Exposed: Black History L.A.Main MenuLos Angeles African American Civic LeadersLos Angeles African American Civic LeadersDesegregating Los AngelesDesegregating Los AngelesCircumstances of Living in Los AngelesCircumstances of Living in Los AngelesNational Leaders in Los AngelesNational Leaders in Los AngelesLoren MillerTom & Ethel Bradley CenterAbout the Bradley CenterTom & Ethel Bradley Center15df6c919fb8109fe0c90d2933e2bce1cb5fe395http://www.csun.edu/bradley-center
09.CW.N45.01.76
12016-02-04T15:35:32-08:00Tom & Ethel Bradley Center15df6c919fb8109fe0c90d2933e2bce1cb5fe39580501California School of Photography, Los Angeles, 1950plain2016-02-04T15:35:32-08:00Tom & Ethel Bradley Center15df6c919fb8109fe0c90d2933e2bce1cb5fe395
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12016-02-05T10:58:46-08:00Beach Integration2Desegregating Los Angelesplain2016-02-05T11:51:23-08:00
California School of Photography, Los Angeles, 1950
The Inkwell (above), a strip at the end of Pico Blvd. in Santa Monica, where Blacks could legally swim. Claude Hudson played a pivotal role in desegregating Los Angeles beaches. Hudson and seven USC students were jailed in 1925 when they waded into the ocean at Manhattan Beach. When the case was dismissed beaches became integrated.