The Hindusthanee Student (April 1916)
The April 1916 issue of The Hindusthanee Student (Vol. 2, No. 7), published from the Nalanda Club in Berkeley, California. The issue begins with a feature on art historian Ananda Coomaraswamy by Basanta Kumar Roy, titled "India's Art-Critic in America," with a photograph of Coomaraswamy and singer Ratan Devi.
The Hindusthanee Student (May 1916)
The May 1916 issue of The Hindusthanee Student (Vol. 2, No. 8), published from the Nalanda Club in Berkeley, California. Essays and editorials in the issue includes "Oh! Our Education" by Lajpat Rai, "Information about American University" by Surendra Karr, part two of "A Review of India's Year Book" by Hemendra K.
The United States of India (July 1923)
The inaugural issue of The United States of India, dubbed "A Monthly Review of Political, Economic, Social and Intellectual Independence of India," was published in July 1923 from the Gadar Party headquarters in No. 5 Wood Street, San Francisco. The title "Pacific Coast Hindustani Association" was used in place for Gadar Party.
The United States of India (August 1923)
The August 1923 issue of the United States of India (Vol. 1, No. 2) published from the Gadar headquarters on No. 5 Wood Street, San Francisco featured the following articles: "Mr. C.S.
The United States of India (October 1923)
The October 1923 issue of the United States of India (Vol. 1, No. 4) published from the Gadar headquarters on No. 5 Wood Street, San Francisco featured the following articles: ""Modernizing Religion," "What India Needs Most Today" by T.M. Karr, "Asian Independence Discussed in the Institute of Politics," "Russia's New Foreign Policy," "Forced Abdication of the Maharajah of Nabha".
The United States of India (December 1923)
The December 1923 issue of the United States of India (Vol. 1, No. 5) published from the headquarters of the "Pacific Coast Hindustani Association" at No. 5 Wood Street, San Francisco featured the following articles: ""A Novel Law in India," "An Englishman on British Rule" by W.S. Blunt, "Hiram W. Johnson, U.S.
Mr. Shima (1914)
Produced in 1914, this 15-minute, black-and-white film captures the California estate of George Shima (born Kinji Ushijima, 1864-1924), one of the wealthiest Japanese-American farmers of the time. The film is unique in that it contains footage of several South Asian laborers on the farm, in two sections: "Migrant Laborers from India" (1:09-1:20), and "Onion Fields" (1:21-1:44).
Girindra Mukerji, "The Hindu in America" (1908)
In "The Hindu in America," an article from the April 1908 issue of Overland Monthly, Girindra Mukerji, a student at the University of California, writes about the Indian presence in the U.S.. The editorial note also remarks on the 1907 riots in Bellingham, Washington.
Agnes Foster Buchanan, "The West and the Hindu Invasion" (1908)
In "The West and the Hindu Invasion," an article from the April 1908 issue of Overland Monthly, Agnes Foster Buchanan writes about the "Hindu Invasion" as the "latest racial problem" to impact the West coast, following the earlier migrations of Chinese and Japanese.