2 Too Cool!
Sunday, February 9, 2014
No cable cars in SF?
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Happy New Year!
Well, here comes 2014. Amazing!
These pics are from one of my many strolls in San Francisco. The film is pretty much trashed due to poor handling on my part over the years, but the images are still interesting (at least to me!).
I'm estimating this to be New Year's Eve day, about 1969 or 1970. That was the day people in the financial district of SF threw out all their old calendars (and just about anything else paper!). I decided I wanted to see it, so took the bus over and walked around. I probably took more pictures, but this little strip turned up recently, so here they are!
These pics are from one of my many strolls in San Francisco. The film is pretty much trashed due to poor handling on my part over the years, but the images are still interesting (at least to me!).
I'm estimating this to be New Year's Eve day, about 1969 or 1970. That was the day people in the financial district of SF threw out all their old calendars (and just about anything else paper!). I decided I wanted to see it, so took the bus over and walked around. I probably took more pictures, but this little strip turned up recently, so here they are!
Wednesday, November 27, 2013
Saturday, July 27, 2013
Marilyn Monroe and the Drones
My dad spent a couple of years in the South Pacific during World War II. He never really elaborated on it, but said he and his crew maintained and flew remote control airplanes used for target practice.
I never quite understood what that was all about - until I found an almost forgotten roll of black & white negatives. I am in the process of scanning THOUSANDS of old family negatives, and when I scanned these, suddenly the whole thing got a lot clearer.
Then we ran across an internet story with a couple of pictures of a woman assembling these radiodrones during WWII, in a factory in Van Nuys CA. British actor Reginald Denny had started a company making these large scale flying models, and the Army Air Force ordered many for training purposes. One of the women working in the factory was tagged to pose for some photos - the photographer suggested she should do some modelling, which she did. She also bleached her hair, and changed her name - to Marilyn Monroe.
The drones my dad photographed in the South Pacific are the same ones in the Marilyn pictures, and were indeed the first "drones" used in a war-time setting!
How my dad would have LOVED knowing that he had a connection to Marilyn Monroe!
I never quite understood what that was all about - until I found an almost forgotten roll of black & white negatives. I am in the process of scanning THOUSANDS of old family negatives, and when I scanned these, suddenly the whole thing got a lot clearer.
Then we ran across an internet story with a couple of pictures of a woman assembling these radiodrones during WWII, in a factory in Van Nuys CA. British actor Reginald Denny had started a company making these large scale flying models, and the Army Air Force ordered many for training purposes. One of the women working in the factory was tagged to pose for some photos - the photographer suggested she should do some modelling, which she did. She also bleached her hair, and changed her name - to Marilyn Monroe.
The drones my dad photographed in the South Pacific are the same ones in the Marilyn pictures, and were indeed the first "drones" used in a war-time setting!
How my dad would have LOVED knowing that he had a connection to Marilyn Monroe!
Thursday, July 4, 2013
Railway Tunnel - STOP - Keep Out
For many years, this sign was posted at the West Portal entrance to the Twin Peaks streetcar tunnel in San Francisco. It didn't always work - there were many, many times the tunnel was closed due to people driving in and getting stuck on the tracks!
This sign has been dragged around all over the place since I rescued it from a trash pile back in 1973. I'm sure of the exact date, but the glass marble reflectors and the California Automobile Association bug on the bottom make me think probably late 1920s.
There are lots of initials and names carved on the back - are any of them yours?
Friday, June 14, 2013
Post Cards 1
I have quite a few old postcards, scattered here and there! Many years ago I stuck several of them into an old oak display unit from the old 16th Street Southern Pacific station in Oakland CA. The unit was used for various tax tables, some of which were from the '20s and '30s, stuck between two pieces of glass about 6 inches wide, 20 inches tall. After spending about an hour trying to remember how to get them out, I am starting to scan them! Enjoy!
The card above was obviously a push for people to get authorization (and money) from Congress for the Panama Pacific Exposition. Needless to say, the campaign was successful, as the card below
is one of the very impressive buildings built for the Exposition (and torn down shortly after).
Thursday, June 6, 2013
Panama Pacific International Exhibition, Part 1
This is my grandmother's season ticket to the Panama Pacific Exhibition in San Francisco, 1915.
She was 22 in 1915, with three children, all boys. Her oldest son was born in 1913, my father and his twin brother were born in November of 1915. She told stories of pushing the twins around the fair in their double stroller!
There are no tickets out of this book, but most of the tickets from my grandfather's book were used. Hopefully this post will be followed in the near future with a scan of my grandfather's book, too, along with other items from the PPIE.
She was 22 in 1915, with three children, all boys. Her oldest son was born in 1913, my father and his twin brother were born in November of 1915. She told stories of pushing the twins around the fair in their double stroller!
There are no tickets out of this book, but most of the tickets from my grandfather's book were used. Hopefully this post will be followed in the near future with a scan of my grandfather's book, too, along with other items from the PPIE.
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