On a cool morning in the spring of 1936, a photographer working for the Resettlement Association stopped in southern San Luis Obispo County, searching for her next photo.
While there, she stumbled across a family of migrant workers struggling to coast their automobile into town, its radiator shot. As the father attempted to get the vehicle running again, his wife, Florence Owens Thompson, and her children looked on from a lean-to tent.
In that moment, photographer Dorothea Lange snapped a series of seven pictures — and the seventh soon became one of the most iconic images of the Great Depression, along with one of the most recognized photographs in American history.
Nearly 90 years removed from Lange’s fateful stop in that Nipomo pea field — which local historians such as Terry Handy say likely lasted no longer than 10 to 15 minutes — the historic photograph is being immortalized in bronze not far from the site where it was taken.
For the past few years, Handy, a former social studies teacher and docent at the Dana Adobe & Cultural Center, has led an effort to memorialize the “Migrant Mother” photo — and next month, the memorial will finally be revealed to the public.
“It speaks to a lot of different parts of American history,” Handy said. “When you just look at the photograph itself, it’s hard not to be touched by it.”

A Historic Moment Captured in Nipomo
Handy said the Migrant Mother photo came at a crucial point in the Great Depression, shedding light on the predicament of the poorest Americans.
When Lange happened upon the Thompson family in 1936, a blight had wiped out the pea crop in the Nipomo area, worsening the local situation, Handy said.
“The fate of migrant workers in the 1930s was pretty dire,” Handy said. “Particularly in Nipomo, there had been migrant camps here as early as the early 1930s at the height of the Depression.”
Lange’s photograph, picked up by the Associated Press wire service and several San Francisco news outlets, eventually led to around $20,000 in food assistance being sent to Nipomo to combat the dire conditions, he said.

Though Lange usually kept a detailed journal about the photos she took, she wrote little about Migrant Mother and the six other images captured that day in Nipomo, making it more challenging for historians to place the exact location of the photo.
The Migrant Mother was likely taken in a field just off of Oakglen Avenue in Nipomo, where a grove of eucalyptus trees that lines the southwest boundary of Nipomo High School now grows, Handy said.
Its location was identified by tracking the location of similar groves of eucalyptus trees seen in the background of several of the photos, which line up with a grove currently growing between Oakglen Avenue and Highway 101, he said.

Exactly where — and even when — the photo was precisely taken remains an unknown, along with much about its subjects, Handy said.
“There are thousands of books written on it, thousands of stories written about it from the point of view of photography, the social history of migrant workers, the plight of women,” Handy said. “She, we now know, was probably full-blooded Cherokee, so she was an Indigenous woman to begin with, which wasn’t reported at the time, and so it just speaks to a lot of different parts of American history.”

Photo Memorial Started With GoFundMe Campaign
Though Handy was the person who pushed the idea of a “Migrant Mother” photo memorial across the finish line, he didn’t come up with the idea himself, he said.
The idea originated around 2016 with Cal State-Fullerton professor and photography expert Paul Lester, who was driving along Highway 101 in the Nipomo area when he realized that the site of the photo was nearby and wondered why the location wasn’t marked, Handy said.
Lester died in 2023, but the idea of a memorial bounced around between local historians until Handy did a presentation at the Dana Adobe on the photo in May and realized there was public interest.

Since then, Handy has raised around $5,000 through individual contributions and a GoFundMe campaign.
He finally received the $3,600 plaque — complete with a relief of the image and a brief history of Lange and her work — in October, and plans to unveil it on Nov. 15 at 10 a.m. at the planned site of Jim Miller Park on Tefft Street, Handy said.
It’s currently unclear whether the plaque will be permanently displayed at Jim Miller Park, as some of those details are still being ironed out, Handy said.
The GoFundMe, which had raised about $2,500 as of Friday evening, will remain active through December to continue collecting funds that will be used for maintenance once the memorial is installed in its final home, Handy said.



