Showing posts with label Mildred's album. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mildred's album. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 27, 2016
Mildred Takes A Trip 5
Well, I did warn people that the album itself was more interesting than the handful of photos.
The top photo is of Coolidge Dam on the Gila River. Its reservoir, used for down stream irrigation, is on the San Carlos Indian Reservation, so it's no surprise that the dam was built, and is owned by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Near as I can tell, the Apaches don't get a lot of benefit from Lake Coolidge. There are boating and fishing concessions, but farm use seems to be off reservation. When the dam was dedicated, in 1930, by President Coolidge, the water had yet to back up and fill the reservoir. As Coolidge made his speech, with nothing but grass were the lake now sits, Will Rogers remarked, "If it were my dam, I'd mow it."
The second photo looks like a return to the Imperial Dunes in California.
I wonder if Mildred, with little more than a single roll of film from her trip, had a reason for the order of photos in her little album, or did she just paste them in as they came out of the envelope from the film lab?
I guess it's not necessary since I posted the album without interruption, but hey, click on Mildred's album to bring up the whole lot.
Sunday, September 25, 2016
Mildred Takes A Trip 4
Well, ramblin' Mildred is on the road again. The top photo is pretty obvious. It's the Hollywood Bowl. Over the years, there have been more than a few renovations to the shell, I've been doing some research and I'm thinking that this particular photo is from either 1928 or 29. Then, it's back to Arizona, note the saguaro cactus. And, I'm not sure where, but those steps with maybe Mildred to the right, look familiar to me. I'm not 100% sure, but I think I've stood at that exact spot.
You guessed it, click on Mildred's album.
Labels:
Arizona,
california,
Hollywood,
Hollywood Bowl,
Los Angeles,
Mildred's album,
photo album,
steps,
theater
Friday, September 23, 2016
Mildred Takes A Trip 3
It doesn't look like Mildred keeps her album in a nice, easy to follow format. In our first two posts, she bounced around from California, to Arizona, and back to California again. Her rambling ways continue with this post. The top photo makes some sense if she was, in fact, going between Arizona and the Pacific fleet at San Diego. To me, it looks a lot like the Imperial sand dunes, in California, right up against the Mexican border. The Algodones Dunes, to use the proper name, is a large sandy area that's pretty much on a straight line between Phoenix and San Diego. When these pictures were taken, I-80 wasn't even a dream in some road planers eye. There were a couple of recently paved roads (They replaced old fashioned plank roads.) and a Southern Pacific rail line that carried both freight and passengers. So why am I linking the Pacific coast and Phoenix? Well, there's no coast in Arizona, and the Pacific is the closest ocean, and that bottom photo, well that location I recognize. It's Roosevelt Dam (Theodore, not Franklin.) in the mountains north and east of Phoenix on the Salt River. It was started in 1902 and finished in 1915. On completion, it was the world's largest masonry dam, and Lake Roosevelt was the largest reservoir.
Click on Mildred's Album for more views.
Labels:
Arizona,
dams,
dunes,
freighter,
Imperial dunes,
Mildred's album,
pacific ocean,
photo album,
Roosevelt Dam,
Salt River,
sand dunes,
ship,
shipping,
ships
Saturday, September 17, 2016
Mildred Takes A Trip 2
Back on the battleship, and I think I might know which battleship. Could it be the U.S.S. California? Click on the ships name in labels, and you can pull up a postcard of the Cali in all her glory. And if it's not the California, it's clearly a ship of the same design. As far as the other two photos, one's obviously somewhere along the California coastline. The San Diego area might be a good bet. After all, that's where the fleet was, but then again, it sure looks like the mouth of Ballona Creek near modern day Marina del Rey. I don't ride my bike out to the coast too often, but there's a bike path along the shore, and the shape of the ridge line in the background looks like it could be it. Of course, with the way the California coast has been carpeted with building after building, it might be impossible to match an old photo to a modern landscape. The bottom photo is Arizona, south of Ajo, in what is now Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument. It's the only place in the world they grow.
Click on Mildred's Album in labels to see the whole thing.
Thursday, September 15, 2016
Mildred Takes A Trip 1
I've had very mixed feelings about posting Mildred's photo album. This one's a bit different for me. I didn't buy it for the photos, I bought it for the album itself. It's very small, let's say little bigger than a postcard, and the pictures are a very odd sort, some interesting, and some not so much. Too, while most photo album are easy to disassemble, making it easier to scan the images, that isn't the case with this one. I was afraid to untie the leather ribbon, and I was also afraid to open the album and lay it out flat on the scanner. In the end, I took the risk, bent it open and scanned. Finally, there's only one photo per page, so there won't be any full page scans to show position.
I suspect that Mildred was the photographer and isn't seen in any of the photos, but I like to think that that is wrong, and that Mildred is the young lady in the center of the first snapshot. Another guess, Mildred and her family have taken a trip to see a son and brother who was in the United States Navy. That tower in the background is clearly from a battleship. It's the second photo that I really like. Two people are well hidden behind the flowers while maybe Mildred is off to the side, clearly visible.
More to come, click on Mildred's album in labels to see the rest. At least, once I get them posted.
Labels:
battleships,
flowers,
Mildred's album,
oceans,
pacific ocean,
photo album,
ship,
ships,
steamships
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