L.A. Stories: Community Spotlight

Landmark Sites

Although Los Angeles is ever-evolving and shifting the world around it, sites, landmarks, photos and postcards remind us of what the city used to be. Sometimes they are all that remain. Whether a site was once a bee ranch, a homestead, sanitorium, or the Port of Los Angeles, the places shared here set the stage for the eventual growth, change, and expansion documenting the passage of time. Before the Santa Monica Pier was developed, Angelenos enjoyed the seaside at Pacific Ocean Park, built to rival Disneyland. After falling into disrepair, it was demolished. Generations of Angelenos traversed the iconic Sixth Street Bridge linking separate parts of the city. Once a major engineering feat but now demolished due to structural weaknesses, we can still see it on screen in movies and TV shows. The LA region was a military outpost long before it was a metropolis, as seen in the remains of Fort Drum from the Civil War era and Fort Moore from the Mexican-American War. And the old Pueblo de Los Angeles reminds us of the many people who have called this city home - Native American communities, Mexican peoples and Spanish colonial settlers. Despite the renewal and change inherent in the region, there is also room for remembering and honoring the past.

This page has paths:

  1. Places Curtis Fletcher

Contents of this path:

  1. Nicholsons Canyon, Lincolns Bee ranch
  2. Apiary at Sierra Madre Villa, San Gabriel
  3. Port of Los Angeles 1913-1917
  4. View of Hancock ranch house, lake pit in foreground and extended landscape the distance. (RLB-30-3)
  5. Bliss Ranch
  6. Bliss family farmhouse
  7. Casa Verdugo
  8. Photograph of Olive View Sanatorium shortly after its opening
  9. Postcard of the Women’s Wards at Olive View Sanatorium
  10. January 1940 issue of the Olive View patient newsletter Olive View Points
  11. The Sixth Street Bridge Series #0050
  12. The Sixth Street Bridge Series #0569
  13. The Sixth Street Bridge Series #1008
  14. "View From the Fort (Moore)"
  15. View of Pacific Ocean Park under construction from the west end of Ocean Park Pier
  16. Civil War Powder Magazine, Wilmington, California
  17. "On Rather Hard Terms" - Letter from F.P.F. Temple to William Workman, 20 November 1875.
  18. "On Rather Hard Terms" - A stereoscopic photograph of the Temple Block, ca. 1870
  19. "On Rather Hard Terms" - William Workman's passbook