This project was supported in whole or in part by the U.S. Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act, administered in California by the State Librarian Made accessible through a grant from the John Randolph Haynes and Dora Haynes Foundation and Photo Friends
Photograph was edited for publication purposes The Clarence W. Pierce School of Agriculture is a two-year community college in Woodland Hills, California. It opened in September 1947, with 70 students and 18 faculty members and is part of the Los Angeles Community College District. The school's initial focus was crop cultivation and animal husbandry, and still retains a large swatch of open fields for hands-on working farm training. In 1956 the school was renamed Los Angeles Pierce College. Photograph caption dated March 27, 1961 reads, "Don Mills, with the help of an animal friend, gives some Valley elementary school children an exhibition of professional sheep-shearing. The exhibition was a part of an all-day instruction class held Friday at Pierce College. With the aid of Glen Thomas, right, a Pierce sophomore, Mills freed some 150 sheep from their winter coats."
Type
image
Format
1 photographic print :b&w ;26 x 21 cm. Photographic prints
Los Angeles Pierce College Los Angeles Pierce College--Students Community colleges--California--Woodland Hills (Los Angeles) Community college students--California--Los Angeles Students--California--Los Angeles Children--California--Los Angeles Men--California--Los Angeles Sheep-shearing--California--Los Angeles Animal culture--California--Los Angeles Livestock--California--Los Angeles Sheep--California--Los Angeles Wool--Growth Wool Woodland Hills (Los Angeles, Calif.) Valley Times Collection photographs Portrait photographs Group portraits
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