People of Chavez Ravine

Leonard Nadel (1916–1990) was born in Harlem, New York, to Austro-Hungarian immigrant parents. He served in the Army during World War II, and then pursued a Master’s degree in Education from Teachers College, Columbia University. He moved to Los Angeles and studied at the Art Center College of Design, and was hired to document living conditions in the city’s slums and new post-war housing projects. For nearly 30 years he worked as a freelance photographer for publications such as the Los Angeles Times, Harvester News, Life, National geographic, Look, Forbes and Paris Match.

Having grown up in the crowded tenements of New York City during the Depression, he always believed he had acquired a more compassionate way of looking at people and their problems. Throughout his career as a photojournalist, he used photography a means to call attention to social contradictions and human suffering. “The new role of the magazine photographer,” he once stated, “is to make such worthwhile projects [i.e., documenting poverty and exploitation] more widely read and their human content enlivened by the visual impact of a sensitive and honest portrayal.”

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Children play outside the Palo Verde Elementary School. Courtesy of the Photo Collection, Los Angeles Public Library. , 1949
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Chavez Ravine with LA City Hall in background. Courtesy of LAPL Photo Collection , 1949
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Chavez Ravine Residents. Courtesy of LAPL Photo Collection , 1949
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Chavez Ravine with 110 freeway and LA City Hall in the background. Courtesy of LAPL Photo Collection , 1949
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Chavez Ravine property owners examine bulldozed ruins, Los Angeles Times , 1959
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