Here's the first, a contractor's name I haven't seen before and couldn't read.
A little further down the block MJ Lynch turned up again, this time up against the competition, D.C. McCabe and Sons.
The block had quite a few McCabe marks.
Across the street I found this Union marking. There was no contractor's name marked along with it.
I can't quite make it all out. It looks like:
UNION MADE
S - 70 - F
LOCAL [3 or N]01 REG
S - 70 - F
LOCAL [3 or N]01 REG
First, I'm quite sure the "70" is not a year. The houses it was in front of didn't appear to built or remodeled in 1970. And I can't imagine them making a new iron every year. I'm not really up on union names and numbers so I searched the web a bit. Today there is a cement mason's union 300 in San Francisco, and the Teamster's local in Oakland is #70.
One of these days I'm going to look through old phone books at the Main Library and search for contractors, builders, and unions.
One of these days I'm going to look through old phone books at the Main Library and search for contractors, builders, and unions.
1 comment:
Very cool -- the only thing cooler is the things people scratch or press into fresh concrete...
And by the way, I was out at Land's End today and made my way down to water-level on an unofficial path -- I guess I could have used those awful stairs, but they're no fun...
Got caught up on the rail line from the information displays along the way...
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