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Leonard Nadel Photographs and Scrapbooks

National Museum of American History

Object Details

Photographer
Nadel, Leonard, 1916-1990
Author
Galarza, Ernesto
Place
Mexico
Texas -- 20th century
Texas
California
Topic
Farmers -- Mexico
Agriculture -- Research
Agriculture -- Photographs -- 20th century
Labor
Agricultural laborers
Labor and laboring classes -- Photographs
Documentary photography -- United States
Photographers -- 1950-1980
Bracero Program
Provenance
The collection was purchased with funds from the Jackson Fund in 2000. All rights were transferred to the National Museum of American History in 2000-2001.
Photographer
Nadel, Leonard, 1916-1990
See more items in
Leonard Nadel Photographs and Scrapbooks
Summary
Photographer Leonard Nadel's supplemental material relating to and photographs of the Mexican braceros (manual laborers). They were photographed in California, Texas, and Mexico for the Ford Foundation's Fund for the Republic during the late 1950s and early 1960s in support of a report entitled Strangers in Our Fields by Dr. Ernesto Galarza.
Biographical / Historical
Primarily known as a freelance photographer and photojournalist, Leonard Nadel (1916-1990) was born in Harlem, New York to Austro-Hungarian immigrant parents. He attended the City College of New York. Entering the Army during World War II, he trained at the Army Signal Corps Photographic Center. During the war he served in Australia, New Guinea, and the Philippines. After the war he returned to New York and received his master's degree in education from Teachers College, Columbia University. He moved to Los Angeles, California and studied at the Art Center College of Design. In Los Angeles, Nadel photographed both the Pueblo del Rio and Aliso Village housing projects. He was also hired by the Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles (HACLA) to document living conditions in the city's slums and their new post-World War II housing projects. Nadel continued his employment with HACLA until 1953, when he resigned because his HACLA colleague, Frank Wilkinson, was blacklisted by the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC) and forced to resign. Between 1953 and 1980 Nadel worked as a freelance photographer for such publications as the Los Angeles Times, Harvester News, Life, Business Week, and other major publications. His work with the Ford Foundation's Fund for the Republic resulted in his work documenting the bracero program. These photographs were taken by Leonard Nadel in connection with a survey of braceros done by Ernesto Galarza for the Fund for the Republic in 1956 in support of the publication, Strangers in Our Fields. During World War II, the United States and Mexico entered an agreement to alleviate the US labor shortage created by the war by importing Mexican workers. This arrangement outlasted the end of the war and by the time of Nadel's photographs nearly half a million Mexican contract workers, in the common vernacular of the time known as "drybacks," were legally imported to the United States annually working on short term labor contracts predominately in agriculture. These workers were also known as braceros, in Spanish translated as "manual laborer". Nadel wrote of his work with the braceros, "I covered 5,000 miles during a circuit that took me from California to Mexico to Texas. It would have been easy enough just to turn over to the Fund the finished collection of photographs from the 2,000 images I took in attempting to accurately document the story of Strangers in Our Fields. But the conditions I had witnessed stirred me deeply. I felt that it was as much my responsibility to help 'sell' the picture story." Nadel's photographs were the subject of the National Museum of American History (NMAH) exhibition, "Bittersweet Harvest: The Bracero Program, 1942-1964" in 2009-2010. Nadel's photographs are featured in NMAH's "America on the Move" exhibit. This quote from the "America on the Move" exhibition website gives the history of the photographs as well as the bracero program. "In 1956, Leonard Nadel was hired by the Fund for the Republic, an anti-McCarthy liberal spin off of the Ford Foundation, to document the Bracero Program. In the 1990s, the Smithsonian Institution acquired the Nadel images. The collection contains 64 captioned photographic prints and 1730 original 35mm negatives (with corresponding contact sheets). The images document life in Mexico, men's experiences of crossing the border, and work and life in the US. "The Bracero Program came into existence in 1942. Growers argued that labor shortages in the United States resulting from World War II required the recruitment of Mexican nationals. Mexico saw the program as a contribution to the war effort. Although the program began as a temporary war measure, it became a fixture of agricultural work landscape until it was finally terminated in 1964. "Over the course of its lifetime, the Bracero Program became the largest and most significant U.S. labor guest worker program of the 20th century. In all, over 4.5 million contracts were awarded through the twenty-two years of the program. Despite the well-intentioned contracts, the program did not escape controversy. Some point out the widespread abuses of many of the contract's protective provisions and the violation of the legal rights and civil liberties of the braceros while others describe the program as an opportunity for Mexican nationals to make a living and improve the conditions of their families. Regardless of one's opinion of the program, it had a profound effect on Mexican American settlement patterns in the U.S. and numerous Latino families have ancestors who were involved in the Bracero Program." Nadel married Los Angeles Times staff writer Evelyn De Wolfe in August 1961. She was Brazilian by birth and after their marriage she resigned from the Times and collaborated with Nadel on many projects that covered both national and international subjects. Nadel died in 1990.
Extent
3 Cubic feet (10 boxes)
Date
1950-2006
bulk 1956-1960
Custodial History
This collection was transferred from the Division of Work and Industry, National Museum of American History to the Archives Center, National Museum of American History in 2012.
Archival Repository
Archives Center, National Museum of American History
Identifier
NMAH.AC.1313
Type
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Photographic prints
Photographs
Black-and-white photographs
Scrapbooks
Citation
Leonard Nadel Photographs and Scrapbooks, Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution.
Arrangement
This collection is divided into three series: Series 1: Scrapbooks, 1950-1968 Series 2: Photographs, 1956-1960, undated Series 3: Publications and Supplemental Materials, 1956-2006, undated
Processing Information
Initially processed by the Division of Work and Industry. Processed by Vanessa Broussard-Simmons, archivist and Franklin A. Robinson, Jr., archivist, September 2013; supervised by Vanessa Broussard-Simmons, archivist. Scrapbooks digitized by Noah Stewart, digital imaging technician, 2024.
Rights
Collection items available for reproduction, but the Archives Center makes no guarantees concerning copyright restrictions. Other intellectual property rights may apply. Archives Center cost-recovery and use fees may apply when requesting reproductions.
Existence and Location of Copies
Digital reproductions of the Leonard Nadel photographs are available electronically for viewing at the Archives Center and at the Bracero History Archives online. Not every item in the scrapbooks was digitized just the original page as created by Nadel.
Genre/Form
Photographic prints
Photographs -- 1950-1960 -- Black-and-white photoprints -- Silver gelatin
Photographs -- 1950-2000
Black-and-white photographs
Scrapbooks -- 20th century
Scope and Contents
The collection is divided into three series. Each series is arranged chronologically. Series 1: Scrapbooks, 1950-1968, contains scrapbooks of clippings of magazine articles and newspaper stories written by Nadel and others as well as magazines and newspaper articles making use of his photographs. The material is from a variety of specialty and mainstream publications and varies in subject matter. The scrapbooks are not only focused on Nadel's work for the Ford Foundation's Fund for the Republic but also offer a broad sampling of his work throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Material in the scrapbooks are arranged in rough chronological order. There is also a sample custom cover from one of the scrapbooks. Series 2: Photographs, 1956-1960, undated, contains photographs printed from his negatives of the braceros. This series also contains a complete run of 8" x 10" contact sheets from his negatives of the bracero. The negatives themselves are in this series but not available for research per donor request. There are photographs ranging in size from 8" x 10" to large format photographs (10 1/2" x 13 1/2") that are keyed to frames on the contact sheets for easy reference. Negatives are arranged chronologically and captions are keyed to the negative numbers. These images have been digitized and may be found by searching "Nadel" on the collections section of the National Museum of American History website or by contacting the Archives Center. Series 3: Publications and Supplemental Materials, 1956-2006, undated, contains correspondence, copies of Strangers in Our Fields, the publication making use of Nadel's bracero photographs, and other publications citing Nadel's work or based on it. This series also contains correspondence and written material from Evelyn De Wolfe Nadel, wife of Leonard Nadel; material relating to Nadel's photographic archive and captions for a selection of the bracero photographs. There is a selection of assorted loose news clippings.
Restrictions
This collection is open for research use. Photographic negatives are not available for research at the donor's request, but contact sheets of the negatives are available in the collection. Some images are restricted for publication, but may be viewed in the Archives Center's reading room. Gloves must be worn when handling unprotected photographs, negatives, and slides.
Related Materials
Materials in Other Organizations The collections of the Los Angeles Public Library and the Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research each contain photographic images made by Leonard Nadel during the time he worked for The Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles (HACLA). The Photo Collection of the Los Angeles Public Library contains approximately 290 copy negatives and corresponding black-and-white copy prints made from original materials held by HACLA. The Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles Photograph Collection, held at the Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research, contains 225 black-and-white photographs produced by HACLA, forty-two of which were taken by Nadel. The Getty Research Institute, Special Collections, Los Angeles, California, contain 8.75 linear feet (14 boxes) of Leonard Nadel photographs and other material relating to housing and urban redevelopment in Los Angeles, 1947-1998. The collection is described as, "Consisting primarily of photographic material by Leonard Nadel from 1947 to 1957, the collection records early efforts by the Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles (HACLA) to promote integrated public housing for the city's growing multi-ethnic population, and also documents several areas of the city that the Community Redevelopment Agency (CRA) had targeted for commercial revitalization. Nadel's black-and-white negatives, contact prints and two unpublished photographic books form the bulk of the collection, supplemented by handwritten notes and related documents."
Related link
Record ID
ebl-1503512572093-1503512572097-0
Metadata Usage
CC0
GUID
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ep8b054fe8c-7f40-4865-9b3d-b623e3e5ac43

In the Collection

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  • 2004.0138.52.07, Braceros pick strawberries and place them in boxes in a field in the Salinas Valley, California.

  • 2004.0138.27.25, Braceros unload from a truck at the Gondo Labor Camp in Watsonville, California.

  • 2004.0138.27.20, Clothes dry on a chain link fence at the Gondo Labor Camp in Watsonville, California.

  • 2004.0138.23.13, A bracero lies in bed at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.58.34, Photographer Leonard Nadel's original contact sheet of roll #34 in his bracero documentary project - 36 frames documenting work in the "Toro" lettuce fields in Salinas, California.

  • 2004.0138.13.10, Braceros wait to be physically examined at the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.45.16, A bracero places cucumbers into a bag at the edge of a field in California.

  • 2004.0138.49.11, Braceros perform stoop labor in a pepper field in California.

  • 2004.0138.12.23, Braceros use a makeshift water fountain at the Hidalgo Processing Center, Texas.

  • 2004.0138.06.04, Braceros receive lunch before boarding buses and leaving the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.14.24, A U.S. Border Patrol official reviews a bracero's documents while others wait in line to be processed at the Hidalgo Processing Center, Texas.

  • 2004.0138.21.05, Braceros smoke, talk, and listen to the radio in a living quarter at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.47.07, Braceros sit in a waiting room at the clinical practice of Dr. Stanley Savoy in the Salinas Valley, California.

  • 2004.0138.08.08, A woman works at home surrounded by a radio, icons, furniture, and a painting of the Virgen de Guadalupe Virgin Mary in San Mateo, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.39.03, An official distributes documents to braceros in front of the Horseshoe Club in Stockton, California.

  • 2004.0138.07.19, Braceros wait in the shade of a building during processing at the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.03.09, After passing their physical examinations, braceros dictate information to clerk typists during processing at the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.12.29, Braceros board trucks at the Hidalgo Processing Center, Texas.

  • 2004.0138.35.26, Braceros stand and walk in front of living quarters at a camp in the Salinas Valley, California.

  • 2004.0138.04.24, Braceros board a bus at the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.20.26, A truck full of Cookie lettuce boxes sits in a field while braceros work nearby in the Salinas Valley, California.

  • 2004.0138.06.25, Braceros wait to be processed at the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.13.28, An official reviews a bracero's documents while others wait in line at the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.09.03, Before a barbed wire fence, a pile of rocks and a wooden cross mark a grave near the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.16.13, A bracero is vaccinated while others wait in line at the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.28.16, A bracero stands outside the doorway of a living quarter at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.49.12, Braceros perform stoop labor in a pepper field in California.

  • 2004.0138.50.13, Braceros sit in a truck bed in front of the Horseshoe Club in Stockton, California.

  • 2004.0138.29.34, Braceros walk the streets of Watsonville, California.

  • 2004.0138.12.04, Bracero insurance and service facilites stand in front of parked cars near Hidalgo, Texas.

  • 2004.0138.23.25, A bracero sits on his bed in a tent at a camp near Stockton, California.

  • 2004.0138.43.10, Braceros load lettuce while men assemble lettuce boxes in a field in the Salinas Valley, California.

  • 2004.0138.45.04, Braceros sit at the edge of a field in California.

  • 2004.0138.21.21, A bracero lies in his bed in a living quarter at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.31.08, A bunch of punched tally cards lies on the ground near strawberry plants in a field near Watsonville, California.

  • 2004.0138.44.35, Braceros lie on their beds in a living quarter at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.39.28, Braceros crowd around the side of the San Joaquin County Farm Production Association building in Stockton, California.

  • 2004.0138.47.23, Braceros are served food in a dining hall at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.32.15, A bracero washes his clothes at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.32.14, A bracero washes his clothes at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.22.13, A Pennsylvania Railroad freight train passes by a small hut at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.45.07, Braceros stand at the edge of a field in California.

  • 2004.0138.02.31, Braceros cross the Mexico-U.S. border while walking over the bridge from Reynosa, Mexico, to Hidalgo, Texas.

  • 2004.0138.47.21, Braceros stand in line outside a dining hall at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.55.02, Braceros pick lettuce in stoop in a field in California.

  • 2004.0138.32.18, Braceros relax on a bed while one of them writes a letter at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.40.16, Braceros load Toro lettuce boxes onto a truck in a lettuce field in the Salinas Valley, California.

  • 2004.0138.49.34, Braceros perform stoop labor beside a row of drainage pipes in a pepper field in California.

  • 2004.0138.14.33, Officials take fingerprints from braceros while others wait in line to be processed at the Hidalgo Processing Center, Texas.

  • 2004.0138.30.03, A bracero hoes a row in a pepper field near Salinas, California.

  • 2004.0138.18.41, A bracero empties a bag of cotton onto a truck near McAllen, Texas.

  • 2004.0138.11.44, Braceros wait in front of the railroad station in Monterrey, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.48.16, A bracero sits in bed and reads a letter in a living quarter at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.34.34, A bracero picks lettuce in a field in the Salinas Valley, California.

  • 2004.0138.52.20, Braceros stoop down with short-handled hoes to cultivate a field in the Salinas Valley, California.

  • 2004.0138.17.28, A nurse vaccinates a bracero while others wait in line at the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.21.18, Braceros talk, smoke, listen to the radio, and eat strawberries in a living quarter at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.05.17, Braceros prepare food in a living quarter at a camp near McAllen, Texas.

  • 2004.0138.35.34, One bracero shaves, another smokes, and a third stands in a doorway the doorway to washroom at a camp in the Salinas Valley, California.

  • 2004.0138.44.07, Paychecks are distributed to braceros outside a building in Watsonville, California.

  • 2004.0138.46.14, Braceros stand around a vendor's car at a camp in California.

  • Photographic Contact Sheets

  • 2004.0138.36.25, Braceros stand around their living quarters at a camp in Gonzales, California.

  • 2004.0138.23.10, A bracero does his laundry at an outdoor washing facility at a tent camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.29.37, Braceros cross a street in Watsonville, California.

  • 2004.0138.15.07, In Mexico City, Mexico, braceros wait in front of an official building to apply for farm work in the United States.

  • 2004.0138.27.19, Clothes dry on a chain link fence at the Gondo Labor Camp in Watsonville, California.

  • 2004.0138.15.12, Eugenio de Azorena stands behind his desk and speaks in his office, Mexico City, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.46.22, Bunk beds sit inside a living quarter at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.17.35, Braceros dictate information to clerk typists while others wait in line for processing at the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.41.22, A bracero stands in the doorway of a living quarter at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.02.29, Braceros cross the Mexico-U.S. border while walking over the bridge from Reynosa, Mexico, to Hidalgo, Texas.

  • 2004.0138.41.19, Braceros sit on beds in a living quarter at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.32.13, Braceros stand in front of a living quarter at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.17.07, Braceros stand with their backs to the wall and stretch while an official examines their figures at the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.25.14, Dr. Stanley Savoy examines a bracero's teeth while a nurse stands nearby in a clinical practice in the Salinas Valley, California.

  • 2004.0138.39.11, A vendor offers items for sale to braceros at a bus stop in Stockton, California.

  • 2004.0138.55.18, Braceros stand in front of a Radio and Smoke Shop in Watsonville, California.

  • 2004.0138.14.14, An agent from the Texas growers association selects braceros for distribution among his association members in Hidalgo, Texas.

  • 2004.0138.09.04, Before a barbed wire fence, a pile of rocks and a wooden cross mark a grave near the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.14.31, Braceros dictate information to clerk typists during processing at the Hidalgo Processing Center, Texas.

  • 2004.0138.16.01, Braceros enjoy an impromptu concert near the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.24.16, Braceros wait while officials review and complete their documents in an office in Stockton, California.

  • 2004.0138.55.04, A bracero, wearing homemade shoes, stands in a lettuce field in a California.

  • 2004.0138.51.19, Dr. Stanley Savoy examines a bracero's back to check for respiratory illness in his clinical practice in the Salinas Valley, California.

  • 2004.0138.24.09, Braceros crowd around the side of the San Jaoquin County Farm Production Association building in Stockton, California.

  • 2004.0138.25.22, Beds sit in a bracero living quarter at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.32.11, Braceros stand outside at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.33.17, A bracero performs stoop labor in a pepper field in California.

  • 2004.0138.34.30, A bracero carries boxes over his head while others pick lettuce in a field in the Salinas Valley, California.

  • 2004.0138.32.28, Braceros sit and lie on their beds and smoke cigarettes at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.13.18, An official reviews a bracero's documents at the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.51.09, Braceros sit and lie on their beds in a living quarter at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.02.06, A bracero receives a chest X-ray during a physical examination at the Hidalgo Processing Center, Texas.

  • 2004.0138.23.23, Braceros play dominoes on a bed in a living quarter at a camp in California.

  • 2004.0138.49.20, A bracero stoops down to pick pepper in a field in California.

  • 2004.0138.19.17, Braceros returning home line up to board a bus in Stockton, California.

  • 2004.0138.37.31, Braceros have lunch next to a truck in the Salinas Valley, California.

  • 2004.0138.01.03, Braceros stand beside railroad tracks while waiting to enter the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico.

  • 2004.0138.37.04, A man on a truck uses a machine to assemble Toro lettuce boxes, which braceros pick up to fill with lettuce in a field in the Salinas Valley, California.

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