Harry Lehrer (October 15, 1904 – June 26, 1972) was an American licensed pharmacist, physician, and real estate speculator[1] who owned the Bumiller Building in Los Angeles.
Early years and education
Working as a stenographer for a wholesale grocery company, Lehrer took a California pharmacy board review course at night and was certified by examination as a pharmacist in 1924.[2] Lehrer attended the University of Southern California and UCLA. He was a 1938 graduate of the College of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons (now the University of California, Irvine School of Medicine).[3] Lehrer received a Doctor of Medicine degree after the 1962 California legislation allowing an osteopath to convert his degree to an MD. While running a pharmacy in the Boyle Heights neighborhood of Los Angeles, he was from time to time a robbery victim.[4] In one instance, a 21-year-old medical student robbed Lehrer of $271. A judge sentenced the student to 10 years' probation and summer vacation in the county jail.[5] In 1938, Lehrer opened a medical office, La Clinica Sano, and pharmacy, La Farmacia Sano, at 124 North Main Street.[6] He spoke fluent Spanish, had a Spanish language radio program, and applied for a broadcast license in 1943.[7]
Later years
Lehrer had his medical offices at 139 South Broadway in Los Angeles, when he acquired a group of neighboring tenement buildings in the early 1950s, anticipating that the State of California would take them under Eminent domain to build a new California State Building. Lehrer was unable to obtain financing to buy one additional building, a former Thrifty Drug Store, 133-135 South Broadway; its owner was Gabriel Laskin.[8] When California did condemn the buildings, Hodge L. Dolle, an attorney known for his expertise in eminent domain, represented Lehrer.[9] The tenement buildings have since been demolished and the land, acquired by the state, has passed to the city and may become a public park.[10]
Bumiller Building
Lehrer bought the Bumiller Building from the estate of Lillian E. Schramm in 1958,[11] and had his medical offices on the ground floor until his death in 1972.[12] Built in 1906,[13] the Bumiller Building, designed by the architects Morgan & Walls,[14] was constructed of reinforced concrete in Renaissance Revival style.[15] It is today part of the Los Angeles Historic Broadway Theater District.
^Deals for acreage involve $16,500. Los Angeles Times March 2, 1941
^California State Archives; Sacramento, California; Register of Assistant Pharmacists, 1914–1926
^Directory of Graduates of Osteopathic Colleges Holding Physician and Surgeon, Osteopathic, and Drugless Practitioner Licenses. California. Board of Osteopathic Examiners. California State Printing Office, 1951 p 46
^"BANDITS RUN RIOT IN CITY NIGHT REIGN". Los Angeles Times. Oct 29, 1929. p. 14.
^"Youth to spend summer vacations in jail". San Francisco Chronicle. December 8, 1931. p. 3.
^Directory of Graduates of Osteopathic Colleges Holding Physician and Surgeon Licenses, Osteopathic Licenses, Drugless Practitioner Licenses. California. Board of Osteopathic Examiners. 1945 p 63