The 1894 Midwinter Fair in Golden Gate Park

Unfinished History

by Daniel Steven Crafts

The Midwinter Fair in Golden Gate Park, 1894

Photo: Private Collection, San Francisco, CA

Midwinter Fair, 1894.

Photo: OpenSFHistory.org

The worst threat to the park came in 1894 with the Columbian Exposition. The Chronicle newspaper proposed the event be held in Golden Gate Park. "Uncle John" McLaren fought tooth and nail against the suggestion, claiming the damage to the natural setting would take decades to reverse. He lost. More than a hundred buildings were erected around the Central Plaza. Among then were the Moorish Village, the Japanese Tea Garden, the Vienna Prater and the Turkish Village (which featured an erotic dancer known as Little Egypt). After more than 2 million people had tramped through the Exposition, the park was once again returned to McLaren. Two features he did permit to remain, however, the Art Museum and the Japanese Tea Garden. The Art Museum was eventually torn down in 1936.

Read More on the Midwinter Fair on Foundsf:

’49 Mining Camp glorifies Gold Rush Fantasies

Women’s Work and Vice

Depression and Poverty

An Orientalist Exposition

Racism at Golden Gate Park's 1894 Midwinter Fair

The Day the Biggest Mechanical Toy Stopped


Fine Arts Building, 1894, on the site of the modern M. H. deYoung Museum.

The Prune Knight representing California's agricultural production.


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