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''Photo: Robert N. Dennis stereoscopic view, Wikimedia commons'' | ''Photo: Robert N. Dennis stereoscopic view, Wikimedia commons'' | ||
[[Image:1870-Montgomery-&-Gold.jpg]] | |||
'''Montgomery and Gold Streets, 1870.''' | |||
''Photo: courtesy Katherine Petrin'' | |||
[[category:Downtown]] [[category:North Beach]] [[category:1850s]] [[category:roads]] | [[Image:1898-Jackson.jpg]] | ||
'''Jackson Street, 1898.''' | |||
''Photo: courtesy Katherine Petrin'' | |||
[[Image:1964-Jackson-looking-east.jpg]] | |||
'''Jackson Street looking east in 1964.''' | |||
''Photo: courtesy Katherine Petrin'' | |||
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Historical Essay
by Dr. Weirde
Building at 804 Montgomery Street, on site that housed Bank of Lucas, Turner and Co. in the 1850s
Photo: Shaping San Francisco
The Bank that General Sherman Built
Bank of Lucas, Turner & Company, 800-804 Montgomery Street. The construction of this bank, completed in 1853, was supervised by William Tecumseh Sherman, who later, in his career as a Civil War general, made history by laying waste to much of the state of Georgia. As the most destructive general in what was then the bloodiest war in human history — the first war in which mechanical means of mass slaughter were effectively employed—Sherman's name is still reviled in the South. Southerners visiting San Francisco may gaze upon this bank and bemoan Sherman's abandoning the business of construction for that of destruction.
Montgomery Street as seen in this 1850 postcard shot, with Telegraph Hill sloping up in the background.
Photo: Wikimedia commons'
Montgomery Street closer to California Street as the stately buildings begin to line the street in the mid-1850s.
Photo: Robert N. Dennis stereoscopic view, Wikimedia commons
Montgomery and Gold Streets, 1870.
Photo: courtesy Katherine Petrin
Jackson Street, 1898.
Photo: courtesy Katherine Petrin
Jackson Street looking east in 1964.
Photo: courtesy Katherine Petrin