A Turn Around Echo Park Lake

or, AN ECHO PARK LAKE TURN-AROUND: A cautious View to historic preservation.

Through long years of misgovernance the Lake was allowed to turn into a muddy, trash-strewn, corpse-filled swamp full of noxious weeds. Not coincidentally, the neighborhood of Echo Park, with its famous Angelus Temple and thousands of picture-perfect Victorians and Craftsman bungalows with breathtaking hill Views of Downtown, deteriorated into a burned-out Vandalized gang-infested slum.

The big triangle-shaped lot at the north rim of the reservoir — still a single farmstead in 1894! — was filled by Aimee Semple MacPherson’s Angelus Temple and Parsonage in 1922.

In the late ‘Nineties and early Aughts, the neighborhood began stabilizing into one of L.A.’s vibrant mixed-race, artists-gays-and-immigrant-young-family welcoming enclaves. It was still crime-ravaged, though; full gentrification was undermined by the festering sore of the Lake at its core.

In 2011 the City of Los Angeles did the right thing, or half of the right thing, by spending what it cost ($45 million) to restore the watershed, the fish, the wildlife, the plants. The benches and walks were enhanced, and the Lake was replanted as a botanical garden of water plants — lotuses, lilies, rushes, wild gingers, reeds. All of course, graciously lorded over by some of L.A.’s oldest and most Narcissistic palms.

In 2013, then-Mayor Elect Eric Garcetti, who had represented the area on the City Council, snipped the ribbon. Here it is, after 7 years, all grown-in together, complete with fountain and Swan Boats, and all in eye-popping bloom, and teeming with fowl and fish and all Noah’s creatures except mosquitoes. Hallelujah. Click to enlarge the pics, the light was DAZZLING yesterday.

LA has returned Echo Park to being one of the most gorgeous, accessible, safe, cool and pleasant urban oases in the world. The neighborhood has already well-repaid its “debt” for the City cost of the renovation, in rising values. If anything, Echo Park has gentrified too much — but what a View!

The Coot family were out for a feed; Mom made sure junior got plenty of greens; while Old Grey Heron stood master of all he View’d.

The palmettos were out promenading in their boas; their flowing plumes, a perfect inverse of the Fountain jets.

YET, PATIENT READER, TURN AROUND:

For every shot in this album, if the camera had been turned around, this would be the View of Echo Park Lake.

I think the Angelus Temple helps out — I saw a crew of young people knocking on the tent doors and distributing boxed lunches to anyone who needed one. All of the homesites were well-thought-out, sensitive of the plants and the pathways. One had a bookcase full of literature and academic volumes. One had a kitchen folding table with a vase of flowers. There was no crime, no smell, no drunkenness, no disturbance of the wildlife in any way; their dogs wagged, they didn’t bark. This, in itself brought a tear to my eye. These were not crazy drug addicts. Theses were well-brought-up Americans, many of them people my age, suddenly dispossessed of their homes and left with no place, but what they could carve out by dint their own damn courtesy and neighborliness and ingenuity. It is a credit to the City that they haven’t run them off. But when I said in the first paragraph, that the City did half the right thing, this is what I meant. It is a CRIME that American cities ignore the social costs of displacement, homelessness, and the lives and livelihoods uprooted by investments in the urban core. This unnecessary tragedy was what Patrick Geddes labored his whole career to get us to understand about cities, redevelopment, rising rents, and social justice. And Henry George, before him. So this issue sticks in the View’s ocular like a beam. We learn nothing.

I sincerely believe the Park right now is a safer place for young women joggers, lost little infants, stray dogs, or sun-distracted tourists, with good neighbors like those I saw yesterday, caring about the place.

There are maybe 300 or so camps, spread all along the one-mile perimeter. They deserve notice. And their numbers are about to skyrocket like one of our old Baja fan palms. Congress adjourned this weekend leaving a further coronavirus relief package undecided. As Rev. Jeremiah Wright, the Obamas’ pastor, put it, “God Damn America.”

Echo Park has two very good spirits presiding over it. First, giving daily benediction, the “Queen of the Angels” 1933, by WPA artist Ada May Sharpless. Second, the spirit of Aimee Semple MacPherson, who served so many thousands of meals during the Depression, that the City made her move her soup kitchen out of the park, over to Temple Street. These legacies give the place an air of grace and mercy to this day.

The lessons of that Depression Era Echo Park are well worth reflecting upon.





Caution: Falling Idols

As Columbus announced, when he knew he was bounced, ‘It was swell, Isabel, swell.’

MONUMENT CONTROVERSY DEPT.

https://news.yahoo.com/christopher-columbus-statue-taken-down-090216918.html

I met a traveller from an antique land
Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. Near them, on the sand,
Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command,
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
The hand that mocked them and the heart that fed:
And on the pedestal these words appear:
‘My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!’
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.

— Percy Bysshe Shelley, “Ozymandias” 1811

As with the once-inspiring, suddenly-inflammatory statues of Fr. Junipero Serra in California, the Grant Park monument was initially put up as a gesture of the pride Chicago felt for its Italian-Americans, and a gesture of the pride Italian-Americans felt for their Chicago. Many such statues were put up all around the nation in the wake of the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition, which was of course in Chicago’s famous White City. The Fair was a year late and many dollars short, but the civic moment in 1893 was Progressive; the civic mood was famously “Gay,” in its Victorian sense, tolerant. The ethnic mix of immigrant America was being urged to coalesce itself into the mainstream, via the New Public Education that gave ethnicity its due, for the first time in America. Italian-Americans were honored for “discovering America.” Teaching America’s civic religion — our common myths and legends – was imperative, but it was damnably selective for what we would call “white privilege.”

Thus communities chose acceptable heroes, those whom everybody could agree represented something to the nation. Bismarck (!) and Beethoven were promoted by Germans. Count Casimir Pulaski — recently revealed to have been fabulously trans! — was a Polish-American entry. The French put Lafayette all over.

Columbus was promoted heavily with the allegorical attributes of “Enterprise.” In the erection of a statue of Columbus, usually themes of predation, colonialism, or the cultural spread of Spanish laws, customs and religion — especially Catholicism — to the New World were often downplayed. Instead, it was the character of Columbus, his individualism, his matrism (Santa Maria, Isabella) his cleverness, his leadership of men, that swelled the hearts of individual immigrant Italian-Americans. They felt that on some level, they exactly shared his story: “In Italy, I was uno povero nessuno — a poor nobody. Then I get on a big boat, discover America, and badda bing, I becoma rich!”

Computer generated 3D illustration with the ships Santa Maria, Nina and Pinta of Christopher Columbus

You could have knocked the Knights of Columbus over with a feather if you told them their hero was responsible for racism, slavery, syphillis, white supremacy, imperialism, the global spread of invasive plants, or the Spanish Armada; or that conjoining the globe was a Pandora’s box for exploitation. Actually, they would have knocked you down for traducing their compare, and you wouldn’t have gotten up.


Monument removal shouldn’t be whimsical — but it’s easier if the monuments themselves have become objects of whimsy, or display obvious mistruth, obsolete moral instruction, or whitewashing. Apart from proud Italian-Americans, few ever took the Columbus idols in a thousand American squares seriously as history or civic memory. American pop culture has saturated Columbus so thoroughly with satire, vaudeville, advertising logos, cartoons, jokes, even the Cole Porter punch lines above, that his myth can be said to have been safely de-bunked for decades. Some of these critiques even amount to a racist calumny of Italians, or its opposite, insisting Italian-Americans themselves are foolish for applauding their hero. This is not to deny legitimate anger over 500 years of European conquest of the Americas; instead, to suggest that the facts of European colonialism are more open now than ever before for discovery and interpretation by il mondo intero.

Here are two absolutely offensive and prejudiced Columbus songs. Each fully deserves six or seven closely-argued paragraphs of humorless undergraduate anti-imperialist rage. Someone will get to work on those, I’m sure. Meanwhile enjoy cultural appropriation what IS cultural appropriation. First the Buffalo Bills’ in a RARE live recording of Lou Monte’s harmless “Please, Mr. Columbus.”

https://drive.google.com/file/d/19pSMoo7JjKVKBRqG6nH5uRuagtZ94zmN/view?usp=sharing

Then the incomparable Fats Waller, and his lyricst, Andy Razaf, clear the decks for Dinah Washington to bump out her groovy history lesson.

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ZLPiLeSFwDXR_xvfB9-hytOOSrs2wK8L/view?usp=sharing

Consider Razaf’s bio: no nessuno, he was born in Washington, D.C. of genuine African, and figurative Afro-American, royalty. He went off to Tin Pan Alley and Hollywood, and he wrote brilliant lyrics to standards everybody knows, like”Honeysuckle Rose” and “Ain’t Misbehavin’.” Eventually this Madagascar prince died with the Blest in North Hollywood, and is buried in the eternal sunshine of Angelus-Rosedale Cemetery. Wise Old Christopher Columbus.

“Razaf was born in Washington, D.C. His birth name was Andriamanantena Paul Razafinkarefo. He was the son of Henri Razafinkarefo, nephew of Queen Ranavalona III of Imerina kingdom in Madagascar, and Jennie (Waller) Razafinkarefo, the daughter of John L. Waller, the first African American consul to Imerina. The French invasion of Madagascar left his father dead, and forced his pregnant 15-year-old mother to escape to the United States, where he was born in 1895.[1]
He was raised in HarlemManhattan, and at the age of 16 he quit school and took a job as an elevator operator at a Tin Pan Alley office building. A year later he penned his first song text, embarking on his career as a lyricist. During this time he would spend many nights in the Greyhound Lines bus station in Times Square and would pick up his mail at the Gaiety Theatre office building which was considered the black Tin Pan Alley.
Some of Razaf’s early poems were published in 1917–18 in the Hubert Harrison-edited Voice, the first newspaper of the “New Negro Movement“. Razaf collaborated with composers Eubie BlakeDon RedmanJames P. JohnsonHarry Brooks, and Fats Waller. Among the best-known Razaf-Waller collaborations are “Ain’t Misbehavin’“, “Honeysuckle Rose“, “The Joint Is Jumpin'”, “Willow Tree”, “Keepin’ Out of Mischief Now” and “(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue“. His music was played by other Tin Pan Alley musicians, as well as Benny GoodmanEubie BlakeCab Calloway and many others. He was a contributor and editor of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League‘s Negro World newspaper.
He also wrote quite a number of raunchy ‘character’ blues-type songs for many of the women blues singers of the 1920s. He also made a number of records as vocalist (both as solo and as vocalist for jazz groups, including a handful by James P. Johnson and Fletcher Henderson). In 1972, Razaf was recognized by his Tin Pan Alley peers in the Songwriters Hall of Fame. Razaf died in North Hollywood, California from cancer, aged 77.”



View’s ‘Modest Proposal’ Is Adopted!!

The View comprises many advanced ideas — things that should seem sensible and practical and a social given, but for some reason are terribly threatening. For instance, A Walkable Earth. Or, the idea that mankind’s only future is free, voluntary, and co-operative. How about free Wi-Fi across the country? Or a free, guaranteed, no-ad, no-commerce, webspace for every American? It would be like having a secure postal address, or a secure bank account, and come with automatic voter registration and Social Security access. How about socialized medicine…?

But no, in America today, it’s only the craziest violent ravings that strike fire:

“In response to the use of tear gas being utilized by federal officers against demonstrators, including a group of moms, in an uprising in Portland, Oregon, this week, a like-minded dads’ group encouraged others to show up to the event with leaf blowers in order to dissipate the chemical agents.
Uprisings in Portland have happened nightly since the end of May, in response to police violence against Black Americans, including renewed attention to Jason Washington, a Black resident of the city who was shot and killed by police in 2018.
Tensions have escalated in recent weeks as federal officers began appearing at the events. Last week, there were reports of agents in unmarked vans stopping next to protesters, whisking them away in the vehicles without stated justification and without identifying who they were. Those actions prompted outcry from Portland residents, and action from a group of mothers who appeared over the weekend to protect demonstrators by standing between them and officers.
Those individuals, known as the Wall of Moms for their way of interlocking arms as a means to protect protesters, were themselves attacked by officers with tear gas during their peaceful demonstrations. On Monday, several social media posts from the group known as “PDX Dad Pod” encouraged its members and others to appear with leaf blowers, even telling users who followed them on social media that it would be a great purchase to support local businesses. Video from confrontations between demonstrators and officers on Monday night into Tuesday morning highlighted how protesters used hockey sticks to scoot tear gas canisters back toward those who fired them, and the leaf blowers as a means to dissipate clouds of chemicals away from protesters. Smaller leaf blowers were also used to help get chemicals off people’s bodies, video also showed…

— Chris Walker, writing for Truthout, July 21, 2020

Here’s what the View wrote back in June:

“In the most ironic twist imaginable, that horrible, ineradicable urban scourge, the leaf blower, has emerged as a go-to device for Anti-Fascists to clear away the noxious tear gas hurled into peaceful protests by the police. If used correctly, they might just save our citizens’ democratic right to assembly.
The genius of these ghastly poisonous weapons, is that, for police officers, leaf blowers are completely invisible. Nobody really knows why, but despite years and years of citizen outrage and protest, after the decades-long civic organizing it takes to fight City Hall, after even passing that law banning the damn things ten or fifteen years ago, we citizens have learned to our dismay, that since the cops apparently can’t see them, can’t smell the fumes, and can’t even hear the window-rattling roars up and and down every block in the city 14 times a week, the police are totally, totally powerless against the devices. This “invisibility to cop” has left the citizens with no defenders against the machines.

Here Lived Eric Whitacre

The greatest artist of our age, Eric Whitacre, once lived on Magnolia, in days of auld lang syne. Here, i.e., was written Lux Aurumque, the first Virtual Choir. The Hollywood Regency octagon window, was his studio. In those days it was much padded with foam pylons — defense against the wail of the sirens, the boisterous oaths of the NoHo High kids coming home at 3:30 each day, or Clio barking at the mail lady.

Eric released his Virtual Choir 6 yesterday, to great acclaim, and the View’s delight. If Valley Village ever did anything to redeem her brazen infamy as America’s Original Automobile Suburb, it was in her time spent nurturing Eric’s music on mankind’s behalf.

Sing Gently is exactly the prescription America needs right now. Breathe, folks, hear the legion voices, and give blessings. Click below to hear Eric, the Pride O’ Valley Village, on process:

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/sing-gently-by-eric-whitacre-creating-a-virtual-choir-with-17572-singers/