History

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2mo
San Francisco was built on the abandoned & buried ships of the gold rush | The Vintage News
Collage depicting ships piled into Yerba Buena cove by Satty, from “Visions of Frisco” edited by Walter Medeiros, Regent Press 2007 During the height of the gold excitement, there were at least five hundred ships stranded in the harbor, some without even a watchman on board, and none with a crew sufficiently large to work her. Many of these vessels never sailed again. Some rotted away and sank at their moorings. (Herbert Asbury in “The Barbary Coast”)
Seppi family seeks 1903 San Quentin details
Seppi family seeks 1903 San Quentin details
Seppi family seeks 1903 San Quentin details
Seppi family seeks 1903 San Quentin details
Seppi family seeks 1903 San Quentin details
Seppi family seeks 1903 San Quentin details
7 Female Outlaws You Never Heard About In History Class, But Who Seriously Lived It Up In The Wild West
Godfrey Ragsdale Jr. And The Jamestown Massacre
Godfrey Ragsdale Jr. And The Jamestown Massacre | mermaidcamp