Box with photographs (box 7) lost November 4, 2007 (according to OPAC). Digital image cataloged without original, not able to ascertain dimensions and identification.
Box with photographs (box 7) lost November 4, 2007 (according to OPAC). Digital image cataloged without original, not able to ascertain dimensions and identification.
Box with photographs (box 7) lost November 4, 2007 (according to OPAC). Digital image cataloged without original, not able to ascertain dimensions and identification.
Box with photographs (box 7) lost November 4, 2007 (according to OPAC). Digital image cataloged without original, not able to ascertain dimensions and identification.
Box with photographs (box 7) lost November 4, 2007 (according to OPAC). Digital image cataloged without original, not able to ascertain dimensions and identification.
Box with photographs (box 7) lost November 4, 2007 (according to OPAC). Digital image cataloged without original, not able to ascertain dimensions and identification.
Half-length portrait photograph of actress Helen Vinson wearing a lamé fabric gown with a matching bolero style jacket and a double-strand pearl choker.
Dr. Vada Somerville (born Vada Jetmore Watson) of Pomona graduated from USC, married dentist John Alexander Somerville (1912), was the first African American woman and the second African American person to graduate from USC School of Dentistry (1918), and was the first African American woman certified to practice dentistry in the state of California. She was a civil rights activist, highly involved in several civic and community organizations.
Page 64 from a University of Southern California yearbook with graduation portraits of four students, top to bottom: Dalton Robert Smith, Verne James Smith, Vada Jetmore Somerville and Robert Burns. Stevenson.
Charlotta Bass was the publisher of the California Eagle newspaper from 1912 to 1951, and a civil rights activist. The California Eagle, covering Los Angeles' African-American community, was one of the oldest and longest running African American newspapers.
Fourteen African Americans wearing suits and overcoats, standing in front of the porch of a brick building. Three reverends wearing white collars are among the group.
Reverend Van Deerlin passed away following an illness of several weeks. Several months before his death the Reverend penned his will, picked out his own casket and arranging for his final rites. Born in England, he was a member of the priesthood for 66 years and a former missionary. He is survived by his nine children.
Robert H. Scott (right) [probably the one who was a juvenile court judge in Los Angeles 1926-1943], at an officious occasion shaking the hand of another man at a desk with baskets of flowers and with an American flag behind him
Portrait painter Josef Sigall with his wife Marie Sigall. Josef wears a double-breasted suit with a vest and Marie wears a felt hat and a coat with a fur collar and fur cuffs.