Original location. Excellent example of a
walk-up food stand and
drive-thru. Built 1961. Declared 2013, Historic-Cultural
Monument No. 1046, Cultural Heritage Commission, City of Los Angeles.
Der Wienerschnitzel Birthplace
At . . . — — Map (db m179870) HM
Established at Wilmington in 1862, Drum Barracks became the United States military headquarters for Southern California, Arizona, and New Mexico. A garrison and base for supplies, it was a terminus for camel pack trains operated by the army until . . . — — Map (db m85152) HM
Panel 1:
Drum Barracks, Officers’ Quarters, 1862 - 1868.
Supply Depot, Department of
the Southwest, U.S. Army.
In memory of the historic past of this
building and the importance of its
association with early American
history in . . . — — Map (db m52631) HM
This memorial plaque commemorates the
early struggle of West Coast Longshoremen to establish hours, wages, and
working conditions. It specifically recalls
the day, May 15, 1934, when fighting broke
out on the waterfront near this . . . — — Map (db m180230) HM
Marked by Wilmington Parlor No. 278, Native Daughters of the Golden West, April 5, 1946.
Historic Mother Church.
Los Angeles Presbytery.
Dedicated November 1870.
Rededicated November 1939. — — Map (db m179878) HM
City of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument LA-249, listed August 10, 1982.
The Powder Magazine, built in 1862 as part of the Drum Barracks military post, is 16-by-14-feet with three foot thick walls. Used to store wooden kegs of . . . — — Map (db m175191) HM
Declared Historic Cultural Monument No. 47 by the Cultural Heritage Board, Municipal Art Department, City of Los Angeles.
St. John's Episcopal Church Diamond Jubilee,
marked June 8, 1958,
Native Daughters of the
Golden . . . — — Map (db m180527) HM
Second oldest cemetery
in Los Angeles,
established 1857. Declared 1989, Historic-Cultural
Monument No. 414,
Cultural Heritage Commission, City of Los Angeles. — — Map (db m180229) HM