Bookmarks
Showing Bookmarks 1 to 25 of 66
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Memorandum regarding planning for the education of incarcerated students
Date: Undated
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Correspondence from Martha A. Chickering to Richard M. Neustadt regarding county takeover of relocation program
Date: February 26, 1942
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Summary of agreement for the Department of Social Welfare to assist in performance of duties and for reimbursement of costs by the Federal Security Agency
Date: Undated
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Office Memorandum from Genevieve Murrican to Martha A. Chickering regarding staff made available by the Federal Security Agency
Date: February 7, 1942
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Correspondence from Charles M. Wollenberg to C. G. Halliday regarding establishment of residency for resettlement
Date: June 26, 1945
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Caption: "Exhibit of Division of Architecture, Sketch for Painting on Exterior Northwest Wall of Booth." Sketch for painting by Alfred Eichler; executed and built. Mural by Dobelstein and assistant, 1931. Project for Department of Public Works - Architecture - Administration.
Date: 1931
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Caption: "Green Hotel, Pasadena, Cal.," c. 1905. View of Castle Green, built as an annex to the Hotel Green in 1899. The original Hotel Green opened for business as a lavish resort in 1894. Its success prompted owner George Gill Green to expand the hotel and build the additional facility shown here, connected to the original hotel by an elaborate enclosed pedestrian bridge (seen at the far right of this photograph). This second building, designed by architect Frederick I. Roehrig with Spanish, Moorish, and Victorian elements, became known as "Castle Green." Business declined in the 1910s, and the complex was sold to a series of investors. In the mid-1920s, Castle Green was subdivided into fifty residential apartments. It remains a residential complex today.
Date: 1905
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Caption: "Fort Point -- Interior," c. 1910. Postcard showing a view of an interior hall or walkway featuring several arches at Fort Point. The facilities at Fort Point were part of an effort by the U.S. government to protect the Golden Gate, entrance to the San Francisco Bay. Built between 1853-1861, the fort included emplacements for 141 guns but never fired a weapon in defense of the Bay. Its name was officially changed in 1882 to Fort Winfield Scott, but in 1886 the fort was officially downgraded to a sub-post of the San Francisco Presidio and the name discontinued. It was resurrected in 1912, with the establishment of a coastal artillery fortification at the Presidio, called, once again, Fort Winfield Scott.
Date: 1910
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An explanation of the War Program; Sections: Enemy Alien and Japanese Evacuation; War Services Program; Defense Activities
Date: November 24, 1943
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Correspondence from C. J. Carey to R. I. French regarding licenses and Japanese in California
Date: January 28, 1942
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Image of Census of 1852, page 5 from Los Angeles County Schedule I Volume I.
Date: 1852