Monthly Archives: January 2026

January 19, 1907: A Conductor Throws Caution to the Winds

January 19, 1907: At great risk to his health and finances, Harley Hamilton will conduct his Los Angeles Symphony Orchestra in the West Coast premiere of Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 4. The orchestra, which eventually disbanded, was a competitor with the later Los Angeles Philharmonic. Continue reading

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

For Monday, we have a mysterious fellow. Mystery movie update: The consensus has been to keep doing what I’ve been doing, but perhaps include more recent films. And so I will. Thank you for playing! Continue reading

Posted in 1973, Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | Tagged , , , , , , | 16 Comments

January 17, 1947: Big Bill Tilden Gets Jail for Morals Case Involving Teenage Boy

January 17, 1947: William (Big Bill) Tilden, 54-year-old internationally known tennis star, yesterday was sentenced to serve nine months in the County Jail with a road gang recommendation by Juvenile Judge A.A. Scott for contributing to the delinquency of a 14-year-old boy. Continue reading

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January 17, 1907: The Changing Face of the City

January 17, 1907: Man who hadn’t been to Los Angeles since 1848 keeps getting lost. Continue reading

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January 17, 1863: U.S. Lifts Ban on L.A. Paper Accused of Treason

January 17, 1863: The Los Angeles Star notes that after a year of being banned from the U.S. mails for publishing treasonous articles in support of the Confederacy, it will once more be available through the mail. Continue reading

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January 16, 1959: Matt Weinstock

January 16, 1959: Matt Weinstock recounts the war story of a wounded sailor, expected to die, who was revived by a glass of brandy from a nurse. Continue reading

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January 16, 1959: Paul Coates — Confidential File

January 16, 1959: Paul Coates on the story of Butch Harris, who was refused admission to the Cub Scouts because he was Black. Continue reading

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January 16, 1947: Teachers Call ‘Song of the South’ Racist Propaganda

January 16, 1947: Local 27 of the American Federation of Teachers, meeting in Washington, called the Disney feature film “Song of the South” “insidious and subtle propaganda against the Negro.” Continue reading

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Black Dahlia: Trim Your Roses on January 15 to Remember Elizabeth Short

January 15: Today is the anniversary of Elizabeth Short’s death. As is the custom, the Daily Mirror will be dark. Trim your roses in her memory. Continue reading

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January 14, 1959: Matt Weinstock

January 14, 1959: A man asks Matt Weinstock to evaluate a theory culminating 15 years of work. It involves the electron, and Weinstock shrugs. Continue reading

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January 14, 1959: Paul Coates — Confidential File

January 14, 1959: Paul Coates has an update on three boys, the oldest age 10, who killed their father as he slept. Continue reading

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Black Dahlia Book Club – True Detective, 1948

Starting next week. the Black Dahlia Book Club, discussing what’s been written about the murder of Elizabeth Short. First up is the October 1948 issue of True Detective. Coming January 20 at YouTube.com/LMHarnisch Continue reading

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Black Dahlia Book Club–Coming Next Week

Three quick reminders: The anniversary of Elizabeth Short’s murder is Thursday — be respectful. The Black Dahlia case is not solved, regardless of what you may hear elsewhere. And the Black Dahlia Book Club begins a week from today at YouTube.com/LMHarnisch Continue reading

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January 12-13: Soviet leader visits Los Angeles

January 12-13: Soviet leader Anastas Mikoyan spends two days in Los Angeles, where he meets… Jerry Lewis! Continue reading

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Voices — Christine Collins, January 12, 1933

January 12, 1933: A letter informing Sheriff Eugene Biscailuz that the prisoner is dead concludes documents telling the unfortunate saga of Walter and Christine Collins, the inspiration for the Clint Eastwood film ‘Changeling.’ Continue reading

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

This week’s mystery movie was the 1949 movie Tulsa, with Susan Hayward, Robert Preston, Pedro Armendariz, Lloyd Gough, Chill Wills, Edward Begley, Jimmy Conlin and Roland Jack.

Posted in 1949, Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | Tagged , , , , , | 32 Comments

January 10, 1909: Addicted to Gambling

January 10, 1909: Wrecked on the rocks of the betting game! Of how many young men of Los Angeles, who but a few months ago held positions of honor or trust, and are now serving time on the chain gang, is this true? Continue reading

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Black L.A., January 9, 1947: LAPD Detectives Cleared of Brutality Against Drunk Woman

January 9, 1947: Two officers are exonerated in the beating of Edythe Galloway. a story from the Los Angeles Sentinel and Police Commission minutes. Continue reading

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January 9, 1913: The Day’s News – Pestilence and Starvation

January 9, 1908: The Times publishes a map of places in the news, showing “troops arriving at the front,” “ship in distress,” “burning building,” “land battle,” “earthquake,” “execution” and “volcano eruption.” The past was definitely not a “kinder, simpler time.” Continue reading

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January 9, 1907: The Floods

January 9-10, 1907: The worst storm in 23 years blows across Southern California with the force of a gale, dumping more than an inch of rain in Pasadena, killing an Orange County rancher, washing out railroad tracks and collapsing tunnels, and leaving nearly every small ship in Santa Barbara sunk, driven ashore or pounded to pieces. Continue reading

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