Black Dahlia: Blogging ‘Black Dahlia Files’ Part 27 — The Pinata Collecting Our Thoughts


Note: This is an encore post from 2006.
The two-minute executive summary:

In analyzing Donald H. Wolfe’s “The Black Dahlia Files: The Mob, the Mogul and the Murder That Transfixed Los Angeles,” we have spent the last week on the identification of Elizabeth Short and her autopsy, finding fiction, literary fraud, a studious disinterest in the facts and an annoying inability to distinguish between city and county agencies.

In addition, research in original newspapers has revealed that despite the claims of living near Bugsy Siegel when he was killed in 1947, Wolfe apparently lived elsewhere as his mother sold the house in question in 1944.

Continue reading

Posted in 1947, Black Dahlia, Books and Authors, Cold Cases, LAPD, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Black Dahlia: Blogging ‘Black Dahlia Files’ Part 27 — The Pinata Collecting Our Thoughts

Feb. 27, 1907: Downtown Fire Kills Secretary Who Stopped to Call Boss


Note: This is an encore post from 2007.
Feb. 27, 1907
Los Angeles

A thick cloud of smoke from a raging fire in the basement swept through the Germain building on South Spring Street at lunch hour, engulfing businessmen and office workers. In a fraction of a second, the building’s occupants were transformed from powerful executives conducting elaborate stock deals into blind and struggling humans groping on their knees through the hallways to save their lives.

There were many daring rescues and examples of selfless sacrifice. One man was saved as he was about to commit suicide rather than die in the fire. Firefighters battled the blaze until they were at the point of collapse, left to revive themselves and then returned. The only fatality was Emma Stewart, a secretary who died because she turned back from her flight to telephone her employer about the fire.

Continue reading

Posted in 1907, Black Dahlia, Books and Authors, LAPD, Streetcars | Tagged | Comments Off on Feb. 27, 1907: Downtown Fire Kills Secretary Who Stopped to Call Boss

Black L.A., 1947: Husband Suspected of Killing Mary Tate

 

Feb. 27, 1947, Edgar Hayes and His Star Dusters

Feb. 27, 1947: Terry Tate, of 123 N. San Pedro Street, is arrested in the death of his wife, Mary, at 107 Weller Street, described by the Sentinel as a rooming house or hotel. Tate was strangled and beaten Jan. 18, 1947. In July, Ocar J. Hallgren was arrested in the killing, which was never solved.

Continue reading

Posted in 1947, African Americans, Black Dahlia, Cold Cases, Crime and Courts, LAPD | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

March 3, 2018, Mystery Photo
This week’s mystery movie has been the 1955 Warner Bros. film “Tall Man Riding,” with Randolph Scott, Dorothy Malone, Peggie Castle, Bill Ching, John Baragrey, Robert Barrat, John Dehner, Paul Richards and Lane Chandler. The screenplay was by Joseph Hoffman, from the novel by Norman A. Fox, photography was by Wilfrid M. Cline, art direction by Stanley Fleischer, set decoration by G.W. Berntsen, wardrobe by Moss Mabry, orchestrations by Max Reese and music by Paul Sawtell. The producer was David Weisbart and the director was Lesley Selander.

“Tall Man Riding,” with “Colt .45” and “Fort Worth,” is available on DVD from Amazon.

Continue reading

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | Tagged , , | 37 Comments

Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: ‘Moving Picture Hero of My Heart’ Promotes Movies

 

moving_picture_hero_cover

From its beginnings, the motion picture industry developed adept advertising and promotional concepts to spread the word of its film products and stars. Quick to develop cross-promotions and partnerships with magazines and newspapers, the film industry grew new fans and box office receipts with practical but novel concepts like employing sheet music to sell its films. The Essanay Film Company followed the same playbook with sheet music titled “The Moving Picture Hero of My Heart” as a special giveaway at the 1916 Motion Picture Exhibitors League of America’s national convention, which later became popular across the country.

The Selig Film Company perhaps pioneered the practice of cross-promotion when they developed a partnership with the Chicago Tribune in 1913 to collaterally sell the serial “The Adventures of Kathlyn,” with the newspaper running serialized installments of each episode after it played in theatres, thus whetting the appetites of readers to see how the next episodes would play out. The serial set attendance records for those coming to see it, and the Tribune saw subscriptions and sales increase. As their book, “The WGN” stated in 1922, “The first step was to capitalize the soaring motion picture craze for Tribune benefit.”

Mary Mallory’s latest book, “Living With Grace: Life Lessons from America’s Princess,” will be released June 1.

 

Continue reading

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Hollywood Heights, Mary Mallory, Music | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: ‘Moving Picture Hero of My Heart’ Promotes Movies

Black Dahlia: Blogging “Black Dahlia Files” Part 26 — Missing Man Formation


Note: This is an encore post from 2006.
Our story so far: I am blogging—in real time—as I read Donald H. Wolfe’s “The Black Dahlia Files.” It’s been slow going and this is an especially tedious part because I’m examining Wolfe’s treatment of Elizabeth Short’s autopsy. I’m not through and I’ve turned up some outright literary fraud, so it’s prudent to be particularly careful.

Page 33

Let’s pick up where we left off yesterday:

“Yet there is not another cold-case homicide on record in Los Angeles in which the autopsy report has not been made available to the public.”

Continue reading

Posted in 1947, Black Dahlia, Cold Cases, Donald Wolfe, LAPD, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on Black Dahlia: Blogging “Black Dahlia Files” Part 26 — Missing Man Formation

In Indiana, There Is No Beer

Note: This is an encore post from 2007.
Feb. 14-26, 1907
Los Angeles

The Rev. Ervin S. Chapman, a Presbyterian minister who heads the Anti-Saloon League of California, has won a victory through an address that persuaded an Indiana judge to rule that saloons are unconstitutional.

Chapman concluded his series of points by saying:

Continue reading

Posted in 1907, Black Dahlia, Books and Authors, Crime and Courts, LAPD, Streetcars | Tagged | 1 Comment

Black Dahlia: Blogging “Black Dahlia Files” Part 25 — Loyalty

Note: This is an encore post from 2006.
Just out of curiosity, I did a Google image search for “loyalty
.” I got Johnny Cash flipping the bird (turned into a mock motivational poster); another poster for the Army on its values; a picture of a dog, a huge tattoo reading “Love” and “Loyalty” featuring rosary beads, a cross and other Christian symbols; James Montgomery Flagg’s famous World War I recruiting poster of Uncle Sam; a boomerang; and a couple of ships.

A search for “loyal” brought up a company’s logo; an image of the Boy Scouts; and the cover to Tupac Shakur’s “Loyal to the Game.”

Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Black Dahlia: Blogging “Black Dahlia Files” Part 25 — Loyalty

Black Dahlia: Blogging “Black Dahlia Files” Part 24 — He Walked by Night


Note: This is an encore post from 2006.
Much has been written about poor crowd control at the Black Dahlia crime scene. Here’s an example of LAPD crowd control from the 1948 film “He Walked by Night,” which was the genesis of “Dragnet,” first as a radio show and then as a TV program. The idea of “Dragnet” arose during filming of “He Walked by Night” as Homicide Sgt. Marty Wynn, the technical advisor on the film, talked with actor Jack Webb about all the mistakes Hollywood made in portraying police work.

A frame grab from the movie shows the ropes used to keep people away from the car where a police officer has been killed. Retired Capt. Ed Jokisch has told me many times that in the 1940s, when he worked homicide, the call car had ropes used for crowd control.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Black Dahlia: Blogging “Black Dahlia Files” Part 24 — He Walked by Night

Black Dahlia: Blogging “Black Dahlia Files” Part 23 — The Pinata


Note: This is an encore post from 2006.

So what’s your point, Harnisch? Isn’t there a little schadenfreude here in dismantling Donald H. Wolfe’s “The Black Dahlia Files: The Mob, the Mogul and the Murder That Transfixed Los Angeles”? Didn’t you make your point at the preface?

Absolutely. So, as Sandy Koufax said: “The question is why.”

Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Black Dahlia: Blogging “Black Dahlia Files” Part 23 — The Pinata

Feb. 24, 1907: Samuel Tilden Norton Designs Eagle Rock Bank Building

Eagle Rock Bank Building
Eagle Rock bank building designed by Samuel Tilden Norton, via Google Street View.

Note: This is an encore post from 2007.
Feb. 24, 1907
Eagle Rock

Architect Samuel Tilden Norton has designed a bank building for Townsend Avenue and Colorado Boulevard in Eagle Rock, The Times says.

Just to make research interesting, The Times misspelled his name as S. Tilton Norton. According to his 1959 obituary, his mother was the first Jewish child born in Los Angeles. After studying architecture in Los Angeles and New York, he designed the Wilshire Fox Building and Sinai Temple.

Continue reading

Posted in 1907, Architecture, Black Dahlia, Books and Authors, LAPD, Obituaries, Streetcars | Tagged | Comments Off on Feb. 24, 1907: Samuel Tilden Norton Designs Eagle Rock Bank Building

Black Dahlia: Blogging “Black Dahlia Files” Part 22 — The Funny Papers


Note: This is an encore post from 2006.
Oh dear…. oh dearie, dearie, dear. Just out of curiosity, I decided to check the address Wolfe gave as his home
when Bugsy Siegel was killed. This was 803 N. Roxbury Drive (“Mogul,” Page 26).

First the good news. Wolfe actually lived there. Now for the bad news: It turns out that Wolfe’s mother sold the house to Sol Hurok in—what’s this—1944? That’s three (count them 1… 2… 3…) years before Siegel was killed.

Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Feb. 23, 1907: Scotch Thistles Beat English Victorias in 1st L.A. Soccer Game of 20th Century


Note: This is an encore post from 2007.
Feb. 23, 1907
Los Angeles

The Scotch Thistles beat the English Victorias 3-2 in Southern California’s first soccer game since the Caledonians and the Pasadena team met at Agricultural Park in 1890, The Times says.

Continue reading

Posted in 1907, Black Dahlia, Books and Authors, LAPD, Pasadena, Streetcars | Comments Off on Feb. 23, 1907: Scotch Thistles Beat English Victorias in 1st L.A. Soccer Game of 20th Century

Black Dahlia: Blogging “Black Dahlia Files” Part 21 —The Cloudy Crystal Ball

Note: This is an encore post from 2006.
I have a poor track record with movie screenings, being one of the few people to walk out halfway through a sneak preview of “Boogie Nights,” which I thought was terrible. Of course the kid who conned me into seeing it told me it was “a Burt Reynolds movie” (a few years ago, any passing warm body on Colorado Boulevard in Old Pasadena was at risk of getting dragged into a theater for a screening). The polka music inserted as a placeholder for the soundtrack didn’t help. Imagine my surprise when everybody I knew absolutely adored it.

So I said “no” when someone asked me last week if I wanted to get into the sneak screening of the Brian De Palma movie “Black Dahlia” on Tuesday night in Sherman Oaks. Some people burn ardently for a movie deal, but I’m not one of them. I’m still thinking of David Thomson’s line in his New York Times review of Steve Hodel’s “Black Dahlia Avenger”: “Kevin Spacey should buy the film rights to this book quickly.” I don’t think there’s any way Hollywood could do a film about the Black Dahlia without turning it into a gruesome slasher flick. And I’m certainly not interested in that.
Hurry back! Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Black Dahlia: Blogging “Black Dahlia Files” Part 21 —The Cloudy Crystal Ball

Feb. 22, 1907: Rainstorm Inspires Lyricism From Times Reporter


Note: This is an encore post from 2007.
Feb. 22, 1907
Los Angeles

Here’s how The Times weather stories read a century ago:

“For all the daylight hours yesterday, the rain drizzled down, much of the time like a heavy Scotch mist, but toward nightfall the storm deepened and the rain began to fall in earnest. For two hours in the early part of the night there was a constant downpour that soon set the gutters running full and brought about the usual results to the streets near the hill district.

“The wash from the highways intersecting the hills poured down onto the streets of the business section and deposits of sand and gravel caused much inconvenience to electric cars. At several of the intersections on Broadway and Hill streets, men were stationed with shovels to keep the tracks passable for cars.

Continue reading

Posted in 1907, Black Dahlia, Books and Authors, LAPD, Pasadena, Streetcars | Comments Off on Feb. 22, 1907: Rainstorm Inspires Lyricism From Times Reporter

Black L.A., 1947: Willie Earle Lynched by South Carolina Mob

Feb. 20, 1947, Lynching

Feb. 20, 1947: The lynching of Willie Earle drew nationwide attention.

Here is the New Yorker’s 1947 account of the trial in which 28 men were acquitted.

Continue reading

Posted in 1947, African Americans, Crime and Courts | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

Billy Graham Brings ‘Canvas Cathedral’ to Los Angeles, 1949

image

Billy Graham brings his “canvas cathedral” to Los Angeles in 1949. Via YouTube.

Billy Graham, 1949

.

Posted in 1949, Obituaries, Religion | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Billy Graham Brings ‘Canvas Cathedral’ to Los Angeles, 1949

Black Dahlia: Blogging “Black Dahlia Files” Part 20 —The FBI Story


Note: This is an encore post from 2006.
There is an individual on ebay who sells copies
of Elizabeth Short’s FBI file for $22 and some bidders drive the price even higher. The fact that the files are available online for free has curbed the demand somewhat. But I don’t know which is worse: a seller offering something that anybody can get for free (oh yes, you do get a “bound” version, if you consider a cheap plastic spiral a “binding”) or the people who buy it for $44.89, like sydney20030_3 .

Update: The price on ebay has gone up to $23, plus $5 shipping. Still free on the FBI’s website.

Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Black Dahlia: Blogging “Black Dahlia Files” Part 20 —The FBI Story

Feb. 21, 1907: Mystery Killer Poisons Dogs and Cats in Angeleno Heights


Note: This is an encore post from 2007.
Feb. 21, 1907
Los Angeles

Someone who hates animals is at work in Angeleno Heights, having poisoned 10 valuable dogs and several cats, The Times says.

Continue reading

Posted in 1907, Black Dahlia, Books and Authors, LAPD, Streetcars | Comments Off on Feb. 21, 1907: Mystery Killer Poisons Dogs and Cats in Angeleno Heights

Black Dahlia: Some Rando Stripper, Not Elizabeth Short, in EBay Photos Listed at $3,000

Rando Stripper
A vendor on EBay has listed old pictures of some rando stripper as Elizabeth Short for $3,000. No really.

2012_0220_random_stripper_ebay_01

I mean seriously? The description doesn’t hedge a bit – like saying photos that *might* be Elizabeth Short or photos that *resemble* Elizabeth Short. They are (supposedly) images of Elizabeth Short. One is dated June 19, 1945, when Elizabeth Short wasn’t anywhere near Los Angeles. Oops.

Continue reading

Posted in 1945, 1947, Another Good Story Ruined, Black Dahlia, Found on EBay, LAPD, Photography | Tagged , , , , , , | 5 Comments