1898_Early_Mount_Wilson_Hotel_California_Los_Angeles_Co_Antique_Photo_Sign_01_xfhl

1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign

1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign

1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
Approximate size: 4.25 inches x 3.25 inches. In my research, I couldn’t find any other photos of a pre-1905 Mount Wilson Hotel photo, so it’s possible that this is the only one left. Certainly the only one on the open market currently. I was not able to find any others on the open market going back a number of years. On the advertisement sign on the side of the hotel, it reads. The riders obscure the rest of the words. The person pictured on the left is named Bob, the brother of the original owner of this photo, and another person in the photo is named Marshall Dill, a friend of his. It’s theoretically plausible that it’s the same foundation or same spot. It’s also plausible that the 1905 hotel was the same building as the 1898 hotel, but expanded. The first reference photo (the first of the last two images in this listing) is of a postcard of the middling hotel in 1909. Although the three hotels possibly aren’t the same building (certainly not the second and third, because the second burned down), it’s helpful to know the history of the hotel(s) in the area. The middling-timeframe hotel was constructed around 1905 to accommodate visitors to Mount Wilson. It stood as a one-story building with additional cottages for overnight guests. Unfortunately, this first hotel met a fiery fate in 1913 when it burned down. Following the fire, a third Mount Wilson Hotel was erected in 1915. This hotel became a landmark, gracing the mountain for fifty years until its demolition in 1966. The Mount Wilson Hotel Company owned an impressive 1050 acres of land surrounding Mount Wilson, extending approximately one mile in each direction from the hotel. Visitors could explore the nearby observatory and indulge in recreational activities like hiking, sledding, and skiing. Wildlife, including deer, birds, and squirrels, added to the natural allure of the area. Mount Wilson is renowned for housing the historic Mount Wilson Observatory. Notably, a 60-inch telescope was completed at the summit in 1908, and a 150-foot Solar Tower graced the landscape in 1910. The observatory played a pivotal role in astronomical research and observation in Southern California. The mountain bears the name of Benjamin D. Wilson, originally hailing from Tennessee, made his way to California in 1841. In 1864, he blazed the first modern trail to the summit of Mount Wilson in the San Gabriel Mountains, a trail still known as the Mount Wilson Trail. Regarding the history of Mount Wilson overall. In 1889, Professor William Pickering of Harvard University, along with telescope-maker Alvan Clark, prepared an experiment with 4-and-13-inch (102 and 330 mm) telescopes at Mount Wilson. University students would operate the telescopes for nighttime viewing, but more often than not they would log in “bad weather, no visibility” and head to town to relieve their boredom. The small observatory was abandoned with plans to build a larger one at a later date. In 1891, Thaddeus S. Lowe incorporated the Pasadena & Mount Wilson Railroad with the plan of building a scenic mountain railroad to the summit of Mt. At the same time, land and easement disputes between camp owners Steils and Strain were going on over the public and private use of the Mount Wilson Trail. The courts ruled that the trail was a public thoroughfare and that any blockading would be illegal. At the foot of the mountain, a local contractor Thomas Banbury built a 10 mi roadway to be named “The New Mount Wilson Trail, ” now the Mount Wilson Toll Road. Walter Raymond, of Raymond & Whitcomb Travel Agency, Boston, and owner of the Raymond Hotel, Pasadena, offered to pay for rail from New York. Lowe offered to take the lenses up via his yet-to-be-built Mt. The lenses ended up at Yerkes Observatory in Wisconsin, and Lowe’s railway ended up going to Oak Mountain (Mount Lowe). By 1901, The Mount Wilson Toll Road Co. In 1903, George Ellery Hale visited Mt. Wilson and was impressed by the perfect conditions for which to set up the observatory, which would become the Mount Wilson Solar Observatory in 1904. In 1926, Albert Abraham Michelson made what was then the most precise calculation of the speed of light at the time by measuring the round-trip travel time of light between Mount Wilson and Mount San Antonio 22 miles away. Please inspect the pictures, as they give the best representation of condition. There are creased corners, wear, and light discoloration to the photo, relatively normal for its age.
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898_Early_Mount_Wilson_Hotel_California_Los_Angeles_Co_Antique_Photo_Sign_01_ma

1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign

1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign

1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
Approximate size: 4.25 inches x 3.25 inches. In my research, I couldn’t find any other photos of a pre-1905 Mount Wilson Hotel photo, so it’s possible that this is the only one left. Certainly the only one on the open market currently. I was not able to find any others on the open market going back a number of years. On the advertisement sign on the side of the hotel, it reads. The riders obscure the rest of the words. The person pictured on the left is named Bob, the brother of the original owner of this photo, and another person in the photo is named Marshall Dill, a friend of his. It’s theoretically plausible that it’s the same foundation or same spot. It’s also plausible that the 1905 hotel was the same building as the 1898 hotel, but expanded. The first reference photo (the first of the last two images in this listing) is of a postcard of the middling hotel in 1909. Although the three hotels possibly aren’t the same building (certainly not the second and third, because the second burned down), it’s helpful to know the history of the hotel(s) in the area. The middling-timeframe hotel was constructed around 1905 to accommodate visitors to Mount Wilson. It stood as a one-story building with additional cottages for overnight guests. Unfortunately, this first hotel met a fiery fate in 1913 when it burned down. Following the fire, a third Mount Wilson Hotel was erected in 1915. This hotel became a landmark, gracing the mountain for fifty years until its demolition in 1966. The Mount Wilson Hotel Company owned an impressive 1050 acres of land surrounding Mount Wilson, extending approximately one mile in each direction from the hotel. Visitors could explore the nearby observatory and indulge in recreational activities like hiking, sledding, and skiing. Wildlife, including deer, birds, and squirrels, added to the natural allure of the area. Mount Wilson is renowned for housing the historic Mount Wilson Observatory. Notably, a 60-inch telescope was completed at the summit in 1908, and a 150-foot Solar Tower graced the landscape in 1910. The observatory played a pivotal role in astronomical research and observation in Southern California. The mountain bears the name of Benjamin D. Wilson, originally hailing from Tennessee, made his way to California in 1841. In 1864, he blazed the first modern trail to the summit of Mount Wilson in the San Gabriel Mountains, a trail still known as the Mount Wilson Trail. Regarding the history of Mount Wilson overall. In 1889, Professor William Pickering of Harvard University, along with telescope-maker Alvan Clark, prepared an experiment with 4-and-13-inch (102 and 330 mm) telescopes at Mount Wilson. University students would operate the telescopes for nighttime viewing, but more often than not they would log in “bad weather, no visibility” and head to town to relieve their boredom. The small observatory was abandoned with plans to build a larger one at a later date. In 1891, Thaddeus S. Lowe incorporated the Pasadena & Mount Wilson Railroad with the plan of building a scenic mountain railroad to the summit of Mt. At the same time, land and easement disputes between camp owners Steils and Strain were going on over the public and private use of the Mount Wilson Trail. The courts ruled that the trail was a public thoroughfare and that any blockading would be illegal. At the foot of the mountain, a local contractor Thomas Banbury built a 10 mi roadway to be named “The New Mount Wilson Trail, ” now the Mount Wilson Toll Road. Walter Raymond, of Raymond & Whitcomb Travel Agency, Boston, and owner of the Raymond Hotel, Pasadena, offered to pay for rail from New York. Lowe offered to take the lenses up via his yet-to-be-built Mt. The lenses ended up at Yerkes Observatory in Wisconsin, and Lowe’s railway ended up going to Oak Mountain (Mount Lowe). By 1901, The Mount Wilson Toll Road Co. In 1903, George Ellery Hale visited Mt. Wilson and was impressed by the perfect conditions for which to set up the observatory, which would become the Mount Wilson Solar Observatory in 1904. In 1926, Albert Abraham Michelson made what was then the most precise calculation of the speed of light at the time by measuring the round-trip travel time of light between Mount Wilson and Mount San Antonio 22 miles away. Please inspect the pictures, as they give the best representation of condition. There are creased corners, wear, and light discoloration to the photo, relatively normal for its age.
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898_Early_Mount_Wilson_Hotel_California_Los_Angeles_Co_Antique_Photo_Sign_01_hi

1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign

1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign

1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
Approximate size: 4.25 inches x 3.25 inches. In my research, I couldn’t find any other photos of a pre-1905 Mount Wilson Hotel photo, so it’s possible that this is the only one left. Certainly the only one on the open market currently. I was not able to find any others on the open market going back a number of years. On the advertisement sign on the side of the hotel, it reads. The riders obscure the rest of the words. The person pictured on the left is named Bob, the brother of the original owner of this photo, and another person in the photo is named Marshall Dill, a friend of his. It’s theoretically plausible that it’s the same foundation or same spot. It’s also plausible that the 1905 hotel was the same building as the 1898 hotel, but expanded. The first reference photo (the first of the last two images in this listing) is of a postcard of the middling hotel in 1909. Although the three hotels possibly aren’t the same building (certainly not the second and third, because the second burned down), it’s helpful to know the history of the hotel(s) in the area. The middling-timeframe hotel was constructed around 1905 to accommodate visitors to Mount Wilson. It stood as a one-story building with additional cottages for overnight guests. Unfortunately, this first hotel met a fiery fate in 1913 when it burned down. Following the fire, a third Mount Wilson Hotel was erected in 1915. This hotel became a landmark, gracing the mountain for fifty years until its demolition in 1966. The Mount Wilson Hotel Company owned an impressive 1050 acres of land surrounding Mount Wilson, extending approximately one mile in each direction from the hotel. Visitors could explore the nearby observatory and indulge in recreational activities like hiking, sledding, and skiing. Wildlife, including deer, birds, and squirrels, added to the natural allure of the area. Mount Wilson is renowned for housing the historic Mount Wilson Observatory. Notably, a 60-inch telescope was completed at the summit in 1908, and a 150-foot Solar Tower graced the landscape in 1910. The observatory played a pivotal role in astronomical research and observation in Southern California. The mountain bears the name of Benjamin D. Wilson, originally hailing from Tennessee, made his way to California in 1841. In 1864, he blazed the first modern trail to the summit of Mount Wilson in the San Gabriel Mountains, a trail still known as the Mount Wilson Trail. Regarding the history of Mount Wilson overall. In 1889, Professor William Pickering of Harvard University, along with telescope-maker Alvan Clark, prepared an experiment with 4-and-13-inch (102 and 330 mm) telescopes at Mount Wilson. University students would operate the telescopes for nighttime viewing, but more often than not they would log in “bad weather, no visibility” and head to town to relieve their boredom. The small observatory was abandoned with plans to build a larger one at a later date. In 1891, Thaddeus S. Lowe incorporated the Pasadena & Mount Wilson Railroad with the plan of building a scenic mountain railroad to the summit of Mt. At the same time, land and easement disputes between camp owners Steils and Strain were going on over the public and private use of the Mount Wilson Trail. The courts ruled that the trail was a public thoroughfare and that any blockading would be illegal. At the foot of the mountain, a local contractor Thomas Banbury built a 10 mi roadway to be named “The New Mount Wilson Trail, ” now the Mount Wilson Toll Road. Walter Raymond, of Raymond & Whitcomb Travel Agency, Boston, and owner of the Raymond Hotel, Pasadena, offered to pay for rail from New York. Lowe offered to take the lenses up via his yet-to-be-built Mt. The lenses ended up at Yerkes Observatory in Wisconsin, and Lowe’s railway ended up going to Oak Mountain (Mount Lowe). By 1901, The Mount Wilson Toll Road Co. In 1903, George Ellery Hale visited Mt. Wilson and was impressed by the perfect conditions for which to set up the observatory, which would become the Mount Wilson Solar Observatory in 1904. In 1926, Albert Abraham Michelson made what was then the most precise calculation of the speed of light at the time by measuring the round-trip travel time of light between Mount Wilson and Mount San Antonio 22 miles away. Please inspect the pictures, as they give the best representation of condition. There are creased corners, wear, and light discoloration to the photo, relatively normal for its age.
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
Code_3_Santa_Barbara_ALF_Rear_Mount_Ladder_Truck_Custom_Built_Museum_Quality_01_vtc

Code 3 Santa Barbara ALF Rear Mount Ladder Truck Custom Built Museum Quality

Code 3 Santa Barbara ALF Rear Mount Ladder Truck Custom Built Museum Quality
Code 3 Santa Barbara ALF Rear Mount Ladder Truck Custom Built Museum Quality
Code 3 Santa Barbara ALF Rear Mount Ladder Truck Custom Built Museum Quality
Code 3 Santa Barbara ALF Rear Mount Ladder Truck Custom Built Museum Quality
Code 3 Santa Barbara ALF Rear Mount Ladder Truck Custom Built Museum Quality

Code 3 Santa Barbara ALF Rear Mount Ladder Truck Custom Built Museum Quality
Santa Barbara County Ladder Truck. Brand New “1/64 scale” Museum Quality Super Detailed American LaFrance Rear Mount Ladder Truck. Beautifuly custom detailed truck would look great in any High End Custom collection. Please look at the 5 AWESOME photos very closely to see the HUGE amount of craftsmanship that went into creating this amazing vehicle. If you do Not know what size 1/64 scale is ASK! This beautiful vehicle is an alternative for the. Who demands perfection and might wish to add something entirely new. Highlights are as follows. My own custom computer made razor sharp decals. Take special note of the perfectly applied decals without any over lapping, silvering, chipping, cracking or bubbles. What you need to know. This magnificent vehicle has just been finished was never displayed. It is for that reason it is being listed as new. Check out my entire new line of Custom Built Big Rigs, FDNY, NYPD, Chicago, Las Vegas, Clark County, CAL FIRE, Los Angeles, Ventura. Santa Barabra County Apparatus. Thank you to the many folks from around the world who have sent me so many kind words and wonderful compliments on my work.
Code 3 Santa Barbara ALF Rear Mount Ladder Truck Custom Built Museum Quality
Code_3_Los_Angeles_County_Rear_Mount_Ladder_Museum_Quality_Custom_Built_01_mh

Code 3 Los Angeles County Rear Mount Ladder Museum Quality Custom Built

Code 3 Los Angeles County Rear Mount Ladder Museum Quality Custom Built
Code 3 Los Angeles County Rear Mount Ladder Museum Quality Custom Built
Code 3 Los Angeles County Rear Mount Ladder Museum Quality Custom Built
Code 3 Los Angeles County Rear Mount Ladder Museum Quality Custom Built

Code 3 Los Angeles County Rear Mount Ladder Museum Quality Custom Built
Los Angeles County Rear Mount Ladder. Brand New Museum Quality Super Detailed C ustom Built Rear Mount Ladder no number. This rig will certainly jump out in anyones collection. Please look at the 4 AWESOME photos very closely to see the HUGE amount of craftsmanship that went into creating this amazing vehicle and and be sure to read the “Highlights” below. This beautiful vehicle is an alternative for the. And might wish to add something. Beware of toyish looking copy-cat imitations! Highlights are as follows. Custom made Laser sharp Stripes. Custom made New Style Ladder Boards with. Notice the NEW style Logos on the cab doors. All my own custom computer made razor sharp decals. The cab door lettering has been upgraded to white. Take special note of the perfectly printed & applied decals without any over lapping, silvering, chipping, cracking or bubbles. What you need to know. This unit has just been finished was never displayed. It is for that reason it is being listed as new. Check out my entire new line of FDNY , LA City, LA County, CAL FIRE, Santa Barbara County, Ventura County, Chicago FD, NYPD & Las Vegas Apparatus. Thank you to the many folks from around the world who have sent me so many kind words and wonderful compliments on my work. This item is in the category “Toys & Hobbies\Diecast & Toy Vehicles\Cars, Trucks & Vans\Contemporary Manufacture”. The seller is “hummertime2″ and is located in this country: US. This item can be shipped to United States, United Kingdom, Slovakia, France, Spain, Italy, Germany, Denmark, Finland, Australia, Greece, Portugal, Sweden, Belgium, Ireland, Netherlands, Poland, Austria, Switzerland, Norway, Canada, Hungary.
  • Vehicle Make: KME / Pierce
  • Modified Item: Yes
  • Scale: 1/64
  • Series: Los Angeles County Fire Department
  • Features: Custom Built/Converted, Limited Edition, Special Edition
  • Year of Manufacture: 2021
  • Vehicle Type: Rear Mount Ladder
  • Modification Description: This is a custom built model and may not represent an actual existing piece of apparatus in the LAFD.
  • Brand: Code 3

Code 3 Los Angeles County Rear Mount Ladder Museum Quality Custom Built
D_P_O_MOUNT_WILSON_Los_Angeles_County_CALIFORNIA_OCT_24_1923_ILLUSTR_01_to

D. P. O MOUNT WILSON(Los Angeles County)CALIFORNIA-OCT/24/1923-ILLUSTR

D. P. O MOUNT WILSON(Los Angeles County)CALIFORNIA-OCT/24/1923-ILLUSTR
D. P. O MOUNT WILSON(Los Angeles County)CALIFORNIA-OCT/24/1923-ILLUSTR
D. P. O MOUNT WILSON(Los Angeles County)CALIFORNIA-OCT/24/1923-ILLUSTR
D. P. O MOUNT WILSON(Los Angeles County)CALIFORNIA-OCT/24/1923-ILLUSTR

D. P. O MOUNT WILSON(Los Angeles County)CALIFORNIA-OCT/24/1923-ILLUSTR
MOUNT WILSON(Los Angeles County)CALIFORNIA-OCT/24/1923-ILLUSTRATED FISH & CREEL-CAMP WEST FORK ADVETISING-TO N. OPENED ROUGH AT TOP-minor toning. Another quality product from Triple S Postal History. We want your long term repeat business. Triple S Postal History, Inc. Urbana, Oh 43078 United States of America. OPENED ROUGH AT TOP-minor toning Another quality product from Triple S Postal History D. Urbana, Oh 43078 United States of America Image. This item is in the category “Stamps\United States\Covers\Postal History”. The seller is “wilnoman” and is located in this country: US. This item can be shipped worldwide.
  • Place of Origin: United States

D. P. O MOUNT WILSON(Los Angeles County)CALIFORNIA-OCT/24/1923-ILLUSTR
D_P_O_MOUNT_WILSON_Los_Angeles_County_CALIFORNIA_OCT_24_1923_ILLUSTR_01_ho

D. P. O. MOUNT WILSON(Los Angeles County)CALIFORNIA-OCT/24/1923-ILLUSTR

D. P. O. MOUNT WILSON(Los Angeles County)CALIFORNIA-OCT/24/1923-ILLUSTR
D. P. O. MOUNT WILSON(Los Angeles County)CALIFORNIA-OCT/24/1923-ILLUSTR
D. P. O. MOUNT WILSON(Los Angeles County)CALIFORNIA-OCT/24/1923-ILLUSTR
D. P. O. MOUNT WILSON(Los Angeles County)CALIFORNIA-OCT/24/1923-ILLUSTR

D. P. O. MOUNT WILSON(Los Angeles County)CALIFORNIA-OCT/24/1923-ILLUSTR
MOUNT WILSON(Los Angeles County)CALIFORNIA-OCT/24/1923-ILLUSTRATED FISH & CREEL-CAMP WEST FORK ADVETISING-TO N. OPENED ROUGH AT TOP-minor toning. Another quality product from Triple S Postal History. We want your long term repeat business. Triple S Postal History, Inc. Urbana, Oh 43078 United States of America. This item is in the category “Stamps\United States\Covers\Postal History”. The seller is “wilnoman” and is located in this country: US. This item can be shipped worldwide.
  • Place of Origin: United States

D. P. O. MOUNT WILSON(Los Angeles County)CALIFORNIA-OCT/24/1923-ILLUSTR