Original envelope is labeled with two dates: "5-55" and "6-56". Arthur S. and Marie Berger were the landscape architects for the firm Arthur S. Berger Landscape Architect. House now demolished, per Dianne del Cid, on visit of 8/27/09.
Also spelled "Rosenburg" on the envelope. Built in 1946. The house received a Progressive Architecture Award in 1946 and was published in Progressive Architecture magazine in 1947 and 1948. Unable to determine if this is the same house as p. 1331.
Negatives previously rehoused. Original envelope dated February 1940, however publication reveals it was taken earlier. Norman Taurog was a Hollywood film director. An Oscar statuette can be seen on the mantel. Img (008) of fireplace appears in...
The photographs arrived at the Huntington in 1924 when, after persistent negotiations, she sold some 1200 glass plate negatives and her "catalogue set of blue prints" to Henry E. Huntingotn and his library for several thousand dollars.* In her...
See James Thomas Keane, Fritz B. Burns and the Development of Los Angeles. (Los Angeles: Loyola Marymount University and the Historical Society of Southern California, 2001), Chapter 5. Negatives previously rehoused. Originally labeled "Burns...
Original envelope does not note "H.B" as most House Beautiful projects do. House Beautiful identifies Van Evera Baily as the Associate Architect for this house. Erskine Wood donated a portion of the Papers of C. E. S. Wood, 1829-1980 (bulk...
This house was destroyed by fire. Original envelope includes the instructions, "1 ea 8x10 gl. to Ellen [Ellen Sheridan of House Beautiful]," and "1 ea 8x10 to House & Home / Carl Norcross."
See also Marcia Masters "Humble as Ginger, Yet Lavished With Beauty... This New Architecture." Los Angeles Times (1886-Current File), March 2, 1947, http://www.proquest.com/ (accessed April 18, 2008). (SL) Map on wall in bedroom sitting area was...