to the right? (The Farmer's??) Seems too short (6-7 stories) and early to be confused with other buildings in vicinity, e.g., Hellman.

http://catalog.library.ca.gov/exlibr...PHY7FLTTTL.jpghttp://catalog.library.ca.gov/exlibr...PHY7FLTTTL.jpg




Lorendoc Aug 22, 2013 5:08 AM

Lookout Mountain Inn FOUND - part 2
 
Lookout Mountain Inn, post-fire (c. 1924):

http://i.imgur.com/11hfGja.jpg


In my recent post, I mentioned that the solution for locating this place was matching the photographs unearthed by 3940dxer with an old topographic map I found at the usgs.gov web site. Close-in pictures, such as the one above, aren't much help due to their lack of identifiable nearby features.

Here the two key pictures and the old topo map:

http://i.imgur.com/I2TrtuS.jpg
photo in 3940dxer's collection

http://i.imgur.com/pLAg65S.jpg
from http://www.hollywoodphotographs.com/...&c=-1&i=1&r=96

http://i.imgur.com/dpvXQQB.jpg
USGS Burbank 7.5' Quadrangle 1926 (surveyed 1924)

Looking at the photographs closely, I realized each photo had a different view of the same features: some trees (circled in red) and a road (blue).

http://i.imgur.com/IZcGXVt.jpg http://i.imgur.com/I55akfJ.jpg

The photo with the switchbacks I assumed was showing "Double Bow Knot Boulevard" from below. Here is a postcard view from the top of the switchbacks I previously posted:

http://i.imgur.com/iqG4OKW.jpg

...and here are the switchbacks on the old topo map:

http://i.imgur.com/gXAZQL8.jpg

So the second photo must have been taken from the north looking south up the switchback hill across Wonderland Avenue, from the high ground of what is now Skyline Drive.

That helps us orient where the first photo was taken from: it is looking southeast from a high point, which could only have been Wulff's Peak, the highest point between Laurel and Coldwater canyons. The Lookout Mountain Inn was indeed in Section 6/Lot D of Lookout Mountain Park, as the Assessor said. Here is the topo map with the lines of sight marked for each photo:


http://i.imgur.com/RRRIBcE.jpg

followed by the photos now with the map features marked:

http://i.imgur.com/GzJk0na.jpg

and:

http://i.imgur.com/jIj88sz.jpg

The numbers in red are 1 = Cyprean Drive and 2 = Crescent Drive (aka "Double Bow Knot Boulevard"). On modern maps, Cyprean is shown as a short stub off Appian Way. But if you look at the bird's-eye view at Bing.com or Google Earth, you see that the road continues over the crest of the hill, just as it did 100 years ago.

In the old days, Appian Way ended at the top of Lookout Mountain. The summit has been leveled off and is located at the hairpin turn on Appian Way on its modern way down towards Stanley Hills Drive. 3940dxer has found some good photos of this.

If we compare the LMI's location on the old topo map with a current map, we can see that it was located at what is now 2355 Sunset Plaza Drive. And this explains the Ginger Rogers connection: she lived at that address for a time before her 1940 divorce from Lew Ayres, who had earlier built his house on the site of the old Inn in the mid-30s.

The next post will describe what the LMI site is like today. I will also describe 3940dxer's and my efforts to get a modern version of the original panoramic view of the Inn from Wulff's Peak. This involved some low comedy, but I hope you will find the results interesting.

Chuckaluck Aug 22, 2013 5:14 AM

Colorado Blvd and Raymond Street - Late 1890s.

http://cdm15123.contentdm.oclc.org/u...XT=&DMROTATE=0http://cdm15123.contentdm.oclc.org/u...XT=&DMROTATE=0http://cdm15123.contentdm.oclc.org/u...XT=&DMROTATE=0

http://cdm15123.contentdm.oclc.org/u...XT=&DMROTATE=0
http://cdm15123.contentdm.oclc.org/u...XT=&DMROTATE=0



Any idea what is hanging from the intersection light?
http://catalog.library.ca.gov/exlibr...BFMTM86PEM.jpghttp://catalog.library.ca.gov/exlibr...BFMTM86PEM.jpg

Chuckaluck Aug 22, 2013 5:24 AM

1928 - 48-52 South Raymond, Pas. A quaint bowling alley? May be empty for a reason.
http://cdm15123.contentdm.oclc.org/u...XT=&DMROTATE=0http://cdm15123.contentdm.oclc.org/u...XT=&DMROTATE=0






Did anyone lock their bicycles in '28, when getting a 2-bit haircut?

http://cdm15123.contentdm.oclc.org/u...XT=&DMROTATE=0



http://cdm15123.contentdm.oclc.org/u...XT=&DMROTATE=0http://cdm15123.contentdm.oclc.org/u...XT=&DMROTATE=0
http://cdm15123.contentdm.oclc.org/u...XT=&DMROTATE=0http://cdm15123.contentdm.oclc.org/u...XT=&DMROTATE=0
http://cdm15123.contentdm.oclc.org/u...XT=&DMROTATE=0http://cdm15123.contentdm.oclc.org/u...XT=&DMROTATE=0

Difficulty viewing this image? Go here http://cdm15123.contentdm.oclc.org/c...2/id/214/rec/8

Chuckaluck Aug 22, 2013 5:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ethereal_reality (Post 5342111)
Below is the original Raymond Hotel that burnt down in 1896.

http://img88.imageshack.us/img88/820...otelwithle.png
ebay


Below: A black and white version of the original Raymond Hotel in South Pasadena.

http://img708.imageshack.us/img708/7...burntin189.png
unknown


Pasadena's Hotels no stranger to fire

Quote:

PASADENA - Fire destroyed some of Pasadena's great tourist hotels - the Raymond, the Maryland, the Echo Mountain House and, just 100 years ago, the Hotel Pasadena, previously known as La Pintoresca. The Raymond and the Maryland were rebuilt.

The photograph is of the earlier La Pintoresca. At an elevation of around 1,000 feet and in an era when trees were lacking, there must have been a splendid view from the veranda.

The Pasadena Star reported on January 15, 1912: "With the exception of the north wing at the west end of the building, containing the kitchen, dining room and servants' quarters, Hotel Pasadena, formerly known as La Pintoresca, located at the corner of Washington Street and Fair Oaks Avenue, was completely destroyed by fire that started at 10:45 o'clock last night. The guests escaped without injury."

Defective wiring was suspected as the cause of the fire but it started above the room of guest E. Tallman who had just left to catch a train and might have discarded a match when lighting a cigar.

The fire department arrived soon and fought the fire for several hours.

Bellboys ran through the halls alerting guests who grabbed jewelry and other possessions as they left. The jewelry of a few guests was lost in the fire.

In an editorial, the Star wrote: "Destruction of property by fire is always particularly regrettable. But the burning of Hotel Pasadena, better known as La Pintoresca, is especially to be deplored, because of the aroma of early-day romance that clung to this landmark. Before it was La Pintoresca, it was known as the Painter Hotel, from the Messrs Painter who built it in 1888 and owned and conducted it until a few years ago. In the early youth of the city many a delightful banquet and social function was held within its walls. Perhaps no structure in Pasadena had more romantic memories and associations attached to it.

"That there was no loss of life is cause for thankfulness."

The hotel contained antique furniture brought to the hotel by "Hetty" Green, said to be the richest woman in the world, who was an investor in the hotel. One valuable chair that was saved had been made for Francis Scott Key of Star Spangled Banner fame.

Sid Gally is a Pasadena Museum of History volunteer http://www.pasadenastarnews.com/gene...-a-century-ago


1887 - The Painter Hotel, located on Washington Boulevard between Fair Oaks and Raymond Avenues. Later became known as La Pintoresca Hotel. http://books.google.com/books?id=z08...0hotel&f=false
http://cdm15123.contentdm.oclc.org/u...out&DMROTATE=0http://cdm15123.contentdm.oclc.org/u...out&DMROTATE=0http://cdm15123.contentdm.oclc.org/c.../id/3773/rec/4

Same image, maybe easier to view.
http://waterandpower.org/Historical_...esca_Hotel.jpghttp://waterandpower.org/Historical_...esca_Hotel.jpg


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