
An In SRO Land Exclusive: six incredible large format photos of the Historic Core circa 1903-10, for just $18 postpaid. To get your set, click here.
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carbolic acidQuick Death for a Dime in DowntownUp until the fall of 1906, an Angeleno could walk into a pharmacy downtown (or discreetly dispatch a messenger boy) without a doctor’s prescription and buy morphine, cocaine, opium, codeine, heroin, laudanum, carbolic acid or other potentially fatal poisons, packed for his or her convenience in nickel, dime, or 25 cent bags.
Image Credit: LA Times Historical Archive Of course, many of these drugs were highly touted miracle ingredients in the elixirs of the day, thought to be so beneficial, in small doses, that they were suitable for children.
Image Credit: Addiction Science Network But 1906 brought a slew of new ‘poison control’ laws, which required pharmacies to employ only registered pharmacists to dispense drugs, to maintain a “poison registry” of the names and addresses of customers who purchased medications deemed dangerous, and to refrain from dispensing such drugs without a prescription from a licensed physician. The laws were not strictly enforced until May of 1907, when a crusading Secretary of the State Board of Pharmacy by the name of Charles B. Whilden made a sweep through 33 drug stores in downtown Los Angeles and bought dope at 16 of them.
In June Whilden continued his poison investigation in Chinatown, where he arrested four proprietors of opium dens, even though the dens were licensed and the opium sellers paid a monthly fee of $25 to the city.
All offenders were released after payment of fines, and business returned to usual in the downtown dens of vice.
Date:
Monday, May 20, 1907
Location
Dope Pharmacy 355 North Main
Los Angeles, CAUnited States
34° 3' 19.386" N, 118° 14' 25.44" W
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