Mission San Gabriel Arcángel/Gallery: Difference between revisions
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imported>Robert A. Estremo No edit summary |
imported>Robert A. Estremo No edit summary |
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<gallery perrow=3 widths=300px heights=250px> | <gallery perrow=3 widths=300px heights=250px> | ||
Image:Deakin SGA.jpg|{{Deakin SGA.jpg/credit}}<br />Mission San Gabriel Arcángel with snow-covered mountains in the background. | |||
Image:San Gabriel Arcangel circa 1900 Keystone-Mast Company.jpg|{{San Gabriel Arcangel circa 1900 Keystone-Mast Company.jpg/credit}}<br/>Mission San Gabriel Arcángel ''circa'' 1900. The trail in the foreground is part of the original El Camino Real. | Image:San Gabriel Arcangel circa 1900 Keystone-Mast Company.jpg|{{San Gabriel Arcangel circa 1900 Keystone-Mast Company.jpg/credit}}<br/>Mission San Gabriel Arcángel ''circa'' 1900. The trail in the foreground is part of the original El Camino Real. | ||
Image:Old PE car at San Gabriel Mission circa 1905.jpg|{{Old PE car at San Gabriel Mission circa 1905.jpg/credit}}<br/>A streetcar of the [[Pacific Electric Railway]] makes a stop at Mission San Gabriel Arcángel ''circa'' 1905. | Image:Old PE car at San Gabriel Mission circa 1905.jpg|{{Old PE car at San Gabriel Mission circa 1905.jpg/credit}}<br/>A streetcar of the [[Pacific Electric Railway]] makes a stop at Mission San Gabriel Arcángel ''circa'' 1905. |
Revision as of 00:30, 14 January 2013
(PD) Photo: Robert C. Post
A streetcar of the Pacific Electric Railway makes a stop at Mission San Gabriel Arcángel circa 1905.(PD) Drawing: Rexford Newcomb
Artist Rexford Newcomb's rendition of Mission San Gabriel Arcángel's original campanile, or bell tower. The details are similar to those of the chapel at Mission Santa Inés.[1](PD) Photo: United States Navy
USNS Mission San Gabriel (T-AO-124) was the fourteenth of twenty-seven Mission Buenaventura-class fleet oilers built during World War II for service in the United States Navy. Scrapped in 1975, she was the only U.S. Naval vessel to have borne the name.[2]