Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Fun with Orange County images

A 1926 "OC" poster, courtesy of the Orange County Archives. Click on it to enlarge it.
It is, of course, impossible to live in this county without thinking about its, um, image. I'm not sure precisely what Orange Countians had in mind with the phrase "prolific wonderland." Lotsa fruit maybe. Look closely and you'll find the hills sprouting oil derricks, and not just palm trees and orange trees!)
OK, I added a little something in the middle of the image for the sake of, uh, retroactive verity. Check it out.
UCI c. 1964. Few realize that, in the early days of the Irvine campus, the "Young Republicans" dominated the social scene and even managed to discourage "hippyism" and "bell-bottom" trousers for a time. That all went to crap when, in 1968, Eldridge Cleaver offered a fiery speech, encouraging UCI Anteaters to "get loaded" and to "chill the f*** out."
Swastika truck bling. Recently, I posted this pic (also courtesy of the Orange County Archives) of downtown of the benighted town of Yorba Linda, circa 1920.  (Yorba Linda was the scene of those anti-Muslim protests a month ago.) Since the photo has an unusually high resolution, I decided to blow it up to read the signage, etc. That yielded a surprise. Below is a detail of the truck and building at left--and then a further blowup of the truck.

See what I mean? Swastikas! (This is for real; it's no Photoshop trick.) The photo was likely taken during the early days of the National Socialist Party, but that scene was thousands of miles away, and otherwise obscure. If not Naziism, what does the symbol mean, if anything?

The swastika is an ancient symbol that was adopted by many cultures long before the Rosenberg/Hitler crowd got hold of it in 1920. At around the turn of the century, it was widely used as a "good luck" charm. That seems to be its meaning in this 1912 photo of an aviatrix.
Don't know what that Yorba Linda swastika is all about. Any ideas?

10 comments:

gj said...

No idea regarding the aviatrix, but with the truck: a lot of OC farmers were Japanese Buddhists. Could have been a truck belonging to one of them.

Roy Bauer said...

Interesting hypothesis, gj.

suman said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Anonymous said...

The driver (Tom Fuentes' father), is unloading refreshments for the 1st Young Republicans meeting held in his Grand Fathers fruit stand.

Anonymous said...

Funny, I was just watching a documentary about the Planet of the Apes franchise. Re: a POTA film filmed at UCI (from the link): "...[at] one point the apes storm the University Administration building to overthrow their human rulers. This metaphor raises an inevitable question among students, faculty and UCI administrators: who amongst us are the humans, and who are the apes?"

Re: the swastikas, on the truck it's going clockwise, and on the aviatrix it's going counterclockwise, unless either image was reversed....

Roy Bauer said...

I arrived (from high school) at UCI in the fall of 1973, a couple of years after the POTA filming, evidently. On the other hand, they had filmed that movie right there where I took most of my classes and generally hung out: Humanities Office Building and Humanities Hall. I was around to observe some of the filming of Mel Brooks' "Silent Movie." Paul Newman was on hand; Brooks just looked incredibly grumpy, sitting in a wheelchair (the scene involved motorized wheelchairs, I think). BvT

Roy Bauer said...

Ah, my memory is faulty. They filmed mostly around the Social Science area.

Roy Bauer said...

Matthew, I don't think the images are reversed, and so, yes, those swastikas "spin" in different directions. I do believe that there was a degree of indifference about "spin" direction for the swastika as lucky charm. As near as I can tell, the Buddhist use of the symbol involves the same direction as the one favored by the Nazis. (There's probably no connection between the two uses.)
It's too bad that people "enforce" symbolism as they do: viewing the Buddhist use as somehow wrong or tainted owing to the symbol's association with Naziism. I once had a friend who frowned upon German Shepherds owing to their "meaning," for him, as symbols of Nazi atrocity and violence. "Yeah," I said, "but what if the dog before you is just a great dog?" That didn't seem to matter to him. Such dogs are Nazis, evidently.

Anonymous said...

It wasn't a particular former English professor, was it?

Cuntry Trash said...

Swastikas were widely used in the USA Southwest pre-Nazi days. Native Americans, cowboys, etc, all used it. Arizona had swastikas on road signs.

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...