From Life magazine, August 30, 1937: Russell Hearn … who has the rank of Lieutenant General in the Chinese Army, proposed in Los Angeles to recruit U.S. volunteers for China. ...
Henry B. R. Briggs, Postmaster of Los Angeles, kneeling in front of a fireplace. There is a carved eagle on the marble mantelpiece of the fireplace, suggesting that Briggs is in a U. S. government building.
Photograph of Alda Silva, holder of the woman's world record for the javelin throw in 1927, performing her sport. People sit in a grandstand in the distance.
Portrait painter Josef Sigall with his wife Marie Sigall. Josef wears a double-breasted suit with a vest and Marie wears a felt hat and a coat with a fur collar and fur cuffs.
Article by Seymour Beubis featuring Robert Redford's advocacy for the Santa Monica Pier appeared in the Los Angeles Times on February 8, 1973. The article was not accompanied by photographs.
Article by Seymour Beubis featuring Robert Redford's advocacy for the Santa Monica Pier appeared in the Los Angeles Times on February 8, 1973. The article was not accompanied by photographs.
Article by Seymour Beubis featuring Robert Redford's advocacy for the Santa Monica Pier appeared in the Los Angeles Times on February 8, 1973. The article was not accompanied by photographs.
View of sculptor John Palo-Kangas placing a mold on his plaster statue known as the "Spirit of the C. C. C." (Civilian Conservation Corps) at the Civilian Conservation Camp No. 1917 in Griffith Park [now the Travel Town train museum]. The mold was used to create a concrete version of the statue. The statue was a Los Angeles County Relief Administration art project. Palo-Kangas told a reporter that the work would be called "Conservation of Man and Nature." The statue was replaced by a bronze version in 1993.
Cartoonist Sidney Smith, in suit and tie, standing with open trunk, with his wife, Kathryn Smith, in silk dress and hat, kneeling as if emerging from trunk, on carpeted area indoors
The former Cathedral of Saint Vibiana, located at 214 South Main Street, is one of Los Angeles' few remaining 19th century landmarks and was completed in 1876. The Cathedral was decommissioned at some point between 1994 and 1999 after which it underwent seismic retrofitting and restoration and, in the process, was converted to an event space called Vibiana.
William Jennings Bryan, Jr., in suit, tie, and straw hat, holding box tied with string, shaking hands with another man, with train and about 6 men and women foreground and background
Ruben Salazar, Los Angeles Times writer, interviews rebel Labor Minister Virgilio Maynardia Reyna in front of rebel President Francisco Caamano's headquarters in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.