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Showing Bookmarks 1 to 13 of 13

  • McCarthy Album 07, Photograph 194

    Caption: "Alum Rock", c. 1910. Grace McCarthy standing in front of the gazebo of Alum Rock Park. The park, founded in 1872, is one of California's oldest municipal parks. The gazebo, the park's oldest standing structure (built in about 1890), features a fountain that used to supply water from the mineral springs in the area. Today, the fountain's water comes from the City of San Jose's municipal supply. See also 96-07-08-alb05-116.

    Date: 1910

  • McCarthy Album 08, Photograph 028

    Caption: "#4 -- Record Oct 25, 09." This postcard shows plume of seawater thrown up by a mortar shell during target practice at Fort Point. The facilities at Fort Point were part of an effort by the U.S. government to protect the Golden Gate, entrance to the San Francisco Bay. Built between 1853-1861, the fort included emplacements for 141 guns but never fired a weapon in defense of the Bay. Its name was officially changed in 1882 to Fort Winfield Scott, but in 1886 the fort was officially downgraded to a sub-post of the San Francisco Presidio and the name discontinued. It was resurrected in 1912, with the establishment of a coastal artillery fortification at the Presidio, called, once again, Fort Winfield Scott.

    Date: 10/25/1909

  • Headquarters Information Bulletin #273

    Bulletin from E. Raymond Cato to All Members of the California Highway Patrol regarding procedures pertaining to curfews, permits, and prohibited articles

    Date: April 14, 1942

  • McCarthy Album 08, Photograph 100

    Caption: "Rescue of Life Raft from Wrecked Steamer Valencia." Photograph showing a boat crew about to rescue 18 people on a life raft. On Monday, January 22, 1906, the passenger liner Valencia ran aground on a reef during a storm off the southwestern coast of Vancouver Island (an area notorious for ship wrecks). Although the shore was only about fifty yards away, heavy seas and rock cliffs prevented the passengers and crew from making their way safely to land. Circumstances prevented rescue vessels from coming to the stricken ship's aid until Wednesday January 24th. The steamship City of Topeka rescued 18 men on a life raft, shown in this photograph. The official death toll was 136: seven officers, 33 crewmen, and 96 passengers (including seventeen women and eleven children -- all of the women and children on board perished). Only 37 people survived the wreck.

    Date: 1/24/1906

  • Manzanar Free Press-Pictorial Edition

    Front page of the Pictorial Edition of Manzanar Free Press depicting four women farming land at Manzanar

    Date: September 10, 1943

  • Memo on Referral Procedures for Resettlement

    Office Memorandum from Bertha S. Underhill to Elizabeth B. MacLatchie regarding

    Date: July 27, 1945

  • Old Series Trademark No. 2783

    Enterprise Brewing Co.

    Date: 1896

  • Affidavit of Choichiro Kakuuchi

    Affidavit of Choichiro Kakuuchi for Kijiro Shigaki in establishment of residency; Notarized by Loise Bottrell; See also: F3729_117_004, F3729_117_005

    Date: June 28, 1947

  • Correspondence on Court Briefs

    Correspondence from Herbert E. Wenig to Major Charles Fairman relating to court briefs pertaining to incarceration and other restrictions on Japanese

    Date: September 24, 1942

  • Old Series Trademark No. 1652

    Perfection

    Date: 1888

  • McCarthy Album 10, Photograph 428a

    No Caption: A section from an informational tourist brochure describing the Cathedral and Chapultepec Castle and Park in Mexico City.

    Date: 1938

  • Old Series Trademark No. 1889

    Urbi et Orbi

    Date: 1890

  • McCarthy Album 11, Photograph 113

    Caption: "Turtle Pens -- Key West. July 2, 1934." View of turtle kraals, or turtle corrals, used in the turtle fishing industry in Key West. Green turtles were kept in these pens prior to slaughter or transport. Turtle meat and eggs were popular food items in the early-to-mid twentieth century; turtle fat was especially prized for making turtle soup. However, the turtle population plummeted in the Florida Keys and surrounding areas as the twentieth century progressed and demand increased. The turtle kraals and nearby canneries closed when the Endangered Species Act was passed in 1971. Populations have since started to recover. The cannery near the kraals shown in this photograph now serves as the Key West Turtle Museum.

    Date: 7/2/1934