The March 10, 1933 Long Beach earthquake was a disaster that changed the way Southern Californians looked at earthquakes, leading to school construction standards and more awareness of the threat faced in what would become known as "earthquake country."
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Griffin Family, U.S. Geological Survey
These images show damaged left by the March 10, 1933 Long Beach earthquake.
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Griffin Family, U.S. Geological Survey
A car is parked next to a damaged building after the March 10, 1933 Long Beach earthquake.
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Griffin Family, U.S. Geological Survey
Rubble can be seen through the window frame a store destroyed in the March 10, 1933 Long Beach earthquake.
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Griffin Family, U.S. Geological Survey
A damaged car is towed away after the March 10, 1933 Long Beach earthquake.
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Griffin Family, U.S. Geological Survey
Damaged water tanks on Western Avenue appear in this photo after the March 10, 1933 Long Beach earthquake.
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Griffin Family, U.S. Geological Survey
A view of a Florence Avenue store building that crumbled in the March 10, 1933 Long Beach earthquake.
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Griffin Family, U.S. Geological Survey
A view of damaged buildings on a Compton street following the March 10, 1933 Long Beach earthquake.
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Griffin Family, U.S. Geological Survey
This photo shows a house that shifted dramatically in the March 10, 1933 Long Beach earthquake.
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Griffin Family, U.S. Geological Survey
Shaking from the March 10, 1933 Long Beach earthquake was felt across the region, including in Compton, where these buildings crumbled.
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Griffin Family, U.S. Geological Survey
Rubble is seen on the ground under a Western Auto Supply Co. billboard following the March 10, 1933 Long Beach earthquake.
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Griffin Family, U.S. Geological Survey
An automotive garage that was destroyed in the March 10, 1933 Long Beach earthquake.
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Griffin Family, U.S. Geological Survey
The corner of a brick building crumbled to the ground in the March 10, 1933 Long Beach earthquake.
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Griffin Family, U.S. Geological Survey
A man sits next to a collapsed building after the March 10, 1933 Long Beach earthquake.
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Griffin Family, U.S. Geological Survey
People walk past a building damaged in the March 10, 1933 Long Beach earthquake.
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Griffin Family, U.S. Geological Survey
An example of one of the many brick buildings that collapsed in the March 10, 1933 Long Beach earthquake.
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Griffin Family, U.S. Geological Survey
Second-floor rooms can be seen after a brick building collapsed in the March 10, 1933 Long Beach earthquake.
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Capt. T.J. Maher, U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey
Cracks can be seen in this partially collapsed building after the March 10, 1933 Long Beach earthquake. The quake caused about $50 million in property damage.