Sept.20,1951: Car Collides with Pacific Electric Streetcar in Van Nuys.


From the time it was established in 1911, Van Nuys was connected to the rest of greater Los Angeles by the Pacific Electric Streetcars that ran up and down Van Nuys Boulevard and traversed Chandler Blvd. to connect to North Hollywood.

The entire apparatus of light rail cars was dismantled by the late 1950s, and Van Nuys was wiped clean of these in 1956. Before the streetcars were taken out, Van Nuys had a thriving business district with diagonal parking, many vibrant stores, clean streets and a congenial sense of optimism and orderliness.

Van Nuys Circa 1945

On September 20, 1951, five years before their demise, an unlucky mother and son were involved in a collision with their car and one of the streetcars. It seems both mother and son survived.

Photos are from the USC Archives. Here is their original text:

“Pacific Electric versus auto (Van Nuys Boulevard and Hatteras Street, Van Nuys), 20 September 1951. Jimmy Quigley; Ann Quigley (mother); E.T. Ophus (motorman).; Caption slip reads: “Photographer: Glickman. Date: 1951-09-20. Reporter: Glickman. Assignment: Pacific Electric versus auto. Van Nuys Boulevard and Hatteras Street, Van Nuys. Passersby comfort Jimmy Quigley as his mother, Ann stands along side of him (in torn skirt). Motorman in picture is E.T. Ophus, who piloted Pacific Electric that hit Quigley’s car”.”

Suicide by Hanging, 1951


From USC Archives is this sad photograph, dated October 30, 1951, showing Van Nuys firemen over the dead body of T.E. Commings, who had earlier hung himself from garage rafters.

American newspapers back then showed flash lit photographs of crime and tragedy, usually with names and addresses of victims. “Mrs. Robert Crane, 34, of 114 Maple Street, was arrested by Officer Casey at the corner of Main and Toro where she had just run a red light. She was later tested and found intoxicated and booked at the Witsend Police Station.”

Though we erroneously imagine that we live in an unparalleled time of explicit violence, coarse language and animalistic barbarism, available to see in the palm of our hands, the 1950s had explicit examples of the worst of the humanity.

The difference is that Americans 73 years ago thought that there were normal, law abiding people who lived to pay taxes, marry, attend church, vote in elections, buy homes, cheer for ball players, and who knew right from wrong.

Popular morality was codified and distributed in films, written in stone on the bases of statues, and inscribed in history books that taught our history as a glorious march of freedom envied by the world.

The obscure ones who failed, who died by their own hands, or screwed up their lives in crime, they had one brief moment of infamy in the news and were quickly forgotten except by those who still loved them. To dwell on them would have been an indictment of the American experiment.

Marijuana in the Van Nuys Jail, 1951


The presence of a little Cannabis Sativa on the premises of the Van Nuys Jail evoked some comical camera ready reactions from LAPD in 1951.

The coppers are mugging for the camera, ersatz high and stoned.

The plant was there to be used later that day for a lecture on the evils of the drug.

Photo courtesy of USC.

“”Photographer: Glickman. Date: 1951-09-06. Reporter: Massard. Assignment: Marijuana in Van Nuys jail. G31-32: Officer F.G. Plamonden gapes at blooming plant of Marijuana. Note bars in background. G13: l to r: Officers Ken Smith and Harry Kowalski wonder what goes on with the plant. Copsater found out that it was sent to Valley Div. to be in a lecture on narcotics. G14: Eyes wide open and wondering what marijuana plant is doing in police station is Officer Ken Smith”.

“Girl Stick-Up Artist” Van Nuys, 1951


“Girl stick-up artist (Van Nuys Jail), July 19, 1951. Detective George Pettyman; Elaine Downey — 18 years (suspect); Detective Guy Moulder; Janice Hays (caught with Elaine Downey); Officer K. L. Crondell (bitten by Hays).”

Source: LA Herald Examiner

Market Holdup Suspects in Custody, 1951


On May 19, 1951 there was a holdup of a grocery store on Burbank and Van Nuys Bl.

The robbers were caught, booked and taken up the street to the jail in the Valley Municipal Building.

Two of the three suspects are pictured here, and are quite a handsome bunch: Samuel McGinnis; Charles Gordon; John Maroney.

John Maroney wears a tight white t-shirt tucked into unbelted jeans. Curly haired, brown-eyed, lean bodied, he had engaged in something stupid and could not have known how lucky he was to live in a time when the best selvedge loomed jeans were $3 and made in America. He could have worked as a house painter and bought a nice little ranch house around the corner with $500 down. He also wore his leather bomber jacket ($15?) in another photo.

His buddy (McGinnis?) is also a nice looking red haired guy in a wool camp shirt, finely tailored and elegant for an afternoon of armed robbery in Van Nuys. He looks almost like the son of the cop handcuffing him.

Source
Los Angeles Examiner Negatives Collection, 1950-1961 (subcollection), Los Angeles Examiner Photographs Collection, 1920-1961 (collection), University of Southern California (contributing entity)