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Image / Drawing of Mission Santa Barbara by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883

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Title
Drawing of Mission Santa Barbara by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883
Creator
Ford, H.C
Date Created and/or Issued
circa 1883
Publication Information
University of Southern California. Libraries
Contributing Institution
California Historical Society
University of Southern California Digital Library
Collection
California Historical Society Collection, 1860-1960
Rights Information
Doheny Memorial Library, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0189
Public Domain. Release under the CC BY Attribution license--http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/--Credit both “University of Southern California. Libraries” and “California Historical Society” as the source. Digitally reproduced by the USC Digital Library; From the California Historical Society Collection at the University of Southern California
Send requests to address or e-mail given
USC Libraries Special Collections
specol@usc.edu
Description
Photograph of a drawing of Mission Santa Barbara by Henry Chapman Ford, ca.1883. A trail leads to the entrance of the church. The façade of the church is facing away from the hills behind it. Two towers with dome roofs flank the church.
"The "Queen of the Missions". On a spring day in 1782 the Padre Presidente of the California Missions, Father Junípero Serra, and the Spanish Governor de Neve founded (as Serra supposed) the presidio and mission of Santa Barbara. Today the mission archives preserve the record book of the mission, which the earnest padre carefully started on that day. But the arbitrary governor would not allow the actual establishment of the mission. A frustrated Father Serra retired to Carmel, where he died two years later on August 28, 1784. Father Fermin Lasuén, one of the missionaries who had arrived with Serra at San Diego, became the new Padre Presidente and the actual founder of Mission Santa Barbara, December 4, 1786. The difficult years were over and the "Golden Age" of the California Missions was dawning. Launched as it was at the beginning of such prosperous times, Santa Barbara had the greatest of good fortune during all its early years. True, an early church was destroyed in the earthquake of 1812, but a new and more impressive edifice was already needed. Santa Barbara's mission church, with its world-famous twin bell towers, boasts of a stone facade patterned after an ancient Latin temple in pre-Christian Rome. The design is traced to a book brought to California by the Franciscans, a Spanish reprint of an architecture book originally published in 27 B.C. This beautiful new church stood firm for over a hundred years until suffering severe damage in an earthquake in 1925. Two years of rebuilding plus later restoration work has maintained the exact original appearance. [...]" -- unknown author.
Type
image
Format
2 photographs : glass photonegative, photonegative, b&w
21 x 26 cm., 10 x 13 cm.
drawings
negatives (photographic)
photographs
art
glass plate negatives
Identifier
chs-m17480 [Legacy record ID]
CHS-5752
http://doi.org/10.25549/chs-m17480
http://thumbnails.digitallibrary.usc.edu/CHS-5752.jpg
Subject
Churches
Missions, Spanish
Religious facilities
Time Period
circa 1883
Place
California
Santa Barbara
USA
Source
1-144-80 [Microfiche number]
5752 [Accession number]
CHS-5752 [Call number]
California Historical Society [Contributing entity]
Relation
California Historical Society Collection, 1860-1960
Title Insurance and Trust, and C.C. Pierce Photography Collection, 1860-1960
chs-m265

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