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Image / Call Building after earthquake and fire, San Francisco, 1906

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Title
Call Building after earthquake and fire, San Francisco, 1906
Contributor
Reid, Merritt J., 1855-1932
Reid, James W., 1851-1943
Reid Brothers, Architects
Reid, Watson Elkinah, 1858-1944)
Date Created and/or Issued
April, 1906
Publication Information
Los Angeles Times
Contributing Institution
UCLA, Library Special Collections, Charles E. Young Research Library
Collection
Los Angeles Times Photographic Archives
Rights Information
US
Description
Access to this collection is generously supported by Arcadia funds.
Related to the article, “Heart is Torn From Great City. San Francisco Nearly Destroyed by Earthquakes and Fire, Hundreds of Killed and Injured, Destruction of Other Coast Cities, California’s Greatest Horror.” Los Angeles Times, 19 Apr. 1906. The article states: San Francisco, April 19.—It looks now as if the entire city would be burned, following the great quake of yesterday. ... At 10 o’clock at night, the fire was unabated, and thousands of people are fleeing to the hills and clamoring for places on ferry boats. The damage is now believed to have reached $200,000,000 and 50,000 people are thought to be homeless. ... At 10 p. m. last night the newspapers ceased all effort to collect news, and the Associated Press force is compelled to act independently. ... Tossing Six Hours on Seismic Waves. San Francisco, April 18.—During six hours of mortal dread and nameless terror San Francisco was today tossed upon the seismic waves of the most disastrous earthquake known to the history or the traditions of America’s west coast. In the mad confusion and helpless horror of this night uncounted bodies of dead men and women are lying in morgues and under uplifted walls. ... Fire and flame have added to the destruction, the ruination and despair. The material losses are beyond computation. ... There is no witness of this day’s story whose tongue or pen can describe the wreck and ruin, the death, the doom, the despair and suffering that lies on every hand. ... surrounded by explosions of illuminating and sewer gas. … The Southern Pacific is doing its utmost to get people out the city, and not charging refugees for transportation. ... Prof. George Davidson, of the University of California, formerly connected with the United States Geodetic Survey, said tonight: “The earthquakes came from north to south … Regarding the cause, I maintain, as I always have, that it is the earth cooling on the inside. The cooling brings about contraction, which is bound to bring about a readjustment of the earth’s surface. …” The entire waterfront district of the metropolis is made ground … Included in this area … Palace and Grand Hotels … Merchants Exchange … Stock Exchange … Nevada Bank, Western Union and Postal telegraph offices, the Crocker building … the Chronicle, the Examiner and the sixteen-story Call newspaper building. … From the ruins of the buildings shaken down by the five quakes that followed in such close succession, arose great bursts of flames which swept inward from the bay. … With water mains broken, fire department powerless, and flames spreading; with morgues and hospitals filled to overflowing; with electric lights and power wires down, and telephone and telegraph communication cut off; with railroads crippled … and with panic rampant, the condition of San Francisco was one of almost benumbing horror. …
The Call Building, commissioned by Claus Spreckels and completed in 1898, housed the offices of the newspaper the San Francisco Call. It was constructed to be fireproof and to withstand earthquakes (Spreckels requested the assistance of structural engineer, Charles Strobe, who greatly reinforced the building's steel framing). After the 1906 earthquake, the Call Building's interior was gutted, but because of its rigid steel frame, it was one of the few buildings on Market Street to remain standing. It was remodeled as an art deco building by the architect Albert Roller in 1938 and still stands today (2013) at the corner of Market and Third Streets. Later names: Spreckels Building, Central Tower.
The damaged Call Building, with rubble of damaged stone and iron walls in foreground, possibly photographed from Third Street
Text from nitrate negative sleeve: California, San Francisco, Fire, After the
Type
Image
Format
b&w nitrate negative
Identifier
uclamss_1429_0666
ark:/21198/zz002db033
Language
No linguistic content
Subject
Landmarks
Baroque revival (Architecture)--California--San Francisco
Disaster
Fires--California--San Francisco
Environment
Historic buildings--California--San Francisco
San Francisco Earthquake and Fire, Calif., 1906
Earthquakes--California--San Francisco
Call Building (San Francisco, Calif.)
Source
Los Angeles Times Photographic Collection

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