January 20, 1947: Virginia Mayo Disappears!

Jan. 10, 1947, Comics

Note: This is a post I wrote in 2006 for the 1947project.

With the city in the grips of the Black Dahlia murder, Los Angeles wonders, where is Virginia Mayo? Or at least some publicist worries enough to feed the item to Louella Parsons at the Examiner. Without knowing for certain, the second story looks like a Times rewrite of the gossip column, which provides juicy details about Mayo’s poisoned dog, her exact address and the implications that she’s a home-wrecker, but is very thin on any real news. Basically, Mayo and her mother went on a trip. End of story.

Bonus factoid: Mayo and O’Shea got married July 2, 1947. He lived at 14633 Magnolia in Van Nuys. O’Shea, who starred in “Mr. District Attorney” and “Underworld Story,” died of a heart attack in Dallas in 1973 while getting ready to join a touring company of “40 Carats,” starring Mayo.

Second bonus factoid: Mayo’s apartment was 1.3 miles from the home of Dr. George Hodel at 5121 Franklin Ave.

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Black Dahlia Book Club for January 2026

Welcome to the first session of the Black Dahlia Book Club! I finally got tired of talking about George Hodel and Steve Hodel (at this point, I know Steve’s monologues from memory) so I decided to spend some time looking at the portrayals of the Black Dahlia case, starting with the October 1948 issue of True Detective, which touched off the Leslie Dillion debacle. I consider myself first and foremost a historian of the Black Dahlia case, and think it’s important to examine the source material in detail to emphasize the challenges of researching the murder of Elizabeth Short.

The next Ask Me Anything on the Black Dahlia case is February 3. The next Black Dahlia Book Club session will be February 17. I’ll announce the subject a week before.

In this session, I discussed: Continue reading

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January 20, 1907: Architectural Ramblings

A Brainerd home at 1158 E. 41st St., Photograph by Larry Harnisch/LADailyMirror.com

Note: This is an encore post from 2007.
Los Angeles
January 20, 2007

What we do know about H.J. Brainerd is that he built a fair number of “portable homes.” What we don’t know, except in one case, is exactly where he put them.

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: Ethel B. Higgins, Photographer and Botanist

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Ethel B. Higgins in an undated photo, courtesy of the San Diego Natural History Museum.


Hollywood welcomed artists long before the film industry descended on the town. Many were women, pioneering in music composition and publishing like Carrie Jacobs Bond, or in photography, like Ethel Phoebe Bailey Higgins. Virtually forgotten today, she served as Hollywood’s top artistic photographer in the early 1900s, before becoming one of California’s leading botanists in the 1930s and 1940s.

Ethel and her parents George and Mary moved to Los Angeles after he retired in 1900. Born in 1846, former Quaker George was heir to an oilcloth factory and investor. Ethel, their only daughter, was born 1866 in Vassalboro, Maine. Thanks to her family’s wealth and social status, she pursued higher education, attending the Wesleyan Seminary and Female College at Redfield before teaching high school in Massachusetts. She moved across country with her parents at the age of 34, looking for new adventures and horizons. Continue reading

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January 19, 1959: Matt Weinstock

Life in Beverly Hills

Matt WeinstockDuring a lavish party in a Beverly Hills home the host guided a group of guests to a huge shelfful of glassware in the trophy room.

“Of course you know about Bruges glass,” he said proudly. “It’s unbreakable. Here, I’ll show you.” He tipped a glass off the shelf. It shattered into fragments.

“That can’t be!” he exclaimed.

He tipped another and it too crashed. He shook his head in utter bafflement and tipped another. Crash.

“I can’t understand it!” he shouted hoarsely, “These glasses have been
in the family for generations! We’ve been the victims of a hoax!” Continue reading

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January 19, 1959: Paul Coates — Confidential File

CONFIDENTIAL FILE

Way Out Back, a Head of Hair

Paul Coates, in coat and tieSee that picture down the column a few lines?

The one of the smiling, bushy-haired boy?

That’s me.

I’ll concede that it wasn’t taken yesterday. But if you want to get technical, I wasn’t born yesterday either. Which doesn’t make sense. However, I warned you not to get technical.

Columnists have certain inalienable liberties. One of which is the right to decorate their columns with vintage photographs of themselves.

At most, it’s petty deceit. And I certainly don’t stand alone in my guilt. Continue reading

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January 19, 1947: Watch Out for His Left Jab!

Jan, 19, 1947, Tarzan
Note: This is an encore post I wrote in 2006 for the 1947project.

Reluctant holdup
victim finds
left jab useful

Sometimes even the boys in the legal beak-busting business don’t fare so well when they run up against the unorthodox style of a southpaw.

Clinton W. White, 2641 Rose View Ave., a Southern Pacific conductor, was thankful today that he was a lefthander when a couple of strong-arm lads tried to rob him, he told police.

One tried to pin White with a half-Nelson of the right arm, he said. So he swung a sharp left and floored his opponent. While the other man fled, White once more called on his left to retire his attacker.

Booked on suspicion of robbery was a man who gave his name as Clarence W. Hartnett, 47. The attack took place at Avenue 64 and Pasadena Avenue, the conductor said.

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January 19, 1942: Lombard’s Body Recovered From Crash

Jan. 19, 1942, Carole Lombard

Jan. 19, 1942, Comics

January 19, 1942: The Times’ Gene Sherman reports from the scene of the crash that killed Carole Lombard and 21 others:

“The totally demolished luxurious Douglas DC-3 Skyclub presented a grim, sorrowful picture on its rocky resting place. Wreckage was scattered in a radius of 500 yards and some of the victims were strewn around the waist-high snow. Bits of the plane, personal effects of the passengers, including handkerchiefs, overcoats and other apparel, were strung from the branches of stunted pine trees like macabre Christmas ornaments.

The two motors of the plane lay 50 feet apart, both to the left of the debris. Both wings had been sheared off. The tail assembly had been cracked off the fuselage, leaving the twisted, blackened cabin at the foot of a V-shaped crevasse.”

“Suspicion” starts tomorrow at the Pantages in Hollywood and RKO Hill Street.

Jimmie Fidler says:
How many photographs have you seen of Irene Dunne with her knees crossed? Continue reading

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


Note: This is an encore post from 2007.

January 19, 1907
Los Angeles

Despite his ill health, Harley Hamilton drove himself to conduct a concert by the Los Angeles Symphony because he believed so much in bringing the music of Tchaikovsky (or in those days, Tschaikowsky) to the public. The concert at hand is West Coast premiere of Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 4.

“Harley Hamilton, too ill to leave his house, is just finishing his arrangements for the work of the symphony orchestra,” The Times says of his labors on the concert series.

Continue reading

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

Main title: Lettering over tinted photo of an oil field, with workers.

This week’s mystery movie was the 1973 Columbia film Oklahoma Crude, with George C. Scott, Faye Dunaway, John Mills, Jack Palance, William Lucking, Harvey Jason, Ted Gehring, Cliff Osmond, Rafael Campos, Woodrow Parfrey, Larry D. Mann, John Dierkes, Hal Smith, Karl Lukas and Wayne Storm. Continue reading

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

Jan. 17, 1947, Li'l Abner

Jan. 17, 1947, Bill Tilden

Note: This is a post I wrote in 2006 for the 1947project.

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.

Judge Scott excoriated Tilden for his actions, declaring: “You have been the idol of youngsters all over the world. It has been a great shock to sports fans to read about your troubles.

“I am going to make this an object lesson, no only to other persons tempted to do similar things, but also to parents who are too busy to concern themselves in determining what type of persons their youngsters are associating with,” Judge Scott commented.

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January 17, 1907: The Changing Face of the City


Note: This is an encore post from 2007.

January 17, 1907
Los Angeles

On a trip from Utah to visit his daughter, H.E. Gibson keeps getting lost as he wanders around Los Angeles. No, it’s not because Gibson is 80, for his mind is still sharp. It’s because he hasn’t been back since 1848 and things have changed just a bit.

Even the old familiar landmark of Ft. Hill is covered with homes, he says. About the only spot in town he recognizes is the Plaza, where he keeps returning to get his bearings.

Gibson came to California with the “Flash Emigrant Colony” to establish Mormon settlements. The group couldn’t raise the money to buy Rancho Cucamonga, so they bought a parcel of land in San Bernardino, The Times says. Continue reading

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

image
Read the entire Los Angeles Star of Jan. 17, 1863, courtesy of USC and the Huntington Library.


January 17, 1863: The 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.

Mr. Humphries, who lives near San Gabriel, celebrates having the entire family, “down to the youngest grandchild” together “under the paternal roof.” “Dancing was kept up with great spirit until daylight.”

Joseph Winston is married to Dona Maria J. Bauchet.

Gov. Stanford, in his message to the Legislature, wants to raise the tax by 23 cents on $100. The Star does not approve.

A sample of the Star’s editorial:

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January 16, 1959: Matt Weinstock

Saved by the Knell

Matt WeinstockIn everybody’s life there is a dark, unforgettable moment when it doesn’t appear he’s going to make it. A downtown group somehow got around to discussing the this topic over coffee, and Ken Bromfield Jones, Title Insurance employee and spare-time TV actor, recalled his big near miss.

In 1942 he was in command of a gun post on HMS Londonderry, convoying ships north of Ireland. During a German air attack he was shot through a lung. Hours later, he was removed to a hospital ashore.

In the night he came out of a sedative. He felt no pain, only extreme lassitude. As in a dream he heard a nurse say, “He’ll be on the slab by morning.” Continue reading

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January 16, 1959: Paul Coates — Confidential File

January 16, 1959: Mirror Cover

CONFIDENTIAL FILE

Someday, Butch H., Try to Be Forgiving

Paul Coates, in coat and tieSome stories I’d rather not print.

And when I first heard about what a bunch of grown men and women were doing to a kid named Butch Harris, I filed the information into that category.

It was a little too unbelievable, too grimy, to put in a newspaper.

That was three months ago. At the time, Butch and some classmates of his had accepted an invitation to all boys at 87th Street School, here in downtown, to join the Cub Scouts.

But not Butch. He was ignored — subtly like a sledge hammer. Continue reading

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

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Jan. 16, 1947: Chef Tubbs is opening a restaurant at 1305-7 E. Olympic Blvd.


Olympic and Central, Google Street View

Olympic Boulevard and Central Avenue, via Google Street View.


Jan. 16, 1947, Los Angeles Sentinel

January 16: 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.”

According to Paul Cooke, head of Local 27, actor James Baskett was “hampered by having to portray the fixed conception of the Negro — a lazy, hat-in-hand, spiritual-singing inferior ‘old rascal.’ ” Cooke also criticized the film for the theme of “the Negro in service to white people, the Negro apparently whose only thought is to help solve the problems of white people.”

 

Continue reading

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

Today is Jan. 15, the anniversary of Elizabeth Short’s death. As is the custom, the Daily Mirror will be dark.

Trim your roses in her memory.

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January 14, 1959: Matt Weinstock

Capricious Electron

Matt WeinstockAn engaging stranger named Peter Buchanan came into the office, apologized for taking my time, handed me a typewritten half-sheet of paper and asked me to read it and perhaps check it.

It was a theory he had spent 15 years developing, he said, and he felt it was vital for the world to know.

“As American scientists study the electron,” it began, “the electron will become more capricious, defiant of observation and measurement because
American scientists start with the wrong hypothesis.”

That’s as far as I got because the rest of it was about wave mechanics, quantum
phenomena and mathematical equations, including Einstein’s. He lost me. Continue reading

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January 14, 1959: Paul Coates — Confidential File

CONFIDENTIAL FILE

Red Tape Frequently Chokes Logic, Justice

Paul Coates, in coat and tiePostscript to a tragedy:

Two and a half years ago, a young Norwalk housewife returned from the home of a neighbor to find her husband sprawled dying across his bed. He had been shot through the head with a .22-caliber rifle.

There was no mystery to the fatal shooting. Within minutes after they arrived at the scene, County Sheriff’s Department detectives had three suspects in custody, and detailed confessions from each.

And it was those confessions which turned the killing into one of the most bizarre tragedies ever to take place in Southern California.

The story was headlines, not only here, but all across the nation. Continue reading

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Black Dahlia Book Club – True Detective, 1948

Magazine cover True Detective October 1948, faces of women with the text 'The Black Dahlia Murders'

Note: Two pages were inadvertently omitted from the upload. They have been added. Thanks to everyone who pointed this out.


Introducing the Black Dahlia Book Club, beginning January 20, 2026, in lieu of the Ask Me Anything sessions on George Hodel and Steve Hodel.

I’m going to begin with “The Black Dahlia Murders,” by George Clark, from the October 1948 issue of True Detective. This isn’t the first pulp magazine article about the murder of Elizabeth Short, but it is by far the most influential because it resulted in the Leslie Dillon debacle.

Note: The article was written from newspaper articles and must be approached with skepticism.

I’ll discuss the article in my live YouTube session, January 20, at 10 a.m. Pacific time on YouTube/LMHarnisch. Email me your questions and I’ll answer them!

The article is on the jump. Continue reading

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