Visual Materials
Old Governor's Palace, Santa Fe, New Mexico
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San Francisco St., Santa Fe, New Mexico
Visual Materials
View of a street in Santa Fe, with adobe buildings on either side and mules in the road.
photCL 215 (58)
Image not available
New Mexico. Santa Fe
Visual Materials
The collection consists of 6202 black-and-white and color photographs, pen and ink drawings, and postcards, 1412 black-and-white and color negatives, 2606 black-and-white and color slides, and ephemeral materials, 1898-1982 (bulk 1920s-1930s) collected by the Automobile Club of Southern California. They form a general photographic reference collection as well as a broad visual survey of topics of interest to California motorists. Included are images of sites in North and Central America (with an emphasis on California), Europe, the Pacific Islands, and portraits, as well as images related to other subjects of interest to the Club's membership. Many of the images were published as illustrations for articles in the Club's first member magazine, Touring Topics. A large portion of the photographs were taken by authors of articles that appeared in Touring Topics; others were commissioned by the Club; and others appear to have been sent to the Club. Photographers (and authors) include, but are not limited to, Ansel Adams, Fred Archer, Viroque Baker, George Hugh Banning, Adelbert Bartlett, Virginia S. Bartlett, Andrew R. Boone, Julius Cindrich, Norman Clyde, Will Connell, Loyd Cooper, Imogen Cunningham, Asahel Curtis, Edward Sheriff Curtis, Fred Dapprich, E.H. Davis, E.E. East, John Anson Ford, Frasher, Ewing Galloway, Forman G. Hanna, Phil Townsend Hanna, Hoag and Ford, John Edwin Hoag, Bert W. Huntoon, Philip Johnston, Dr. Frederick Monsen, Dave Packwood, C.C. Pierce, Ernest M. Pratt, Putnam Studios, E. Willard Spurr, and John L. Von Blon.
photCL 375
Image not available
Birds-eye-view of Santa Fe, New Mexico
Visual Materials
Photographs made by Adam Clark Vroman, ca. 1892-1909, spanning various subjects, primarily his bookstore in Pasadena, California, and scenes from his travels. Of particular significance is Vroman's handwritten journal of a trip to see the Snake Dance at Walpi, Arizona, in 1895, written sequentially on the back of 19 mounted photographs. Vroman's traveling companions were Horatio N. Rust, Mrs. Thaddeus (Leontine) Lowe, and Charles J. Crandall, who are shown, along with Vroman, at pueblos, and traveling with supplies and wagons. There are also views of the Grand Canyon and the Petrified Forest. The California images include scenery and travelers in the San Gabriel Mountains, Mount Wilson, Mount Lowe and the Alpine Tavern, and travelers having a picnic; details of missions; historic adobes of Monterey; Rancho Guajome Adobe in San Diego County; Yosemite and one view of Indians living in Yosemite Valley. Locations depicted in other parts of the United States are: Manitou, Colorado; Oregon, Illinois; Niagara Falls; Grant's Tomb; a bird's-eye-view of Santa Fe, New Mexico; and other miscellaneous views. Vroman travelled to Japan in 1903 and 1909, and eight prints in the collection show Japanese men and women in traditional dress, as well as details of architecture. Vroman appears in a few photographs. There are several portraits of Pueblo Indian men, some identified in Vroman's captions.
photCL 86

Iolani Palace, Honolulu, Hawaii
Manuscripts
Glass plate with a front view of Iolani Palace in Honolulu. The building is two stories, with enclosed porches on each level. The road leading up to the palace is lined with palm trees.
mssLattaS, Box 111, Folder 10, Item 1
Image not available
Photographs of Sante Fe, New Mexico
Visual Materials
Consists of four photographs, two of which are cabinet cards and two of which are stereographs. Subjects include The Governor's Palace, the Church of San Miguel, and San Miguel Collection. W.H. Jackson & Co., Denver, CO is among the photographers. All photographs handwritten annotations, and one has a small illustration of a man on horseback attached.
photPF 1500-1509

Iolani Palace, Honolulu, Hawaii
Manuscripts
A slightly elevated view of the Iolani Palace in Honolulu, Hawaii. The building is two stories, with enclosed porches on each level. The wide road leading to the front of the building is lined with palm trees. There is a church spire beyond the palace on the left, and mountains in the background on the right.
mssLattaS, Box 117, Folder 23, Item 1