The ‘Masked Marvel Murder’ – Part 3

image68

Sept. 14, 1943, Lowell Sun

In case you just tuned in, we’re looking at the unsolved September 1943 killing of movie actor David G.G. Bacon, who appeared in the Republic serial “The Masked Marvel.”

In Part 1, witnesses described Bacon driving erratically on Washington Boulevard, then crashing into a bean field, where he died of a deep stab wound.

In Part 2, we found that Bacon  went to Venice by himself, leaving his pregnant wife, singer Greta Keller, at home. He also didn’t take his three dogs, as was his custom when he went swimming. Police said that robbery probably wasn’t the motive, because he had $13 in his wallet and was wearing two valuable rings. They also noted that he habitually picked up hitchhikers.

Today we’ll look at Bacon’s life.

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Posted in 1943, Cold Cases, Crime and Courts, Film, Hollywood, LAPD | Tagged , , , , , | 5 Comments

Captured Through Witzel’s Lens

Bebe Daniels

Leopard Woman Seena Owen

A couple of Witzel photos have turned up on EBay. As you may recall from Mary Mallory’s recent post, Witzel was one of the leading portrait studios in early 20th century Los Angeles and took many movie publicity photos.

At the top is a Witzel portrait of Bebe Daniels that was apparently inscribed by her. On the lower left, we have an unidentified woman in a fetching leopard-skin outfit and on the lower right we have actress Seena Owen.

The photos of Daniels and Owen are offered by the same vendor, while the leopard woman is offered by another seller. The Daniels photo is priced at Buy It Now for $320; the leopard-skin lady is Buy It Now for $19.95; and the Seena Owen photo is Buy It Now for $275.

As with anything on EBay, an item and vendor should be evaluated thoroughly before submitting a bid, especially when any serious money is involved.

Posted in Film, Found on EBay, Hollywood, Photography, Witzel | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on Captured Through Witzel’s Lens

Rediscovering Los Angeles – The Old Livery Stable

Nov. 25, 1935, Rediscovering Los Angeles

This is the fourth in the Rediscovering Los Angeles series, from Nov. 25, 1935, by Times artist Charles Owens and columnist Timothy Turner.

Horses did not disappear from the streets of Los Angeles for quite a while after the introduction of the automobile, and even in 1935, when this livery stable was to be razed for construction of Union Station, it was still operating, but rented out rigs to junk men who collected scrap metal, paper and old clothes. Turner wrote: “Look in vain, you will, for anything, the least thing in the world, to denote that we are living any later than 1895.”

Unfortunately, Rediscovering Los Angeles was never published in book form, unlike the later Nuestro Pueblo, by Owens and Joe Seewerker.

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Posted in 1935, Animals, Architecture, Art & Artists, City Hall, Downtown, Nuestro Pueblo | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + +)

Oct. 7, 2013, Mystery Photo

And for Monday, a couple of mystery guests!

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

Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights – 1938 Floods Wreak Havoc on Los Angeles Area

North Hollywood Flood House Collapse
Flooding in North Hollywood, courtesy of Mary Mallory.


Seventy-five years ago, a deluge of rain hit Los Angeles and the surrounding area, leading to massive floods and causing millions of dollars in damage and a devastating loss of life. Many factors led to this destruction: too much rain, inadequate construction of bridges and roads, and homes and businesses located in flood-prone areas. One of the unfortunate consequences of the floods was the eventual concreting of the Los Angeles River, ruining its beauty.

Although other areas of the country suffered through droughts and dust storms in the 1930s, Los Angeles and Southern California endured large amounts of rainfall. Most years saw higher than normal annual rain levels. 1937 saw 17.85 inches fall by March 1, while 1934 saw the largest amount of rain since the 1860s.

1938 started out with heavy rains, growing worse through February. Small patches of flooding caused concerns throughout the city. On Feb. 28, a severe storm hit the area, leading to five days of disaster.

The March 1, 1938, Los Angeles Times noted that gale winds hit the coast, and more than 2.5 inches of rain fell on Feb. 28. Seasonal rain totals reached 14.43 inches, more than 4 inches above average.

Mary Mallory’s “Hollywoodland” is now available as an ebook.

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Batchelder Tiles

Batchelder Cymbals

batchelder_twins_ebay batchelder_twins_ebay

These quite unusual Batchelder tiles have been listed on EBay. In the years I’ve been watching for Batchelder tiles, I can’t say I have ever seen anything like these.

Bidding on the upper tile, featuring a man apparently playing the cymbals,  starts at $300. The two angels, which are in separate lot from the same vendor, start at $250. As with anything on EBay, an item and vendor should be evaluated thoroughly before submitting a bid.

Posted in Architecture, Art & Artists, Batchelder Tile, Found on EBay, Pasadena | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Curious Dreamer

Note: Here’s an entry I wrote in 2006 for the 1947project. I thought newer readers might enjoy it.

Oct. 5, 1907
Los Angeles

Hilliard Stricklin is a man with an urgent desire to do something for his fellow African Americans. He says that he came to Los Angeles from Chattanooga, Tenn., about 1895 with a few dollars in his pocket, worked hard and saved his money until he opened a grocery store at 2053 Santa Fe Ave.

What he wants most is to build a facility for the elderly and for orphaned children, naming it the Stricklin Memorial Home for the Aged in honor of his mother.

Two years earlier, Stricklin bought the old Pertinico Winery on Vermont Avenue just south of Pico, paying about $10,000 ($205,235.70 USD 2005). The white neighbors in Pico Heights assumed Stricklin was bluffing with his talk about helping the elderly until the day piles of lumber and a crowd of workmen appeared on the site.

And then they were furious at the idea. Neighbors accused Stricklin of extorting an extravagant price for the property under the threat of bringing blacks into the area.

[Warning: Dialect ahead]

“Followed numerous interviews with Stricklin,” The Times said. “Citizens expressed themselves vigorously. Stricklin sorry that they didn’t like his plans; but somehow the site just seemed to suit him and he kind o’ thought the ol’ folks could be real comfo’ble out there. Reckoned he’d just go ’long with the work.

“Citizens stormed; but Stricklin calmly squinted at the frame of the structure and dropped remarks about the great need of charity and the good he hoped the memorial home would do his brethren and sisters.

“Finally, a great light seemed to dawn. Hilliard Stricklin conceived the idea—remarkable feat—that perhaps the white people of the neighborhood would like to buy him out!”

In fact, according to Mayor Harper, Stricklin made a modest profit on the property, selling it for $13,000. His plan was to duplicate the Vermont Avenue building “in a quarter where it appropriately belongs,” according to The Times.

The location, however, is vague. Some stories say it was at Alamo and Santa Fe, while another lists Alma and St. Elmo, just off Santa Fe, but unfortunately I can’t locate either of them on any of my old maps, which only go back to the 1930s.

Stricklin took out ads for his second project and raised money, but nothing ever came of it except for a lawsuit by the guardian of one of his donors accusing Stricklin of fraud.

“The founder appears to be in hard luck,” The Times said. “His little grocery store at No. 2053 Santa Fe Ave. is tied up under an attachment. He is very discouraged over the collapse of his pet scheme. He lays the blame on poor solicitors but admits his lack of business judgment.”

“If a home for colored people is ever established,” The Time said, “it is believed it will be necessary to purchase ground outside the city limits. To establish such an institution in any residential part of the city would meet with strong opposition from property owners.”

Lmharnisch.com


Lmharnisch.blogspot.com

Posted in 1907, African Americans | Comments Off on Curious Dreamer

October 4, 1943: American Troops Enter Bomb-Shattered Naples

Oct. 4, 1943, Comics

October 4, 1943: Tom Treanor, who will be killed in a Jeep accident in France, writes about the liberation of Naples.

“The Germans left Naples in a truly deplorable condition. In a huge hospital for incurables I myself saw 70 rotting corpses of men, women and children. They were killed in street fighting during the past week and authorities were unable to move their bodies because of the lack of transportation. Sprawled on stretchers, in coffins, on tables and on floors in a great dim-lighted chamber, their naked wounds showing, they made a ghoulish scene unparalleled by any on any battlefield I have seen.

The Los Angeles Public Library celebrates Newspaper Week with a display of historic papers, including a 1918 edition of The Times on the armistice ending World War I.

Kattie Brady, 75, dies after being badly beaten in an alley at 210 W. 5th St. on her way home from St. Vibiana’s.

Charlie Chaplin’s sound stage is being used for some scenes of Columbia’s “Curly,” the first time a company other than Chaplin’s has used its sound stage, Edwin Schallert writes.

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Posted in 1943, Art & Artists, Columnists, Comics, Downtown, Film, Hollywood, Main Street, Tom Treanor, World War II | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Dining at the Van Nuys Hotel

Van Nuys Hotel Cafe

Last month, I posted an image of the Cafe Bristol in the basement of the Hellman Building. Here’s another postcard, stamped 1911, of a downtown restaurant: the cafe at the Van Nuys Hotel at 4th and Main streets. The card is listed as Buy It Now for $6.89.

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Posted in 1911, Downtown, Food and Drink, Found on EBay, Main Street | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

The ‘Masked Marvel Murder’ – Part 2

image6

In case you just tuned in, we’re looking at the strange, unsolved killing of movie actor David G.G. Bacon in September 1943.  Because he appeared in Republic’s “Masked Marvel” serial, shown above, I’m calling it the “Masked Marvel Murder.”


In Part 1, witnesses saw Bacon’s car jump the curb on Washington Boulevard near Thatcher Avenue and crash into a bean field. Neighbors went to help him and found that he had been stabbed in the left side of his back.

Wayne Powell said:

I knelt beside him and he whispered “Please help me” two times and then he died…. (Later Powell said) He was just lying there between two bean stacks, kicking and squirming. I told him to lie still and save his energy. Before he died, I asked him who had done it but he couldn’t say.

Investigators ran into curious questions almost immediately.

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Posted in 1943, Cold Cases, Crime and Courts, Film, Hollywood, LAPD | Tagged , , , , , | 6 Comments

LAPD Photo on EBay From 1884 – To Collect and to Serve

LAPD_1885_ebay

image An EBay vendor has listed this collection of cabinet cards dated 1884 showing LAPD officers.

The vendor is also offering other clippings and ephemera linked to William  Ernst Stoermer. Stoermer, who died in 1932, was also a firefighter and a locomotive engineer.

lapd_1876_sjoquist_photo

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For the record
The photo published on Page 40 of LAPD Capt. Art Sjoquist’s 1984 “History of the Los Angeles Police Department” labeled as “The first Los Angeles Police Department, 1876” has been the subject of more recent research by Glynn Martin, executive director of the Los Angeles Police Museum. In a 2006 blog post, Martin states that the photo has been displayed at the museum with a brass plaque bearing the incorrect date of 1869. The photo is undated, but research indicates that it was taken between 1887 and 1901, based on the career of Officer Henry W. Marden (d. 1909), one the officers in the photograph.
———-

The vendor, engaging in EBay hyperbole, calls it the “EARLIEST, OLDEST LAPD POLICE PHOTO OF ENTIRE FORCE – BELONGS IN A MUSEUM !” In fact, less than a minute of searching through the L.A. Daily Mirror archives turned up a group photo from 1876 showing “the first Los Angeles Police Department.”

This lot is listed as Buy It Now for $4,500 (note the damage in the upper left corner and along the right side). As with anything on EBay, an item and vendor should be evaluated thoroughly before submitting a bid. And thanks to Mary Mallory for pointing this out!

Posted in 1884, Found on EBay, History, LAPD, Obituaries, Photography, Preservation | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on LAPD Photo on EBay From 1884 – To Collect and to Serve

The ‘Masked Marvel Murder’ – Part 1

'The Masked Marvel'
David Bacon in “The Masked Marvel.”

Sept. 13, 1943, David Bacon Murder


D
avid G.G. Bacon died on the afternoon of Sept. 12, 1943, at the age of 29 with many secrets: A secret diary kept in code, coded annotations in his address book and most of all a secret hideaway about a mile from his home. Bacon appeared in Republic’s Masked Marvel serial, so I’ll call it the “Masked Marvel Murder.”

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Posted in 1943, Crime and Courts, Film, Hollywood, LAPD | 9 Comments

A Bit of Old Hawaii From Bullock’s Wilshire

Bullocks Hawaiian Shirt

bullocks_wilshire_hawaiian_shirt_label This Hawaiian shirt made by Kahala and sold by Bullock’s Wilshire has been listed on EBay.

In the years I have been following vintage clothing from Bullock’s (later Bullocks), I have never seen a Hawaiian shirt. Even so, the price on this item (Buy It Now for $650) seems a bit steep. As with anything on EBay, an item and vendor should be evaluated thoroughly before submitting a bid.

Posted in Fashion, Found on EBay | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on A Bit of Old Hawaii From Bullock’s Wilshire

Rediscovering Los Angeles – Aliso and Alameda

Nov. 18, 1935, Rediscovering Los Angeles

Nov. 18, 1935: This is the third installment in the Rediscovering Los Angeles series, featuring Charles Owens’ artwork and text by Times columnist Timothy Turner. Unlike the later Nuestro Pueblo series by Owens and Joe Seewerker, these entries were never published in book form. The Times encouraged readers to clip these columns and save them in a scrapbook.

This week, Turner and Owens visit the Pyrenees Hotel at Aliso and Alameda, built in 1874, which was being demolished to make way for Union Station. The side of the hotel was used as one side of a ball court or “rebote fronton,” Turner writes of the popular pastime of rebote.

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Posted in 1935, Architecture, Art & Artists, Downtown, Nuestro Pueblo, Preservation, Transportation | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Rediscovering Los Angeles – Aliso and Alameda

Remembering A.C. Lyles

News sources are reporting the death of longtime Paramount producer A.C. Lyles, who died Friday at the age of 95.

I interviewed him back in 1997 about old Los Angeles and recently digitized the tape, so I’ll be posting excerpts in the next few days. Stay tuned!

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Obituaries | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Remembering A.C. Lyles

A Note to Commenters

It may be worthwhile to point out in these days of heightened focus on Internet privacy that there isn’t as much anonymity as one might think.

This is particularly true for commenters on L.A. Daily Mirror posts or indeed for commenting on any major blog platform.

You may sign your comment YouWillNeverFindMeHaHaHa@aol.com but in fact your IP address is also saved. It is easy to look up 123.45.678.910 and see who’s being a pest.

No comments get posted without my approval. I don’t have any qualms about banning people who have nothing constructive or pertinent to offer.

Posted in History | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

Movieland Mystery Photo – Newsboy Cap Edition XII (Updated + + +)

Sept. 30, 2013, Mystery Photo

This week’s movie was going to be a Western especially for Don Danard, but the DVD got vapor lock. Perhaps it will return another week if it learns to behave itself.

In the meantime we have a movie with, yes, newsboy caps.

How to Wear a Hat — Newsboy Cap Edition
How to Wear a Hat — ‘Grapes of Wrath’ Edition
Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition I
Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition II
Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition III
Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition IV
Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition V
Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition VI
Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition VII
Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition VIII
Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition IX
Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition X
Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition XI
How to Wear a Newsboy Cap — Marc Chevalier Edition

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Posted in Fashion, Film, Mystery Photo | Tagged , , , , | 26 Comments

Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights — ‘Spirit of ’76’ as Propaganda

"Spirit of '76"
A still from the lost film “Spirit of ‘76” from Moving Picture World.

 



T
he United States’ Espionage Act was ratified in 1917 to punish those abetting the enemy, promoting military insubordination, or interfering with recruitment. Over the years, it has been amended to include punishing for the disclosure of secret information. For good or ill, such individuals as Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, Daniel Ellsberg, and Bradley Manning have been convicted under its statutes. One of the first people to be ensnared after its creation was filmmaker Robert Goldstein, producer of the 1917 patriotic film, “Spirit of ’76.” A film he intended to unite Americans in pride instead became a tool for destroying his life.

Born in San Francisco, Robert Goldstein was the son of Simon Goldstein, the owner of one of the United States largest costume and wig making businesses. This connection enabled young Goldstein to meet many early moving picture performers, like D. W. Griffith, Lillian and Dorothy Gish, Henry Walthall, Mae Marsh, and others. Motion pictures thrilled him so much that he moved to Los Angeles in 1912 and established a branch of the family’s costume businesses, providing wardrobe for the film industry.

Mary Mallory’s “Hollywoodland,” a collection of her posts from the L.A. Daily Mirror, is available from Amazon.

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Posted in 1917, Crime and Courts, Film, Hollywood, Hollywood Heights, Mary Mallory, World War I | Tagged , , , , , , | 12 Comments

L.A. Becomes New York – Again

New York Taxi Movie Prop

How much from downtown L.A. to JFK? Yes, they were filming around “New York Street” on Thursday and providing color with fake New York taxis.

Posted in Downtown, Film, New York, Spring Street | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on L.A. Becomes New York – Again

Scr*w You, Steve Needleman

If Steve Needleman, owner of the Orpheum Theatre, wanted  “a  two-story, 10,400-square-foot Cape Cod Revival house” he could have purchased an entire block of 1950s Valley tract homes and leveled them. No one would have cared. But tearing down Ira Gershwin’s house?

I’m officially boycotting the Orpheum. Nuts to you. Jerk.

Posted in Broadway, Downtown, Preservation, San Fernando Valley, Theaters | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments