English:
Identifier: pacifictouristad1881shea (find matches)
Title: The Pacific tourist : Adams & Bishop's illustrated trans-continental guide of travel, from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean : containing full descriptions of railroad routes across the continent, all pleasure resorts and places of most noted scenery in the Far West, also of all cities, towns, villages, U.S. forts, springs, lakes, mountains, routes of summer travel, best localities for hunting, fishing, sporting, and enjoyment, with all needful information for the pleasure traveler, miner, settler, or business man : a complete traveler's guide of the Union and Central Pacific Railroads, and all points of business or pleasure travel to California, Colorado, Nebraska, Wyoming, Utah, Nevada, Montana, the mines and mining of the Territories, the lands of the Pacific Coast, the wonders of the Rocky Mountains, the scenery of the Sierra Nevadas, the Colorado Mountains, the big trees, the geysers, the Yosemite, and the Yellowstone
Year: 1881 (1880s)
Authors: Shearer, Frederick E Williams, Henry T
Subjects: Union Pacific Railroad Company Central Pacific Railroad Company
Publisher: New York : Adams & Bishop
Contributing Library: Harold B. Lee Library
Digitizing Sponsor: Brigham Young University
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ijended, and nearly a quarter of amillions dollars value in property is owned bythe department. The State University is with-in the city limits. Its site, which has beennamed Berkeley, is on the northern border ofthe city and has a direct ferry to San Francisco,and many families are jjlanting themselves there,attracted by its natural beauty and the educa-tional and social advantages which clusteraround it. The University is open to studentsof both sexes, and tuition is free. The numberof students exceeds 200. By special law, thesale of intoxicating liquors is forbidden withintwo miles of this University. There are twenty churches in Oakland, ofwhich sixteen own houses of worship. Someof them are elegant and costly; the First Pres-byterian Church costing over $65,000, and theFirst Congregational a larger sum. Sevennewspapers are published, two daily, the restweekly. The rides in and around Oakland, for varietyof attractive features, are rarely equalled. Many 266 TME ^^€iWl€ W@WMBW,
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come over from San Fran-cisco in the morning ex-pressly to enjoy this pleas-ure. Lake Merritt, a beau-tiful sheet of water, isamong the attractions whichnone fail to visit, and withwhich thousands have brightand happy memories associa-ted. Though incorporated as acity, Oakland is thoroughlyrural. A very small portionof the business part aroundthe chief railroad station isbuilt lip solidly, but every-where else the houses standdetached and usually sur-rounded by a liberal expanseof gardens, grass-plat, andshrubbery which remind oneof an eastern village. Liveoaks abound, and show byp their leaning over toward£ the east, the constancy andy, strength of the summer trade-2 winds. Geraniums, roses,^ fuchsias, callas, verbenas, and a soil of surpassing richnessg and fertility. Fruit trees de^K velop into bearing in a third-^ or half the time usually re-« quired on the A
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Text added by Wikimedia editors: this image shows an elevated image of San Francisco, with various ships near the piers of the city. landmarks of the time are visible. the iconic bridge at the Golden Gate is not built yet, but the Gate is visible to the right