Mirror Building

Mirror Building
Second Street Mirror Building on the right in 1886
LocationSecond Street and 145 S Spring St, Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Coordinates34°03′07″N 118°14′43″W / 34.0518583333333°N 118.245247222222°W / 34.0518583333333; -118.245247222222
Built1858
DesignatedJuly 05, 1960
Reference no.744
Mirror Building is located in the Los Angeles metropolitan area
Mirror Building
Location of Mirror Building in the Los Angeles metropolitan area
The LA Times Building in 1935 on the site of the former Mirror Building
Office of U.S. Quartermaster, Army Camel Corp training
Office of U.S. Quartermaster Army Camel Corp monument
Butterfield Stage in 1860

The Mirror Building also called the Butterfield Overland Mail Company Los Angeles Building was a large brick building in Los Angeles built by Butterfield Overland Mail Company built in 1858. The Mirror Building was designated a California Historic Landmark (No.744) on July 5, 1960. The Mirror Building had business offices and housing space for traveling workers. There was a large stable in the back of the buildings for the horses, along with a large workshop to repair the stagecoaches. The first Butterfield Overland Mail stagecoach from St. Louis to arrive was on October 7, 1858. The Butterfield Overland Mail Company was founded by John Butterfield, who later founded American Express.[1]

While the Mirror Building was being built the Butterfield Overland Mail Company rented space from the Bella Union Hotel.[2][3][4] The Los Angeles Butterfield Overland Mail Company closed in 1861.

In 1861, the Mirror Building became the Office of U.S. Quartermaster. The U.S. Quartermaster use the stable for army horses and mules. The stable also had space to support the camels used at Fort Tejon and other west outpost. From 1858, Fort Tejon was the western terminus of the experimental U.S. Camel Corps, which used imported camels in an effort to carry supplies across arid regions in the Southwest. The soldiers found the camels hardy, but temperamental, and they spooked the horses used by the cavalry.[5]

From 1884 to 1888, the Mirror Building was used as Los Angeles City Hall. The site of the former Mirror Building is now Los Angeles Times building at 202 West 1st Street built in 1935. The current Times Building has a small museum about the Mirror Building and other offices that were on the site, located at 125 South Spring Street. The 1947 New Times Building, is sometimes called Mirror Building due to the site of the original Mirror Building.[6][7]

  • The Mirror Building received its name later from the Mirror Printing Office and Book Bindery. Mirror Printing Office became the owners of Los Angeles Daily Times in 1882.[8]
  • The downtown Los Angeles block that the Mirror Building was on is also the location of the Los Angeles School No. 1 built in 1855. This was the first brick school house in Los Angeles. The School was paid for by the new California education property tax assessment started in 1852, which gave schools five cents per $100 of taxable property value. The school was at the northwest corner of Spring and Second streets and cost $6,000 to build. The two story School opened on March 19, 1855.[9][10]
Route divisions of Butterfield Overland Mail route[11]
Division Route Miles Hours
Division 1 San Francisco to Los Angeles 462 80
Division 2 Los Angeles to Fort Yuma 282 72.20
  1. ^ "Butterfield Stagecoach Overland Mail Co". Knol. Archived from the original on 7 February 2012. Retrieved 9 May 2011.
  2. ^ Kieliaso, John R. "Historic Adobes of Los Angeles County". LAOkay.com. Archived from the original on 2004-10-25.
  3. ^ washington.edu, Bella Union Hotel
  4. ^ "Bella Union Hotel Site, California Historical Landmark 656". Archived from the original on 2019-08-22. Retrieved 2019-08-22.
  5. ^ Slatta, Richard W. (2001). The mythical West : an encyclopedia of legend, lore, and popular culture. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9781576071519. OCLC 50174716.
  6. ^ Cal Parks, Site 744
  7. ^ hmdb.org, Mirror Building
  8. ^ Early Los Angeles Historical Buildings (1800s)
  9. ^ LAschools.org, Historic Context Statement, page 3
  10. ^ A History of California, by James Miller Guinn, 1907, page 303
  11. ^ Wright, "Historic Places-Appendix A", p. 821