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L.A. Stories: Community SpotlightMain MenuIntroductionThe greater Los Angeles area is on the traditional lands of the Gabrielino/Tongva, Chumash, Fernandeño Tataviam and Yuhaaviatam/Maarenga’yam (Serrano) peoples. We acknowledge their presence here since time immemorial and recognize their continuing connection to the land, to the water and to their ancestors.PeoplePlacesContributorsChronology of ArtifactsMapping the CollectionVisualize the ExhibitIn this visualization, artifacts are green, themes are blue, and contributors to the exhibit are red.Acknowledgements
Caltech Archives and Special Collections
12021-10-18T16:05:16-07:00Curtis Fletcher3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e395904The California Institute of Technology Archives and Special Collections, founded in 1968, has a mission of facilitating understanding of Caltech's role in the history of science and technology. Our collections include the papers of Caltech researchers; photographs, film, audio, video, websites, and publications documenting Caltech's history; scientific instruments characteristic of research at Caltech; and rare books anchored by the Rocco Collection of early modern physics and astronomy. We have been collecting oral histories of Caltech faculty and other affiliates since 1979, and have published approximately 200 transcripts on the web. Caltech has also made publicly available on the web the papers of astrophysicist George Ellery Hale, founder of Mount Wilson Observatory; aeronautical engineer and pioneer of human-powered flight Paul MacCready; and Nobel Prize-winning particle physicist and molecular biologist Donald Glaser.
https://archives.caltech.edu/structured_gallery2021-10-19T11:15:42-07:00Curtis Fletcher3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673eThe California Institute of Technology Archives and Special Collections, founded in 1968, has a mission of facilitating understanding of Caltech's role in the history of science and technology. Our collections include the papers of Caltech researchers; photographs, film, audio, video, websites, and publications documenting Caltech's history; scientific instruments characteristic of research at Caltech; and rare books anchored by the Rocco Collection of early modern physics and astronomy. We have been collecting oral histories of Caltech faculty and other affiliates since 1979, and have published approximately 200 transcripts on the web. Caltech has also made publicly available on the web the papers of astrophysicist George Ellery Hale, founder of Mount Wilson Observatory; aeronautical engineer and pioneer of human-powered flight Paul MacCready; and Nobel Prize-winning particle physicist and molecular biologist Donald Glaser.
1media/E.Wallace_+_book_edit.jpg2021-10-11T10:17:54-07:00Curtis Fletcher3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673eEdith Wallace and her drawings of mutations in Drosophila melanogaster (fruit flies)6Biologist Edith Wallace (here pictured in 1918) came to Caltech in 1928 to support research in biological heredity. Her extraordinary and detailed drawings of fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster) were essential in the investigation of genes and mutations. Among other textbooks, her drawings were featured in Sturtevant and Beadle’s 1939 An Introduction to Genetics.media/E.Wallace_+_book_edit.jpgplain2021-10-18T16:53:01-07:00Suzanne Noruschatd5b4fb9efb1f1d6e4833d051ebc06907bb9dba64
1media/Cal_Rodger_60.1-1_thumbnail.jpg2021-10-11T10:17:49-07:00Curtis Fletcher3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673eCal Rodgers landing his “Vin Fiz” in Tournament Park, Pasadena, California2On November 5, 1911, Calbraith Perry Rodgers (right) landed his bi-plane nicknamed the “Vin Fiz” in Pasadena's Tournament Park before a crowd of approximately 20,000 people, successfully completing the first U.S. transcontinental flight. Taking off from Sheepshead Bay, New York, on September 17, Rodgers landed in Long Beach on December 10—a trip that required 70 landings and took 84 days. The "Vin Fiz" was later donated to the Smithsonian Institution.media/Cal_Rodger_60.1-1.jpgplain2021-10-18T16:48:54-07:00Suzanne Noruschatd5b4fb9efb1f1d6e4833d051ebc06907bb9dba64
1media/Cosmopolitan_Club_30.23-1__1925_thumbnail.jpg2021-10-11T10:17:52-07:00Curtis Fletcher3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673eThe beginnings of Caltech’s Cosmopolitan Club2Caltech and its predecessor Throop College of Technology initially drew its students from local schools, but received few international students already in the 1910s, representing Japan, Australia, Costa Rica, Denmark, the Philippines, and Mexico. More came in the 1920s from many other countries. Thus the Cosmopolitan Club was created in 1925 to promote fellowship among students of different nationalities and foster the universal peace movement. Club activities included themed dinners dedicated to learning about specific countries.media/Cosmopolitan_Club_30.23-1__1925.jpgplain2021-10-18T16:50:55-07:00Suzanne Noruschatd5b4fb9efb1f1d6e4833d051ebc06907bb9dba64