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CENTRAL
COAST JEWEL
It
has been said that it takes a newcomer to truly appreciate the marvelous
place that is Santa Barbara. The visitor, armed with maps and tourist
guides, often discovers dazzling treasures that many locals scarcely know
exist or have forgotten. Its colorful history is one of Santa Barbaras
wonderful, often hidden treasures.
Tens
of thousands of years ago, long before any European imagined there was
a place called North America, people known as the Chumash lived in scattered
villages along the central coast. They lived in harmony fly with
the land, eating acorns and other native vegetation as well as the plenteous
supply of fish and shellfish. They were skilled in many crafts,
inventing the tomol, or plank canoe, which took them across the channel
to the islands visible from the shore.
The
Spanish came in the 16th century, signaling the beginning of the end of
the Chumash way of life. When Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo arrived in
1542 he met a friendly native people, who paddled out to the ships in
their tomols. Over the next several hundred years explorers visited
the central coast and were met by curious, amicable natives, who eagerly
traded items with the Europeans. They would escort the visitors
to shore and welcome them, throwing splendid celebrations in their honor.
In fact during one visit it was said that Chumash singing and dancing
in honor of their guests went on so long and so loudly that the Spanish
finally asked them to quiet down and let them sleep! On Dec. 4, 1602,
explorer Sebastian Vizcaino sailed into the channel. He was accompanied
by a Carmelite friar who had a penchant for naming the places they visited.
They arrived on the feast day of Saint Barbara, a girl who had been martyred
by the Roman army. It wasn't until the 18th century; when the English
and Russians began eyeing "Alta California," as it was called,
that the Spanish got serious about colonizing the area. Capt. Jose
Francisco de Ortega was dispatched to Santa Barbara to build a military
post. After his arrival, Capt. Ortega asked a native chief where
he could find good water. The chief led him to a laguna where two
pure cold water springs flowed. Ortega chose a nearby hilltop for
the fort, and on April 21, 1782, it was founded as the Royal Presidio
at Santa Barbara, which still exists, in reconstructed form, in the area
of Canon Perdido and Santa Barbara streets.
Soon
after, the Santa Barbara Mission was established, where the native people
were baptized and taught European trades - weaving, iron-working, pottery
and masonry. As the indigenous people left their villages and came
to the Mission, Churnash village life began to disintegrate. The
Europeans also unwittingly brought smallpox and measles with them, Infecting
the native people and eventually decimating their population. "The
Queen of the Missions," however, has endured, rebuilt alter several
earthquakes.
Many
of the soldiers who had been stationed at the Presidio decided to make
Santa Barbara their permanent home, and a pueblo began to grow up around
the fort. After Mexico declared its independence, the government
divided up the Santa Barbara area into ranchos and granted them to prominent
men. The ranchos consisted of tens of thousands of acres each, where
livestock were raised and orchards and crops were cultivated.
In
the second half of the 18th century; when California became part of the
United States, Anglos flowed into the community The economy boomed, the
railroad arrived and new, Victorian style buildings rose up quickly, often
replacing adobes of the past. Late in the century Santa Barbara
began to be identified as a resort community. Wealthy easterners
were drawn by the mild temperatures and gentle sunshine resulting from
rare geography. Because the coastline runs east-west rather than
north-south (the only portion of the West Coast between Alaska and South
America like it), the beach remains in the sun all day. Santa Barbara'
became known as the American version of the Mediterranean Riviera.
The Arlington, a 90-room luxury hotel at the corner of Chapala and Victoria
streets, accommodated not only east-coast tycoons but also presidents
such as Teddy Roosevelt before it burned down in 1909. A few years
earlier the Potter Hotel was erected on the beach. It could house
up to 1,000 guests. The Potter also burned in 1923. Many of
the visitors who stayed in Santa Barbara's hotels became enchanted with
the community and decided to stay, building palatial estates. Everyone
today associates the file industry with Hollywood, but in the early 2Oth
century Santa Barbara was the motion-picture center. In 1910 Flying
A Studios was begun at the corner of State and Mission streets, and more
than 1,200 silent films were made during its 10-year history. Since
then Santa Barbara has been a popular getaway for many film stars.
One
of the most memorable natural disasters in local history is the 1925 earthquake,
which heavily damaged the Mission and destroyed the old brick County Courthouse.
The community rallied to rebuild. The Mission was restored and a
new Courthouse was built in the style of Spanish-Moorish architectural.
Known today as one the most beautiful buildings North America, the Courthouse
is a product of architectural controls implemented in thc early part of
the 20th century to recapture the old-world style of its origins.
The Spanish colonial revival also gave the community the El Paseo shopping
arcade and the Lobero Theater, which is one of the many places that the
arts have flourished in Santa Barbara over the years.
Today
Santa Barbara, with more than 160,000 residents including outlying areas,
would scarcely be recognized by those who lived in the sleepy pueblo hundreds
of years ago. In addition to being a tourist and celebrity mecca,
the community sports a wide range of commerce, industry a University California
campus and an alt port. But if you look closely can catch a glimpse
of the city's origins when strolling through shopping arcades and walking
the outdoors. From the mountains, home to the Chumash Painted Cave,
to the Mission and adobes scattered through the downtown area Santa Barbara
hidden treasures of yesterday remain with us today.
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