Guest blogger, museum fossil hunter and mortician, Doug Goodreau has been chipping away to unbury Mortuary Row.
He is a Senior Paleontological Preparator at the Dinosaur Institute of the Natural History Museum in Exposition Park. Doug knows my neck of the woods very well, having previously worked for nine years at Rose Hills Memorial Park & Mortuary in Whittier - of which six years were on the "graveyard shift."
Here is what Doug has uncovered:
From Monster Movies to Mortuaries
I never intended to become a mortician. I moved to Los
Angeles in 1988 to attend a makeup effects school and work in the film
industry. Monster movies were my passion, or so I thought. In
between films I was always interested in seeking out references for the next
horror film I was going to work on. I approached every mortuary listed in the
yellow pages (remember, there was no internet), but I instead discovered none
of them would hire just any makeup artist, only embalmers from the mortuary
college. Hmmm, interesting - "Sign me up," I said to
myself.
After receiving my embalmer's license in 1991, I worked from small, family
owned mortuaries up to large corporations, enjoying the stability of a regular
paycheck and schedule. Coincidentally, it was around this same time I
began volunteering in our Museum's Vertebrate Paleontology Department preparing
fossils and applying the molding, casting and painting skills that I learned in
the film industry. Still wanting to learn more and challenge myself, I
heard by word of mouth, “trade embalming" was the thing to do; this was
only for the most seasoned experts and restorative artists (folks like me that
specialize in facial reconstruction on severely traumatized human remains) who
subcontract to all funeral homes throughout the Greater Los Angeles
Area and get paid well for doing so. Naturally, for me, I seized this
opportunity, but had no idea of the kind of experiences I'd have, nor the
eclectic group of living people I would work with and the stories they told me.
Doug Goodreau excavating an ichthyosaur skull in Nevada, September 2019 (Image provided by D. Goodreau) |
Being the youngest trade embalmer for Schenk Professional
Services (with which I still work today) I was hazed as well as coached by hard
working men and women from all walks of life. Everyone brought their own
life experience to the funeral industry and always had a side hustle: some
staff were World War II, Korean, or Vietnam war veterans; one owned a hair
salon during normal business hours; another supported a professional car racing
hobby; one needed to moonlight temporarily from their full-time mortuary gig to
supplement putting their kids through college; or frankly they just needed the
cash.
The Good Ol' Days for Embalming
One recurring theme that I kept hearing from the old-timers was about a
legendary time and place in Los Angeles funeral history, a "good ol days
for embalming" as some embalmers refer to it with a smile as they reflect
back to what was once nicknamed Mortuary Row. This was an area uniquely
zoned for mortuaries from the early 1920's to the mid-50's, between what is now
the Staples Center and our very own Natural History Museum, which was home to
over 4O funeral parlors and related funeral industry businesses. More
specifically, the main streets were West Washington and Venice Boulevards
(going east to west) and loosely bordered by north/south running streets, Toberman
Street to the west, and Flower Street to the east.
Within a 16-block rectangular portion of the historic West Adams district, a
grieving family would commonly conduct business among a diversity of mortuaries
to serve their particular needs, and the casket could be loaded onto a trolley
car that had direct routes out to Rosedale or Evergreen cemeteries for
interment. At a time when most funeral homes lacked large refrigeration units
because these buildings were usually just homes converted into businesses,
everyone in our ever expanding population of Los Angeles was embalmed, that is,
intravenously injected with formaldehyde and other preservatives to disinfect,
preserve and restore human remains, along with dressing, cosmetics, hair
styling, and casketing, as opposed to the approximately 50 percent of cremation
that people opt for today. This kept embalmers busy! "How busy?” - you may
ask. It was so busy a coworker told me he would have a falling out with
one funeral director in the morning and get fired, or quit, go have lunch, and
get a job a couple doors down just by asking for work, no resume required. It
was a 24-hours, 7 days-a-week operation.
From Le Guide Francais de Los Angeles, 1932, p. 127 (Courtesy of the Seaver Center for Western History Research, Natural History Museum) |
[Blogger's note: Godeau & Martinoni, pictured
above, was one example along the Row. Doug learned from co-workers that
Martinoni was known to change his name to "Martinian" in order to
market himself to the increasing Armenian population at the time. Today
the building is the headquarters for Giroux Glass, located at 850 West
Washington Boulevard.]
The former Godeau & Martinoni Mortuary, today Giroux Glass, Inc. (Image courtesy of Google Maps) |
After many years of working with all of these characters, listening to countless details of this rich local history, and hearing their repeated stories until they slowly began dying off, I realized I really needed to document this. It wasn't until I was a little older that I truly began to value their collective past, an era that will never repeat. I have so many friends and family that simply wouldn't believe that this was how we did funerals per folks that are still serving the public today. A few years ago I began sitting with individuals to digitally record their oral histories, along with copious note taking, fact checking their accounts, and asking a lot more questions: Who started this "trade embalming” business model, and why was it so successful? How many other morticians have done this and for how long? Were their stories similar in any way to mine, or entirely different? What unexpectedly bizarre events took place that were most memorable? Why did Mortuary Row come to an end?
The Embalmer's Embalmer
A prime example from my project was a good friend, an embalmer’s embalmer, the late Louie Brousseau. He began his career as a trade embalmer in 1946, just after his tour of duty in WWII. Louie lived above the Willen Glasband mortuary for a time. Armed only with his instrument kit and the strongest work ethic I’ve ever encountered, he started his own business. He soon met his wife at a dance hall across the street, and raised three daughters in the apartment behind the chapel here. This building happens to be located on the corner of Oak Street and West Washington Boulevard, known as “the heart of Mortuary Row” by industry professionals of that era. This building still exists as an evangelical church and there are a few remaining buildings on the row that can be easily identified based on the architecture (if you know what to look for). Groman and Armstrong Family mortuaries are the only remaining two businesses that still function as funeral homes, I still do occasional work at the latter.I was fortunate enough to do a walking tour with Louie when he was an energetic 94, video recorded with the assistance of Chris Weisbart (former museum exhibits staff), as he pointed out every mortuary that existed during the heyday of the neighborhood, in addition to many other unrelated fun facts. For instance, directly across, on the south side of the street, used to stand a miniature golf course, next door to Rodger Young Auditorium (a former German beer hall that was revamped post WWII for concern of Nazi sympathizers meeting there, but the building is now demolished) where such big names as Jimmy Durante and Judy Garland once performed. Next door, just west of that was Bresee Brothers Mortuary (currently a charter school). Bresee Brothers played a significant role in establishing the zoning for the funeral industry in this vicinity. All the elderly embalmers I know spoke highly of their facilities.
Orr & Hines predated the zoning along Mortuary Row according to Doug From Los Angeles To-Day, circa 1900 (Courtesy of the Seaver Center, GC-1299.1-2) |
Santa Monica Freeway work looking east from Hoover Street, 1961 (Image courtesy of Los Angeles Examiner Photographs Collection, USC Libraries) |
Here is the 10 Santa Monica freeway being constructed and intersecting the 110 Harbor freeway. You may recognize the Bob Hope
Patriotic Hall, tallest building off to the upper right, nearest the
intersection, on Figueroa, for reference. Willen Glasband Mortuary is the white
building dead center of the photo, along Washington Blvd., bisecting the shot
diagonally from left to right.
The Research and "Digging" Continues
I always appreciate any suggestions that folks have to improve and add to my search in an effort to paint a more complete picture of this particular morbid, but interesting part of our collective past. If anyone reading this happens to already be aware of Mortuary Row, have related stories they’re comfortable sharing, and/or funerary ephemera (i.e. photos of the businesses & funerals in this area, fans, postcards, matchbook covers, etc.) please don't hesitate to reach out to me: dgoodrea@nhm.org.