Hold Your Horses! – Glenview Mansion, Hudson River Museum, Yonkers, New York

2014


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02 Jan 2014

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2 comments

616 visits

The Former Masonic Temple – Van Ness Street at Market Street, San Francisco, California

Freemasons have been in California since its inception. While the names of members are supposed to be kept secret, we know that many of the state’s pioneers were Masons. So were Walter Danforth Bliss and William Baker Faville, the architects of this, the second Masonic Lodge in San Francisco. The first lodge, at 1 Montgomery Street, was built in 1860 and burned down in the 1906 fire. Its replacement at 25 Van Ness Avenue was built in 1911 and is a seven-story Neoclassical structure modeled on a Florentine palazzo. The dominating features of the exterior are the gallery of arches and projections around the top, and the groups of sculpture inside the entrance archway. Bliss and Faville met as students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and in 1895 both left to work at the prominent New York architectural firm of McKim, Mead & White. In 1898 they formed a partnership and moved to San Francisco. The 1913 Chamber of Commerce Handbook for San Francisco declared, "One of the few buildings in America comparable to some of the good buildings in Europe is the Masonic Temple." And the 1919 Architectural Review said, "Bliss & Faville’s Masonic Temple is widely known as one of the best Masonic structures, both inside and out. . . . It looks like what it is, and this cannot always be said of lodges and fraternity buildings." In 1958 the Freemasons moved to their present grand temple on Nob Hill. This 55,000-square-foot building is now home to a number of city and county departments, including the San Francisco Arts Commission, the New Conservatory Theatre, and the San Francisco Parking Division.

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02 Jan 2014

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497 visits

Recycled Records – Haight Street, Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco, California

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02 Jan 2014

4 241 visits

The Love of Ganesha – Haight Street, Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco, California

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02 Jan 2014

5 favorites

1 comment

793 visits

A Painted Lady – Haight Street at Masonic, Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco, California

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02 Jan 2014

4 958 visits

"World Famous" – Haight Street at Masonic, Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco, California

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02 Jan 2014

3 favorites

1 comment

676 visits

Piedmont Boutique – Haight Street, Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco, California

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02 Jan 2014

3 favorites

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705 visits

Pork Store Café – Haight Street, Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco, California

In 1916, an immigrant couple from Czechoslovakia came to the states and opened the original Haight Street Pork Store (which was a butcher shop and sausage place). 1925, the family imported stained glass from Italy for the original Pork Store logo. The stained glass was placed above the front entrance. In the 40’s, the original proprietors passed the business on to their grandsons who ran it until the early fifties. In the 50’s, the Pork Store sign was covered, never removed and Three Coin Cafe was started at that location. In early 60’s, a hair salon moved into that location but did not go far during the Hippie Era. Then Vic’s coffee shop was started in the mid 60’s. After Vic’s, an Armenian family opened Raffies Lebanese Cuisine till 1979. Once they left, wooden boards where removed and the stained glass and the Pork Store sign were discovered to remain there and the Pork Store Cafe was born. 24 years later, Pork Store Cafe has become a distinguished breakfast institution of San Francisco.

02 Jan 2014

444 visits

Recycled Records – Haight Street, Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco, California

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02 Jan 2014

1 favorite

621 visits

Haight-Ashbury Tattoo and Piercing – Haight Street, San Francisco, California

556 items in total