Projected medium / 1906
Title | [A trip down Market Street before the fire] |
Item type | Projected medium |
Author(s) | Miles Brothers |
Imprint | United States [s.n.], 1906 |
Language | English |
URL | Link to original record |
Notes |
|
Physical description | 1 reel of 1 (8 min.) (657 ft.) : si., b&w ; 35 mm. print. |
Languages:
Date text:
1906Publisher:
[s.n.]Subject headings:
Item Type:
Oskicat subjects:
Millenium MARC Record:
LEADER 00000ngmaa2200529Ka 4500
001 792945413
003 OCoLC
005 20120502114240.0
007 mr ba||fmnarauuac||||||
008 120502s1906 xxu008 mleng d
035 (PFA-FILM)20886
040 CUY|beng|cCUY
245 02 [A trip down Market Street before the fire]|h[motion
picture] /|cMiles Brothers.
257 United States.
260 United States :|b[s.n.],|c[1906].
300 1 reel of 1 (8 min.) (657 ft.) :|bsi., b&w ;|c35 mm.
|3print.
500 Title taken from Library of Congress catalogue.
500 Running time iss 12 min. at 16 fps; 1.33 full frame
silent.
506 Pacific Film Archive collection; non-circulating. Access
by appt. only.|5CBPF.
506 PFA 3500-01-14474. Restricted: For PFA exhibition only.
520 "This film, shot from the front window of a moving Market
Street cable car, is a rare record of San Francisco's
principal thoroughfare and downtown area before their
destruction in the 1906 earthquake and fire. The filmed
ride covers 1.55 miles at an average speed of nearly 10
miles per hour. While there is no production or copyright
information on the film, the state of completion of the
Flood Building and the Monadnock Building indicate that
the year is 1905. Also, the apparent position of the sun
in relation to the time visible on the Ferry Building
clock point to early September as the month. Market Street,
graded through sand dunes in the 1850's, is 120 feet wide,
and nearly 3.5 miles long. The street runs northeast from
the foot of Twin Peaks to the Ferry Building. Different
street grids, diagonal on the northwest side and parallel
on the southeast side, create several awkward diagonal
intersections along Market Street, contributing to the
chaotic traffic situation that is evident in the film. San
Francisco's cable cars, which first began operations in
1873, have no power of their own, and operate by
"gripping" a moving cable beneath a slot in the street.
This is the origin of the name "south of the slot" for the
South-of-Market Street district. The Market Street lines,
dating from 1883, merged in 1902 to form the United
Railroads of San Francisco. Dark cars served westerly
neighborhood lines extending along McAllister, Hayes and
Haight streets, light cars served southwesterly
neighborhoods, with the lines extending along Valencia and
Castro streets. The Market Street section of the lines
ended at the Ferry Building, where passengers boarded
ferries for Oakland, Alameda, or Berkeley, across San
Francisco Bay. East of Sutter Street, horse cars ran along
Market Street. Independently owned, they ran on side
tracks to the Ferry Building. A few electric streetcars,
dating from 1892, are seen in the film crossing Market
Street. Market Street itself reverted to electric
streetcars in 1906, following the earthquake and fire. In
all, the film shows some thirty cable cars, four horse
cars and four streetcars. An interesting feature of the
film is the apparent abundance of automobiles. However, a
careful tracking of automobile traffic shows that almost
all of the autos seen circle around the camera/cable car
many times (one ten times). This traffic was apparently
staged by the producer to give Market Street the
appearance of a prosperous modern boulevard with many
automobiles. In fact, in 1905 the automobile was still
something of a novelty in San Francisco, with horse-drawn
buggies, carts, vans, and wagons being the common private
and business vehicles. The near total lack of traffic
control along Market Street emphasizes the newness of the
automobile. Granite paving stripes in the street marking
ignored pedestrian crosswalks, making the crossing of
Market Street on foot a risky venture. The pedestrian
"islands" for homeward-bound downtown cable car commuters
are among the few signs of order visible in the film"--
Library of Congress [For a shot-by-shot description see:
www.loc.gov. [Further research by David Klein has
established that this film was shot shortly before the
earthquake and fire of 1906].
546 No title or intertitles.
590 PFA 3500-01-14474. |aCONDITION NOTE: Last checked: 2012/05
/01; Excellent condition. CONDITION NOTE: Last inspected:
2012/03/06; New
650 0 Streets|zCalifornia|zSan Francisco.
650 0 Commercial buildings|zCalifornia|zSan Francisco.
650 0 Vehicles|zCalifornia|zSan Francisco.
650 0 Local transit|zCalifornia|zSan Francisco.
650 0 Street-railroads|zCalifornia|zSan Francisco.
650 0 Horse-drawn vehicles|zCalifornia|zSan Francisco.
650 0 Pedestrians|zCalifornia|zSan Francisco.
650 0 Automobiles|zCalifornia|zSan Francisco.
650 0 Bicycles|zCalifornia|zSan Francisco.
651 0 San Francisco (Calif.)
655 7 Actualities.|2mim
655 7 Shorts.|2mim
655 7 Documentaries and factual works.|2mim
690 Silent films.
710 2 Miles Brothers.
941 0 PFA 3500-01-14474. PFA collection acquisition purchase
from D0372 2011/04/04
946 PFA 3500-01-14474. MIN record created 2012/05/01 by sw;
revised 2012/05/30 by js (945)
948 PFA 3500-01-14474. Restricted: For PFA exhibition only.
956 20120501|bpfsw
956 20140224|bPFA migration/merge load
957 OCLC xref loaded 20140309
994 C0|bCUY