Advertisement

Verdugo Views: Float trophies evoke a golden age

Share

To the dismay of many who left messages on social media sites, there was no Glendale float in this year’s Tournament of Roses parade in Pasadena.

But, our long and illustrious history of participating in our neighbor’s big party — more than 100 years — did merit a front-page story in this newspaper.

The Jan. 4 article revealed that two silver trophies, for our 1929 and 1930 floats, are in the possession of former resident Shushanik Devine, now of Burbank, who bought them at auction nearly 20 years ago.

She recently contacted tournament officials after learning of their plans to present trophies to award-winning floats, as had been done in the tournament’s early years.

Join the conversation on Facebook >>

Back then, Glendale’s floats were frequent award winners. Our first Sweepstakes came in 1923, with 10 more to follow, according to documents found at the-soon-to-reopen Special Collections Room at the Glendale Public Library on Harvard Street.

Both of Devine’s trophies are from Glendale’s glory years, the 1920s, when city employee L. W. Chobe designed the floats.

Chobe’s first creation, in 1920, featured a California bungalow backed by a snow-capped mountain, which took a $100 first prize and a trophy cup.

His 1923 float — a peacock with a tail extending to 52 feet — won both a first prize and a Sweepstakes (our first). The tail end of Chobe’s great bird was supported by a small wagon carrying the four trophy cups already won by Glendale.

Hollywood’s Sid Grauman was so impressed with the peacock that he displayed the float — and Chobe’s picture — in the court of his Egyptian Theatre for two weeks. Grauman promised to take responsibility for the silver cups and presumably they were returned intact.

The designer’s 1928 Chinese Dragon was another sensation. A full 85 feet in length, it “writhed its way along the parade route to the roar of the assembled spectators. The dragon swished its tail from side to side, turning its head, rolling its eyes, opening and closing its colossal jaws and blowing smoke from its nostrils,” as noted in a newspaper account on file in Special Collections.

The two trophies now in Devine’s possession were awarded to Glendale’s 1929 and 1930 floats.

The 1929 float, “Lady of Shalott,” from Alfred Tennyson’s poem of the same name, depicted Lily Maid drifting to Camelot in a stream made of flowers.

Thousands of violets, chrysanthemums, roses and sweet peas were used to create the first prize and Sweepstakes-winning float, which was later displayed on Brand Boulevard in front of the 4-year-old Alexander Theatre.

The theater’s manager received permission from the city to display the float for the benefit of those unable to attend the parade in these pre-television days. Police officers were detailed to handle the traffic at the crossing in the middle of the block to “protect those pedestrians who allow their interest in the float to blind them to the risk they run while crossing the street, “ according to an account in the News-Press.

His 1930 portrayal of the “Gold Rush of ‘98” took first theme prize, but Chobe, who had been suffering from a throat ailment for a year and a half, was unable to speak and had to write directions for his wife, Georgia, who supervised the float decoration.

Accompanied by his physician, Chobe made it to Pasadena on New Year’s Day to see his float take yet another prize. He died just a few days later.

Alas, none of the silver trophies awarded to Glendale’s rose floats remain in the city’s possession.

To the readers:

Jean Maluccio, with the Crescenta Valley Chamber of Commerce, emailed regarding the organization’s Jan. 12 recognition of the recently disbanded Crescenta-Cañada Rotary Club’s 76 years of service to the community — from 1940 to 2016 — and, in particular, its early years during World War II, watching for enemy aircraft, holding war bond drives and even manning a canteen at Union Station.

Maluccio wrote that some of the Rotary’s written history was destroyed in a fire at the Oakmont Country Club many years ago.

She added a few lines regarding the Carpenters (Verdugo Views, Oct. 22, 2016). “The Ledger and Leader newspapers were in storage for years. They finally came out around 12 years ago, and ended up with me. Their collection went beyond the local papers they put out, as the Carpenters collected newspapers from around the United States. In addition, Grace Carpenter put a lot of what they did in ‘numerous’ scrapbooks.”

She also had a collection of many things, including invitations to the White House.

“She saved all her letters from friends and family,” Maluccio wrote.

--

KATHERINE YAMADA can be reached at katherineyamada@gmail.com. or by mail at Verdugo Views, c/o News-Press, 202 W. First St., Los Angeles, CA 90012. Please include your name, address and phone number.

Advertisement