Category Archives: Streetcars

November 4, 1907: Final Crash Finishes Off Ford Runabout, but Driver Survives to Race Again

November 4, 1907: Luck finally runs out for Eugene Rowe’s runabout, which was repaired after being smashed by a trolley, then crashed during practice for the Thanksgiving run. Continue reading

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October 22, 1907: Mayor’s Son Gives a Lesson in Identifying L.A. County Sheriff’s Badges

October 22, 1907: Mayor’s son gives a lesson on L.A. County sheriff’s badges. Continue reading

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October 17, 1907: All-White USC Football Team Starts Race Riot Over Tackle by Black Player From Whittier

October 17, 1907: A Black player from Whittier State tackles a player for USC’s all-white team, setting off a fight between the teams. Continue reading

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October 13, 1907: 2 Die in Tong War

October 13, 1907: Gunmen imported from out of town by the Hop Sing Tong entered the tailor shop of Lem Sing at 806 Juan St. in Chinatown and under the pretense of having some clothing made, wounded him and killed Wong Goon Kor. Continue reading

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September 13, 1947: The Light Rail That Failed — Transit Plan Calls for Trains on Freeway Medians

September 13, 1947: A committee studying Los Angeles’ transportation issues recommends high-speed rail arteries, including tracks down the medians of express highways. Continue reading

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Sept. 13, 1907: Girl’s Foot Amputated After Being Crushed by Streetcar

September 13, 1907: A girl’s foot is amputated after she was hit by a streetcar. Continue reading

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September 11, 1947: Driver of Beer Wagon Gets Revenge on Streetcars

September 11, 1947: Joseph P. Johnston is a career safecracker who gave up his trade during World War II, considering it unpatriotic, but is up to his old ways. And a flashback to 1905, when a beer truck driver gets revenge on L.A.’s sainted streetcars by blocking the tracks. Continue reading

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September 11, 1907: In Praise of the Corset for the ‘Woman Who Weighs a Ton’

September 11, 1907: “The woman who gets the proper sort of corset will have the fashionable figure, even if she weighs a ton,” says Elizabeth A.C. White. Continue reading

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September 7, 1907: Typhoid, Diphtheria, Scarlet Fever and Tuberculosis

September 7,1907: No measles or smallpox cases for August, and diphtheria, scarlet fever and tuberculosis are down. Typhoid cases, however, are increasing. Continue reading

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September 5, 1943: Union Pleads With Streetcar Workers Not to Strike

September 5, 1943: The head of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen pleased with Pacific Electric workers not to strike. Eight to 10 streetcar workers are quitting every day to take better jobs. Continue reading

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September 4, 1933: Man Kills Wife and Daughter, Commits Suicide Over Pink Bedroom

September 4, 1933: A man fatally stabs his estranged wife and daughter, then slits his throat after an argument because his wife had the bedroom painted pink. Continue reading

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September 3, 1907: A Oration for Labor Day

September 3, 1907: The Times criticizes Hearst papers “for their persistent efforts to teach the working people of America that they are the slaves of the ‘predatory rich’; that every corporation is a conspiracy to rob; that all capitalists are brainless brutes; that the government of the United States is a corrupt glutocracy.” Continue reading

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August 30, 1907: Rabbi Leads Campaign to Open Hebrew University in L.A.

August 30, 1907: Rabbi Alfred Arndt of Congregation Beth Israel leads an effort to open what The Times describes as “the only Hebrew university within the entire United States.” Continue reading

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August 29, 1943: Parents Sue Doctor Who Said Baby Girl Was a Boy!

August 29, 1943: Dr. John M. Andrews is being sued for $500,000 by Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Hartwig after delivering a baby and telling the family that it was a boy, whom they named Richard Allen Hartwig — when it was actually a girl. Continue reading

Posted in 1943, Art & Artists, Comics, Crime and Courts, Film, Hollywood, Medicine, Streetcars, Transportation, World War II | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

August 27, 1903: 6,000 Union Army Veterans Gather to Recall the Campfires of Old

August 27, 2003: 6,000 Union Army veterans gather at Eastlake (Lincoln) Park in Los Angeles. And a minister endorses the lynching of Blacks. Continue reading

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August 26, 1907: Save Those Redwoods

August 26, 1907: A large rally calls for saving the 800-acre Armstrong Grove of redwoods. In 2025, it is a State Natural Reserve. Continue reading

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August 25, 1907: Death at the Lummis House Over a Garden Hose

August 25, 1907: Death at the Lummis House in a fight that began over a garden hose. Continue reading

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1944 in Music — Oscar Levant and Leonard Bernstein at the Hollywood Bowl, August 22, 1944

August 22, 1944: The Times encourages readers to save copies of the paper for reuse in the war effort. Let’s hear it for recycling! Continue reading

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Aug. 12-13, 1907: Bucket of Blood Is a Den of Drunken Debauchery

August 12, 1907: The L.A. Times describes the Bismark Cafe, known to police as the Bucket of Blood, as “drunken debauchery among girls of tender ages, painted women and men.” It is an “immoral pesthole” where “young girls are enticed nightly do drink and listen to a band concert.” Continue reading

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Aug. 10, 1947: North Broadway Tunnel, Doomed Downtown Landmark

August 10, 1947: The North Broadway Tunnel is doomed. Continue reading

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