Showing posts with label local history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label local history. Show all posts

The Spanish Missions of San Antonio Review

The Spanish Missions of San Antonio
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This guidebook gives a great, detailed history of the missions of San Antonio as well as providing large historical photographs. The layout is excellent; however, the size of the guidebook is not practical for carrying on a tour of the missions, but does serve well as a coffee table book and as a valuable source of information.

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This is a concisely written, lavishly illustrated account of the founding, growth, decline and restoration of San Antonio's five Spanish colonial missions, a national treasure. Built by Franciscan friars and their Native American charges on the far frontier of New Spain, they stand today as the largest cluster of Spanish missions in the United States. One is preserved as the Alamo. The others form San Antonio Missions National Historical Park.

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San Francisco Then and Now (Compact) (Then & Now Thunder Bay) Review

San Francisco Then and Now (Compact) (Then and Now Thunder Bay)
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This book offers an excellent photographic perspective of San Francisco's past and present. Photos from the 1850's even up to the early 1960s (in the case of Diamond Heights) are shown along with photos of what a particular area of SF looks like today. While this book is a testament to how much the city has grown and changed over the last 150 years, it also shows how resilient it was after the earthquake and fire in 1906 that virtually leveled it.
It also makes the reader ponder a little about what life must have been like in San Francisco around the turn of the 20th century. Among the areas shown? The Marina district, Pacific Heights, Market St and the ferry building, several panoramas of the city, the Golden Gate bridge (during contruction and how it appears today), and Nob Hill.
Not only are the photos spectacular, but it also offers some history about "the city by the bay" and how some parts of it have changed dramatically and others might still be recognizable to those who visited 50 years ago. An excellent pictorial coffee table book about the city I'm lucky enough to live near.

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There's no denying the charm of San Francisco, a city perched on rolling hills, where "little cable cars climb half-way to the stars." With dramatic vistas at every turn, the Pacific Ocean to the West and Bay to the East, its geography and cityscape is like no other place on Earth. This unique book features a selection of dramatic photos taken before, during, and after the 1906 Earthquake and fire.Filled with amazing then-and-now photographs of the City's notable attractions, including cable cars, the Ferry Building, Palace of Fine Arts, Transamerica Pyramid, and Mission Dolores, the oldest building in SF.San Francisco's most beloved landmark gets the royal treatment. See the Golden Gate Bridge during construction in 1934, and how it looks today.Condé Nast Traveler readers vote San Francisco as one of the world's most popular tourist destinations year after year. This new compact edition of our best-seller is sure to make a great gift or souvenir for everyone who's left their heart here.

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San Francisco Bay Area Aviation (Images of Aviation: California) Review

San Francisco Bay Area Aviation (Images of Aviation: California)
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I have about 25 of the Images series and this one meets the excellent standards of the others. Great visual of the history of aviation in the SF Bay Area.
Bud Bresnahan
Marin County

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From hot-air balloons to jets, no other location has a more diverse aviation history than the San Francisco Bay Area. Aside from private and commercial airline operations, the area has housed the NACA/NASA Research Center, the prestigious Boeing School of Aeronautics, and the dirigible USS Macon. It is currently the center for antique aircraft in Northern California and has been the site of numerous flight records, including the Dole Race and Amelia Earhart's circumnavigation attempts. San Francisco was also home to the pioneer Pan American Airways flying boat, which opened the Pacific Ocean to air travel.

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San Francisco Then and Now (Compact) (Then & Now Thunder Bay) Review

San Francisco Then and Now (Compact) (Then and Now Thunder Bay)
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It's remarkable how the view of many corners and streets of San Francisco have been preserved, despite the city's growth and the intervention of natural disasters. In "San Francisco Then and Now," we are treated to dozens of photos and stories about how the city looked in previous years, some reaching back to the late 1800s, and what it looks like today.
This book is clearly a labor of love; no doubt many, many hours were spent collecting old and new photos for comparison purposes. What the photos show is the life and growth of a city built on tough terrain. If you don't already know San Francisco is one seriously hilly environment, you'll certainly know it after viewing just a few photos. Architectural creativity is definitely on display.Some of the photos:
Chinatown at the corner of Grant Avenue and California Street looks very much the same, with primarily tenants changing; The Bing Chong Importing Co. has turned into a food court but otherwise, the street looks virtually unchanged.
Clay Street to Nob Hill, shown in an 1872 photo, was the site of the world's first cable-car line today, the cable line is gone but still, several of the buildings and trees create the same look, though the street is now one-way, downhill.
The famously crooked Lombard Street, shown first in a 1922 photo as its many twists and turns, to accommodate drivers trying to negotiate the steep decline, were being installed. The authors note that it's not the city's crookedest street, saying that recongition belongs to Vermont Street but is not on the tourist map.
Other photos show views from the Marina District, Crissy Field, Powell Street turnaround, Palace Hotel, and Steamboat Point, the latter once a thriving shipping area. A 2007 photo shows dozens of tiny boats holding people hoping to catch Barry Bonds' record-setting home run.
Not all of the older photos are dated. There's a marvelous packaging of two photos showing the the steep rise of Market Street in the Castro district, with a theater sign showing clearing in both, traffic passing by, and many of the buildings looking quite similar in both. The older one I can only guesstimate, based on car models and, best of all, names of the movies on the theater marquee. Both "Hold Back the Dawn" and "The Lady Has Plans" are shown on the marquee in the old photo, indicating that the picture is from about 1942; in the newer photo, Kate Winslet's name shows prominently, in "The Reader," dating it to 2008.
Still, this is a wonderful book for tourists and city residents alike who enjoy knowing what the city looked like and how it grew to what it is today. Well done, thoughtful and entertaining.


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Home to social revolutions of every kind, a vibrant counterculture, and the crookedest street in the world, San Francisco is a city like no other—and always has been. This compact edition of San Francisco Then and Now looks back at the intriguing architecture and design of this extraordinary city, highlighting the differences between its picturesque past appearance and its no less fascinating present.There's the Barbary Coast, once a district of song and dance and scandal, but is now a sedately beautiful street. The Golden Gate Theatre, which was once home to vaudeville classics, continues the theatrical tradition with the latest Broadway hits. And the ornate Palace Hotel, was and still is home of the city's finest luxury.San Francisco Then and Now also highlights the changes that the city's various earthquakes have brought, showing how some of the Bay Area's most iconic sights quite literally rose from the ashes of its earlier landmarks.So whether you've never set foot in the Haight-Ashbury or whether you're an expert at jumping on and off cable cars, San Francisco Then and Now is the perfect introduction to this amazing city—and its equally amazing history.

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