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Image / Surveying the damage done by the Elysian Park landslide

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Title
Surveying the damage done by the Elysian Park landslide
Alternative Title
Los Angeles Photographers Photo Collection;
Creator
Schultheis, Herman
Contributor
Made accessible through a grant from the John Randolph Haynes and Dora Haynes Foundation
Date Created and/or Issued
1937
Contributing Institution
Los Angeles Public Library
Collection
Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection
Rights Information
Images available for reproduction and use. Please see the Ordering & Use page at http://tessa.lapl.org/OrderingUse.html for additional information.
Description
Title supplied by cataloger.; Herman J. Schultheis was born in Aachen, Germany in 1900, and immigrated to the United States in the mid-1920s after obtaining a Ph.D. in mechanical and electrical engineering. He married Ethel Wisloh in 1936, and the pair moved to Los Angeles the following year. He worked in the film industry from the late 1930s to the mid-1940s, most notably on the animated features Fantasia and Pinocchio. His detailed notebook, documenting the special effects for Fantasia, is the subject of a 14-minute short-subject included on the film's DVD. In 1949, he started employment with Librascope as a patent engineer. Schultheis was an avid amateur photographer who traveled the world with his cameras. It was on one of these photographic exhibitions in 1955 that he disappeared in the jungles of Guatemala. His remains were discovered 18 months later. The digitized portion of this collection represents the images Schultheis took of Los Angeles and its surrounding communities after he relocated to the area in 1937.
The Elysian Park landslide, which started near the top of Point Grand View (Buena Vista Peak) as a small crack in the earth and grew to 500-foot fissure over three weeks, culminated on November 26, 1937 when a million and a half tons of loose rock and dirt created a "moving mountain" destroying a 600-foot stretch of Riverside Drive. Dayton Avenue (later N. Figueroa Street) has had three different bridges. The Riverside Drive-Dayton Avenue Bridge first built in 1903 was replaced with a concrete one completed in 1928. In 1939, after the Elysian Park landslide and heavy floods in 1938, the Army Corps of Engineers built a replacement bridge with steel trussing, known as the Riverside Drive Bridge (Riverside-Figueroa Bridge) that was demolished in 2011.
A man surveys along the riverbed at the base of the split roadbed of the Riverside Drive-Dayton Avenue Bridge, next to the two temporary 24-inch water pipes that replaced the crushed pipes from the Elysian Park landslide.
Type
Image
Format
1 photographic print :b&w ;15 x 11 cm.
Photographic prints
Identifier
00098456
Herman J Schultheis Collection; Los Angeles Photographers Collection;
N-007-896 8x10
CARL0005084022
http://173.196.26.125/cdm/ref/collection/photos/id/38453
Subject
Landslides--California--Los Angeles
Natural disasters--California--Los Angeles
Bridges--California--Los Angeles
Bridge failures--California--Los Angeles
Streets--California--Los Angeles
Water-pipes--California--Los Angeles
Rivers--California, Southern
Surveyors--California--Los Angeles
Lost architecture--California--Los Angeles
Los Angeles River (Calif.)
Riverside Drive-Dayton Avenue Bridge (Los Angeles, Calif.)
Riverside Drive (Los Angeles, Calif.)
Elysian Park (Los Angeles, Calif.)
Schultheis Collection photographs

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