Manuscripts
W. G. Winston letter to his mother, Mary H. Winston, Los Angeles, California
Image not available
You might also be interested in
Image not available
G. W. Buckmore letter to George Gaulet
Manuscripts
In this letter, Buckmore talks a lot about the climate of California, his business, gold mining, crime in San Francisco, the deaths of some of his friends, and the lumber trade in California and Oregon. He also advises his friend to urge people to not come to California unless they have the means to survive.
mssHM 75095
Image not available
Charles W. Drury letters
Manuscripts
In the letters, Drury talks of gold mining and discoveries, the transcontinental railroad, shipping lines opening up travel to China and Australia, the Walker expedition of 1853 to Sonora, the future of Mexico and Hawaii as American territories, and California politics and climate.
mssHM 75088-75089
Image not available
Plans of Los Angeles, California
Manuscripts
Drawn plans of Fort Moore, Los Angeles, California, and the Ciudad of Los Angeles. Copied by Bert H. Cocks from originals by Edward Otho Cresap Ord and William R. Hutton in August 1849.
mssHM 84384-84385
Image not available
G. Cleveland letters to Mary Cleveland
Manuscripts
Three letters written by G. Cleveland to his sister Mary Cleveland in Canton, New York, between October 1849 and May 1850. In the first letter, dated October 28, 1849, Cleveland writes of his intentions to leave school and sail to California aboard the bark Orion. He describes his expectations of the wonders and dangers of the voyage and his hopes for success as well as his belief that "California is much like a lottery." The second letter, in three parts beginning February 5, 1850, was written while Cleveland was sailing around Cape Horn and during visits to Staten Land (now Isla de los Estados, Argentina) and Robinson Crusoe Island (part of the Juan Fernandez Islands, Chile). Cleveland writes of storms at sea, catching an albatross, and extensive descriptions of Robinson Crusoe Island (including the note that "we had the pleasure of seeing Crusoe's canoe...in a cove"). The final letter, dated May 1850, was written at the time of the Orion's arrival in California and further describes Cleveland's travels in the South Pacific and debates the total distance covered on the voyage.
mssHM 73682-73684

Open-air drive-in theatre, Los Angeles, Cal
Visual Materials
Image of a drive-in movie theater in Los Angeles, California, with a woman standing on the corner at the intersection of West Pico Boulevard and Westwood Boulevard. The writing on the drive-in signs read "Drive-in theatre sit in your car see and hear talking pictures on the world's largest screen - California's first" "turn all lights out here" and "drive-in theater admission prices adults $.35 per person."
photCL_555_06_1624

Passengers getting on Angels Flight, Los Angeles, California
Visual Materials
View of passengers getting into a car of the Angels Flight incline railway at the intersection of Hill Street and Third Street in the Bunker Hill neighborhood of downtown Los Angeles, California, with the Pacific Telephone Tower and microwave tower (now the AT&T Tower) visible in the background.
photCL_555_01_178