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A History Of Silver Lake's LAFD Station No. 56

Los Angeles and Southern California have been shaped by fire since the end of the last ice age. The first humans in the region, the ancestors of the Chumash, arrived at least 13,000 years ago and used fire to manage and alter the landscape for many millennia. Intentional burns were banned by the Spanish and the ban was upheld by the Mexican and American governments that succeeded them. Accidental fires, however, remain a fact of life and for those, we have fire departments. The first was the all-volunteer Engine Company No. 1, organized in Los Angeles in 1871 by George M. Fall, a Counter Clerk. The professional Los Angeles Fire Department was organized on 1 February 1886.

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Los Angeles grew rapidly in the 1910s, overtaking San Francisco during that decade to become the most populous California city in the state. Los Angeles’s  population more than doubled in the 1920s, surpassing one million. As the city grew, so too did the fire department – which also modernized. Horse drawn fire-carts were phased out on 19 July 1921. Under Chief Engineer Ralph J. Scott, the Los Angeles Fire Department opened thirteen new bungalow style fire departments in the early ’20s. The bungalow style was designed to ensure that fire stations fit, aesthetically,  into their suburban residential surroundings. The Los Angeles Evening Express declared, of the new bungalow style stations, “the day of the ugly common brick box stuck into an otherwise handsome row of homes is past.”

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In the area of Silver Lake then still commonly referred to as the Ivanhoe Hills, the then-new Engine Company No. 56 moved into its new fire house on 11 August 1924. The brick building was constructed at a cost of $23,500 ($431,761 adjusted for inflation). Its Mediterranean-inspired architecture matched that of many of the homes in the neighborhood constructed during that era. The Spanish Colonial Revival-style bungalow court across the street matched its style when it was constructed in 1928. In addition to the main building, the firehouse included a kitchen/oil room and a handball court.

Apparatus Maintenance
Apparatus Maintenance

Hand Ball (right) (Source: Adolph Ziegler Collection, circa 1950)
Hand Ball (right) (Source: Adolph Ziegler Collection, circa 1950)

In 1933, The Los Angeles Times profiled Los Angeles firefighters in an article titled “Men Who Laugh at Death.” In it, author Mary June Burton described Station No. 56 firefighter Alexander J. MacDonald as “a very Scotch fireman–steady, close-mouthed, unbending, but still ready to risk his life when the need comes.’ Like all LAFD firehouses before 1955, it was racially segregated – in Silver Lake, that meant whites only. Most of Silver Lake itself was racially restricted until the 1940s.

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Because of earthquakes, some of the station’s ornamental features were removed in 1960 and efforts were made to stabilize the building. Nevertheless, the station and sixteen others (as well as fourteen branch libraries) were listed as earthquake hazards in 1982. In 1984, The Los Angeles Times reported that these “antique firehouses” were “facing the ax.” The Los Angeles Cultural Heritage Board singled out Station 56 as an “excellent example of the bungalow-type stations built in 1923-1924.” On 12 January 1988, the station was designated Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument No. 337.

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The new Station 56 opened 160 meters east of the original on the other side of Rowena Avenue on 8 February 1989. It was designed by Howard Robinson & Associates and built by contractors, Shirley Brothers Construction. The station, more “Smog Check Revival” than “Spanish Colonial Revival,” lacks the former’s architectural charms but, more importantly, was designed to withstand earthquakes.


The old building, meanwhile, was sold at an auction in 1990. Its Historic-Cultural Monument status protected it from demolition or significant alterations. At the same time, however, the aging building needed new plumbing, new electrical fixtures, new windows, earthquake retrofitting, and asbestos removal. The first buyer backed out and the sale was canceled in 1991. It was auctioned again on 9 September 1994 but sat abandoned for years after.

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Around 2000, Melanie Tusquellas and Patti Peck began undertaking costly renovations for the restaurant they planned to open there. A conditional use permit for alcohol and live entertainment was issued in 2001. In mid-October 2002, the Edendale Grill & Mixville Bar opened in the old firehouse. “Edendale” was the name of a 1902 tract that straddled the border of what later came to be known as Echo Park and Silver Lake. “Mixville,” meanwhile, was the name of early cowboy star Tom Mix’s, old movie ranch, located where the Whole Foods is now.

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A few years later, Eddie Ebell, a waiter at Blair’s, began bartending at the Mixville Bar. In July 2010, he took over the business and shortened its name to just Edendale. The pub threw a “100 Year Centennial Party” on 27 July. History Happy Hour, a group I’m part of, decided to gather there on 13 August. I’m tempted to shout out everyone who was there except I’m deathly afraid of inadvertently leaving anyone out. If you were there, cheers.,.. and to Station 56 and the Edendale — here’s to another 100!

 
 
 

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Land Acknowledgement

The Silver Lake Neighborhood Council acknowledges all of the original stewards and inhabitants of the Los Angeles Basin, or Tovaangar, and their descendants. We pay tribute to the Gabrielino-Tongva (Toviscanga) people who lived and cared for Yaanga & Maawnga—the lands which include present day Silver Lake—as well as the Kizh, Chumash, & Fernandeno-Tataviam Band who also inhabited Tovaangar.

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