logo

1862. San Francisco, 1862. From Russian Hill. Section 3 Looking East.

  • San Francisco, 1862.  From Russian Hill.  Section 3 Looking East.

San Francisco, 1862. From Russian Hill. Section 3 Looking East. information:

Year of creation: 
Resolution size (pixels): 
 14169x9413 px
Disk Size: 
 40.1387MiB
Number of pages: 
 1
Place: 
 San Francisco

Print information. Print size (Width x height in inches):
Printing at 72 dpi 
  196.79 х 130.74
Printing at 150 dpi 
 94.46 х 62.75
Printing at 300 dpi 
 47.23 х 31.38

An example of detailing the file of this map of in a printable high-resolution:

Click to open in high resolution (open in new tab).
Attention! this is just the central piece (central area 960x960 px) of the map file!
This is an example, so that you can see and study the level of detail of a given map. The entire Map will be fully available after payment!

San Francisco, 1862.  From Russian Hill.  Section 3 Looking East.

Sheet 3 of Gifford's rare 5-sheet (9 foot) panorama of San Francisco, published by A. Rosenfield in San Francisco, in 1862.

The present sheet is centered on Telegraph Hill and Yerba Buena or Goat Island, with Oakland and the East Bay in the distance and the Jackson Street and Pacific Street Wharves at the far right.

Of note is the Congregation Sherith Israel, one of the oldest synagogues in the United States. The Congregation is one of two established in San Francisco in 1850-51. Sherith Israel followed the minhag Polen, the traditions of Jews from Posen in Prussia, while Congregation Emanu-El chose to worship according to the German practices of Jews from Bavaria. Emanu-El is typically considered the oldest Jewish synagoge west of the Mississippi River.

Gifford's view was executed in five separate sections, totaling 9 feet, if joined, and identifying 121 points of interest. The present view illustrates the first of San Francisco's heavily built-up streets Details of buildings, streets, and other features are rendered with great exactness and a stunning wealth of detail. Churches, synagogues, the Masonic temple, wharves, and streets are all identified. "...[I]t took an ambitious project like Charles Gifford's multisectioned panorama to record completely the city's tremendous growth" - Deák.

Gifford's view is the first panorama of San Francisco and perhaps the single most ambitious city view undertaken in the American West up to that time. It would remain unrivaled as a lithographic view of San Francisco and unsurpassed in detail until Muybridge's photographic panorama of San Francisco.

Peters calls it "important and rare." It is an incredible production, both as a landmark in western lithography, and as a view of a major American city in the midst of a period of tremendous growth. . Eberstadt describes the work as "One of the rarest and most important of items relating to San Francisco".

Charles Gifford came to California in 1860, and was active until 1877. According to Reps, "Gifford's finest and most ambitious view was a sweeping panorama from Russian Hill." The view was lithographed by Louis Nagel, who had been well-known as a lithographer in New York before coming to San Francisco in 1856.

Reps notes that the publisher, Rosenfield, made the panorama available in three versions in 1862: one printed on thin paper and mounted on cloth; another as here, printed on single sheets on heavier paper; and a third mounted on cloth and fastened to wooden rollers.

Deák and Reps locate six copies of this panorama (MWA, DLC, CU-B, CSmH, Wells Fargo, California State Pioneers).

Reps #290-#295, p. 177-178; Peters, California On Stone, p.167-168; Stokes and Haskell G82 (1862).

Special conditions for students!

If you are a student, write to us in telegram: @antiquemaps and indicate what material you need and for what work you need a map in high detail. We are ready to provide material on special terms. For students only!

Item information:

Year of creation:
Size:
14169x9413 px
Disk:
40.1387MiB
Number of pages:
1
Place:
San Francisco
Author:
Charles Braddock Gifford.
$14.99

Related item