Phiney house, Tustin, 1910
James & Coralinn Rice house, Tustin, 1895
Marcy Ranch, Newport Avenue, Tustin, ca. 1915
Newport Bay and Balboa Pavilion with sand bar
in foreground, Newport Beach, 1922
in foreground, Newport Beach, 1922
Samuel Ward, Ward farm, corner of Walnut and Newport, Tustin
Apricot pitters, Ward farm, Walnut and Newport, Tustin (c. 1910?) |
Laguna Beach, 1918 |
Santa Ana, ca. 1930
Metz Block building, built in 1889. Anaheim.
Photos from Orange County Public Library digital collection
12 comments:
I love them, but these photos of Newport Beach and Laguna Beach make we want to cry. Could we someday dismantle the thousands of houses now covering those ancient hills?--go back to something like the quiet way it was?
It sounds impossible--but really isn't, in any literal sense.
And it would be good.
MAH
Why go back to a quieter time, when you can go forward to a quieter time? For example, a time when the Holodeck exists, and you can step in to your closet to find peace.
Actually, maybe you can find peace in your closet now.
finds pieces in his closet; pieces of stuff
BS
Well, it would be great if people could embrace the desirability of small human populations. Ah, but the "right" to produce large families will die hard. I do think, however, it will die fast, of necessity, but not soon enough.
MAH is a farm girl from the land of the big sky. She's got wide open, non-populated spaces in her blood. Cow pies, too.
BvT is correct; it is the quiet *outdoors* that I really want back. Those who have never had it don't know what they're missing. I do better thinking and meditating out there than I have ever done in my closets--which are also overpopulated, with STUFF.
MAH
On the overbreeding issue, there are some tv shoes that follow the adventures of people who can't stop it--I think one show has people with 19 spawn.
When this is criticized, a common reaction is 'well if they can afford it and I don't have to pay for them, then it's alright with me." This stupidity permeates many levels.
Yes; it is stupid, thoughtless, and ill-informed on many levels. Of course, we all DO pay for other people's children, through taxes for schools, infrastructure, health-care, and so on. Globally, citizens of all nations pay the price, as do we, through the environmental costs (increased waste, pollution, use of resources) of many children. And other species, and the natural world in general, pay the highest price of all. (Most species extinctions are brought about by human habitation encroaching into former wildlife habitats.)
Our country has it exactly backward: we provide tax breaks for those who have children, instead of increased taxes for them to help with the broad costs they impose on the rest of us, quite selfishly or at least quite thoughtlessly.
MAH
I could not agree more, MAH; I for one would like a no child tax credit. Why the IRS actually allows for a full credit (not a deduction) per child is beyond me.
BvT: what is the very top photo? Pretty interesting and disturbing....
The top photo is a close up of the Phiney house and occupants. Is that disturbing? Go to OC Public Library.
Perhaps you mean the burning house of the subsequent post (not this one). Go to Bainbridge house. I know nothing about it, aside from the date given there. --B.vT
Perhaps you mean the still from "Close Encounters of the Third Kind"? That's all that is. Richard Dreyfuss looking at his mud-mountain.
Yeah; I meant the top photo of the previous post! Is THAT what that is? I thought it was a post-fire photo from a house interior!!!
Ever out of the loop--
MAH
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