References for City
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Locations Contact Information
LOCATIONS CONTACT INFORMATION Aerial Services Aeronautic Pictures Craig Schmitman 805-985-2320 http://aeronauticpictures.com/ P.O. Box 1748, Ojai, CA 93024 Film, video and still photography aerial and location services. Stock footage and photos too. We work air-to-anywhere. Demo reel on our website. Aspen Helicopters 805-985-5416 Fax: 805-985-7327 [email protected] http://www.aspenhelo.com/ Crop spraying and aerial tours. Credits: Richmond Prods. FAA Federal Aviation Administration Terri Rector FAA Federal Aviation Administration 10 Burns Place Goleta, CA 93117 805-681-0534, x3102 [email protected] Regional Flight Standards: (Van Nuys) 818-904-6291 Platinum Helicopters, Inc Skybound Charter, LLC Phone: 805-484-6900 Fax: 805-484-6939 Camarillo, Ca. 93010 [email protected] www.platinumhelicopters.com Movie/Television Camera Flight Operations, Aerial Film Productions, Business/VIP Transportation throughout Southern California, Arizona, Nevada. Aerial Photography, Aerial Survey, Private Tours/Sightseeing, Geological Survey. Remote-i Rhandal Sayat - Director of Photography 805-681-7314 [email protected] http://www.remotei.com/ 81 David Love Place, Goleta, CA 93117 Remote Aerial Photography, videography & cinematography services, and camera mount systems. Santa Barbara Biplane Tours Jay Farbman - Marketing Director 805-453-8320 [email protected] http://www.sbbiplane.com/ 406 A Moffett, Santa Barbara, CA 93117 Signature Flight Support Devin Madgett 805-967-5608 Fax: 805-967-5781 515 Marxmiller Rd, Goleta, CA 93117 [email protected] http://www.signatureflight.com/ Helicopter and fixed wing. Hangar storage 6am-10pm. After hours service available. Spitfire Aviation Flight School 805-967-4373 [email protected] 300 Moffett Place, Goleta, CA, 93117 Flights for still photography or filming purposes. -
Den, Bell, and Luton Families Papers MS-07
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8gf0vb5 No online items Guide to the Den, Bell, and Luton Families Papers MS-07 Updated by Chris S. Ervin CA Presidio Research Center 2020-03-18 215 East Canon Perdido St. Santa Barbara, CA 93101 [email protected] URL: http://sbthp.org/research.htm Guide to the Den, Bell, and Luton MS-07 1 Families Papers MS-07 Language of Material: English Contributing Institution: Presidio Research Center Title: Den, Bell, and Luton Families Papers creator: Den, Richard S. creator: Den, Nicholas Augustus creator: Meagher, Thomas Francis, 1823-1867 creator: Pico, Pío, 1801-1894 creator: Micheltorena, Manuel, 1802-1853 creator: Stearns, Abel, 1798-1871 Identifier/Call Number: MS-07 Physical Description: 2.2 Linear Feet2 record storage boxes Date (inclusive): 1784-1974 Abstract: The papers of the Den, Bell, and Luton Families are focused largely on land ownership by brothers Nicholas and Richard Den, early settlers of Santa Barbara and Los Angeles, and their heirs. They highlight the transition in land tenure during the Mexican period and early years of California statehood as well as the inner operations of land and oil development in Santa Barbara County during the first part of the twentieth century. Language of Material: Materials in Spanish and English. Scope and Contents The papers are focused largely on land ownership by brothers Nicholas and Richard Den, early settlers of Santa Barbara and Los Angeles, and their heirs. They highlight the transition in land tenure during the Mexican period and early years of California statehood as well as the inner operations of land and oil development in Santa Barbara County during the first part of the twentieth century. -
The Spanish and Mexican Baseline of California Tree and Shrubland Distributions Since the Late 18Th Century
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany Volume 33 | Issue 1 Article 4 2015 The pS anish and Mexican Baseline of California Tree and Shrubland Distributions Since the Late 18th Century Richard A. Minnich University of California, Riverside Brett R. Goforth California State University, San Bernardino Richard Minnich Dept. of Earth Sciences, University of California, Riverside, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.claremont.edu/aliso Part of the Botany Commons, and the Forest Sciences Commons Recommended Citation Minnich, Richard A.; Goforth, Brett R.; and Minnich, Richard (2015) "The pS anish and Mexican Baseline of California Tree and Shrubland Distributions Since the Late 18th Century," Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany: Vol. 33: Iss. 1, Article 4. Available at: http://scholarship.claremont.edu/aliso/vol33/iss1/4 Aliso, 33(1), pp. 5–76 ISSN 0065-6275 (print), 2327-2929 (online) THE SPANISH AND MEXICAN BASELINE OF CALIFORNIA TREE AND SHRUBLAND DISTRIBUTIONS SINCE THE LATE 18TH CENTURY RICHARD A. MINNICH1,3 AND BRETT R. GOFORTH2 1Department of Earth Sciences, University of California, Riverside, California 92521; 2Department of Geography and Environmental Studies, California State University, San Bernardino, California 92407 3Corresponding author ([email protected]) ABSTRACT Historical distributions of 31 tree species, chaparral, and coastal sage scrub described by Spanish land explorers in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries (1769–1806) and in land grant disen˜os (1784– 1846) are reconstructed at 634 localities across central and southern California. This baseline predates most formal botanical surveys by nearly a century, allowing for assessment of vegetation change over the broadest time frame for comparison with pre-historical evidences and future distributions. -
Hunger Strikes, Spectacular Speech, and the Struggle for Dignity
STARVING FOR JUSTICE RALPH ARMBRUSTER-SANDOVAL STARVING FOR JUSTICE Hunger Strikes, Spectacular Speech, and the Struggle for Dignity TUCSON The University of Arizona Press www.uapress.arizona.edu © 2017 by The Arizona Board of Regents All rights reserved. Published 2017 Printed in the United States of America 22 21 20 19 18 17 6 5 4 3 2 1 ISBN-13: 978-0-8165-3258-2 (cloth) Cover design by Lori Lieber Cover photograph: El Congreso de UCSB 1994 hunger strike, Naomi García and Edwin López repre- senting all hunger strikers collectively and their immediate demands for justice to a packed audience of children, parents, community members, media, allies, and onlookers from near and far, Campbell Hall, UC Santa Barbara, May 1994. Photo by Lisa Valencia Sherratt, El Congreso de UCSB alumnus and former historian. Publication of this book is made possible in part by the proceeds of a permanent endowment created with the assistance of a Challenge Grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, a federal agency. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data [to come] This paper meets the requirements of ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992 (Permanence of Paper). Por El Congreso de UCSB y toda gente que está trabajando por un mundo justo, un mundo sin dolor, hambre, y pobreza. To El Congreso de UCSB and all people working for a more just world, a world without pain, hunger, and poverty. x CONTENTS List of Illustrations ix Acknowledgments xi 1 Starving for Justice: Hunger Strikes, Spectacular Speech, and the Struggle for Dignity 3 2 “Speak About Destruction”: Coloniality, Humiliation, and Self-Sacrifice 36 3 UCLA: “Hungry for Justice” 53 4 UC Santa Barbara: “We Offer Our Lives as a Moral Protest” 103 5 Stanford: “Things Aren’t Right Here” 157 6 “Two, Three, or Many Hunger Strikes”: Screaming and Dreaming for a New World 207 Notes 215 Works Cited 253 Index 295 ILLUSTRATIONS 1. -
El Camino Real in 1850
el camino real in 1850 PARRY’S JOURNEY BY MULE FROM SAN DIEGO TO MONTEREY JAMES LIGHTNER el camino real in 1850 PARRY’S JOURNEY BY MULE FROM SAN DIEGO TO MONTEREY Copyright © 2014 James Lightner All rights reserved No part of this document may be reproduced or transmitted in any form without permission in writing from the publisher. Cover photograph: Man with Mules, 1880s (unattributed). Figure 1 (facing page): Charles C. Parry (1823-1890) c. 1865, courtesy Wis- consin Historical Society WHS-46969 Also from San Diego Flora: San Diego County Native Plants, 3d ed. (2011). A comprehensive color field guide to native and naturalized plants of San Diego County, incorpo- rating the latest taxonomy from The Jepson Manual, 2d ed. Parry’s California Notebooks 1849-51 (2014). A transcription of the note- books of Charles Parry, also including letters to Dr. John Torrey, more than 200 historical and scientific footnotes, appendices, and detailed index. San Diego County Native Plants in the 1830s, The Collections of Thomas Coulter, Thomas Nuttall, and HMS Sulphur with George Barclay and Richard Hinds (2014). Accounts of the visits of UK naturalists to San Diego County in the 1830s, with detailed footnotes and historical background. San Diego Flora 1220 Rosecrans Street, suite 293 San Diego, CA 92106 Figure 1. Dr. Charles C. Parry (1823-1890). Photo c.1865. www.sandiegoflora.com el camino real in 1850 1 Since around 1900 Californians have referred to their state’s principal superior was Major William Emory of the Army’s topographic corps. north-south road during the Spanish and Mexican periods (1769-1848) as The Boundary Commission needed to find two points, one at the coast El Camino Real. -
Ancestors West-Vol 15 No. 4-1989
V inccstovs VOLUME 15 NO. $- frEI'TEMBEte 1< R 5Q 4Tb6avj \tie6s tjjg&er&u} vOith tomorrou) Xbr continuity SANTA BARBARA COUNTY GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY P.O.Box 1303, Santa Barbara, CA 93116-1303 1989 OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS ,onc . I oOd ; President, Beatrice Mohr McGrath 967-8954 1st Vice President-Programs, Jan Gibson Cloud 965-7423 2nd Vice President-Membership, Alma Thompson 962-3943 Treasurer, Julia Carr 965-4314 Recording Secretary, Arlene Langstaff Doty 968-1162 Corresponding Secretary, Gladys Beckwith 965-4924 Parliamentarian, Dorcas Robson 969-4277 Librarian. Doris Crawford 962-3040 Director-at-Large, Al Hardy 736-9637 Director-at-Large,Helen Miller 687-1196 Director-at-Large, Sandra Strickland 969-0770 1989 COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN Book, Jan Gibson Cloud 965-7423 Bus Travel, Doreen Cook Dullea 969-3935 Education, Pat Case 964-5829 Hospitality, Ruth Tapper 963-5836 Locale Interest Sessions, Merna McClenathen 964-3005 Member List & Mail Latels, Robert Ball 685-4278 Publication Distribution, Helen Rydell 687-3234 Research Queries, Helen Rydell Sales, Grace Ekvall 569-0446 PAST PRESIDENTS Ken Mathewson 1987-88 Bette Root Kot 1980 Jan Gibson Cloud 1985-86 Mary Ellen Galbraith 1987 Doreen Cook Dullea 1984 Carlton M. Smith 1977 Norman E. Scofield 1983 *Selma Bankhead West 1975-6 Harry W. Titus 1979/1982 Harry R. Glen 1974-75 Emily Perry Thies 1981 Carol Forbes Roth 1972-73 *Deceased ...ooOoo ... ANCESTORS WEST is published quarterly in March, June, September and December. As available, current and back issues are $3 plus mail cost. Annual subscription to ANCESTORS WEST only is $10. Articles of family history or historical nature are solicited and accepted as space permits. -
Chapter 6: 1920S: Eucalypts and Spanish Style Architecture
CHAPTER 6 1920s: Eucalypts and Spanish Style architecture How they revelled in the perfume of the euca- Live on an adobe hill: It is a most enchant- lyptus and the boronias! ing spot. A red-tiled bungalow is built about How they chortled at the fine old gums away in a courtyard with cloisters and a fountain, the heart of the park, left wild, and so having while vines and flowers fill the air with the a chance of showing what they can do when most delicious perfume of heliotrope, mignon- they’re free! And what an appropriate name ette, and jasmine. Beyond the big living-room for that Australian-made park—The Golden extends a terrace with boxes of deep and pale Gate! pink geraniums against a blue sea, that might —George Taylor, ‘Art and architecture at the San be the Bay of Naples, except that Vesuvius is Francisco exposition’, Building, 1915.1 lacking. It is so lovely that after three years ~ it still seems like a dream. We are only one The eucalyptus, as here employed, does not short look from the Pacific Ocean, that ocean appear in its quality of ‘foreign missionary’, into whose mists the sun sets in flaming purple as an absorber of miasma, a healer of disease. and gold, or the more soft tones of shimmer- It is used purely as an agent of decoration, ing gray and shell-pink. We sit on our terrace to break the monotony of the view, which … feeling as if we were in a proscenium box on is the greatest evil threatening the landscape the edge of the world, and watch ever-varying gardener. -
The Spanish and Mexican Baseline of California Tree and Shrubland Distributions Since the Late 18Th Century
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany Volume 33 | Issue 1 Article 4 2015 The pS anish and Mexican Baseline of California Tree and Shrubland Distributions Since the Late 18th Century Richard A. Minnich University of California, Riverside Brett R. Goforth California State University, San Bernardino Richard Minnich Dept. of Earth Sciences, University of California, Riverside Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.claremont.edu/aliso Part of the Botany Commons, and the Forest Sciences Commons Recommended Citation Minnich, Richard A.; Goforth, Brett R.; and Minnich, Richard (2015) "The pS anish and Mexican Baseline of California Tree and Shrubland Distributions Since the Late 18th Century," Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany: Vol. 33: Iss. 1, Article 4. Available at: http://scholarship.claremont.edu/aliso/vol33/iss1/4 Aliso, 33(1), pp. 5–76 ISSN 0065-6275 (print), 2327-2929 (online) THE SPANISH AND MEXICAN BASELINE OF CALIFORNIA TREE AND SHRUBLAND DISTRIBUTIONS SINCE THE LATE 18TH CENTURY RICHARD A. MINNICH1,3 AND BRETT R. GOFORTH2 1Department of Earth Sciences, University of California, Riverside, California 92521; 2Department of Geography and Environmental Studies, California State University, San Bernardino, California 92407 3Corresponding author ([email protected]) ABSTRACT Historical distributions of 31 tree species, chaparral, and coastal sage scrub described by Spanish land explorers in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries (1769–1806) and in land grant disen˜os (1784– 1846) are reconstructed at 634 localities across central and southern California. This baseline predates most formal botanical surveys by nearly a century, allowing for assessment of vegetation change over the broadest time frame for comparison with pre-historical evidences and future distributions. -
Helen Smith Orange County Project Vol. II
CENTER FOR ORAL AND PUBLIC HISTORY CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, FULLERTON Helen Smith Oral History Collection THE RANCH HOUSE ON SAN MIGUEL ISLAND The San Miguel island ranch house was built in 1906 for Captain W. G. Waters who had leased the island since the 1890s from the government for sheep raising, paying rent of $5.00 per year. In 1906 a large steamer was wrecked on San Miguel and its cargo of tongue and groove pine flooring provided the original building material. The house was built by John Russell who became caretaker of the island for Bob Brooks after Captain Waters’ death. The house itself was a single row of nine rooms, 120 feet long. Some rooms were connected with interior sliding doors and others only by hinged doors from the covered porch that ran the length of the building. The outside wall faced toward Bat Rock, at the west end of Cuyler’s Harbor, and indirectly toward Point Concepcion, “the cradle of the winds.” Because of the constant winds that blew sand against this outer wall, its only windows were fixed ships’ portholes and its only door was a four-vane revolving one at the west end which the wind turned without piling sand against the entry. From this door ingress was into a large utility area including a laundry, butcher shop, woodshed and storeroom where perishable food was spread on large tables to prevent its molding from dampness. In line east of this were, successively, the kitchen, dining room, two dormitory bedrooms used by the sheepshearers, another bedroom, the living room and the master bedroom. -
Manuscripts for the Study of Iberian, Latin American, and Latino History in the Huntington Library
Manuscripts for the Study of Iberian, Latin American, and Latino History in the Huntington Library A Preliminary Handlist Contents Section Pages Brazil 1-3 Caribbean 1-5 Central America 1-9 Mexico 1-35 Mexican War 1-5 North America 1-33 Philippines 1-4 Portugal 1-4 South America 1-8 Spain 1-12 Note to Readers Before using this handlist, the researcher should be aware of its scope and limitations. It covers only material held in the Manuscripts Department of the Huntington Library, and does not generally include material from Rare Books (with the exception of some pertinent manuscript material included in printed books), Photo Archives, or the Botanical Division. It is in its early stages of development, and makes no claim to be complete. It has been constructed largely from existing finding aids, with only occasional checking having been done to date with the original manuscripts to ensure accuracy. Since it is still being actively and continually supplemented with new information, it has not been systematically proofread for accuracy. With these caveats, we hope it will be of some help to researchers until a more thorough guide can be created. Please note that the “Find” function takes into account diacritics. Names often appear both with and without them, so two separate searches must be undertaken to find all instances of names including diacritical marks. BRAZIL 1500s FAC 945(1-764) Karpinski (Louis Charles.) Collection. 835 maps. 1500-1799. Contains photographic reproductions of maps of the Americas taken from: Paris: Bibliotheque -
Blakmar, Den, and Olvera Family Correspondence and Other Material SBHC Mss 125
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8251r3p No online items Guide to the Blakmar, Den, and Olvera family correspondence and other material SBHC Mss 125 Finding aid prepared by Zachary Liebhaber, 2019. UC Santa Barbara Library, Department of Special Research Collections University of California, Santa Barbara Santa Barbara 93106-9010 [email protected] URL: http://www.library.ucsb.edu/special-collections 2019 September 10 Guide to the Blakmar, Den, and SBHC Mss 125 1 Olvera family correspondence and other material SBHC Mss 125 Title: Blakmar, Den, and Olvera family correspondence and other material Identifier/Call Number: SBHC Mss 125 Contributing Institution: UC Santa Barbara Library, Department of Special Research Collections Language of Material: Multiple languages Physical Description: 0.21 linear feet(1 half document box) Source: Olvera, Agustin Source: Den, Nicholas Augustus Source: Den, Ysabel Argüello Source: Blakmar, Olive Date (inclusive): 1853-1936 Abstract: Correspondence and other material, mainly legal documents, as well as a smaller number of personal items and ephemera. Correspondence includes that of Agustin Olvera (1818-1876), first judge of Los Angeles County. Legal materials document the activities of the heirs of Nicholas A. Den (1812-1862), grantee of Rancho Dos Pueblos in Goleta Valley, California. Also included is correspondence and other material, such as cabinet card photographs, relating to R.C. Blakmar and Olive Blakmar of Santa Clara, California. Special Research Collections, UC Santa Barbara Library Language of Material: Material is in Spanish and English. Access Restrictions The collection is open for research. Use Restrictions Copyright has not been assigned to the Department of Special Research Collections, UCSB. -
Locations Contact Information
LOCATIONS CONTACT INFORMATION Aerial Services Aeronautic Pictures Craig Schmitman 805-985-2320 http://aeronauticpictures.com/ P.O. Box 1748, Ojai, CA 93024 Film, video and still photography aerial and location services. Stock footage and photos too. We work air-to-anywhere. Demo reel on our website. Aspen Helicopters 805-985-5416 Fax: 805-985-7327 [email protected] http://www.aspenhelo.com/ Crop spraying and aerial tours. Credits: Richmond Prods. FAA Federal Aviation Administration Terri Rector FAA Federal Aviation Administration 10 Burns Place Goleta, CA 93117 805-681-0534, x3102 [email protected] Regional Flight Standards: (Van Nuys) 818-904-6291 Platinum Helicopters, Inc Skybound Charter, LLC Phone: 805-484-6900 Fax: 805-484-6939 Camarillo, Ca. 93010 [email protected] www.platinumhelicopters.com Movie/Television Camera Flight Operations, Aerial Film Productions, Business/VIP Transportation throughout Southern California, Arizona, Nevada. Aerial Photography, Aerial Survey, Private Tours/Sightseeing, Geological Survey. Remote-i Rhandal Sayat - Director of Photography 805-681-7314 [email protected] http://www.remotei.com/ 81 David Love Place, Goleta, CA 93117 Remote Aerial Photography, videography & cinematography services, and camera mount systems. Santa Barbara Biplane Tours Jay Farbman - Marketing Director 805-453-8320 [email protected] http://www.sbbiplane.com/ 406 A Moffett, Santa Barbara, CA 93117 Signature Flight Support Devin Madgett 805-967-5608 Fax: 805-967-5781 515 Marxmiller Rd, Goleta, CA 93117 [email protected] http://www.signatureflight.com/ Helicopter and fixed wing. Hangar storage 6am-10pm. After hours service available. Spitfire Aviation Flight School 805-967-4373 [email protected] 300 Moffett Place, Goleta, CA, 93117 Flights for still photography or filming purposes.