Visual Materials
Westside Lighting Steam Plant
You might also be interested in

Westside Lighting Steam Plant
Visual Materials
Westside Lighting Steam Plant - The first plant of the Edison Company which Edison acquired. [22nd & Vermont Streets]
photCL SCE 02 - 00423

The old arc machine which was originally in the Westside Lighting Steam Plant
Visual Materials
The old arc machine [which was originally in the Westside Lighting Steam Plant, but the picture was probably taken in Los Angeles #1 Steam Plant.]
photCL SCE 02 - 00424

The original Westside Generator
Visual Materials
The original Westside Generator [or the first generator installed in Wright Electric Company's 22nd & Vermont St. Plant in Los Angeles.]
photCL SCE 01 - 00277

Los Angeles #1 - Boylston Steam Plant
Visual Materials
Los Angeles #1 - Boylston Steam Plant - Westside Lighting Company
photCL SCE 02 - 29158

Distribution Lines
Visual Materials
Distribution Lines - A man sitting on the site of the Westside Lighting Company's Westside Steam Plant, which was the first steam plant of the Edison Electric Company.
photCL SCE 02 - 00592
Image not available
Westside Lighting Company Powerhouse (1-2)
Visual Materials
The Southern California Edison collection of negatives and photographs consists of approximately 80,000 images created and acquired by the company from approximately 1883-1989, with the bulk of the collection covering 1910-1960. Formats include glass and film negatives, photo cards, loose photographs, photograph albums, lantern slides, and related materials. Most of the images were produced by Edison staff and contract photographers to document Edison facilities, products, operations, activities, and employees and for the purposes of education, advertising, training, and liability. The SCE collection offers a range of subjects far broader than the company's original intent. In addition to infrastructural images of transmission lines, steam plants, substations, equipment, vehicles, and hydroelectric plants, the company captured the uses of light and electricity in its myriad capacities, including night lighting of streets, billboards, storefronts, and gas stations; electric kitchens and appliances in domestic and industrial settings such as restaurants and cafes; agricultural innovations in the dairy and poultry industries; lighting for recreational uses such as swimming pools, bathhouses, tennis courts; golf courses; office work; and accident scenes and disasters, particularly the St. Francis Dam disaster of 1928.
photCL SCE