A rare
daguerrotype showing San Francisco's economic activity during the California gold rush. Merchant ships crowd the harbor and freshly constructed clapboard buildings fill the foreground. Hardly any of this scene could be replaced with a later photograph: the gold rush ended shortly afterward, construction projects began on Alcatraz Island in 1853, steam ships replaced sailing ships, and the great San Francisco earthquake/fire of 1906 destroyed most of the city's early architecture. Restored version of
Image:SanFranciscoharbor1851.jpg. This is San Francisco 55 years before the earthquake and more than 80 years before Alcatraz became a federal prison.
Support Historic, unique perspective, excellent restoration job, and as you say, daguerrotypes are rare.
Dr. Extreme (
talk) 22:37, 4 March 2008 (UTC)reply
Support. I was just reading a book about SF in the Gold Rush and how the harbor was so full of boats that many had to wait for days before they could unload, and along comes a photo of that very phenomenon. howcheng {
chat} 17:18, 10 March 2008 (UTC)reply
Promoted Image:SanFranciscoharbor1851c sharp.jpgMER-C 08:24, 11 March 2008 (UTC)reply