Showing posts with label 1955. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1955. Show all posts

10/19/13

DONALD G. SCHNABEL


I can't be certain, but I think most of the Kodachrome slides I purchased from Betty Schnabel's estate were taken by her father, Donald G. Schnabel. However, this one of Mr. Schnabel on the tarmac at the Las Vegas airport in 1955 was perhaps taken by Betty.


Click on image to see it larger.
________________________________________________

To find out about The Last Unicorn Screening Tour click here or on the link in the left column.

9/11/13

DISNEYLAND in November 1955


The first time I went to Disneyland it had only been open for a few weeks. There was a lot of area still under construction, lots of dirt. Didn't matter to me because I was entranced.



The person that took this vintage snapshot visited a few months after I did. This shot was taken in November 1955.

9/10/13

MOTHER, 1955


On the slide is written the type of camera used for this shot and "Mother 1955."


Click on image to see it larger.

9/5/13

Fremont Street in LAS VEGAS 1955


Another slide purchased at the estate sale several weeks ago.


Click on image to see it larger.

This was taken in 1955 on Fremont Street.
Fremont Street dates back to 1905, when Las Vegas itself was founded. Fremont Street was the first paved street in Las Vegas in 1925 and received the city's first traffic light in 1931. Fremont Street also carried the shields of U.S. 95, U.S. 93, and U.S. 466 before the construction of the interstates.
While gambling was well established prior to being legalized, the Northern Club in 1931 received one of the first 6 gambling licenses issued in Nevada and the first one for Fremont Street. (SOURCE: Wikipedia)
In the distance you can see one of the first big time casinos along the Strip called the Golden Nugget which still exists.


Click on image to see it larger.

A bit of history about the Golden Nugget.
Desperate to lure people to the state, Nevada legislators legalized gambling in 1931. Even so, Las Vegas remained a dusty saloon town full of small-time gambling operations. Guy McAfee embodied the casino owner of his day.

The Captain

McAfee, known around town as "the Captain," served for years as commander of the Los Angeles Police Department vice squad. While heading the vice squad, McAfee simultaneously pursued a profitable life in the underground. He owned saloons and brothels and had ties to organized crime.

In the 1920s and early 30s, while his wife worked as a high-profile Hollywood madam, McAfee operated a busy and lucrative circuit of gambling houses. His connections with mobsters and position with the L.A.P.D. proved invaluable, making him privy to inside information and especially lucky in his ability to stay one step ahead of raids.

Bowron Cleans Up L.A.
But in the late 1930s, Judge Fletcher Bowron was elected as the new mayor of Los Angeles. Bowron had campaigned heavily on a platform pledging to clean up Los Angeles' sordid underworld that had been allowed to flourish for the last two decades. Upon his election, Bowron lived up to his promises and began upending longstanding narcotic, prostitution and gambling operations like McAfee's.

As soon as the extent of the police commander's outfit was discovered, McAfee was forced to resign his post and, facing possible legal action, flee the city. Lured both by Las Vegas' proximity to Los Angeles and its permissiveness, McAfee arrived in Las Vegas in 1938.

McAfee Arrives on Highway 91
Eager to pick up his business career where he had left off, the next year, McAfee bought the Pair-O-Dice Club on Highway 91 from owners Frank and Angelina Detra (John Detra, son of the owners, remembers Al Capone visiting his parents, possibly planning to establish operations in Vegas before he was jailed). McAfee renamed the club the "91 Club" (later, it would become part of the Last Frontier), and ever the opportunist, delayed the club's grand opening to coincide with Clark Gable and Ria Langham Clark's infamous divorce in March 1939. McAfee's tie-in with the immense publicity garnered by the Gables' divorce was a public relations coup.

McAfee would continue to build up his interests, arguably the most famous of which was his casino, the Golden Nugget. Upon its completion in 1946, the Golden Nugget was touted as the world's largest casino. Eventually, the Golden Nugget would fall under the ownership of another Las Vegas casino owner, Steve Wynn. (SOURCE: PBS/American Experience)
The question is, how many of these other businesses still exist along the strip?

8/15/13

SQUARE SALLY with an Alley


If Sponge Bob Square Pants can be the host of a kids tv show why not an apartment building? What about Square Sally with an Alley?


Click on image to see it larger.

This fetching young lady with the antennae boldly sticking up from the top of her head just screams out for a theme song. Make sure it's suitable for 1955.

8/14/13

Dave and Pat from GLENDALE, CALIFORNIA in 1955


A string of pearls and a man were about all you needed in the 1950s...or so I've been told.


Click on image to see it larger.

8/13/13

DRESS FOR SUCCESS on a flight in 1955


Next time you're on a plane take a look at the people sitting around you. For that matter, take a look at yourself. How are you and your fellow travelers dressed?


Click on image to see it larger.

Now take a moment and imagine it's 1955. Those flip-flops worn by the guy in the shorts and worn-out stained Megadeath t-shirt would never have made it onto a flight. Is this a good or bad thing?

8/11/13

Waiting to TAKE FLIGHT from San Francisco in 1955


Another Kodachrome shot from 1955. This has the caption "Chas. Perkins at Mills Field in San Francisco. Nov 1955."


Click on image to see it larger.

Mills Field is what the San Francisco airport was called when it was first established in 1927. Why this photographer was still calling it Mills Field in 1955 has me confused.
The airport opened on May 7, 1927 on 150 acres (61 ha) of cow pasture. The land was leased from Ogden L. Mills who had leased it from his grandfather Darius O. Mills. It was named Mills Field Municipal Airport until 1931, when it became San Francisco Municipal Airport. "Municipal" was replaced by "International" in 1955. (SOURCE: Wikipedia)

8/10/13

EDDIE in Oakland, California in 1955





Click on images to see them larger.

To see Eddie in his car in 1955 click here.

3/3/10

Brownie HAWKEYE CAMERAS and vernacular photography


For many of us the Kodak Brownie Hawkeye Camera is the first camera we ever used. The Hawkeye was first introduced by Kodak in September 1950 with an original list price of $6.95. I always remember this camera being around the house. It was a mysterious plastic box that I loved to hold and look through, pretending to push the shutter, capturing visual moments.

My folks first allowed me to use the Brownie on an outing to Ft. DeRussy at Waikiki. We were on a picnic with my best friend and her family. Somewhere I think I still have the blurred pictures I took that day, but I can't find them. I also have a photo of myself using the camera at my grandmother's house in Pennsylvania the first summer after we'd moved back to the mainland. Again, I know it's around somewhere and had it just a few months ago. I remember putting it away for safe keeping. Yeah, well, now I don't know where I put it. I do however have this photo of a complete stranger with her Brownie Hawkeye taken in 1955. That's all it says on the back, 1955.

I also have the small pamphlet (shown below) that came with the camera. When you consider how easy point-and-shoot cameras are to use these days, just the mere fact that you had to load film into one of these little boxes would confuse kids today.

To see more interesting facts and memories people have of their Brownie cameras go to the Kodak site and then click on "View Story." Well worth the little bit of time it takes to view the history of the different Brownie cameras.

How many vernacular photographs in your collection were taken with one of these?

Brownie Hawkeye 1_tatteredandlost
Brownie Hawkeye 2_tatteredandlost
Brownie Hawkeye 3_tatteredandlost
Brownie Hawkeye 4_tatteredandlost
Brownie Hawkeye 5_tatteredandlost
Brownie Hawkeye 6_tatteredandlost
Click on any of the images to see them larger.