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San Diego Natural History Museum

1874 establishments in California1917 establishments in California1930s architecture in the United States1933 establishments in CaliforniaBalboa Park (San Diego)
Beaux-Arts architecture in CaliforniaBuildings and structures completed in 1933Fossil museumsInstitutions accredited by the American Alliance of MuseumsMuseums established in 1917Museums in San DiegoNatural history museums in CaliforniaPaleontology in CaliforniaPeople associated with the San Diego Natural History MuseumScientific organizations established in 1874Use mdy dates from June 2019
San Diego Natural History Museum exterior
San Diego Natural History Museum exterior

The San Diego Natural History Museum is a museum located in Balboa Park in San Diego, California. It was founded in 1874 as the San Diego Society of Natural History. It is the second oldest scientific institution west of the Mississippi and the oldest in Southern California. The present location of the museum was dedicated on January 14, 1933. A major addition to the museum was dedicated in April 2001, doubling exhibit space.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article San Diego Natural History Museum (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

San Diego Natural History Museum
Plaza de Balboa, San Diego

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N 32.732111111111 ° E -117.14730277778 °
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San Diego Natural History Museum

Plaza de Balboa
92134 San Diego
California, United States
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sdnhm.org

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San Diego Natural History Museum exterior
San Diego Natural History Museum exterior
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Zoro Garden Nudist Colony
Zoro Garden Nudist Colony

Zorro Garden Nudist Colony was an attraction at the 1935-36 Pacific International Exposition in Balboa Park in San Diego, California. It was located in Zoro Garden, a sunken garden originally created for the 1915-16 Panama-California Exposition. Billed as a nudist colony, it was populated by hired performers rather than actual practicing nudists. The women wore only G-strings; the men wore loincloths or trunks. The participants lounged around in their "colony", played volleyball and other games, and performed a quasi-religious "Sacrifice to the Sun God" five times a day. Fair attendees could pay for admission to bleacher-type seats, or they could peek through knotholes in a wooden fence for free. On August 27, 1936, the colony closed, allegedly "after an argument with Exposition officials about finances."Contemporary newspaper accounts indicate the "colony" was composed of actual nudists, but local historian Matthew Alice has stated that the women were "wearing flesh-colored bras, G-strings, or body stockings so everything was zipped up tight." However, the women were indeed topless, as countless un-doctored photographs plainly show. Nate Eagle, a sideshow promoter who, with partner Stanley R. Graham, created the scandalous Zoro Garden nudist colony. Located in a sunken garden east of the Palace of Better Housing (today's Casa de Balboa), Zoro Garden was, according to the Zoro Garden program, "designed to explain to the general public the ideals and advantages of natural outdoor life." Topless women and bearded men in loincloths read books, sunbathed, and acted in pseudo-religious rituals to the Sun God. According to the program, "Healthy young men and women, indulging in the freedom of outdoor living in which they so devoutly believe, have opened their colony to the friendly, curious gaze of the public." The public's curious gaze quickly turned Zorro Garden into the Exposition's most lucrative outdoor attraction. Despite protests, Zorro Garden lasted for the entire run of the Exposition. The area is now the Zoro Butterfly Garden.