The Daily Mirror

Larry Harnisch reflects on Los Angeles history

Category: Parks and Recreation

U.S. Tightens Border; DiMaggio and the Angels?

Sept. 22, 1969, Cover


Sept. 22, 1969: The U.S. tightens inspections at the border as part of Operation Intercept.

Sept. 22, 1969, Hippies

And hippies gather at Griffith Park.

Sept. 22, 1969, Akron

Akron had everything for the swinging bachelor pad -- including armor.

Sept. 22, 1969, Li'l Abner

Al Capp satirized all sorts of people and popular culture in the 1960s. In this panel, he makes fun of Philip Roth's bestseller "Portnoy's Complaint." 

Sept. 22, 1969, Paint Your Wagon

An ad for "Paint Your Wagon" by Peter Max, an artist who helped define the look of the 1960s. His artwork used to be everywhere.

Sept. 22, 1969, Sports

The Yankee Clipper as Angel manager in 1970?

Joe DiMaggio's name surfaced in a story by The Times' John Wiebusch on potential replacements for Angel Manager Lefty Phillips. DiMaggio was in the mix but only because he was telling associates he wanted no part of a managerial job. Smart man.

Others rumored to be possibilities included another former Yankee player, Hank Bauer, and Red Schoendienst, who had been a player, coach and manager with the Cardinals.

Of course, none of those potential managers actually took over. Phillips stayed for the disaster that became the Angels' 1970 season.

--Keith Thursby




Police Crack Down on 'Mashers' in Park



Sept. 21, 1909, Hollingsworth

Cartoonist Edmund Waller "Ted" Gale draws W.I. Hollingsworth.

Sept. 21, 1909, Mashers


Sept. 21, 1909: Police crack down on mashers in Eastlake Park, which is now Lincoln Park. "These young rowdies attempt to flirt with every girl they see," said John Butler, sergeant of the traffic squad. "They make eyes at them and if the girls will not flirt, they make indecent remarks."

Found on EBay -- Elysian Park


Elysian Park EBay

This postcard of Elysian Park, stamped 1904, has been listed on EBay. The writer says: "This is one of the most beautiful of all of Los Angeles' many pretty parks." The road in the center is apparently North Broadway and to the right are the railroad yards. Bidding starts at $5.99.

Bathhouse Planned for Wilshire District



Sept. 14, 1919, Roman Baths  
Sept. 14, 1919: An elaborate bathhouse is planned for 4th Street between Vermont and New Hampshire.

 

View Larger Map

Sept. 14, 1919, Roman Baths


Dr. Elmer E. Stone plans a spa and athletic club. It's unclear from The Times' clips whether this was actually built. 

March 30, 1919, Schmidt Heights

March 30, 1919: Two new homes in Schmidt Heights.

Mexican Independence Day



Sept. 14, 1909, Victrola
Sept. 14, 1909: From the recording horn.

Sept. 14, 1909, Independence
Gen. Antonio Aguilar will preside at Chutes Park for the celebration of Mexican Independence Day.

Ignore Khrushchev, VFW Leader Says; Koufax Strikes Out 18!

Sept. 1, 1959, Cover

Sept. 1, 1959: Vice President Nixon addresses the VFW convention being held in Los Angeles ... VFW Commander in Chief John W. Mahan says of Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev's upcoming visit: "We ask Americans to ignore, with dignity, this man. There should be no demonstration of any sort. Frankly, we're unhappy that he is coming here." Bernard Abrams, national commander of the Jewish War Veterans, says: "Khrushchev comes to these shores with bloody hands."  Notice the plans for the $800-million monorail.

 
Sept. 1, 1959, North by Northwest

In the 1950s, The Times used to run brief digests of New York film reviews, such as this one of "North by Northwest."
 
Sept. 1, 1959, Jack Smith

Jack Smith writes: "All roads in the state of California are under construction ... Don't expect to find anyplace where there isn't already somebody else ... No matter how fast you drive, somebody will pass you like a cannonball."

Sept. 1, 1959, Sports Sandy Koufax struck out 18  to break the National League record and tie the major league record, leading the Dodgers past the Giants in front of nearly 83,000 fans at the Coliseum.

And he almost was overshadowed.

Wally Moon hit a three-run homer in the ninth to provide the difference in the 5-2 victory. Koufax and Jim Gilliam singled to set up the Moon shot.

As for Koufax, he said the Giants "must have been anxious. I never saw so many bad pitches swung at in one game." Even The Times' Frank Finch noted that was "a curious observation."

The victory pulled the Dodgers within a game of the first-place Giants.

--Keith Thursby



Pilgrimage Play Opens

May 31, 1920, Pilgrimage Play  

May 31, 1920: Preparations are underway in El Camino Real Canyon for "The National Pilgrimage Play."

Aug. 26, 1938, Nuestro Pueblo  

Aug. 26, 1938: Joe Seewerker and Charles Owens visit what was then Pilgrimage Play Theater for Nuestro Pueblo. The play wasn't presented in 1938 because the theater was being used for a production of "Faust."

July 31, 1939, Pilgrimage Play

July 31, 1939: Jesus cures a leper in a scene from "The Pilgrimage Play."

July 1, 1939, Pilgrimage Play
July 31, 1939, Pilgrimage Play

Until the early 1960s, when a legal ruling ended its government funding, "The Pilgrimage Play" was one of the more enduring fixtures in The Times' drama pages, along with "The Mission Play" and "The Drunkard."

Originally called "The National Pilgrimage Play" in hopes that people from across the U.S. would come to Los Angeles to see the annual production, the play was "transcribed from the Scriptures by Mrs. W. Yorke Stevenson, with assistance from Brander Matthews, Clayton Hamilton, Sheldon Cheney and Prof. Baker of Harvard," The Times said in 1920. 

The script consisted of 14 scenes, divided into a prologue, two acts and an epilogue. The original production was directed by Stevenson and H. Ellis Reed.

The play was presented every summer until a fire destroyed the original structure in 1929. After a two-year gap for construction what is now known as the John Anson Ford Amphitheatre in honor of the former county supervisor, production resumed, with another gap during World War II. In 1943, the property was deeded to Los Angeles County.

Construction of the Hollywood Freeway once again interrupted productions, which resumed in 1955 under John Arnold Ford, the son of John Anson Ford. 

In 1961, Atty. Gen. Stanley Mosk ruled that the play could not receive city or county funding on the principle of the separation of church and state. A privately funded production was given in 1964 and John Arnold Ford presented some scenes in 1978.

Nov. 4, 1978, Pilgrimage Play

Nov. 4, 1978: John Arnold Ford presents scenes from "The Pilgrimage Play." A movie version, partially shot at the amphitheater with some segments filmed on  leftover sets from "Joan of Arc," was released in 1949.

Found on EBay -- The Cyclone in Long Beach




Sept. 16, 1968, Cyclone

Sept. 16, 1968, the end of the ride for the Cyclone.
Cyclone Racer, Long Beach, EBay
This postcard of the Cyclone roller coaster at the Nu-Pike in Long Beach has been listed on EBay. The world's longest, fastest roller-coaster was torn down in 1968 to make way for the Queen Mary exhibit. Bidding starts at $3.50.

Artist's Notebook -- Pasadena Ice Skating Center



July 17, 2009, Pasadena Ice Skating Center
Pasadena Ice Skating Center by Marion Eisenmann, July 17, 2009.

Young skater Emma Linde puts on a show.

Los Angeles has had a hot spell for the last week so I gave Marion a list of alternatives to Travel Town, which has an old streetcar I think would be an interesting subject--except that it's outdoors. We settled on the Pasadena Ice Skating Center, which was a pleasant way to spend a hot Friday afternoon.

The rink was once a ballroom and it retains many grand features, including elaborate chandeliers and large windows, which make a peculiar contrast to a big Zamboni waltzing around as it smooths the ice for the skaters. 

I got there a bit early and waited at the entrance with a dozen or so youngsters, evidently from summer camp, who were eating their lunches in the shade and waiting for the center to open. I noticed one of the young girls zipping around on a pair of shoes that have wheels in the soles like roller skates but I didn't give it much thought.

Once they got on the ice, it was a different story. The boys slowly groped along the outside rail, mostly keeping their balance but occasionally falling and sometimes a bit hard.

In the middle of a slowly circling herd of kids was an astounding girl of 9 who put on a fantastic show in the center of the rink -- like a tiny ice princess in a little skirt and pink sweatshirt.

It turned out she was the girl with the roller shoes and she put on quite a show for us; the first time I saw her skating backward at a pretty good clip I could hardly believe it. She was working with a coach named Scott Carson, a 1973 national gold medalist, who was in an oversized bright red parka, and like an opera singer who is "marking" in rehearsal, he made slight hints of movements that she carried out in full gestures. We watched her go through all her turns and polish what was clearly the big finish of a routine she was rehearsing. If I didn't know better, I would have thought I was watching a miniature adult. 

We learned afterward that her name is Emma Linde and she was getting ready for a competition in Burbank. Carson told me later that she placed first in her group and I wasn't at all surprised.

The fate of skating in Pasadena remains uncertain. The rink is moving out next year (in fact, I had the mistaken impression that it was already closed) and is hoping to build a new home. The Pasadena City Council will discuss the future of a new skating rink at 4 p.m. July 27, More information is here>>>

And, yes, in case you're wondering, Marion took artistic liberties by leaving out the Plexiglas shield around the rink. I plan to have more of her artwork in the future. In the meantime, you can contact her here.

A Brutal Sport Hounded to Extinction



Dec. 12, 1897, Coursing

Coursing as depicted in The Times on Dec. 12, 1897.


"The rabbit dodged this way and that, squatted suddenly to the ground while the hound rushed past. Once, the dog's teeth sank in the hindquarters of the rabbit, jerked the little creature in full flight from the ground. But with a dying spasm, the rabbit freed himself and ran on.

"Again, the hound's teeth snapped and the fur could be seen tearing off in a fluff. With the awful terror and pain tearing at its heart, the rabbit went on. At last, he made the wrong turn and the hound closed in on it with a sickening crunch.

The rabbit was ground to death amid shrieks of agony. These cries of a rabbit sound appallingly like those of a tortured little child."

--The Times, April 24, 1905

Agricultural Park
Los Angeles Times file photo

One of the entrances to Agricultural Park in an undated photo.


"Dog coursing" was a sensationally popular pastime in Los Angeles that flourished in the 1890s despite repeated court rulings of animal cruelty and a personal campaign by the mayor after the police chief failed to close it down. The fight over coursing was so fierce that its supporters nearly derailed the city's annexation of USC and nearby Agricultural Park, where the races were held.
 
A variation of greyhound racing in which dogs chased a live jackrabbit over a fenced field of about 40 acres, coursing was finally stopped through the efforts of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and resulted in the arrest of several promoters, including an unrepentant E.J. "Lucky" Baldwin.

The races, which date to ancient times and were given a set of rules in Elizabethan England, were already underway elsewhere in California before being introduced to Los Angeles in the summer of 1897 by Francis D. Black, the manager of what is now Exposition Park. Coursing caught on quickly, The Times said, adding: "The people take to it with a vim that surpassed their enthusiasm for horse racing."

::

Jan. 1, 1898, Slipper

Jan. 1, 1898, the "slipper."

In a typical coursing match, a rabbit was released into a large open field that was tightly fenced. To give the rabbit what was considered a sporting chance, there was an inner enclosure with 20 to 40 "escapes" in which it could flee to safety from the dogs. At one end of the grounds was a grandstand and many stories noted that the finely dressed women spectators, rather than being reserved and delicate, were far more bloodthirsty than the men.

A man called a "slipper" held two competing greyhounds -- sometimes four -- on a leash, while the rabbit was given a head start of 60 yards to 80 yards. The dogs were released to chase the rabbit and trailed by a man on horseback who judged the race by assigning points based on when the dogs turned to follow the rabbit, when one dog passed the other and when a dog caught the prey. If the rabbit wasn't dead when the dogs were through, someone killed it by stepping on its skull.

Although The Times eventually opposed the races, the paper endorsed them at first: "Coursing as a sport is almost as old as the sport of falconry and there is no country on the civilized globe where it is not indulged in," it said in 1898.

In explaining the races to a novice audience in 1897, The Times said: "The two species are natural enemies, and, while the dogs kill the rabbits as a general conclusion to a race, there is nothing cruel in the sport. The hares are given 'way the best of the start,' and more than 40 escapes are provided for them into which they can run and find safety.

"As a matter of fact, the hares are jackrabbits, the pest of Southern California. Thousands and tens of thousands of the rabbits are killed every year by farmers, whose orchards and vineyards they are ruining, by driving the rabbits into a pen and beating them to death with clubs. Such work is slaughter, necessary slaughter, it is true, but slaughter none the less. Coursing is not.

"The rabbit is turned loose in the field and the dogs are turned loose after it. If the dogs are swifter than the rabbit, they catch and kill it, just as nature intended they should do, but the rabbit has a chance for its life never given it in a rabbit drive by the farmers club. There is nothing brutal in coursing."

Not only did The Times imply that the races were merely following natural law, a Thanksgiving story from 1897 said -- perhaps sarcastically -- that the rabbits relished their role.

 "At Agricultural Park the winners in the coursing matches thanked an ever-watchful providence for bestowing upon mankind the gift of good dogs, sound in wind and speedy in the legs; the dogs were duly grateful for the chance to use those legs, and the unfortunate jackrabbits doubtless rejoiced over such an excellent opportunity to cultivate the true martyr spirit in yielding up their wretched little lives for the delectation of civilized humanity."

::

Jan. 1, 1898, Rabbits

Jan. 1, 1898, the rabbit enclosure at Agricultural Park.

If the races were intended to be thrilling spectacles of majestic sport, they often fell short. Although promoters insisted that the rabbits were crop-destroying vermin preying on local farmers, the animals were actually imported from Kern County. And after being kept in dark cages for days before the race, the suddenly freed rabbits frequently sat trembling and frozen in fear, unresponsive to race course employees' efforts to frighten them into running. Sometimes an injured rabbit was mistaken for dead and had more dogs set on it when it sprang to life and started running again.  

As for what became of the dead rabbits, The Times explained that some were sold to a downtown meat market for 75 cents a dozen, others were cooked for the dogs and "one or two persons about the park have enjoyed a rabbit stew for breakfast every Monday morning for the last year."

The dogs did not fare much better. Races sometimes had to be rerun because the greyhounds didn't see their prey. A winning dog might run three races in an hour, get a 30-minute rest, and then race again. One Times story mentions a dog that was lame and ran on three legs. Another story tells of an 11-year-old greyhound that won after being dosed with cocaine.

Coursing at Agricultural Park was an immediate sensation and within four months, promoters were reporting crowds of 2,500. Trolley service on the two lines to the park was increased to a capacity of 2,000 people an hour with streetcars leaving for the park every five minutes.

For two years, the enterprise flourished -- helped by "nickel in the slot machines" --  and then Black ran into the first hint of the problems that lay ahead.

Along with the races at Agricultural Park, Black ran a gambling operation at 143 S. Broadway that accepted bets on races in New Orleans, Oakland and elsewhere. When authorities closed him down in 1899, Black moved his operation beyond the city limits to the park, but he got in trouble with the American Turf Congress which prohibited off-track betting and said the races were illegal.  

Jan. 1, 1898, Greyound

Jan. 1, 1898: Trip, owned by Oscar H. Hinters, one of the fleetest hounds on the course.


Then came a more serious complication: Annexation.

Los Angeles was continually expanding in this era and an election campaign was underway to add USC to the city. Annexation would also include Agricultural Park, which would mean an end to the dog races and gambling.

In an attempt to tilt the election with a tactic called "colonizing," Black hired about 100 men on the pretense of resurfacing the grounds and housed them in tents at the park, making them eligible to vote on annexation. On May 24, 1899, annexation of USC passed by less than 10%, with a close vote in the university district, 139 to 116.

The next month, Black's wife went to the park and tried to shoot his personal secretary, William Taylor, who was evidently keeping Black away from home. Mrs. Black missed her target and someone grabbed her arm before she could fire again as Taylor fled. "To those who led her away she expressed her regret at the failure of her effort," The Times said. She was never charged.

The next day, Black and the park's "slipper" were arrested on charges of animal cruelty by a newly appointed humane officer, and the trial was held in Gardena.  

Jan. 1, 1898, F.D. Black The previous officer had seen nothing cruel about coursing, but his successor had made a study of the operation by interviewing Black two weeks earlier while posing as a gambling entrepreneur from Santa Barbara who wanted to set up similar races.

Black's trial ended in a hung jury, so new animal cruelty charges were filed over another race in an attempt to put the case under the jurisdiction of a court in Los Angeles. 

On June 20, 1899, Justice James of the Township Court ruled that the races were illegal under state law, saying: "The coursing club is not conducted for the purpose of destroying hares because they are dangerous to crops when at large. The chase is had for the purpose of furnishing an object of pursuit to the hounds, whereby the spectators find amusement and recreation and the managers reap financial gain."

Black was fined $10 and resumed the races pending an appeal.

In July, The Times noted that gambling and coursing had continued at Agricultural Park even though it was now part of the city. A furious Mayor Fred Eaton had ordered Police Chief J.M. Glass to end the races at once and when those efforts failed, despite Black's arrest, Eaton vowed to lead a squadron of police officers to the park on the Fourth of July and personally stop the races by arresting everyone and seizing all the rabbits.

"If coursing can be run there without rabbits, he wants to see how it is done," The Times said.  
 
But Black was tired of the legal battles, complaining to reporters: "The town has been given over to the longhairs, so what's the use of trying to do business?" His conviction was upheld on appeal and the case was held as a precedent in state law.

::

Lucky Baldwin
Los Angeles Times file photo

E.J. "Lucky" Baldwin in an undated photograph.


With racing shut down at Agricultural Park, enthusiasts looked for another city that might be more friendly to coursing. Santa Monica rebuffed attempts to begin races there, and in 1900, coursing began on what The Times described as open land 10 or 12 miles east of Long Beach near the beet fields of the Los Alamitos sugar factory.

By now, popular opinion was turning against coursing, with opposition by The Times not only in news stories, but in letters to the editor:

"It is a peculiar cry that the dying rabbit utters. It is the nearest to the wail of a young child of any known sound. And how men that are fathers and women that are mothers can hear these and at the same time rise to applaud the fierce dogs that are pulling and crunching the quivering bodies from which these wails and moans come is a question that staggers a man that has not had all the pity and compassion frozen out of his soul.

"The women who habitually attend these scenes can sit and witness these performances without a breath of protest. They grin and jest about 'the long-haired and old women,' referring to those who believe coursing is cruel, and cruelty under the state's laws in punishable. And when a hound is more fierce than others they rise with shrieks and clap their hands in applause."

The races continued infrequently without legal interference until March 1905, when E.J. "Lucky" Baldwin, whom The Times called "the despot of Arcadia," announced plans to stage them.

A month later, a brawl broke out at Baldwin's coursing grounds over an attempt to stop the races. Three agents of the SPCA, one of them a deputy sheriff, planned to halt coursing while Jack Birdie, a Baldwin enforcer who was also a deputy, tried to handcuff one of them. Overpowered, Birdie gave up and soon had his deputy's badge confiscated by the sheriff.

Known throughout his life as a man who loved a fight, Baldwin was angry over being arrested and outraged that he was taken to court in Pasadena rather than Arcadia, where he had more influence. The Times said: "Upon entering the courtroom 'Lucky' bragged aloud of his arrest, declaring that it was just what he had been looking for and wanting for a long time past. He declares that he will fight the case to the bitter end and will not stop short of the Supreme Court, if it takes the biggest part of his millions."

"I want every sign of a rabbit on my ranch killed off," Baldwin said. "They are the worst pest I have to contend with and I have a number. My dogs are out chasing them every night and I intend to keep it up till I get every rabbit off my fields. They have caused me to lose thousands of dollars in grain and grass each year."

April 24, 1905, Illustration

Stylishly arrayed woman applauds bloody killing of rabbit at Arcadia coursing event, April 24, 1905.


Baldwin and his seven co-defendants were released on bail and the case lay dormant. After repeated inquiries, The Times learned that all charges were dropped because the SPCA didn't want to pursue the case, citing the expense to the county of fighting Baldwin and the defendants' promise that coursing would not resume.

In July, Baldwin's coursing grounds were turned into a baseball field, perhaps as a ruse because two months later, word leaked out that rabbit cages had been seen at the park and the dog kennels had been prepared for the greyhounds.

Races were held once or twice more in Arcadia before the district attorney's office took up the fight at the SPCA's request in November 1905.

Dist. Atty. John D. Fredericks rejected promoters' pleas that he permit them run a few final races as "test cases." The Times said: "The only answer he has made to them is that coursing has stopped in this county; the first man who turns loose a dog in the trail of a rabbit will be put in jail."

Postscripts: Black died in Hong Kong in 1905 and Baldwin died at his ranch in 1909. The Arcadia coursing park was sold in 1907. In 1910, nearly all the buildings at Agricultural Park were torn down as 104 acres, including the coursing field, were cleared for a state exposition building and a county historical museum and art gallery.
 

Found on EBay -- Polytechnic High School


Polytechnic High, Library  

A lot of 12 postcards, including Polytechnic High School, top left, and the library, bottom left, has been listed on EBay. Other postcards include Angels Flight, Bullock's downtown, the fountain at what is now Pershing Square, the alligator farm and the Plaza Church.  Bidding starts at $9.99.

Found on EBay -- Historic Venice


Venice Bathhouse Ebay

This 1908 postcard showing the bath house and lagoon in Venice has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $7.95.
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