Thursday, April 2, 2015

 1908 photo postcard image taken in Visalia.   The view is from the top of the old county courthouse, looking southeast.  George Besaw is the photographer.
At the left lower corner is the Odd Fellows Hall, built in 1873;  this building was at the NE corner of Church St. and Center Ave.   The two story building near the right corner (with the number "176" written just in front of it) is the Delta Office (newspaper) building.    Almost all of the old buildings in this view are now gone.
 
(Added 12/9/15)  Another  George Besaw photograph taken from the top of the county courthouse, this time looking South.    The old courthouse had several statues on its roof.  You can see the back of one of these at the bottom of this image.
Several close-up views of buildings:
This is a close-up of the corner of Main and Church Streets.    The "Visalia House" was an old hotel, torn down in 1917.   It was the last place famed stage-coach robber  Black Bart  was seen (in the late 1880s). The Wunder Saloon is also visable here.    According to Joseph Vicenti,   the business with the horse statue is  Uhl Harness Shop.   It eventually became Uhl Rubber, one of the few local businesses to make the transition from horses to automobiles.

The cupola tower in the left foreground was at the NW corner of Main & Church, where the 5-story Bank of America building is now.   I think the narrow two-story building (middle of image) was the old firehouse.

Close-up showing the  J. Harrell Building and Vucovich Bros & Co  on Main Street.  
 

Portrait of a girl, from the studio of  E.A.S. Wyllie  - Tulare, CA.   Circa 1889.


Photo postcard from Lindsay, CA.  It appears to be the interior of a bar  with a billiard room in the back.    The calendar in this image indicates that it was taken in April 1915.   It is postmarked from Lindsay,  June 22, 1915.  Written on this card:  "Lindsay Cal,  June 23rd.  This is where I work.  How is old Vermont?  Your Old friend, Doun".


An old snapshot of two kids posing with a burro in Porterville,  circa 1905.  One of the businesses in the background is  Andrew S. Mapes' saddle shop.          The two photographs, below, are of the same girl on the burro.






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