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Signal Hill, Long Beach, Calif.
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Signal Hill, Long Beach, Calif.
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Description
Identifier
clloy_140
Title
Signal
Hill
,
Long
Beach
,
Calif
.
Creator
Unknown
Date Published
circa
1926
Subject (Topic)
Oil
fields--California--Signal
Hill
;
Oil
wells--California--Signal
Hill
;
Dwellings--California--Signal
Hill
;
Subject (Place)
Signal
Hill
(Calif.)
;
Long
Beach
(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
M
.
Kashower
Co
.
Place of Publication
Los
Angeles
,
Cal
.
Language
eng
Description
A
view
looking
out
over
Signal
Hill
,
showing
the
many
oil
derricks
that
dot
the
landscape
. In the
foreground
are
several
cottages
,
some
with
small
gardens
.
Historical Background
Signal
Hill
is
a
small
city
encompassing
only
2.2
square
miles
, and
completely
surrounded
on
all
sides
by the
City
of
Long
Beach
. The
land
rises
365
feet
above
sea
level
, and was
used
by
native
tribes
to
signal
other
tribes
on
Santa
Catalina
Island
approximately
26
miles
away
.
After
the
area's
settlement
by
Europeans
, the
land
was
used
for
grazing
and
agriculture
until
the
end
of the
19th
century
,
when
expensive
homes
were
built
to
take
advantage
of the
panoramic
view
. In
1917
, the
Union
Oil
Company
began
drilling
for
oil
, but was
unsuccessful
and
abandoned
the
project
. In
1921
, the
Royal
Dutch
Shell
Oil
Company
resumed
exploration
, this
time
meeting
with
success
. By
1923
,
259,000
barrels
of
crude
oil
were
being
produced
every
day
from
nearly
300
wells
. By the
1940s
, the
hill
was
studded
with
20,000
oil
derricks
,
earning
it
the
nickname
"
Porcupine
Hill.
" At that
time
,
Signal
Hill
was an
unincorporated
territory
within
the
City
of
Long
Beach
, but in
order
to
avoid
Long
Beach's
heavy
per-barrel
tax
on
oil
, the
city
voted
to
incorporate
. In the
1970s
,
falling
oil
prices
reduced
production
, and the
oil
rigs
began
to be
replaced
once
more
with
luxury
homes
.
Publisher's Identifier
Series number: 231; Written in lower right corner of photograph: "14287"
Additional Notes
Approximate date from postmark.
Metacollection Identifier
http://digitalcollections.lmu.edu
Source
Werner
Von
Boltenstern
Postcard
Collection
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