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California Historical Society Collection, 1860-1960
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Title Insurance and Trust and C.C. Pierce Photography Collection 1860-1960
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Drawing of Mission San Diego Alcala, by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883
(USC DC Image)
Drawing of Mission San Diego Alcala, by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883
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Description
Photograph of a drawing of Mission San Diego Alcala, by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883. The mission consists of the two-story church and several smaller buildings. The church features a multi-curved parapet where on the peak sits a cross. Behind the church is a wall with multicurved parapets and supported by large wooden beams. A palm tree stands below the hill in front of the mission. A line of birds is crossing the sky overhead.; "It was a pitiful group of missionaries and soldiers who gathered on the shore of San Diego Bay on July 1, 1769. Of the 219 Spaniards who had left Lower California two months before, only half were still alive. Of the survivors, many were sick and exhausted. Even so, after two weeks' rest Governor Portola gathered the strongest men about him and set off northward in an attempt to locate Vizcaino's Bay of Monterey. Two days later, on July 16, 1769, a crude brushwood shelter had been erected. There Father Serra established Mission San Diego de Alcalá, which was to be the first of the famous California missions. The Indians, however, were slow in accepting the blessings offered. They approached the strangers with extreme caution at first, then later wandered about the new settlement stealing whatever they found the chance to carry away. Father Serra considered the loss of a few trinkets a small price to pay for the friendship of the natives, but the Spanish soldiers were resentful. When it appeared the Indians were approaching to steal in force, they were fired upon and quickly scattered by the soldiers. Naturally any conversions were thus considerably delayed. -- unknown author (part 1 of 2).; "Eventually the mission was moved six miles inland to separate mission and presidio. A later Indian attack, which could easily have been repulsed by the soldiers, destroyed the buildings, and killed a priest and two workmen. Then the mission was moved back to the presidio. But, that arrangement was no more satisfactory the second time than the first time, and the inland site became the final location of the San Diego Mission. The church of today was not completed until 1813. During the next 54 years the Spanish padres established a chain of 21 missions to the California Indians, which stretched along the coast for 600 miles from San Diego to Sonoma, north of San Francisco Bay. Originally the San Diego Mission and the Spanish presidio, or fort, were located on the hill above Old Town San Diego, but the mission was soon moved to its present location five miles up the San Diego River. Mexican secularization laws took away the vast mission property. It was not until 1862 that a mere 22 acres were returned to the Church by the U. S. Congress. The original buildings were in ruins. In 1931 restoration began which exactly duplicated the Padres' church and bell wall." -- unknown author (part 2 of 2).
Asset Metadata
Title
Drawing of Mission San Diego Alcala, by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883
Subject
Missions -- Mission San Diego Alcala
(file heading),
Missions, Spanish
(lcsh),
religious facilities
(adlf),
San Diego Alcala Mission
(subject)
Tags
OAI-PMH Harvest
Place
California
(states),
San Diego
(city or populated place),
San Diego
(counties),
USA
(countries)
Temporal Subject
1883
Type
images
Format
2 photographs : glass photonegative, photoprint, b&w ; 21 x 26 cm.
(aacr2),
art
(aat),
glass plate negatives
(format),
photographic prints
(aat),
photographs
(aat)
Source
California Historical Society
(contributing entity),
California Historical Society Collection, 1860-1960
(collection),
Title Insurance and Trust, and C.C. Pierce Photography Collection, 1860-1960
(subcollection)
Date Created
1883
Creator
Pierce, C.C. (Charles C.), 1861-1946
(photographer)
Publisher
University of Southern California. Libraries
(digital)
Repository Email
specol@lib.usc.edu
Repository Name
USC Libraries Special Collections
Repository Location
Doheny Memorial Library, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0189
Rights
Public Domain. Please credit both “University of Southern California. Libraries” and “California Historical Society” as the source. Digitally reproduced by the USC Digital Library.
Copyright
Public Domain. Please credit both “University of Southern California. Libraries” and “California Historical Society” as the source. Digitally reproduced by the USC Digital Library.
Access Conditions
Send requests to address or e-mail given
Permanent Link (DOI)
https://doi.org/10.25549/chs-m17478
Identifier
5749 (
accession number
), CHS-5749 (
call number
), CHS-5749 (
filename
), chs-m265 (
legacy collection record id
), chs-c65-17471 (
legacy record id
), chs-m17478 (
legacy record id
), USC-1-1-1-14081 (
legacy record id
), 1-128-20 (
microfiche number
), USC (
project
)
IIIF ID
[Document.IIIFV3ID]
DM Record ID
17471
Unique identifier
UC142464
Legacy Identifier
CHS-5749.tiff
Type
Image
Internet Media Type
image/tiff
Resolution
17.0 in × 14.0 in at 300dpi
43.1 cm × 35.6 cm at 300dpi
Inherited Values
Title
Title Insurance and Trust and C.C. Pierce Photography Collection 1860-1960
Description
The nearly 15,000 unique photographs of this collection contain the work of C.C. Pierce which cover the Los Angeles region city, street and architectural views, California Missions, Southwestern Native Americans, and turn-of-century Nevada, Arizona, and California. Pierce, active from 1886 to 1940, was one of the leading photographers of his day and amassed a collection of 15,000 images, including his own and those bought and copied from his contemporaries, George Wharton James and Charles Puck. The James collection contains over 2,000 images of portraits, customs, ceremonies, arts, and games of various groups of Southwestern Native Americans.
Date Created
1860/1960
Linked assets
Title Insurance and Trust and C.C. Pierce Photography Collection 1860-1960
Conceptually similar
Drawing of Mission San Fernando Rey de Espana by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883
Drawing of Mission San Luis Rey de Francia by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883
Exterior view of the Mission San Diego Alcala, showing cows, ca.1898
Drawing of Mission San Jose by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883
Drawing of Mission San Juan Capistrano by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883
Drawing of Mission San Miguel Arcangel, by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883
Mission San Diego de Alcala, California, ca.1898
Mission San Diego de Alcala, California. Interior of old town chapel, ca.1889
Exterior view of Mission San Diego Alcala showing a well (or water tank?) in the garden, San Diego, ca.1874
Drawing of San Francisco Solano de Sonoma Mission, by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883
Drawing of Mission Asistencia of San Antonio at Pala, by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883
Drawing by Major Charles C. Churchill depicting an exterior view of the mission San Diego Alcala, ca.1858
Paschal candlestick in yard of Mission San Diego de Alcala, California, ca.1900
Interior of Mission San Diego de Alcala, California, where Ramona was married, ca.1887
General view of Mission San Diego de Alcala, California, from palm trees, ca.1887-1898
Drawing of Mission San Buenaventura by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883
Statue of "El Salvadore" (Christ crowned with thorns) at Mission San Diego de Alcala, ca.1905
Mission San Diego Alcala in ruins, ca.1905
Drawing of the Mission San Juan Bautista, by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1902
Statue of the Madonna at Mission San Diego de Alcala, ca.1905
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