• Homestead Museum
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
Search

The Homestead Blog

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

Menu
Skip to content
  • Home
  • About
  • Economics
    • Agriculture
    • Commerce & Manufacturing
    • Labor
    • Oil Industry
    • Real Estate
    • Transportation & Infrastructure
  • Homestead Museum
    • Historic Preservation & Research
    • Staff & Events
  • House & Home
    • Food & Drink
    • Homes
    • Landscape & Gardens
  • Leisure/Entertainments
    • Film
    • Holidays & Celebrations
    • Sports
    • Music
    • Outdoors
    • Theater
  • People
    • Biographies
    • Workman & Temple Family
  • Society
    • Architecture & Decoration
    • Disasters
    • Education
    • Health & Medicine
    • Law & Crime
    • Places & Communities
    • Politics & Government
    • Race, Ethnicity, & Marginalized Groups
    • Religion & Beliefs
    • Women

Tag: Los Angeles Illustrated Daily News history 1924

  • Oil Industry

Games People Play: A Press Photo of An Auto Race at the Culver City Speedway, March 1925

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on March 7, 2023March 7, 2023
Read More
  • Places & Communities

From Point A to Point B: “No Evidence of Petrification of the Nerves” at Rogers Airport, Los Angeles, 24 February 1928

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on February 24, 2023February 25, 2023
Read More
  • Architecture & Decoration

An Apex for the Elite: A Press Photo of the Jonathan Club Building, December 1925

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on December 22, 2022December 23, 2022
Read More
  • Places & Communities

“At Last Receiving the Relief Too Long Denied Them”: A Program for a Victory Banquet of the Disabled Emergency Officers of the World War Retired, Los Angeles, 6 July 1928

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on November 11, 2022November 11, 2022
Read More
  • Economics

“She Has Touched the Imagination of General Public Opinion as no Other City Has Touched the Millions”: Purple Prose Boosterism in “Why Los Angeles Will Become the World’s Greatest City,” 1923, Part One

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on October 26, 2022
Read More
  • Commerce & Manufacturing

That’s a Wrap with a Program from Grauman’s Million Dollar and Rialto Theatres, Los Angeles, the Week of 6 April 1924

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on April 6, 2022April 7, 2022
Read More
  • Uncategorized

“A Perfection of Pulchritude” in a Press Photo from the National Progressive Chiropractic Association Conference, Los Angeles, August 1928

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on August 29, 2021August 30, 2021
Read More
  • Law & Crime

“All the Elements of a Wild West Novel”: The “Owens Valley Feud” Over the Los Angeles Aqueduct in “The Outlook” Magazine, 13 July 1927

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on July 13, 2021
Read More
  • Holidays & Celebrations

“Humble Expressions of Reverence from a Grateful People”: The Observance of Memorial Day in Greater Los Angeles, 30 May 1924

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on May 31, 2021
Read More

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

Subscribe to our blog

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 1,378 other subscribers

Facebook

Facebook

Twitter

My Tweets

Instagram

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.

Archives

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.

Subscribe to our Blog

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

  • Homestead Museum
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
Powered by WordPress.com.
×
 

Loading Comments...