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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 the Mission San Juan Bautista, by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1902
(USC DC Image)
Drawing of the Mission San Juan Bautista, by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1902
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Description
Photograph of a drawing of the Mission San Juan Bautista, by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1902. The single-story mission is flat and lengthy. A cross stands at the peak of the gable of the main building. To the left is a lengthy arcade with semi-circular arches. Trees cover parts of the arcade.; "Henry C. Ford was best known for his paintings of the entire chain of twenty-one California missions. He was born in Livonia, New York in 1828, but he pursued his studies in Paris and Florence during the late 1850's. He was a Civil War illustrator and veteran, and as soon as he was discharged from service, he settled in Chicago, Illinois. In Chicago, Ford became an accomplished landscapist, and was one of the founders of the Chicago Academy of Design in 1873. The studio that Ford kept in Chicago burned down in 1871. Due to his failing health, Ford moved to a milder climate, settling in Santa Barbara, California. In the summers of 1880 and 1881, he traveled by horse and buggy to each mission site south of Santa Barbara. On the mission grounds, Ford made pencil drawings and painted sketches. He was the first artist to make a set of mission images in two media, oil and etching. He went to New York to turn his renditions into etchings, which were inexpensive and could be easily duplicated. In 1893, he exhibited his mission etchings at the Chicago World's Fair. Later in his life, Ford taught and continued to paint from his Santa Barbara home. He died in 1894, leaving behind the important historical contribution of his California mission paintings." -- unknown author.; "Located in the middle of the San Juan Valley, the mission sits right on the San Andreas fault! Although its location right on the fault was less dangerous than other locations, it accounted for many shaky days and nights. In October 1798 the shaking was so bad that the missionaries slept outside for the whole month. The earth shook as many as 6 times on one day, leaving many huge cracks in both the buildings and the ground. Since the mission population was growing so quickly, when an earthquake destroyed the church in 1803 plans were already underway to build a larger church. Much of the interior was painted by Thomas Doak, a sailor from Boston who jumped ship in Monterey, thereby becoming the first Anglo-American resident in California. Although he was not a great artist, he did work for just room and board, and the colors he mixed were so durable that they continue to glow today. After secularization in 1835 the church continued to serve as a parish for the local town. After sustaining some damage from a quake in 1906, it was repaired and then suffered through some attempts at modernization. Fortunately, in 1949, the Hearst Foundation financed the restoration that restored it to its original form." -- unknown author.
Asset Metadata
Title
Drawing of the Mission San Juan Bautista, by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1902
Subject
Mission San Juan Bautista
(file heading),
Missions, Spanish
(lcsh),
religious facilities
(adlf),
San Juan Bautista Mission
(subject)
Tags
OAI-PMH Harvest
Place
California
(states),
USA
(countries)
Temporal Subject
1902
Type
images
Format
3 photographs : glass photonegative, photonegative, photoprint, b&w ; 21 x 26 cm., 10 x 13 cm.
(aacr2),
art
(aat),
glass plate negatives
(format),
negatives (photographic)
(aat),
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
1902
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-m17462
Identifier
5730 (
accession number
), CHS-5730 (
call number
), CHS-5730 (
filename
), chs-m265 (
legacy collection record id
), chs-c65-17455 (
legacy record id
), chs-m17462 (
legacy record id
), USC-1-1-1-14079 (
legacy record id
), 1-136-27 (
microfiche number
), USC (
project
)
IIIF ID
[Document.IIIFV3ID]
DM Record ID
17455
Unique identifier
UC142545
Legacy Identifier
CHS-5730.tiff
Type
Image
Internet Media Type
image/tiff
Resolution
17.0 in × 13.5 in at 300dpi
43.1 cm × 34.4 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
External front view of Mission San Juan Bautista, after partial destruction of the tower, ca.1902
Drawing of Mission San Juan Capistrano by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883
Drawing of Mission San Jose by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883
Drawing of Mission San Fernando Rey de Espana by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883
Drawing of Mission Carmel (San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo) by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1884
Church and arches of Mission San Juan Bautista, ca.1889-1902
Etching of Mission Carmel (San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo) by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1884
Interior of chapel at Mission San Juan Bautista, ca.1904-1905
Pulpit on the wall at Mission San Juan Bautista, ca.1904
Sacristy door at Mission San Juan Bautista, ca.1905
Garden at Mission San Juan Bautista, ca.1905
Drawing of Mission San Luis Rey de Francia by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883
Wall decorations at Mission San Juan Bautista (?), ca.1908
Drawing of Mission San Luis Obispo by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1900
Drawing of San Francisco Solano de Sonoma Mission, by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883
Richly carved tabernacle at Mission San Juan Bautista, California, ca.1905
Mission San Juan Bautista, California, ca.1902
Drawing of Mission San Diego Alcala, by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883
Cloister and garden at Mission San Juan Bautista, ca.1903
View of parts of Mission San Juan Capistrano in ruins, Orange County, ca.1900
Similar tones
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