Home
Browse All
Log in
|
Help
Search
Advanced Search
Find results with:
error div
Add another field
Search by date
from
after
before
on
to
Searching collections:
Changing Face of Southern California
Add or remove collections
Home
Ship Cafe, Venice, California
Reference URL
Share
To link to this object, paste this link in email, IM or document
To embed this object, paste this HTML in website
Paste link in email, IM, or document
Paste HTML to embed in website
Ship Cafe, Venice, California
View Description
Loading content ...
Description
Identifier
clloy_023
Title
Ship
Cafe
,
Venice
,
California
Creator
Unknown
Date Published
circa
1930
Subject (Topic)
Restaurants--California--Los
Angeles
;
Restaurants--Decoration--California--Los
Angeles
;
Subject (Name)
Ship
Cafe
(Los
Angeles
,
Calif.)
;
Subject (Place)
Venice
(Los
Angeles
,
Calif.)
;
Type
image
Form/Genre
Postcards
Physical Description
1
postcard
:
Color
;
9
x
14
cm
.
Institution
Department
of
Archives
and
Special
Collections
,
Loyola
Marymount
University
Library
.
Collection Identifier
http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/kt9489r2nz
Country of Creation
US
Copyright Status
public
domain
Copyright Statement
http://library.lmu.edu/dlp/copyright.htm
Publisher
E
.
C
.
Kropp
,
Co
.
Place of Publication
Milwaukee
,
Wis
.
Language
eng
Description
A
three-quarters
view
of the
Ship
Cafe
as
it
stood
after
1924
;
two
cars
are
parked
to the
left
of the
entrance
,
small
flags
are
strung
over
the
ships
two
large
masts
.
Historical Background
Venice
was
originally
part
of the
Ocean
Park
district
of
Santa
Monica
,
developed
primarily
by
Francis
Ryan
and
Abbot
Kinney
. In
1904
,
Kinney
started
developing
his
vision
of
Venice
in
America
,
complete
with a
canal
system
.
Venice
of
America
opened
to the
public
on
Independence
Day
,
1905
, to a
crowd
of
40,000
people
. The
Ship
Hotel
and
Cafe
was
one
of the
original
attractions
of the
Venice
pier
and was
intended
to be a
replica
of
Juan
Cabrillo's
Spanish
galleon
. The
Ship
was
built
on
piling
and
faced
out
towards
the
ocean
. The
cafe
,
along
with
several
other
buildings
, were
destroyed
by a
fire
in
1920
, and the
rebuilt
ship
cafe
(with
two
masts
instead
of
3)
was
built
parallel
to the
beach
rather
than
facing
out
to
sea
. In
1946
the
city
council
decided
to
tear
down
the
Venice
pier
, and the
ship
cafe
with
it
. What was not
demolished
by
1946
was
destroyed
by a
fire
in
1947
.
Publisher's Identifier
Publisher's serial number: 5064
Additional Notes
Printed on textured paper.
Metacollection Identifier
http://digitalcollections.lmu.edu
Source
Werner
Von
Boltenstern
Postcard
Collection
you wish to report:
Your comment:
Your Name:
Submit
Cancel
...
Back to top
Select the collections to add or remove from your search
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Select All Collections
A
America's West
C
Catholicism in L.A.
Changing Face of Southern California
T
The Atrium
500
You have selected:
1
OK
Cancel