Nob Hill in San Francisco City and County, California — The American West (Pacific Coastal)
Huntington Park/Fountain of the Tortoises
Photographed By Andrew Ruppenstein, November 20, 2021
1. Huntington Park/Fountain of the Tortoises Marker
Inscription.
Huntington Park/Fountain of the Tortoises. .
Huntington Park. On this site in 1872, General David D. Colton, a railroad attorney, built one of the most elaborate residences ever seen in San Francisco. The classic white wooden mansion featured an entry flight of marble steps leading to a portico of Corinthian columns. General Colton, his wife, and his two daughters entertained in the mansion with style and splendor. General Colton died in 1878 and shortly thereafter his widow, Ellen, closed the mansion and moved to Washington, D.C., In 1892, railroad baron Collis P. Huntington purchased the house where he lived with his wife, Arabella, until the time of his death in 1900. Mrs. Huntington occupied the grand mansion until its destruction in the San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906. In 1915, Mrs. Huntington donated the land to the City of San Francisco to remain as a park in perpetuity for all the people of the city to enjoy., Beginning in the late 1970s, the park became a continuing restoration and preservation project of the Nob Hill Association, San Francisco’s oldest neighborhood organization, in cooperation with the San Francisco Parks and Recreation Department.,
"Fountain of the Tortoises". The magnificent Roman "Fountain of the Tortoises" is the centerpiece of Huntington Park., The original Fontana della Tartarughe is still functioning in Piazza Mattei, Rome, Italy. In the early 1900s , a company in Rome offered exact replicas of the original fountain, and William H. and Ethel Crocker purchased one of the reproductions and had it installed at their estate in Hillsborough, California. The four Crocker Children donated the fountain to the City of San Francisco in 1954. It was placed in Huntington Park across the street from the site of the original Crocker Mansion, now occupied by Grace Cathedral.
Huntington Park
On this site in 1872, General David D. Colton, a railroad attorney, built one of the most elaborate residences ever seen in San Francisco. The classic white wooden mansion featured an entry flight of marble steps leading to a portico of Corinthian columns. General Colton, his wife, and his two daughters entertained in the mansion with style and splendor. General Colton died in 1878 and shortly thereafter his widow, Ellen, closed the mansion and moved to Washington, D.C.
In 1892, railroad baron Collis P. Huntington purchased the house where he lived with his wife, Arabella, until the time of his death in 1900. Mrs. Huntington occupied the grand mansion until its destruction in the San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906. In 1915, Mrs. Huntington donated the land to the City of San Francisco to remain as a park in perpetuity for all the people of the city to enjoy.
Beginning in the late 1970s, the park became a continuing restoration and preservation project of the Nob Hill Association, San Francisco’s oldest neighborhood organization, in cooperation with the San Francisco Parks and Recreation Department.
"Fountain of the Tortoises"
The magnificent Roman "Fountain of the Tortoises" is the centerpiece of Huntington Park.
The
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original Fontana della Tartarughe is still functioning in Piazza Mattei, Rome, Italy. In the early 1900s , a company in Rome offered exact replicas of the original fountain, and William H. and Ethel Crocker purchased one of the reproductions and had it installed at their estate in Hillsborough, California. The four Crocker Children donated the fountain to the City of San Francisco in 1954. It was placed in Huntington Park across the street from the site of the original Crocker Mansion, now occupied by Grace Cathedral.
Location. 37° 47.526′ N, 122° 24.741′ W. Marker is in San Francisco, California, in San Francisco City and County. It is in Nob Hill. Marker can be reached from Taylor Street north of California Street. Touch for map. Marker is in this post office area: San Francisco CA 94108, United States of America. Touch for directions.
Photographed By Andrew Ruppenstein, February 23, 2013
2. Huntington Park/Fountain of the Tortoises Marker - Wide View
The marker is the leftmost of the two visible here, mounted to a utility shed on the west (Grace Cathedral) side of the park. The plaque to the immediate right of the historical marker is a donor plaque. The Mark Hopkins Hotel is in the background.
Photographed By Andrew Ruppenstein, February 23, 2013
3. Fountain of the Tortoises in San Francisco
Photographed By Giovan Battista Falda, 1699
4. Fountain of the Tortoises (Fontane delle Tartarughe), Rome
Photographed By F.W. Burnett, May 15, 1902
5. The Flood, Huntington, and Crocker Mansions on Nob Hill (1902)
Excerpted from a much larger panoramic picture, this image (courtesy of the Library of Congress) shows the California Street portion of the Nob Hill area prior to the 1906 earthquake and fire. In the foreground is the Flood Mansion (still extant), the Huntington Mansion (now site of Huntington Park), and further back is Crocker Mansion, now the site of Grace Cathedral. See the succeeding picture to see what the area looks like today.
Photographed By Andrew Ruppenstein, February 23, 2013
6. Huntington Park, as seen from the Top of the Mark (Mark Hopkins Hotel)
The fountain is barely visible here, mid-picture, in center of the park. The park is sandwiched between the Flood Mansion to the east (built 1885-86, said to be the oldest brownstone building west of the Mississippi), and Grace Cathedral (construction started 1928) to the west.
Credits. This page was last revised on February 7, 2023. It was originally submitted on February 25, 2013, by Andrew Ruppenstein of Lamorinda, California. This page has been viewed 1,495 times since then and 113 times this year. Photos:1. submitted on November 22, 2021, by Andrew Ruppenstein of Lamorinda, California. 2. submitted on February 25, 2013, by Andrew Ruppenstein of Lamorinda, California. 3. submitted on February 27, 2013, by Andrew Ruppenstein of Lamorinda, California. 4. submitted on February 26, 2013, by Andrew Ruppenstein of Lamorinda, California. 5. submitted on February 26, 2013. 6. submitted on February 25, 2013, by Andrew Ruppenstein of Lamorinda, California. • Syd Whittle was the editor who published this page.