Visual Materials
Broadway from 2nd to 3rd Streets
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Clay Street view of Olive Street remnants between 2nd and 3rd
Visual Materials
Bunker Hill housing structures being demolished on Olive Street. Building to the left is nearly gone.
photCL 486
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Broadway between 2nd and 3rd Streets
Visual Materials
This collection consists of 35mm Kodachrome slides taken between 1954 and 1972. This collection of photographs taken by amateur photographer Palmer Conner documents by street the physical and social changes of Bunker Hill during the earliest stages of redevelopment. The collection is particularly strong in its depiction of the Bunker Hill neighborhood of downtown Los Angeles during redevelopment in the 1950s. Images chiefly consist of views of commercial and residential building exteriors taken from the street, including images of both new construction and older buildings in the process of being demolished.
photCL 486

Old Coulter Building on Broadway between 2nd and 3rd Streets
Visual Materials
This collection consists of 35mm Kodachrome slides taken between 1954 and 1972. This collection of photographs taken by amateur photographer Palmer Conner documents by street the physical and social changes of Bunker Hill during the earliest stages of redevelopment. The collection is particularly strong in its depiction of the Bunker Hill neighborhood of downtown Los Angeles during redevelopment in the 1950s. Images chiefly consist of views of commercial and residential building exteriors taken from the street, including images of both new construction and older buildings in the process of being demolished.
photCL 486

2nd Street and Broadway, southeast corner
Visual Materials
Gordon Building in the middle being demolished. On the Gordon Building's right is the Fay Building, formerly the Crocker Building.
photCL 486
Image not available
2nd Street and Broadway
Visual Materials
This collection consists of 35mm Kodachrome slides taken between 1954 and 1972. This collection of photographs taken by amateur photographer Palmer Conner documents by street the physical and social changes of Bunker Hill during the earliest stages of redevelopment. The collection is particularly strong in its depiction of the Bunker Hill neighborhood of downtown Los Angeles during redevelopment in the 1950s. Images chiefly consist of views of commercial and residential building exteriors taken from the street, including images of both new construction and older buildings in the process of being demolished.
photCL 486
