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Downtown Riverside in Riverside County, California — The American West (Pacific Coastal)
 

Dosan Ahn Chang-Ho Memorial

도산안창호기념동상

 
 
Dosan Ahn Chang-Ho Memorial - main text image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Volt Craft, June 26, 2026
1. Dosan Ahn Chang-Ho Memorial - main text
Inscription.
Dosan Ahn Chang-Ho
1878-1938

Pioneer · Educator · Orange Picker · Patriot

Freedom was his life, and he gave his life to freedom. Dosan Ahn Chang Ho believed that an individual could make a difference in the course of human endeavors, and he showed us the way by setting examples. The world is a better place because of him and his courage to recognize truth and tell it without fear.

Born in a small village in Korea in 1878, Ahn Chang Ho came to America in 1902 with his new bride, Lee Hye Ryon (Helen Ahn). As the steamship approached Hawaii, he saw the islands of the Hawaiian chain like mountain peaks looming in the distance. The twenty-four-year-old freedom fighter made a resolve then that he would stand tall above the sea of turmoil in Korea created by Imperial Japan. He would call himself "Dosan" (Island Mountain).

One of his missions was to learn about the American education system and to bring new ideas to the schools that he had established in Korea. He enrolled in an elementary school to gain firsthand knowledge about American schooling. At the same time, Dosan turned his attention to the deplorable living conditions of his countrymen in San Francisco. An accomplished orator and persuader at 24, he guided them to form a respectable community there.

Then he came to
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Riverside in 1904 to help the community of Korean farm workers. Riverside was his home until 1913. He lived in a small Korean village on Pachappa Avenue (Commerce Street) and he picked oranges for Cornelius Earle Rumsey, owner of Alta Cresta Groves. Dosan practiced cooperation and careful handling of citrus fruit, then a new concept even for Riverside's progressive growers.

He was no ordinary ranch hand as history would show. Following Japan's annexation of Korea in 1910, Dosan formulated the basis for the Provisional Government of Korea here in Riverside. While in Riverside, Dosan also conceived Hung Sa Dahn (Young Korean Academy), an organization to develop leaders for the independence movement.

He left for Shanghai in 1919 to join the Provisional Government of Korea as its interim Prime Minister and the Minister of Labor. At the height of the Japanese expansion into China, the Japanese police arrested him in Shanghai in 1932. He returned to Korea as a prisoner of the Japanese. Prior to the liberation of his homeland, he died in 1938. A national memorial commemorating his life and work stands in the center of Gangnam District in Seoul, Riverside's distinguished sister city. Now he stands here in Riverside to remind us of his legacy as a pioneer, an educator, an orange picker and a patriot.

Facets of Dosan Ahn Chang-Ho

Figure
Dosan Ahn Chang-Ho Memorial Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Volt Craft, June 26, 2026
2. Dosan Ahn Chang-Ho Memorial Marker
1

Dosan picking oranges in Alta Cresta Groves, c. 1912
Dosan taught fellow Korean workers in California to pursue every task, including picking, oranges as a means of being good citizens, serving their country and helping to free Korea from Japanese occupation.

Figure 2
Dosan studying with children, c. 1902
Dosan, a Confucian scholar, believed learning Created strength, and truth was, the key to good character. He came to America to study Western education and Democratic ideals in order to modernize his country and build an independent nation for Korea.

Figure 3
Dosan teaching bible study by oil lamp, c. 1904-1906
Dosan, an early Christian convert, learned love of humanity with unshakable faith. In Riverside, he taught bible studies and English to fellow Koreans.

Figure 4
The ideal of cooperation
Dosan admired the California Fruit Growers Exchange and realized cooperation was the growers' key to success. He taught Koreans this ideal of cooperation, to help build their national strength.

Figure 5
Leader of the Independence Movement, c. 1919
Dosan organized the Korean Provisional Government, in exile in Shanghai. The government upheld the Shanghai Declaration of Independence, based on Dosan's democratic ideals.

Figure 6
Reconciliation
Dosan Ahn Chang-Ho Memorial image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Volt Craft, June 26, 2026
3. Dosan Ahn Chang-Ho Memorial
and the Ideal of a Nation
Dosan fought wholeheartedly for a true Korean republic. He avenue to prepare his people sought every people for the responsibilities associated with governing themselves.


 
Topics. This historical marker and memorial is listed in these topic lists: Asian AmericansCivil RightsImmigration.
 
Location. 33° 58.923′ N, 117° 22.461′ W. Marker is in Riverside, California, in Riverside County. It is in Downtown Riverside. It is at the intersection of Main Street and University Avenue, on the right when traveling north on Main Street. Touch for map. Marker is at or near this postal address: 3750 Main Street, Riverside CA 92501, United States of America. Touch for directions.

Regionally, this marker and memorial is in Greater Los Angeles, in the Inland Empire, and in the Peninsular Ranges. It is also in the American Southwest. Globally, it is in North America, on the Ring of Fire, in the Pacific Rim, in the Western Hemisphere, in the Western World, and in the Anglosphere. Historically, it finds itself in what was once New Spain and also Mexico’s Alta California.

Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within walking distance of this marker: Jackson Building (within shouting distance of this marker); The Roosevelt Building (about 300 feet away, measured in a direct line); Downtown Riverside Mahatma Gandhi Monument (about 300 feet away); Former Rouse's Department Store (about 300 feet away); Arcade Building (about 400 feet away); Loring Building (about 400 feet away); Old City Hall (about 500 feet away); E. M. Bonnett Building (about 500 feet away). Touch for a list and map of all markers in Riverside.
 
Related marker. Click here for another marker that is related to this marker. - The family home after moving from Riverside to
Dosan Ahn Chang-Ho Memorial image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Volt Craft, June 26, 2026
4. Dosan Ahn Chang-Ho Memorial
Los Angeles, now preserved on the campus of USC.
 
Also see . . .
1. Dosan Ahn Chang-Ho Memorial (2001).
Memorial installation of a cast bronze statue of Dosan Ahn Chang-Ho (also known as Ahn Changho) surrounded by cast bronze plaques depicting images from his life, with landscaping and hardscape of stamped and colored concrete, concrete walls and granite

The title name of this memorial to Ahn Changho uses his pen name of 'Dosan'. Ahn Changho was a prominent Korean social activist promoting efforts in education reform and modernization.
(Submitted on June 27, 2026, by Volt Craft of Riverside, California.) 

2. Dosan Ahn Chang-Ho Memorial. 27 photos of the memorial. (Submitted on June 27, 2026, by Volt Craft of Riverside, California.) 

3. Dosan Ahn Chang-ho. A complete profile of Dosan Ahn Chang-ho and the history of his life as a Korean independence activist and a leader of the Korean immigrant community in the U.S. (Submitted on June 27, 2026, by Volt Craft of Riverside, California.) 

4. [Video] Riverside's Civil Rights Walk (2021). Presented by Dr. Edward Chang, Professor of Ethnic Studies at University of California, Riverside. (4 min.) (Submitted on June 28, 2026, by Volt Craft of Riverside, California.) 
 
Dosan Ahn Chang-Ho Memorial image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Volt Craft
5. Dosan Ahn Chang-Ho Memorial
Illustrative panels for “facets”.
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on June 28, 2026. It was originally submitted on June 27, 2026, by Volt Craft of Riverside, California. This page has been viewed 10 times since then. Photos:   1, 2, 3, 4, 5. submitted on June 27, 2026, by Volt Craft of Riverside, California. • Andrew Ruppenstein was the editor who published this page.
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Jul. 3, 2026