Welcome

The Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West (ICW) is a center for scholarly investigation of the history and culture of California and the American West. Through sponsorship of innovative scholarship, research and programming, ICW draws on the resources of the University of Southern California and The Huntington Library to build a unique collaboration amongst a research university, a research library, and the public.

News

Welcome to ICW’s new website. Some of our menus above have changed and we appreciate your patience as we continue to add features.

The Beinecke Library has hired a cohort of six new curators—including USC and ICW alum Dr. Sarah Keyes—who will shape how Yale Library special collections are selected, taught, and used for decades to come.

Launching on Sept. 3, 2024, the fourth season of Western Edition — the podcast from the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West (ICW) — digs deep into the “Crown City” of the San Gabriel Valley. Western Edition: Hidden Pasadena shares six little-known Pasadena stories, from Simons brickyard to Vroman’s bookstore, St. Barnabas church to the Shoya House at The Huntington. It also considers Pasadenans from the past, from John Brown’s children to John Birch’s followers.

ICW’s Abby Gibson named the 2024 George A. Rentschler Fellow by the American Heritage Center

Congratulations to USC doctoral student Abby Gibson on being awarded the 2024 George A. Rentschler Fellowship at the American Heritage Center! Her research project, exploring how fear and emotions influenced western colonization from 1820 to 1920 and reframing westward expansion as both a territorial and emotional conquest, was recognized as for its impact and important contribution to the field. As part of the fellowship, Abby will take part in a residency and research stay at the American Heritage Center in later 2024.

From the Directors

On behalf of the Institute on California and the West, welcome to ICW’s website. We invite you to scroll through these pages to see the range of ICW projects over the last two decades. We will mark our 20th anniversary in 2024 and are hopeful you can join us in the celebration. Our work investigating the history and culture of the modern American West is characterized by a set of activities that seek to bridge scholarly and public audiences, dialogues, and contributions to knowledge. We are committed to our work and our many collaborations, and we urge you to reach out to us with questions, comments, and suggestions about other directions we might explore. We take every suggestion seriously, and our dialogues with you strength our work and outreach.

July 28, 2024

Olive View Sanitarium

Amber Santoro

In 1933, Virginia B. Lujan, a twenty-seven-year-old resident of East Los Angeles, found herself grappling with a life of isolation as a tuberculosis patient at Olive View Sanitarium in the San Fernando Valley. My grandmother, Frances, was Virginia’s eldest daughter, and a mere four years old when her mother fell ill and entered Olive View during the Great Depression. For twenty-one months, Virginia endured quarantine. Most of her interactions with her family occurred from a distance and through a glass window to the outside world. As she slowly healed, holidays offered fleeting moments of physical proximity, such as short outdoor interactions during an Easter celebration.

Read

Publications

Published in partnership with the University of California Press, ICW’s scholarly series Western Histories questions and deepens collective understanding of the history of California and the American West. In addition to the partnership with UC Press, ICW has published stand-alone texts including, Form and Landscape and Past Due.

Learn

USC Courses

Through ICW, USC faculty teach undergraduate courses at USC and graduate courses at The Huntington, directly weaving the library’s scholarly materials into the professional training of students. Doctoral and postdoctoral students in USC Dornsife College utilize the breadth of The Huntington collections in their path-breaking research on the history of the American West. At the graduate level, ICW is at the nexus of inter-university collaboration with students and scholars from UCLA, University of California, Riverside, University of California, Irvine, and others.

Study LA

Los Angeles History Syllabi

Drawing on academic partners throughout the region, syllabi from courses focused on Los Angeles history reflect the range of approaches to better understanding this space.

Contact Us

Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West

University of Southern California
Van Hunnick Department of History
Los Angeles, CA 90089

Los Angeles Service Academy (LASA)

University of Southern California
Van Hunnick Department of History
Los Angeles, CA 90089

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