Historical Prints San Francisco Visitors Take Home Depict Its Colorful Past

By Susan King


The City By the Bay is a favorite tourist destination for people all over the world. Every year millions pass through the city and enjoy its many amenities including temperate weather, beautiful views, fine dining, trolley cars, and unique history. Most want to take something home to remind them of their time spent in this unusual and distinctive city. Prints are a popular choice. Golden Gate Bridge views may be the obvious option, but there are a number of other historical prints San Francisco collectors recommend.

Many have had the good fortune to dine at the Cliff House and take in the breathtaking views of the Pacific. A photo the restaurant as it originally appeared, and before its numerous reconstructions and remodeling project, might be a great souvenir. The restaurant's significance as a city landmark is well established.

The Sutro Baths no longer exist, but you can visit the remains just north of Cliff House. The mining engineer and one time mayor of San Francisco, Adolph Sutro, had a vision for a bathhouse where the public could come to exercise and socialize in style. The product of this vision became the biggest indoor swimming facility in the world. In its heyday, there were seven heated pools, paintings, history exhibits, and Egyptian mummies. The only way to enjoy it today is in a photograph.

Food is one thing this city is rightly famous for. If you spent time at the local markets, you could purchase a print of Market Street bustling with trolley cars and horse drawn carriages circa 1900. The famous Flat Iron Building is front and center in many of these pictures.

You might have spent a night at the Mark Hopkins Hotel on Nob Hill and enjoyed the view from the Top of the Mark. If you did, you must have noticed the photography highlighting the original mansion that once stood in its place. Many believed it to be the gaudiest and most vulgar building ever built, but others admired the size and grandeur of the designer's endeavor. Although fire brought on by the 1906 earthquake destroyed it, the Mansion still lives on in print.

San Francisco is no stranger to colorful characters, and one that is still remembered fondly today is Emperor Norton. The local citizenry accepted his eccentricities and looked forward to his latest proclamations and decrees. His reign as self-proclaimed Emperor of the United States lasted almost a quarter of a century. During that time he was a welcome guest at theaters and restaurants throughout the city.

The 1906 earthquake was a defining moment in the city's history, and there are numerous old prints showing the devastation that occurred as a result of the quake and the fires that ignited after it. The scenes of what was left of City Hall and the Call Building are very interesting.

There is no city in the world that remotely resembles the City By the Bay. It has a unique and colorful personality that has thankfully been preserved in print. Landmarks, local characters, and cataclysmic events are all carefully recorded for future generations.




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