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In Search of the Holy Virgin in the Bungalow Court Ruins

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Gentle reader,

At the end of May 2024, work crews swarmed over the hillside at 1251-1259 Sunset Boulevard, where the last tenants have been evicted from the Stires Staircase Bungalow Court, and felled all of the 100 year old trees shading the historic property—including one that contained a shrine to the Blessed Virgin Mary inside a knot on the trunk.

Since 1922, Stires provided dignified, affordable housing for ten households, and shelter for countless birds and squirrels and other living things. There was a lot of undeveloped land on the parcel that could have been used for new housing units.

The destruction of this entire bungalow court compound and the eviction of its residents for a huge new building is a policy failure that illuminates everything wrong with Los Angeles and how the city is creating homelessness and blight, while serving the interests of wealthy developers.

If you’d like to support our preservation work, you can do that below. You can also tip us on Venmo (Esotouric) or here. Your support helps us look out for Los Angeles and we thank you!

Taking one last walk up the central stair and peering into the ruined cottages, we expressed our anger at the abject failure of newish CD 1 councilmember Eunisses Hernandez to do anything to protect these affordable units from demolition, despite campaigning as a fresh voice for tenants and in opposition to gentrification.

We didn't find the Virgin's shrine, though we did encounter a cool streamline moderne duck and enough rage to power future preservation and tenants' rights battles.

And back down on the sidewalk, we met Justin Berthelot Sr., a traveling music man just off the bus from Baton Rouge, Louisiana. His impromptu song made us feel more hopeful for this town, which has always called the dreamers and artists to its heart, and rewarded us all with the fruits of their imaginations.

It is war, friends. We don't want to fight, but we have no choice. So let's fight together for all Los Angeles has been and can be again.

We’ve still got a few tickets left on this Saturday’s POP - Preserving Our Past tour honoring some of Downtown L.A.’s heritage heroes and including a rare chance to visit the Dutch Chocolate Shop, and featuring Bunker Hill lore from native son Gordon Pattison and neighborhood historian Nathan Marsak. Then next week, it’s the Westlake Park Time Travel trip with a special half-price ticket offer for readers like you.

Yours for Los Angeles,

Kim & Richard

Esotouric

Our work—leading tours and historic preservation and cultural landmark advocacy—is about building a bridge between Los Angeles' past and its future, and not allowing the corrupt, greedy, inept and misguided players who hold present power to destroy the city's soul and body. If you’d like to support our efforts to be the voice of places worth preserving, we have a tip jar and a subscriber edition of this newsletter, vintage Los Angeles webinars available to stream, in-person tours and a souvenir shop you can browse in. We’ve also got recommended reading bookshelves on Amazon and the Bookshop indie bookstore site. You can share this post to win subscriber perks. And did you know we offer private versions of our walking and bus tours for groups big or small? Or just share this link with other people who care.

Tour Gift Certificates


UPCOMING BUS & WALKING TOURS

POP – Preserving Our Past Featuring the Dutch Chocolate Shop (Sat. 6/1) • Westlake Park (Sat. 6/8 - special offer for our readers) • Film Noir / Real Noir (Sat. 6/29) • The Real Black Dahlia (Sat. 7/6) • Angelino Heights & Carroll Avenue (Sat. 7/13) • Miracle Mile Marvels and Madness (Sun. 7/21) • Know Your Downtown L.A.: Tunnels To Towers To The Dutch Chocolate Shop (Sat. 7/27 - sorry, sold out) • Evergreen Cemetery, 1877 (Sun. 8/4) • West Adams Sugar Hill and Angelus Rosedale Cemetery (Sat. 8/10) • Broadway: Downtown Los Angeles’ Beautiful, Magical Mess (Sun. 8/25) • Raymond Chandler’s Noir Downtown Los Angeles (Sat. 8/31)


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