Visual Materials
South side Marchessault St. (2 of 3)
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South side Marchessault St. (1 of 3)
Visual Materials
View of brick two-story buildings, with balconies, on Marchessault Street in Old Chinatown, Los Angeles, with automobiles. Window stenciling in center of photograph read Chew Suen Grocery and Chew Kim (illegible).
photCL 502 (58)

South side of Marchessault St. (3 of 3)
Visual Materials
View of Marchessault Street in Old Chinatown, Los Angeles, lined with one- and two-story attached brick buildings, automobiles, and pedestrians.
photCL 502 (47)

317, 319, 321 Marchessault St
Visual Materials
View of two-story attached brick buildings on Marchessault Street in Old Chinatown, Los Angeles. One building has crates of vegetables out front.
photCL 502 (52)

325 & 327 Marchessault St
Visual Materials
View of two-story attached brick buildings, one with a balcony with potted plants, on Marchessault Street in Old Chinatown, Los Angeles, with automobiles on street. Sign on one car reads Chun Sang Market Meat Wholesale and Retail.
photCL 502 (51)

313 1/2-319 Marchessault St
Visual Materials
View of two-story attached brick buildings, with balconies and drying laundry, on Marchessault Street in Old Chinatown, Los Angeles, with a pedestrian and men in an automobile.
photCL 502 (54)
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South side Marchessault St. (2 of 3)
Visual Materials
This collection contains 131 black-and-white photographs (including some duplicates) of views of building exteriors and streets scenes in Old Chinatown and neighboring residential and industrial areas of downtown Los Angeles, California, that were taken prior to the demolition of the area beginning on December 23, 1933, to make way for the Los Angeles Union Station railroad terminal. The photographs consist of eye-level street views focused on the area of downtown Los Angeles, around Apablasa Street (spelled Apalabasa or Apalabassa on the images), that was bordered by Alameda Street to the west, Aliso Street to the south, Date and College Streets to the north, and Lyon to the east. The views include images of industrial and commercial areas; retail storefronts; warehouses; manufacturing; utility and railroad buildings; houses and apartments with balconies; dirt streets and alleys; children; automobiles; and dilapidated and vacant buildings. The signage on retail buildings often reflects the Chinese and Hispanic heritage of residents and shop owners in the area. The photographer is unidentified, but presumably the photographs were created to aid in planning for the project, perhaps as part of the process of determining property valuation.
photCL 502