File:Exterior view of Hanna's Los Angeles College on Eighth Street and Hope Street, ca.1890 (CHS-4310).jpg
From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Size of this preview: 800 × 500 pixels. Other resolutions: 320 × 200 pixels | 640 × 400 pixels | 1,024 × 640 pixels | 1,280 × 800 pixels | 2,560 × 1,600 pixels | 4,736 × 2,960 pixels.
Original file (4,736 × 2,960 pixels, file size: 2.38 MB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
File information
Structured data
Captions
Summary[edit]
DescriptionExterior view of Hanna's Los Angeles College on Eighth Street and Hope Street, ca.1890 (CHS-4310).jpg |
English: Exterior view of Hanna's Los Angeles College on Eighth Street and Hope Street, ca.1890 Photograph of a corner view of Hanna's Los Angeles College, formerly the First Methodist Episcopalian Church building (and Emanuel Presbyterian Church; later Abbotsford Inn), Eighth Street and Hope Street, Los Angeles, ca.1890. The 3-story wooden building has square towers on or near the three visible corners. The central one is topped with a tall pyramidal roof. The others are topped with octagonal cone-shaped roofs. A two-tiered narrow fire-escape is attached to the building along the rows of windows on the right side. A simple low rail fence surrounds the building. A few adjacent buildings are visible. The city of Los Angeles is visible in background.; "D.W. Hanna, a Michigan pedagogue who had come to Los Angeles in 1884, to open Ellis College on Fort Street (later renamed Broadway) near Temple Street -- burned in 1888 -- established on September 2nd , 1885, the Los Angeles College, a boarding school for girls, in a couple of buildings at the corner of Fifth and Olive Streets. In 1887 Hanna, having formed a stock company, erected a new school structure at the southwest corner of Eighth and Hope Streets, where eighteen teachers soon instructed some two hundred and fifty students. But the institution failed, and the building ... was finally bought by Abbot Kinney and named the Abbotsford Inn." -- Harris Newmark. Sixty Years in Southern California, p.566.; "Rev. Dr. W.J. Chichester on Sunday delivered his farewell address at the First Presbyterian church. He briefly alluded to his three years of labor in the church and announced that next Sunday he would open the new church, which has been organized under him under the name of Emanuel Presbyterian Church, in Professor Hanna's college, at the corner of Eighth and Hope Streets." -- newspaper clipping, Express, 18 Oct. 1888. |
Date |
circa 1890 date QS:P,+1890-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P1480,Q5727902 |
Source | http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/cdm/ref/collection/p15799coll65/id/4796 |
Author | Unknown authorUnknown author |
Object location | 34° 02′ 45.6″ N, 118° 15′ 32.4″ W | View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMap | 34.046000; -118.259000 |
---|
Licensing[edit]
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse |
This media file is in the public domain in the United States. This applies to U.S. works where the copyright has expired, often because its first publication occurred prior to January 1, 1929, and if not then due to lack of notice or renewal. See this page for further explanation.
|
||
This image might not be in the public domain outside of the United States; this especially applies in the countries and areas that do not apply the rule of the shorter term for US works, such as Canada, Mainland China (not Hong Kong or Macao), Germany, Mexico, and Switzerland. The creator and year of publication are essential information and must be provided. See Wikipedia:Public domain and Wikipedia:Copyrights for more details.
|
File history
Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.
Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
current | 02:04, 16 April 2014 | 4,736 × 2,960 (2.38 MB) | Junkyardsparkle (talk | contribs) | Crop to image, remove catalog number. | |
01:48, 16 April 2014 | 5,081 × 3,881 (1.25 MB) | Junkyardsparkle (talk | contribs) | User created page with UploadWizard |
You cannot overwrite this file.
File usage on Commons
There are no pages that use this file.