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The Homestead Blog

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

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Tag: Drum Barracks

  • Biographies

Read All About It with Albert A. Polhamus and the “Wilmington Journal,” 5 May 1866

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on May 25, 2019January 7, 2021
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  • Staff & Events

Victorian Fair Recap: Day Two

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on April 30, 2018January 11, 2021
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  • Agriculture

Working the Land on “Los Robles,” the Stoneman Ranch, ca. 1880

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on May 31, 2017December 28, 2020
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  • Race, Ethnicity, & Marginalized Groups

Sharing the History of Company D, 1st Battalion of Native Cavalry, California Volunteers, 1864-1866

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on May 10, 2017January 16, 2023
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  • Law & Crime

On this Day: The Assassination of Abraham Lincoln and Reaction in Los Angeles, 14 April 1865

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on April 14, 2017December 29, 2020
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  • Politics & Government

Drum Barracks and Los Angeles Civil War History

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on September 17, 2016December 30, 2020
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Recent Posts

  • “Valuable Services of an Executive and Business Nature”: An Agreement Regarding the Temple Estate Company, 2 June 1924
  • “To Promote in the Study of the Development of Civilization in England and America”: The Third Annual Report of the Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery, 1929-1930, Part Two
  • “To Promote in the Study of the Development of Civilization in England and America”: The Third Annual Report of the Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery, 1929-1930, Part One
  • No Place Like Home: The Best Laid Plans of Architect Anton W. Riewe for Antonio Merlo’s Proposed House, Avocado Heights, ca. 1920s
  • At Our Leisure with Photos from Switzer’s Camp, San Gabriel Mountains, 30 May 1921

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Happy #nationaltrailsday ! Here's a photo from 1906 featuring a man atop a mule while traveling Mt. Wilson. Do you have a local trail you love to walk?
Check out these then and now photos of our Mission Walkway. The top picture is from 1925 and features Thomas Temple!
Congratulations to those graduating this term!
We're joining the Archive Babies hashtag today with a couple of photos from our collection!
Sunday, May 7, from 12-4 p.m.
Being in CA, we often think that slavery didn’t happen here, but after an enlightening and thought-provoking afternoon with Dr. Kevin Waite @kevinwaite yesterday discussing his book West of Slavery: The Southern Dream of a Transcontinental Empire all in attendance learned the true story. His book tackles the often untold history of how and why Southern slaveholders infiltrated the American West in the years leading up to the Civil War and how they kept a stranglehold there for decades to come.

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Hours & Info

15415 E Don Julian Road
City of Industry, CA 91745
1-626-968-8492
Public Tours (Fri.-Sun., except 4th weekend)
Workman House:
1:00 & 3:00 p.m.
La Casa Nueva:
2:00 & 4:00 p.m.

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