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Immigrants and Power Sharing in Mexican Los Angeles Immigrants and Power Sharing in Mexican Los Angeles
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Conquest, Anxiety, and an Intercultural Community During War and Peace, 1846–1850 Conquest, Anxiety, and an Intercultural Community During War and Peace, 1846–1850
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Learning by Doing Learning by Doing
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Solidifying Community: Political and Social Violence Solidifying Community: Political and Social Violence
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A Borderlands Community A Borderlands Community
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2 “Members of the Same Family with Ourselves”: Intercultural Civic Ideals, Identities, and Spaces, 1840–1855
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Published:September 2013
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Abstract
This chapter looks at changes that took place in Los Angeles during the 1840s and early 1850s. On-going surges in immigration from the United States and Europe coincided with tumultuous times, including but not limited to political instability within Mexican California, national uncertainties growing out of the Mexican-American War, and the subsequent annexation of California to the United States. The foreign-born population of Los Angeles rose from 53 in 1844 to 395 in 1850 (in a total population of 1,610), then grew to 2,316 in 1860 (in a total population of 4,385). The combination of fluid demographics and geopolitical imperatives provoked rapidly evolving and increasingly complicated dynamics in the realms of identity, space, and municipal power.
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