There are ghosts in my neighborhood. They’re invisible, but they’re everywhere, all around. Everyday I walk right through bunches of them – I even drive my car through them. And, as I live in an old house, I know that their ghost furniture fills my rooms... their vaporous ghost clothing hangs in the closet with my shirts and jeans.
My favorite thing about living in one of the oldest neighborhoods in Los Angeles is that the past lies beneath a wax paper-thin overlay of the present. I wonder especially about those long-gone citizens who once occupied our space. They were certainly different – if you doubt it, look at what they were wearing on a summer day in 1909! – but these strange people breathed the same air we’re breathing now.
I enjoy looking for any connection between our time and theirs. My friends wearily endure conversations with me hung on hypothetical musings, such as: “If an Angelino of 1929 were to suddenly quantum leap into 2009, don’t you think it’s neat that he or she would still be able to give you directions from South Pasadena to the Hollywood Bowl?”
This photo from 1909 depicts the then-brand-new electric incline railway that once lifted residents and visitors to the summit of Mount Washington in Los Angeles. The hillside streets were too steep for most automobiles of the period to climb without overheating, so a cablecar system run by a 40-horse power induction motor (built by Westinghouse) was installed.
That's all gone now.
My current home is near the top of Mt Washington, and several times a week I jog down this same street to catch the Metro Rail at the bottom of the hill. As I hike back up, panting, I sometimes imagine I'm being passed by one of the iron cars of the Los Angeles and Mount Washington Railway. Inside, the passengers in their colorless hats and collars sit on wooden benches gazing out at the passing front yards. And as they go by, I realize not one of them can see me.
Absolutely stunning.
ReplyDeleteThis is "hauntingly" beautiful. I very much enjoyed reading the entry on Dinosaurs and Robots. And I also enjoy your Flickr photographs and always look forward to your latest. Thanks and thanks.
ReplyDeleteVery cool job of matching up the photos! I am fascinated by old Los Angeles, what a paradise. My grandmother often told me of how much she loved moving here in 1928 when she married my grandpa. Their home in Westwood (we have photos) is surrounded by plenty of nothin'. Their next home in Encino had nothing but empty lots around them, and across Ventura Boulevard it was orange groves as far as the eye could see. Thanks Kevin!
ReplyDeleteThanks Kevin... This is so way cool!!!
ReplyDeleteI love this type of stuff...thanks Kevin...just brilliant!
ReplyDeleteopposite this view, the train depot is still standing, now as a small home.
ReplyDeleteThis photo is magnificent and your accompanying story was wonderful. May I share this on Facebook with your name as the artist?
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