
A site devoted to street photography of El Paso, Texas and surrounding areas.
Wednesday, October 11, 2006
Store sign, Gran Mercado, 416 South El Paso Street

Colón Mercado (formerly the Colón Theater), 507 South El Paso Street

Denise Chávez link
Photo taken October 11, 2006.
Office of John Wesley Hardin (Wells Fargo Building in the 1890s, now Alamo Shooters Supply), 100 East San Antonio Avenue

UPDATE: Sadly, this building burned down a couple of years ago.
Cowboy sign and mannequin, Starr Western Wear, 112 East Overland Avenue


Mannequin heads, Jin-Hee Wholesale, 513 South El Paso Street
Snack vendor, corner of El Paso Street and Overland Avenue
Wall art, above J.K. Tennis, 221 South Stanton
Saturday, October 07, 2006
Happy Halloween from El Chuco!

Monday, September 18, 2006
Great photos from a fellow El Chuco photographer
I received a nice email from Chacal la Chaise, who is also posting great photos and a blog from right here in El Chuco. Check them out!
http://www.flickr.com/photos/chacal/
http://chacal-la-chaise.blogspot.com/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/chacal/
http://chacal-la-chaise.blogspot.com/
Friday, August 25, 2006
White Elephant Bowling Lanes, 1011 East Overland Avenue


The White Elephant Bowling Lanes closed at least ten years ago, earlier I think. I never got to bowl here, but the White Elephant, along with the Red Rooster Bowling Lanes near Five Points were two seriously old-school lanes. The White Elephant, I believe, dated back to the 1930s, and had only six lanes. The lanes themselves closed long before the delish dive restaurant that was attached to it. The lane area itself looked like it hadn't changed a bit in 60 years. Photos taken August 25, 2006.
Fat Boy Hamburgers, 911 East Paisano
Graffiti art, next to Cinco Puntos Press, 701 Texas Avenue
Graffiti art, back of Downtown Motors, 1001 East Paisano

Neat graffiti art on the back of the Downtown Motors building, 1001 East Paisano. It's good to see that taggers give respect to true graffiti artists and don't cover their work. I'm not an advocate of graffiti, but this type really adds a lot of needed color in areas that could use visual improvement. Many don't see the difference, and see graffiti as pure defacement of property. There is a big difference, however, especially if the building's owner gives permission to graffiti artists to spice up their building. Photo taken August 25, 2006.
Wednesday, August 16, 2006
Marty Robbins performs "El Paso"

Found a nice video of Marty Robbins performing his classic "El Paso," a song which (obviously) is important to my city!
Marty Robbins - El Paso
Saturday, March 25, 2006
Lolita Bail Bonds sign, 100-200 block of Texas Avenue.
Monday, March 20, 2006
Please contribute to El Chuco!
If you have a non-copyrighted photo of downtown El Paso that you would like to share, please email it to me. Please accurately note the location. Also note, any of the photos on this page can be enlarged to show more detail simply by clicking on them. These photos have have been taken with several sorts of cameras, from a camera phone to a digital SLR.
Old Lerner Store (Acme Saloon), 227 East San Antonio Avenue


The Old Lerner Store, 227 East San Antonio Avenue, is the site of the Acme Saloon and the beginning of the Parlor House District. The Acme Saloon was wood and adobe, and had a doorway opening to the bar. On August 19, 1895, John Selman walked into the Acme Saloon and shot and killed John Wesley Hardin, the Old West's most notorious gunfighter. A marker on the building notes the historic site. Photo taken March 20, 2006.
The Tap, 408 East San Antonio Avenue
Eva Unitel Sales, 515 South Stanton Street
Mannequin heads, Diana Beauty Supply, 212 East San Antonio Avenue
La Feria del Carnaval, 500 South Mesa & Third
Ceramic animals at La Familia, 305 South Stanton Street
Caples Building, 300 East San Antonio Avenue

Detail of the Caples Building, 300 East San Antonio Avenue.
The building was named for Richard Caples, El Paso mayor from 1889 to 1893. It was El Paso's first concrete-framed building, and during the Mexican Revolution of the 1910s, it housed offices of several notable revolutionary leaders. Photo taken March 20, 2006.
O.T. Bassett Tower, 303 Texas Avenue
Thursday, February 23, 2006
Plaza Motor Hotel, corner of Oregon and Mills
Gateway Hotel, 104 South Stanton Street
Perfumeria Rachelle, 106 East San Antonio Ave
Italian Kitchen, 2923 Pershing
Thursday, January 26, 2006
Boxing gym, Las Cruces, New Mexico
Texas Rasquache Festival, Texas Avenue, October 29, 2005





My daughter and her calavera Dad. Also, mojigangas (skeleton dancers) parading down Texas Avenue. Info about the festival: Rasquache link
National Bakery, 520 South Stanton Street
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