HudsonHawk
I'll Lock Up
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... And here's a better photo of the clock attached to the building:
The building is located on the southeast corner of one of the more prominent intersections in what is now known as the "uptown" area of Whittier. This was the first area to be developed by settlers in the 1880s, so I suppose it's as close to a town square as we get. The same building can be seen on the far right in this photo from 1924...I love those clocks that are attached to the building. It reminds me of every town square in every small town in Texas...
Yes, it is! :eusa_clap As you can tell by my somewhat long-winded post above, I enjoy seeing the buildings these clocks are attached to, or are built into, or are surrounded by, as much as seeing the clocks themselves, and reading the history of those clocks and buildings. Here on the west coast our "physical" history (i.e., buildings like these) doesn't date nearly as far back as it does on the east coast and other parts of the country, so it pleases me to see these clocks and buildings that have somehow survived in spite of developers bent on replacing them with "modern" monstrosities through the decades.Great idea for a post, HH!
At one time there were four walk-in movie theaters here in Whittier. Sadly, only one remains today, and it's been converted to an eight-screen multiplex....To late for our movie theaters though, only one still exist down there, out of five.
Clock tower at Hillsborough High School in Tampa (which counts both my parents as alumni), built in 1928.
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That is an architecturally stunning high school - is it still a high school today?
Oh yes. By the 90's, it had become that "inner-city" school, but that area of town is undergoing a "revitalization", and the school underwent some restoration a few years back. That picture is fairly recent, I believe. The area to the right of the tower is the auditorium, with it stained glass windows:
View attachment 23489
Holy Cow - that is incredible. Thank you for posting the additional picture. While I think there are some new buildings that are nicely done today, nothing compares to the great architecture like this high school.
Yeah, mine was the typical brown brick cube built in the 1950s. We didn't have a clock tower, though we did have a "victory bell". We didn't get to ring it often.