(ca. 1858) - This is the earliest known close-up photograph of the - TopicsExpress



          

(ca. 1858) - This is the earliest known close-up photograph of the Los Angeles Plaza. There is a square main brick reservoir in the middle of the Plaza, which was the terminus of the towns historic lifeline: the Zanja Madre (Mother Ditch). The reservoir was built in 1858 by the LA Water Works Company. The site of the Plaza today is not the original location. It is the second, third, or maybe even the fourth. One of the earlier plots is believed to be around where the current Pershing Square sits. It’s also thought that at least one of the first three was washed away in a flood. The current Plaza dates from as early as 1815. When early settlers arrived at the Los Angeles River by way of Mission Road, they picked as a nearby gathering point a huge sycamore (upper right-center of photo) that gave them shelter and became a landmark, El Aliso. That Spanish word for sycamore was later used to name the road carved out near the river (Aliso Street in 1854).
Posted on: Sat, 08 Nov 2014 20:05:42 +0000

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