This is a retired account of the National Archives at Riverside. We are no longer updating this blog, but hope you find something interesting in our collection of past posts. To learn more about the records documenting the Federal government in the western states of Arizona, southern California and Clark County, Nevada please visit https://www.archives.gov/riverside. You can also search the National Archives' online Catalog to explore our digitized holdings here.
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Enjoy this post from the National Archives Rediscovering Black History blog!
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We regularly update our website with any changes to the operating status of our research rooms, Presidential Libraries and Museums, and other buildings. Check our operating status here: https://www.archives.gov/coronavirus
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Don’t Throw Away Your Shot
This week is World Immunization Week so we are sharing this fun image of Navy recruits receiving inoculations at the U.S. Naval Training Station in San Diego in the 1920s. If you are a military veteran, you probably remember this experience!
There are many resources available online to help people learn about vaccines. The World Health Organization (WHO) website about #WorldImmunizationWeek can be found here. For general information about vaccines and immunizations, please visit the Health and Human Services (HHS) website here.
Item: [Recruits receiving inoculations at the dispensary, U.S. Naval Training Station, San Diego, California.] File Unit: U11-83 Naval Training Center, Balboa Park. Series: Historical Photograph Files, 1917 - 1994. Record Group 181: Records of Naval Districts and Shore Establishments, 1784 - 2000. (National Archives Identifier 295565).
#World Immunization Week#Navy#recruits#vaccination#inoculation#San Diego#1920s#military#veteran#World Health Organization#Health and Human Services#Naval Training Center#Balboa Park
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Got your popcorn?
125 years ago today, Vitascope’s first theatrical exhibit took place in New York City. In April 1902, Tally’s Electric Theatre opened in Los Angeles, California. Home of Hollywood, Los Angeles is no stranger to movie-making or theatres. The image we’re sharing with you today of a movie theatre at the Connell Naval Club on the Submarine Base, Los Angeles, while taken in 1922, is eerily similar to today’s images of empty theaters. Hang in there, LA. We can’t wait to see you at the movies!
Item: [Movie theatre at the Connell Naval Club on the Submarine Base, Los Angeles. File Unit: 61 Photographs [submarine base]. Series: Central Subject Files, 1924 - 1958. Record Group 181: Records of Naval Districts and Shore Establishments, 1784 - 2000. (National Archives Identifier 295430).
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Earth Construction on Earth Day
Today on Earth Day we celebrate something that is old which is now new again! Building with earth is an ancient practice. Popular once again, it was revived in the 1930s by the Mission Indian Agency because so much of southern California has sandy and clay soils, making adobe construction cost-effective, durable, fire-resistant and comfortable. Images from the Mission Indian Agency show the process of how homes were built with earthen materials and the Mission Indian newsletter contains a write-up of the work done to create adobe bricks.
Item: The Mission Indian, Volume 3, Number 6. Series: The Mission Indian 1932-1941. Record Group 75: Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, 1793-1999. (National Archives Identifier 176414828)
Item: Photograph of Men Molding Adobe Bricks and Leaving them to Dry. Series: Photographs, 1936-1942. Record Group 75: Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, 1793 - 1999. (National Archives Identifier 170102543)
Item: Photograph of Everista Myers's House Under Construction at Pala. Series: Photographs, 1936-1942. Record Group 75: Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, 1793 - 1999. (National Archives Identifier 170102665)
Item: Photograph of a New Home for Lenora Banegas. Series: Photographs, 1936-1942. Record Group 75: Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, 1793 - 1999. (National Archives Identifier 170100795)
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Today is #NationalTakeAWildGuessDay! Nope, it’s not a Ferris wheel. See the image caption for the answer!
File Unit: USDI Bureau of Reclamation, Davis Dam Project - Arizona - Nevada, Annual Project History Volume VI. Series: Davis Dam Project Histories, 1948 - 1952. Record Group 48: Records of the Office of the Secretary of the Interior, 1826 - 2009. (National Archives Identifier 166002518). https://catalog.archives.gov/id/166002518
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Today is #NationalTakeAWildGuessDay! We sometimes come across items in our collections that keep us guessing. Luckily this photograph has a caption, but today we want you to take a wild guess! Make sure to come back later to see if you were right!
File Unit: USDI Bureau of Reclamation, Davis Dam Project - Arizona - Nevada, Annual Project History Volume VI. Series: Davis Dam Project Histories, 1948 - 1952. Record Group 48: Records of the Office of the Secretary of the Interior, 1826 - 2009. (National Archives Identifier 166002518).
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“...With silverbells and cockleshells…”
So, how does your garden grow? April 14th marks National Gardening Day! This day allows seasoned home gardeners to learn even more about their gardens and different plants and to share their knowledge with others. We’re here to help, with images of great gardens from our collection of Mission Indian photographs.
As you browse through these historic garden images, perhaps you’d like to share your gardening wisdom and show us some of your gardening gems. Reply in the comments with pics of your top harvests!




Item: “Photograph of Calistro Lugo’s Garden at Morongo, 1936-1942.” Series: Photographs, 1793-1999. Record Group 75: Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, 1793-1999. (National Archives Identifier 170102497).
Item: “Photograph of Felipa Nolasquez Gonzalez in a Garden, 1936-1942.” Series: Photographs, 1793-1999. Record Group 75: Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, 1793-1999. (National Archives Identifier 170102153).
Item: “Photograph of Rose Murphy in Indian Relief and Rehabilitation Garden at Pechanga, 1936-1942.” Series: Photographs, 1793-1999. Record Group 75: Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, 1793-1999. (National Archives Identifier 170102823).
Item: “Photograph of the Front Yard View of Francis Bosley’s Garden at Morongo, 1936-1942.” Series: Photographs, 1793-1999. Record Group 75: Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, 1793-1999. (National Archives Identifier 170102483).
Item: “Photograph of Susie Arenas Standing in a Corner of the Garden at Cahuilla, 1936-1942.” Series: Photographs, 1793-1999. Record Group 75: Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, 1793-1999. (National Archives Identifier 170101027).
Item: “Photograph of Nicholas Chapparosa in his Garden on the Los Coyotes Reservation, 1936-1942.” Series: Photographs, 1793-1999. Record Group 75: Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, 1793-1999. (National Archives Identifier 170101297).
#homegrown#National Gardening Day#Morongo#Pechanga#Cahuilla#Los Coyotes#gardens#Bureau of Indian Affairs
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We regularly update our website with any changes to the operating status of our research rooms, Presidential Libraries and Museums, and other buildings. Check our operating status here: https://www.archives.gov/coronavirus
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Subs for Subs?
Today we celebrate National Submarine Day. No, not the sandwich, but the actual underwater vessels and the men and women who serve on them. We wonder if they serve submarine sandwiches on board a submarine vessel.
On this day in 1900, the Navy commissioned its first submarine called the USS Holland. Pictured here is the crew from the USS Jimmy Carter during the ship's Christening Ceremony in 2004.
Series: Combined Military Service Digital Photographic Files, 1982 - 2007. Record Group 330: Records of the Office of the Secretary of Defense, 1921 - 2008.
If you are interested in diving into the history of submarines check out the links below.
https://www.history.navy.mil/content/history/museums/nmusn/education/distance-learning/history-of-submarines/submarine-development--a-short-history.html
https://www.military-history.org/feature/submarine-the-history-of-submarine-war.htm
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Scottish American Heritage Month
April is Scottish American Heritage Month and we are sharing these images of Scottish immigrants naturalizing in the U.S. between 1939 and 1943. Meet Alison McKinley Campbell, age 57, a practical nurse from Cowdenbeath; Catherine Archer Smith, age 62, a nurse from Dundee; William Wilson, age 46, a plumber from Glasgow; Clementina Sinclair Heddle Smith, age 55, a housewife from St. Andrews; Charles Leslie Brown, age 39, an actor from Aberdeen; and Alexander Thomson, age 37, a blacksmith from Thurso.
Did your ancestors immigrate to the U.S. and become naturalized citizens? If they naturalized in southern California, Arizona, or Clark County, Nevada, we may have their documents here. We have over 1 million naturalization documents in our holdings!
Series: Petitions for Naturalization, 1887 - 1991. Record Group 21: Records of District Courts of the United States, 1685 - 2009. (National Archives Identifier 594890).
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Happy Birthday!
Happy birthday to Hollywood director, writer, and producer Allan Dwan, who was born this date in 1885 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Dwan was born Joseph Aloysius Dwan and immigrated to the United States when he was just 7 years old. He studied engineering at Notre Dame and was interested in the new motion picture industry. The opportunity to become a scriptwriter presented itself and the rest, as they say, is history.
Dwan began working in Hollywood in 1911, and over his 50-year career, he directed 125 motion pictures, working with stars such as Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, John Wayne, and Shirley Temple. He earned a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and, in 1976, was awarded the Career Achievement Award by the Los Angeles Film Critics Association. Allan Dwan died on December 28, 1981.


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#ArchivesTipOfTheHat
Who doesn’t love a great baseball cap? This 1941 image is captioned, “The Pala Reservation Baseball team. They made a splendid record the past season.”
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#ArchivesTipOfTheHat
Join us as we follow a lost hat on its perilous journey home to finally be reunited with its owner!
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Chinese American Actress’s Story Illustrates ‘Othering’ of Immigrants
Recent acts of violence against Asian Americans across the country have underscored the notion of being perceived as a “perpetual foreigner” in one’s home country.
But this is nothing new. The “othering” of immigrant groups is long rooted in American history.
Read the full story here.
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We regularly update our website with any changes to the operating status of our research rooms, Presidential Libraries and Museums, and other buildings. Check our operating status here: https://www.archives.gov/coronavirus
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Sgt. Tess Hall of the Women’s Army Corps served at the Los Angeles Port of Embarkation, contributing her time to the USO by playing accordion and serving on the joint military and industrial council, she was also rumored to have served in the intelligence division, having spent three years in the WAC. It is “sergeants” like this that helped deploy American troops to the Pacific Theater during World War II.
Series: Central Subject Files, 1942-1946. Record Group 336: Records of the Office of the Chief of Transportation, 1917 - 1966. (National Archives Identifier 1812804).
#WomensHistoryMonth#Women's Army Corps#WAC#Tess Hall#Los Angeles#Port of Embarkation\#USO#accordion#intelligence#sergeant#Pacific Theater#World War II#WWII
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