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The Homestead Blog

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

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Tag: Spanish Colonial Revival architecture 1920s

  • Architecture & Decoration

Recap of the California Preservation Foundation Doors Open California Program Tours of La Casa Nueva for Its Centennial Commemoration, 1923-2023

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on September 10, 2023September 10, 2023
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  • Architecture & Decoration

No Place Like Home with The Architectural Digest, 1925, Part Three

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on May 12, 2023May 13, 2023
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  • Architecture & Decoration

No Place Like Home with The Architectural Digest, 1925, Part One

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on May 9, 2023May 9, 2023
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  • Architecture & Decoration

Twists and Turns in the Twenties Postview: La Casa Nueva Architect Roy Seldon Price (1889-1940)

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on April 16, 2023April 17, 2023
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  • Architecture & Decoration

One For the Books: A Press Photo of Librarians at the New Los Angeles Central Library, 28 June 1926

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on June 29, 2022June 29, 2022
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  • Architecture & Decoration

No Place Like Home: Photographs of the Construction of the Mission Walkway at La Casa Nueva, Mid-1920s

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on March 28, 2022
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  • Architecture & Decoration

No Place Like Home: A Trio of Photographs of the Construction of La Casa Nueva’s Courtyard, ca. 1925

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on November 16, 2021
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  • Architecture & Decoration

Paying Homage to Hispanic Heritage by the Temple Family with the Design and Construction of La Casa Nueva, 1922-1927

  • by homesteadmuseum
  • Posted on September 29, 2021
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Recent Posts

  • “Six Wonderful Days and Nights in a Glorious Spanish Setting”: The 7th Annual Los Angeles County Fair in The Southern California Tourist Magazine, September 1928
  • Drilling for Black Gold with the Union Oil Bulletin, September 1925
  • Recap of the First-Ever Tres Hermanos Ranch Tours and Some of its Early History from 1914-1928
  • Read All About It in the Los Angeles Star, 22 September 1875
  • Reading Between the Lines From Point A to Point B With a Letter from Charles Forman of the Los Angeles Cable Railway, 21 September 1888

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Check out these side by side photos of our mausoleum nearly 100 years ago and our mausoleum today!
Free Lecture.
Mission City Affinity: The Workman and Temple Families and San Gabriel, 1842-1872
Join us for rare and special access to amazing architecture and hidden histories in one weekend for Doors Open California – the largest statewide celebration of historic places. You will have behind-the-scenes and special access to unique, threatened or preserved buildings, landscapes, or features. Enjoy activities that are fun for the whole family on September 9th and 10th of 2023. Whether walking tours, hidden vaults of local museums, inaccessible areas of historic buildings, or enlightening stories told by our state’s best raconteurs - these are all rare chances to experience history first-hand that normally is not available to the public. It’s just $20 to access more than 65 amazing places in California.
Happy #NationalBeachDay! Venice Beach has changed a lot since this photo was taken in 1918. National Beach Day serves to remind us to keep our beaches clean, so that in another 100 years, future generations will still be able to enjoy a beautiful day at the beach.
Happy #NationalAviationDay !

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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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