Capture Calif

Capture California

What is a YOLT? Well, you may have heard the term YOLO. Gary and Sherri think we can live again, not as James Bond, but as being reborn. Consequently, we are having fun in our life, after all, You Only Live Twice.

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Adventure: 051, Site 018 – Southern Pacific Passenger Station

Capture California, the Game-2012
Adventure: 051, Site 018 – Southern Pacific Passenger Station
National Registry ID: 1978000665
Local Registry ID: 11

Team: Thing One, Thing Two
Date:  September 16, 2012
Location:
Latitude: 36°43′57″N
Longitude: 119°47′33″W
Address: 1713 Tulare Street, Fresno, CA

Description:
Date Built: 1889
Architect: Unknown



In some ways, this building was a disappointment. Even though the building has been newly renovated and there is fresh paint everywhere, it is closed off and much not open to the public. In a lot of ways, the station has kept its form, but lost the aire of a station. We could not find a plaque to go with the station. It is currently an office complex.



The Southern Pacific Railroad Depot, more than any other building in the city, represents the growth of Fresno from a barren plain into the agri-business capital of the world. The Central Pacific Railroad, which became the Southern Pacific in 1884, began a line through the Central Valley from San Francisco to Los Angeles shortly after completing its part of the Transcontinental Railroad in 1869. The Fresno Station was established on that line in 1872, and a wood frame depot constructed. In 1889 the Southern Pacific designated Fresno as its main Central Valley freight terminal; it removed the 1872 depot and replaced it with a spacious new passenger and freight depot. The Daily Evening Expositor on July 6, 1889, reported that "from San Francisco to Los Angeles there is no depot that can be compared with the one to be constructed in Fresno. It will be a model building of the latest style of architecture."
Truck transportation and decreasing passenger traffic forced the depot's closure in 1971. One of two Queen Anne-influenced stations in California and a symbol of Fresno's founding, it remains one of the city's most significant historical and architectural landmarks.



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