cityscape of los angeles at sunset

Here is your L.A. County Supervisors Map by District until 2031

Open in Map Viewer to see a more detailed version of the boundaries via ArcGIS.

This map was created by yours truly based on publicly available GIS data from Los Angeles County, which itself based the boundaries on recommendations from the Citizens Redistricting Commission of 2021. The boundaries are officially in effect until 2031.

Access more maps for the most populous county of them all HERE. Look up your District Supervisor via address HERE.

J.T.

person sitting and posing in traditional native american clothing

This map shows at least 62 different tribes in California prior to European contact

The map is courtesy of the Northern California Indian Development Council, which has provided resources for American Indian communities since 1976. According to the U.S. Library of Congress:

“The earliest Californians were adventurous Asians who made their way across the Bering Straits to Alaska thousands of years ago when a warmer climate and a now-vanished land bridge made such travel easier. These men and women and their descendants settled North and South America, spreading out to form the various nations and tribes whom the first European visitors to this hemisphere dubbed ‘Indians.’ The mountain ranges of the Pacific Coast isolated these early settlers from the cultures that developed in neighboring Mexico and the western United States.”

Source: Northern California Indian Development Council.

There were at least six unique language networks in what would become California. In the L.A. basin area, the Gabrieleño, Tongva, or Kizh nation is noted as part of a network which spoke an “Uto-Aztecan” language.

In early 2024, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife is set to return 40 acres to the Pauite-Shoshone people in the Owens Valley in the department’s first ever such move.

In the “Southland,” 2023 also saw an Indigenous Charter School in El Sereno purchase 12 acres of land on behalf of the Gabrieleño Shoshone Tribal Nation to establish what will one day be known as the Chief Ya’anna Learning Village.

Be sure you’re subscribed to J.T. the L.A. Storyteller for more updates on Native American and California Native history soon!

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J.T.