Browse Items(69 total)
- Search: Landmarks
- Item Type: Still Image
Sort by:
The wharf at Pigeon Point Landing. At one time, it was used as a whaling station and a shipping station for the dairy products from nearby coastal dairies. Pigeon Point was named for the British sailing vessel, the Carrier Pigeon, that wrecked on theā¦
Date: ca. 1870s
Type: PHOTO
Panorama of the Santa Cruz city beach front. Buildings visible from far left are: S. J. Lunch home, below it the house owned by Harriett M. Blackburn
Date: Undated
Type: PHOTO
A stereograph of the first Santa Cruz Lighthouse on West Cliff Drive. It was built by the U.S. government in 1869 and torn down in 1948.
Date: Prior to 1886
Type: PHOTO
View of Santa Cruz beach area (where the Boardwalk would be) from the Sea Beach Hotel.
Date: ca. 1880's
Type: PHOTO
Conductors on an open streetcar of the Santa Cruz - Garfield Park - Beach route of an unidentified streetcar company. The car is just passing the Sea Beach Hotel. The bank behind the streetcar says "Sea Beach."
Date: 1893-1912
Type: PHOTO
Passengers on streetcars #6 of the Santa Cruz Electric Railway and #13 of the Santa Cruz, Capitola and Watsonville Railway traveling east along Beach Street. The Sea Beach Hotel is in the background.
Date: ca. 1904
Type: PHOTO
A man and woman on the sand in front of the Sea Beach Hotel. On the right, a streetcar of the Santa Cruz Electric line is passing the hotel.
Date: ca. 1893
Type: PHOTO
View of Pacific Avenue, looking north. On the right is the I.O.O.F. (International Order of Odd Fellows) Town Clock building. The streetcar is Union Traction No. 11.
Date: 1916
Type: PHOTO
Looking east along the tracks in the Santa Cruz beach area. On the far right is a streetcar of the Santa Cruz Electric line at its beachfront terminus. Straight ahead is the Sea Beach Hotel. The large white building on the left is the Neptune Baths.
Date: 1892-1904 (Dates of Santa Cruz Electric)
Type: PHOTO