South Park First Buildings: Difference between revisions

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'''<font face = arial light> <font color = maroon> <font size = 3>Unfinished History</font></font> </font>'''
'''<font face = arial light> <font color = maroon> <font size = 3>Unfinished History</font></font> </font>'''


[[Image:soma1$south-park-1853-photo.jpg]]
[[Image:soma1$south-park-1853-photo.jpg|720px]]


'''South Park, 1853: San Francisco's first planned development, looking southwest from 2nd Street (Rincon Hill), Twin Peaks and Mt. Davidson in background.''' <br>''Photo: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library''
'''South Park, 1853: San Francisco's first planned development, looking southwest from 2nd Street (Rincon Hill), Twin Peaks and Mt. Davidson in background.'''  
 
''Photo: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library''


''' '''Built by capitalist George Gordon shortly after the gold rush, South Park was designed by George H. Goddard, Esq., an Englishman, and featured several lavish mansions around an "orchard." According to historian Albert Shumate, who assembled the book [http://www.printsoldandrare.com/windgatepress/page8.html ''South Park and Rincon Hill''] (Windgate Press), the oval shape was part of what was known as the "English Crescent Design," and was intended to promote neighborliness.
''' '''Built by capitalist George Gordon shortly after the gold rush, South Park was designed by George H. Goddard, Esq., an Englishman, and featured several lavish mansions around an "orchard." According to historian Albert Shumate, who assembled the book [http://www.printsoldandrare.com/windgatepress/page8.html ''South Park and Rincon Hill''] (Windgate Press), the oval shape was part of what was known as the "English Crescent Design," and was intended to promote neighborliness.


[[Image:Habitat-tour-button.jpg]]  [[Inner Sunset 1870s|-->Open Space Habitat tour continues]]
[[Image:South-Park-c-1890s.jpg]]
 
'''Forty years later in the 1890s South Park had become a pleasant but forgotten urban park.'''
 
''Photo: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library''
 
[[SOUTH PARK|South Park and Rincon Hill continues]]
 
[[Image:Tours-habitat.gif|link=Inner Sunset 1870s]]  [[Inner Sunset 1870s|-->Open Space Habitat tour continues]]


[[THE RAILROAD COMES TO SF? |Prev. Document]]  [[SOUTH PARK |Next Document]]
[[Harrison Street from Dunes to Trains|Prev. Document]]  [[SOUTH PARK |Next Document]]


[[category:SOMA]] [[category:real estate]] [[category:1850s]]
[[category:SOMA]] [[category:real estate]] [[category:1850s]] [[category:1890s]]

Revision as of 13:03, 14 March 2016

Unfinished History

Soma1$south-park-1853-photo.jpg

South Park, 1853: San Francisco's first planned development, looking southwest from 2nd Street (Rincon Hill), Twin Peaks and Mt. Davidson in background.

Photo: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library

Built by capitalist George Gordon shortly after the gold rush, South Park was designed by George H. Goddard, Esq., an Englishman, and featured several lavish mansions around an "orchard." According to historian Albert Shumate, who assembled the book South Park and Rincon Hill (Windgate Press), the oval shape was part of what was known as the "English Crescent Design," and was intended to promote neighborliness.

South-Park-c-1890s.jpg

Forty years later in the 1890s South Park had become a pleasant but forgotten urban park.

Photo: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library

South Park and Rincon Hill continues

Tours-habitat.gif -->Open Space Habitat tour continues

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