- 200 Block Grand Ave
- 300 Block Grand Ave.
- Brunson Mansion - 347 South Grand Avenue
- Bryan Mansion & Fleur-de-Lis Apartments/Capitol Hotel - 333 S. Grand Avenue
- Burn Melrose Burn
- CRA Relocation Offices - 232 South Grand Avenue
- Field Trip!
- Girls Just Wanna Have Fun
- Hershey Residence/Castle Towers - 350 South Grand/750 West Fourth
- Rose Mansion - 400 South Grand Avenue
- St Angelo Hotel - 237 North Grand Avenue
- Stotts Landing
- The Nugent/New Grand Hotel – 257 South Grand
- The Pensioner Showgirls of Melrose
- The Richelieu Hotel - 142 South Grand Avenue
- The Rise and Fall of the Dome
Dome Denizen Smith
Submitted by nathan on Sat, 03/29/2008 - 20:32.
July 14, 1949
Grace E. Smith made the Dome her home. From there she made the trek to work down to the Belmont Grill. It’s 1949. She’s a B-girl.
Vice has been coming down on prosties of late and joints like the Belmont that run B-girl operations are a thorn in the side of decent society. The racket is simple: the gals chat up the fellas, and as a gal mingles with the patrons she induces them to buy more drinks. Her bourbons are colored water or ice tea; she gets a commission of those sales. And if she takes off with her new friend, we’ll call him, oh, John, the tavern owner gets a cut of her earnings. Repeat.
After a while Vice gets tired of dealing with pimp beat downs, or customers given the mick finn, so it’s time to round up the ladies. Grace E. Smith, 28, won’t get to go home to her little room at the Dome tonight, popped as she was at the Belmont for violating the municipal B-girl ordinance. Tomorrow morning she’ll be out on $100 bail.
Grace's boss Nathan Bass, owner of the Belmont, has been supbeanoed to testify before the county grand jury in its current vice inquiry into the Brenda Allen police pay-off probe. (Bass had been in the news last month when he, as a pal of LAPD Lieutenant Wellpott, had wiretaps of his phone calls played at the PD/Allen vice hearings.) Bass went on to testify that famously dirty Sgts. Stoker and Jackson would meet in the Belmont.
The next mention of Grace E. Smith—one wonders if it's she and the same—is in 1953: a Lena S. Reed, 72, was to leave her $8,000 estate ($61,857 USD 2007) to her family but just before her demise opted to bequeath it to Mrs. Edna W. “Mail Fraud” Ballard (aka St. Germain, aka Joan of Arc, aka Lotus Ray King), cofounder of the I AM religious movement. A judge blocked probate when the family filed contest, accusing Mrs. Ballard of “exerting undue influence on Mrs. Reed while she was in ill health and mentally disturbed.” The same accusations were made against the secretary of the organization’s St. Germain Foundation, and executor of the will, one Grace E. Smith.
No mention as to whether this Grace E. Smith lived in the Dome.




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