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The Homestead Blog

Creating advocates for history through the stories of greater Los Angeles.

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Tag: Black Los Angeles history

  • Leisure/Entertainments

“A Beautiful Inn With A Soul”: A Photo of the Hotel Somerville Lobby, Los Angeles, September 1928

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on September 26, 2020February 9, 2021
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  • Biographies

Lewis G. Green: A Pioneer of the Black Community of Los Angeles, 1850s-1880s

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on February 23, 2017February 26, 2021
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Recent Posts

  • “The Highest Class of Entertainment at Popular Prices”: A Program for the Opera and Drama Guild’s Presentation of “Il Trovatore,” Los Angeles, the Week of 16 April 1928
  • From the Homestead Kitchen: Tea Rooms, Sponge Cake, and “A Home for Homeless Babies”
  • More Descriptions of Greater Los Angeles in the “Report of Explorations for Railroad Routes from San Francisco Bay to Los Angeles, California,” 1854-1855
  • “There Is No Government and No Law in California”: Early News from Gold Rush California in the “New York Tribune,” 14 April 1849
  • Descriptions of Greater Los Angeles in the “Report of Explorations for Railroad Routes from San Francisco Bay to Los Angeles, California,” 1854-1855

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“A Home for Homeless Babies” was the motto of Castelar Crèche, an organization begun by LA women in 1921 that helped struggling families stay together. Read about the group and try a sponge cake recipe from its fundraising cook book. #ArchivesCooking #ArchivingWomen
We always know that spring is in full swing when our Lady Banks rose bush is blooming. It is said to have been planted in 1860 by William and Nicolasa Workman to celebrate the birth of their first granddaughter, Lucinda Temple.
Once again, vaccinations are "quite the rage"! This clip from the LA Star newspaper ran August 8, 1868, when people were clamoring for the smallpox vaccine, which happens to be the first successful vaccine developed.
"Of course there are the streets and schools and buildings that bear their name. The history of the Workman family is forever entwined with that of the San Gabriel Valley and Los Angeles. But what I love most about this immigrant tale is how true it is for any family: one ancestor decides to strike out to a new place and the roots they establish make for one thrilling, tragic and altogether human story."
For the Temple family, it was quite a decade. They began the 1860s with a flood forcing them to flee their home on a raft and dealing with a devastating drought, but ended it as likely the wealthiest family in a rapidly growing greater Los Angeles.
#HappyEaster! This postcard from our collection shows a Sunrise Service @hollywoodbowl in 1929. 2021 marks the 100th anniversary of this tradition, which will be virtual this year.

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15415 E Don Julian Road
City of Industry, CA 91745
1-626-968-8492
Public Tours (Wed.-Sun.)
Workman House:
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La Casa Nueva:
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