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345 Market Street 11: Broker's Building ... San Diego History Center This page was last edited on 23 December 2024, at 06:28 (UTC). Text is available under the ...
SDHL # [1] Landmark name [2] Image Address [2] Designation Date [2] Description [3]; 1: El Prado Area: Balboa Park: 9/7/1967 Long, wide promenade running through the center of Balboa Park, lined with Spanish Revival buildings including the Museum of Us, the San Diego Museum of Art, the Museum of Photographic Arts, the Natural History Museum, the Fleet Science Center, and the Timken Museum of Art
April 8, 1994 (1210 Division St. Oceanside: 2: Anza Borrego-Palo Verde Site, S-2: Anza Borrego-Palo Verde Site, S-2: October 25, 1985 (Address Restricted
32nd & Commercial station is a station on the Orange Line of the San Diego Trolley located in the Stockton neighborhood of San Diego, California.The stop is located in an area where the light rail temporarily breaks from its street-level tracks and runs on a separate right-of-way around the Mt. Hope and Greenwood Cemeteries.
In 1982, the San Diego Historical Society moved its collections and research library to the Casa de Balboa building [5] in Balboa Park (maintaining the Serra Museum as an auxiliary museum and education center), and the Society changed its name to the San Diego History Center in 2010.
The 13-acre (5.3 ha) complex includes 13 contributing buildings and one contributing structure. Most of the structures were built for San Diego's Panama–California Exposition of 1915–16 and were refurbished and re-used for the California Pacific International Exposition of 1935–36.
1912 All Saints Episcopal Church, San Diego (with Carleton Monroe Winslow) 1913 Sefton Hotel, 630 F Street, for banker Joseph Sefton, Jr. (Maryland Hotel, 1916; Ivy Hotel, 2006; Andaz San Diego; address has been renumbered to 600 F Street.) 1915 Baker House, Coronado, also known as 'Seashore' a grand oceanfront estate, 519 Ocean Blvd.
George Marston was a department store owner and a prominent civic leader in San Diego. He was a founder of the San Diego Historical Society (now the San Diego History Center). [3] He may be best known for preserving the site of the San Diego Presidio, the first European settlement in present-day California, which had fallen into ruins. He ...