Jul 18, 2016
Bunker Hill LA then and Now
'Seventy Years of Los Angeles [Bunker Hill], Then and Now' See what once was in Los Angeles and how it compares to today.
Jul 18, 2016
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Sep 01, 2008
Sep 01, 2008
- Dave D
221 Olive Street Home History
Residence – 221 South Olive Street by Christina Rice The house that stood at 221 South Olive may not have been as ornate as some of its Bunker Hill neighbors, but unlike the homes of Margaret Crocker and L.J. Rose, the residence on Olive survived from the earliest days of the neighborhood until the bitter end. Set back from the street, up to two small sets of stairs, and surrounded by foliage, the fading Victorian beauty was a popular subject of the photographers who documented the Hill in its waning years. The mansion was built in 1887 by Herman F. Baer, a real estate developer who was responsible for a number of residences in the area. The original address of the Baer home was 117 South Olive, but soon became 221 South Olive due to further development of the area and an 1889 ordinance renumbering street addresses. When the property was surveyed prior to its demolition, the American Institute of Architects noted that the house bore a striking resemblance to the design style of local architects Samuel and Joseph C. Newson. By 1891, Baer was out and the Doran family was in. John J. Doran operated a stationery shop on Main Street which also provided the city with school supplies, fine pictures, candles, vegetable & olive oil, magazines, and well-assorted stock of Catholic books. Doran passed away in 1892, but his widow Mary, their son, and three daughters continued to live on Olive and threw parties worthy of the society pages. The Dorans left Olive Street around 1905, selling the property to R.A. Fowler who unloaded it a couple of years later for $26,500 (over half a million in today’s dollars). By this time, the residence had been converted into a boarding house. Compare to many boarding houses in the neighborhood, the Baer/Doran house witnessed very little excitement. In 1926, resident Albert V. Herndon bought a train ticket to Kansas to visit his ailing father and was never heard from again. On a less morbid note, border Thorsten Anderson left his Olive Street room in 1930 on Labor Day to go to the Plaza for a pro-Communist demonstration. He and seventeen other participants spent the night in the slammer when they were arrested for disturbing the peace. In keeping with the public disturbance theme, resident James C McLean was hauled out of his room and arrested in December 1934. At that time, the City was in the midst of a transportation strike and McLean was accused of setting a streetcar at Third and Bixel on fire. Though he denied being responsible for the incident, the burns on his hands made the police think otherwise. While the neighborhood continued its downward decline, the house on Olive street maintained its peaceful existence. By 1939, the house had been divided up into fourteen different residences. According to the WPA household census, boarders paid from six to twenty dollars a month in rent and had lived in the house for a month up to sixteen years. Unlike many of the Victorian mansions getting on in their years, the Olive house was in decent condition, only requiring minor repairs. The picturesque mansion house survived without incident into the mid-1960s. In 1964, the Community Redevelopment Agency purchased the property from owner Louis Swiatel in order to demolish it. After fifty-seven years, the house at 221 South Olive Street was no more.
221 Olive Street Home History
Residence – 221 South Olive Street by Christina Rice The house that stood at 221 South Olive may not have been as ornate as some of its Bunker Hill neighbors, but unlike the homes of Margaret Crocker and L.J. Rose, the residence on Olive survived from the earliest days of the neighborhood until the bitter end. Set back from the street, up to two small sets of stairs, and surrounded by foliage, the fading Victorian beauty was a popular subject of the photographers who documented the Hill in its waning years. The mansion was built in 1887 by Herman F. Baer, a real estate developer who was responsible for a number of residences in the area. The original address of the Baer home was 117 South Olive, but soon became 221 South Olive due to further development of the area and an 1889 ordinance renumbering street addresses. When the property was surveyed prior to its demolition, the American Institute of Architects noted that the house bore a striking resemblance to the design style of local architects Samuel and Joseph C. Newson. By 1891, Baer was out and the Doran family was in. John J. Doran operated a stationery shop on Main Street which also provided the city with school supplies, fine pictures, candles, vegetable & olive oil, magazines, and well-assorted stock of Catholic books. Doran passed away in 1892, but his widow Mary, their son, and three daughters continued to live on Olive and threw parties worthy of the society pages. The Dorans left Olive Street around 1905, selling the property to R.A. Fowler who unloaded it a couple of years later for $26,500 (over half a million in today’s dollars). By this time, the residence had been converted into a boarding house. Compare to many boarding houses in the neighborhood, the Baer/Doran house witnessed very little excitement. In 1926, resident Albert V. Herndon bought a train ticket to Kansas to visit his ailing father and was never heard from again. On a less morbid note, border Thorsten Anderson left his Olive Street room in 1930 on Labor Day to go to the Plaza for a pro-Communist demonstration. He and seventeen other participants spent the night in the slammer when they were arrested for disturbing the peace. In keeping with the public disturbance theme, resident James C McLean was hauled out of his room and arrested in December 1934. At that time, the City was in the midst of a transportation strike and McLean was accused of setting a streetcar at Third and Bixel on fire. Though he denied being responsible for the incident, the burns on his hands made the police think otherwise. While the neighborhood continued its downward decline, the house on Olive street maintained its peaceful existence. By 1939, the house had been divided up into fourteen different residences. According to the WPA household census, boarders paid from six to twenty dollars a month in rent and had lived in the house for a month up to sixteen years. Unlike many of the Victorian mansions getting on in their years, the Olive house was in decent condition, only requiring minor repairs. The picturesque mansion house survived without incident into the mid-1960s. In 1964, the Community Redevelopment Agency purchased the property from owner Louis Swiatel in order to demolish it. After fifty-seven years, the house at 221 South Olive Street was no more.
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Jan 04, 2007
Jan 04, 2007
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Jul 27, 1961
Jul 27, 1961
- Amanda Zielike
The last old Bunker Hill mansion on Olive Street in LA
From Huntington Digital Library: The last old Bunker Hill mansion on Olive Street. Last Victorian mansion on Olive Street. Stairs lead up to the one story wood frame house with a front porch and basement. Low wall of fieldstone around the front yard. It was converted to a boarding house later on. Historical Notes: 221 South Olive Street. Built in 1887 by real estate developer Herman F. Baer. Possibly designed by Samuel and Joseph C. Newsom. Demolished in 1964. Subjects Bunker Hill (Los Angeles, Calif.) Architecture, Victorian -- California -- Los Angeles. Housing -- California. Palmer Conner Collection of Color Slides of Los Angeles, 1950 - 1970 Catalog Link - See: https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8vm4gjz/ Digital Collection Photographs, Huntington Digital Library Cataloging Notes: Historical notes supplied by Nathan Marsak, 2010.; Unique Digital Identifier: 408064 IIIF Manifest https://hdl.huntington.org/iiif/info/p15150coll2/6283/manifest.json IIIF Image https://hdl.huntington.org/digital/iiif/p15150coll2/6283/full/full/0/default.jpg
The last old Bunker Hill mansion on Olive Street in LA
From Huntington Digital Library: The last old Bunker Hill mansion on Olive Street. Last Victorian mansion on Olive Street. Stairs lead up to the one story wood frame house with a front porch and basement. Low wall of fieldstone around the front yard. It was converted to a boarding house later on. Historical Notes: 221 South Olive Street. Built in 1887 by real estate developer Herman F. Baer. Possibly designed by Samuel and Joseph C. Newsom. Demolished in 1964. Subjects Bunker Hill (Los Angeles, Calif.) Architecture, Victorian -- California -- Los Angeles. Housing -- California. Palmer Conner Collection of Color Slides of Los Angeles, 1950 - 1970 Catalog Link - See: https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8vm4gjz/ Digital Collection Photographs, Huntington Digital Library Cataloging Notes: Historical notes supplied by Nathan Marsak, 2010.; Unique Digital Identifier: 408064 IIIF Manifest https://hdl.huntington.org/iiif/info/p15150coll2/6283/manifest.json IIIF Image https://hdl.huntington.org/digital/iiif/p15150coll2/6283/full/full/0/default.jpg
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- Marley Zielike
221 South Olive St (House), Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, CA
Bunker Hill District was developed during the first waves of real-estate speculation and boom that came with the extension of Southern Pacific Railroad to Los Angeles in 1876, and the construction of the Santa Fe Railroad, completed in 1886; and came to an urgent abrupt recession with the bursting of the bubble in 1888. Large mansions of the wealthy, designed in the flamboyant styles that were the fashion of the time, were constructed on Bunker Hill, giving way in the 90s to homes for the professional class, and finally, after 1900, to residential hotels and apartment buildings...
221 South Olive St (House), Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, CA
Bunker Hill District was developed during the first waves of real-estate speculation and boom that came with the extension of Southern Pacific Railroad to Los Angeles in 1876, and the construction of the Santa Fe Railroad, completed in 1886; and came to an urgent abrupt recession with the bursting of the bubble in 1888. Large mansions of the wealthy, designed in the flamboyant styles that were the fashion of the time, were constructed on Bunker Hill, giving way in the 90s to homes for the professional class, and finally, after 1900, to residential hotels and apartment buildings...
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