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An early view of the Rossmoyne area of Glendale. The photograph was taken in 1926, the year that the three-gabled Craftsman-style home (just above the left side of the reservoir in the foreground) was built on Ethel Street for an employee of William F. Markham. Markham's enormous estate, also newly built, stands alone in the center of the photograph, which accompanied Katherine Yamada's November 24, 2006, article about the Ethel Street house in the Glendale News-Press.
Katherine's column, Verdugo Views, spotlights various people, places, and events in Glendale's unique history.
A late afternoon hike yields a mountain flower view of the San Gabriel Mountain Range from the Verdugo Mountains.
Before and after views of the bridge across Verdugo Creek on State Highway 61 in Los Angeles County. Fed by small tributary streams in the San Gabriel Mountains, the creek became a raging torrent that cut a new channel, swept away the bridge approach and damaged the abutment. March 2-4, 1938.
Harvested from the April, 1938 issue of California Highways:
libraryarchives.metro.net/DPGTL/Californiahighways/chpw_1...
He pitched brilliantly despite being sick. He told me later he was coughing so hard throughout this start that he was gagging. Makes his win all the more impressive!
hosted by Louise Gale, "your heart makes a difference" blog...."global heart exchange".
This is the piece that I did for Tracy Verdugo. from Austrailia. The title of the piece is "let your heart sing"~~~ she later told me that she also sings. I was beyond excited to be a part of this with Tracy.
This panorama is comprised of roughly 16 shots from the iPhone camera, stitched together in Autostitch. There is some slight blurring in the foreground since I did not perfectly pivot the phone on axis with the sensor, but I like the dimensional effect that it gives. I think the open feeling of this shot does a good job of representing what it's like to be standing right here.
The highest point in the Verdugos is just over 3000 feet and is obscured by Tongva Peak. Tongva Peak at 2650 feet is visible to the right (with all of the radio antennae on it). Mount Lowe, standing over 5000 feet, is visible to the right in the distance.
Have a drink in the Hilton Los Angeles N/Glendale's Skyline Lounge overlooking the beautiful Verdugo Mountains! For more information on our hotel, visit, www.hiltonlosangelesglendale.com/