Mira Loma
Mira Loma Space Center/U.S. Army Supply Depot
Space Center Ct. between 7th & Hopkins St., Mira Loma
This was ground zero for logistics in the Inland region beginning with WWII efforts to supply materials to troops and the newly opened Manzanar concentration camp. Amazon warehouses are built on the site of the former Mira Loma Space Center.
In the early 20th century, Mira Loma’s Industrial agriculture included a huge expanse of grape vineyards planted by Italian immigrants in the sandy soil. Railways enabled growers to ship their products around the country and, with nearby highways, gave Mira Loma logistical advantage during WWII, when the U.S. Army built its military supply operations here. They constructed millions of acres of warehouses to supply desert training sites and Manzanar’s over 10,000 incarcerated Japanese Americans.
After the war, this supply chain infrastructure continued to be used by military industries and then by the growing logistics sector. The Mira Loma Village subdivision was built in the 1950s to provide housing for military and civilian workers. Many Latino families who moved to the Village in later decades seeking the suburban dream are now surrounded by warehouses. Since the 1990s, their children have been studied, and their respiratory illnesses and reduced lung capacity documented in lawsuits. Still, the resulting installation of home air filters in Mira Loma Village won’t change the fact that residents here have an increased likelihood of heart attacks, cancer, and premature deaths.
From the Archives
by A People’s History of the I.E.
Click on the images below to uncover the story.
The Origins of Logistics
by A People’s History of the I.E.
Resources
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CCAEJ - Center for Community Action and Environmental Justice is a community-based organization fighting for environmental justice and equity in Bloomington and throughout the I.E.
Warehouse Worker Resource Center is dedicated to improving working conditions in the warehouse industry in Southern California.
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Boom California, “Before Amazon: Land, Labor, and Logistics in the Inland Empire of WWII” by Brinda Sarathy.
Jurupa Valley, Historic Resource Analysis of the Proposed Mira Loma Space Center.
PBS SoCal, “Slow violence of the supply chain.”
A People’s History of the I.E., “From Mira Loma to Manzanar: the Roots of Logistics” microdocumentary.