'The joyous shriek of the victorious bird filled all the circumjacence'
Prose does not get much purpler than this 1897 report on the news that San Pedro had been selected over Santa Monica as the site for Los Angeles' harbor (which is in the news this week after the City Council approved a controversial rail yard project):
Yesterday morning this telegram was received at the Times office:
"WASHINGTON, D.C., March 2, 1897.
"L.E. Mosher — Times, Los Angeles: Let the Eagle scream some more and louder, and yet more loud. San Pedro has won. Official report is public.
Whereupon the bird that perches upon the Times Building flapped his wings and his voice was heard in the land. The joyous shriek of the victorious bird filled all the circumjacence even to Cahuenga, and the populace gathered to assist him in making noise. ...
Even the few proponents of the Santa Monica scheme knew without asking what had happened, and they seemed to find some consolation in telephoning to The Times that the Eagle was a nuisance and demanding that the jubilant voice of that estimable bird be choked off because it scared their horses. But it was the Eagle's day to scream, and he whooped it up in great shape for several hours.
And, you guessed it, the "victorious" and "estimable bird" mentioned in this breathless article is pictured at the top of this post. It was installed, Times copy editor Larry Harnisch informs me, in 1891 at the second Times building, which was destroyed in the 1910 bombing (don't miss Harnisch's history of that event). After that, it perched on the replacement building, and it used to be on top of our current headquarters. Now it resides in the Globe Lobby.
(Photo: The Times Eagle in the Globe Lobby. Credit: Matt Ballinger / Los Angeles Times)