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[[File:Los Angeles Victor Clothing Company Building.jpg|thumb|Victor Clothing Building]]
[[File:Los Angeles Victor Clothing Company Building.jpg|thumb|Victor Clothing Building]]
[[File:Bride and Groom by Kent Twitchell.jpg|thumb|''The Bride and Groom'' mural by [[Kent Twitchell]], Victor Clothing Company Building|alt=]]
[[File:Bride and Groom by Kent Twitchell.jpg|thumb|''The Bride and Groom'' mural by [[Kent Twitchell]], Victor Clothing Company Building|alt=]]
[[Image:Looking north along Broadway at its east side past 2nd St. Hall of Record, L.A. Times, Chamber of Commerce Bldg., 2nd St. Victor Clothing in Crocker Bldg., Pig 'n Whistle in Copp Bldg., 1888 City Hall at far right.jpg|thumb|Looking north along Broadway at its east side past 2nd Street in the c. mid-1920s. Mid-block, Victor Clothing in its location from 1926–1964 in the Crocker Bldg. (#212–6). Pig 'n Whistle in the Copp Bldg. (#218–224). 1888 City Hall at far right.]]
'''Victor Clothing''' Company was a retail clothing store at 242 S. [[Broadway (Los Angeles)|Broadway]], [[Downtown Los Angeles]].
'''Victor Clothing''' Company was a retail clothing store at 242 S. [[Broadway (Los Angeles)|Broadway]], [[Downtown Los Angeles]]. Originally from 1926–1964 it was located at the Crocker Building #212–6 S. Broadway.<ref name=2B1894-1906>Sanborn Maps of Los Angeles: 1894, vol. 1, plate 8; 1906, vol. 2, plate 131.</ref>


The store reached its heyday in the 1940s and '50s when Broadway was the city's main retail and commercial street and "The Victor" employed more than 50 workers and stocked thousands of men's suits and some furs and dresses for women. In its last decades it was a frequent advertiser on local Spanish-language television. The store closed in 2001, according to the owner due to shrinking customer traffic in the area.<ref name="ladt">{{Cite web|last=Maese|first=Kathryn|title=The Victor No Longer|url=http://www.ladowntownnews.com/news/the-victor-no-longer/article_a0238335-e381-5fc6-8926-1d9430ff9237.html|access-date=2020-08-11|website=Los Angeles Downtown News - The Voice of Downtown Los Angeles|language=en}}</ref>
The store reached its heyday in the 1940s and '50s when Broadway was the city's main retail and commercial street and "The Victor" employed more than 50 workers and stocked thousands of men's suits and some furs and dresses for women. In its last decades it was a frequent advertiser on local Spanish-language television. The store closed in 2001, according to the owner due to shrinking customer traffic in the area.<ref name="ladt">{{Cite web|last=Maese|first=Kathryn|title=The Victor No Longer|url=http://www.ladowntownnews.com/news/the-victor-no-longer/article_a0238335-e381-5fc6-8926-1d9430ff9237.html|access-date=2020-08-11|website=Los Angeles Downtown News - The Voice of Downtown Los Angeles|language=en}}</ref>

Revision as of 21:20, 28 January 2021

Victor Clothing Building
File:Bride and Groom by Kent Twitchell.jpg
The Bride and Groom mural by Kent Twitchell, Victor Clothing Company Building
Looking north along Broadway at its east side past 2nd Street in the c. mid-1920s. Mid-block, Victor Clothing in its location from 1926–1964 in the Crocker Bldg. (#212–6). Pig 'n Whistle in the Copp Bldg. (#218–224). 1888 City Hall at far right.

Victor Clothing Company was a retail clothing store at 242 S. Broadway, Downtown Los Angeles. Originally from 1926–1964 it was located at the Crocker Building #212–6 S. Broadway.[1]

The store reached its heyday in the 1940s and '50s when Broadway was the city's main retail and commercial street and "The Victor" employed more than 50 workers and stocked thousands of men's suits and some furs and dresses for women. In its last decades it was a frequent advertiser on local Spanish-language television. The store closed in 2001, according to the owner due to shrinking customer traffic in the area.[2]

Victor Clothing Company murals

Three historic public art murals dating from 1984-1985 were painted on the exterior walls of the former Victor Clothing Company buildings between Broadway Street and Spring Street, Los Angeles.[3]

References

  1. ^ Sanborn Maps of Los Angeles: 1894, vol. 1, plate 8; 1906, vol. 2, plate 131.
  2. ^ Maese, Kathryn. "The Victor No Longer". Los Angeles Downtown News - The Voice of Downtown Los Angeles. Retrieved 2020-08-11.
  3. ^ Branson-Potts, Haley (24 January 2017). "Downtown's 'Pope of Broadway' mural featuring actor Anthony Quinn fully restored by original artist". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 17 October 2020.