Color shot of the lower station of the Angels Flight funicular railway at the corner of Hill St and Third, downtown Los Angeles, circa 1950s

Color shot of the lower station of the Angels Flight funicular railway at the corner of Hill St and Third, downtown Los Angeles, circa 1950sI don’t know who decided that vermilion was the right color to paint the two stations of the Angels Flight funicular railway at the corner of Hill St and Third in downtown LA, but they knew what they were doing. As we can see in this circa 1950s Kodachrome shot, it helped to make the station really stand out. As we can see by the surrounding background, by the 1950s, downtown was starting to look worn and weathered. In the 60s, all those buildings would be torn down and Angels Flight moved half a block down Hill St, so I’m glad we’ve got images like this to remind us how things were 70 years ago.

David M. says: “The car is a 1949 or 1950 Chevy Fleetline. Somewhat desirable fastback that you’ll see at classic car shows.

This how that same view looked in June 1969:

This is how Angels Flight’s Hill St station looked in May 2024 in its second location across the street from the Grand Central Market.

 

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7 responses to “Color shot of the lower station of the Angels Flight funicular railway at the corner of Hill St and Third, downtown Los Angeles, circa 1950s”

  1. Martin Pal says:

    Love this photo! “Vermilion!” I wonder if that’s why this was one of the colors chosen for the color palette they used at the 1984 Summer Olympics?

  2. itstechno says:

    Great , need more posts this way

  3. Al Donnelly says:

    That No Unnecessary Noise sign in 1969 is an oddity. It used to be kind of thing with people to honk the car horn as they drove through a tunnel like something from a movie with a steam locomotive blasting by. Must have been the effect of seeing so many westerns at the theater or on television.

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