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"So Many Children at Once
and so Many Kinds":
Schools and Ethno-racial Boundaries in
Early Twentieth-Century Los Angeles
Mark Wild
Schools in many working-class districts of early twentieth-century Los Angeles brought together students of different ethno-racial backgrounds.1 Although these integrated environments provided abundant opportunities for cross-cultural contact, school administrators, teachers, parents, and broader social structures worked against lasting friendships and coalitions.
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"My Japanese-American
friends . . . were ordered to evacuate the West Coast, so I decided
to go with them," Ralph Lozo explained to startled authorities at
the Manzanar Relocation Center, where several thousand Japanese
Americans were confined during World War II, in August 1944. "Who
can say I haven't got Japanese blood in me? Who knows what kind
of blood runs in their veins?" Two years earlier the Los Angeles
resident had registered for internment despite the fact that both
his parents were Mexican. He had been living at Manzanar ever since.
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Lozo's story illustrates an obvious
point that few American historians would deny: urban residents in
pre-World War II cities like Los Angeles, even those committed to
maintaining their own ethno-racial community, sometimes cultivated
relationships and alliances across ethnic and racial lines. In recent
years, labor historians have finally begun to explore these relationships,
particularly within the workplace during the immigration boom of
the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries.
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But they have paid less attention to interaction and diversity outside
the workplace, in the residential neighborhoods, and in public spaces
populated by these new urban workers. A traditional emphasis of
urban studies on northeastern cities could partly account for this
distinction. Working-class residents of Chicago, for instance, may
have inhabited neighborhoods "segregated according to race . . .
and ethnicity," but the same did not necessarily hold true for other
parts of the country.
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In certain western cities like Los Angeles, working-class districts
emerging during a specific confluence of industrialization, migration,
and settlement created diverse kinds of urban environments. Like
Lozo, the children of these neighborhoods, whether Anglo, immigrant,
or African American, shared their streets and, sometimes, schools
with members of other groups.
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