Mission Park, Santa Barbara
{{Infobox park
| name = Mission Historical Park
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| photo = SB MissionParkEast 20140909.jpg
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| photo_caption = Grassy area of Mission Historical Park in Santa Barbara looking northeast toward the Santa Ynez Mountains
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| coords = {{coord|34.437601|N|119.712206|W|type:landmark_region:US-CA|display=title}}
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| location = Intersection of East Los Olivos St. and Laguna St. in Santa Barbara, California; Due east of the Santa Barbara Mission
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| area = {{Convert|10|acre|0}}City of Santa Barbara, California: Parks Division - [http://www.santabarbaraca.gov/gov/depts/parksrec/parks/features/views/missionhistorical.asp Mission Park] (accessed 24 Aug 2015)
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| operator = City of Santa Barbara Parks & Recreation Department
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| website = [http://www.santabarbaraca.gov/gov/depts/parksrec/parks/features/views/missionhistorical.asp Mission Historical Park]
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Mission Historical Park is a {{convert|10|acre|ha|adj=mid| park}} located to the east of the Santa Barbara Mission in Santa Barbara, California. The park hosts a large open grassy area, the A.C. Postel Memorial Rose Garden, a fountain, hiking trails, a variety of sycamore and native oak trees, a historic olive grove dedicated to
World War I veterans, remains of tannery vats, a pottery, gristmill, and a historic reservoir and aqueduct system. The park and the Mission were designated as a California State Historical Landmark on July 12, 1939 (No. 309).{{cite web|url=http://ohp.parks.ca.gov/ListedResources/Detail/309|title=California Historical Resources (listing)|access-date=2015-12-01|date=2015|publisher=California State Office of Historic Preservation (OHP)}}
The park is divided by Alameda Padré Serra, a major access roadway{{cite web|title=Mission Park To Mission Canyon Multimodal Improvements Plan|author1=County of Santa Barbara|author2=City of Santa Barbara|author3=Mission Heritage Trail Association|publisher=County of Santa Barbara Planning and Development|location=Santa Barbara, California|date=December 2014|url=http://www.sbcountyplanning.org/PDF/boards/CntyPC/12-10-2014/MISSI-ONPAR-KTOMI/Attachment%20A.pdf}} that has an Average Annual Daily Traffic (AADT) of about 9,900 vehicles.{{cite report|date=November 2009|title=Average Hourly Volumes: Alameda Padre Serra 2100|url=http://www.santabarbaraca.gov/gov/depts/pw/default.asp|publisher=Public Works Department|format=PDF|location=Santa Barbara, California}} The perimeter of the park's 8-acre southern area extends from the intersection of East Los Olivos St. and Laguna St. north to Alameda Padré Serra, and east to Plaza del Rubio. The smaller northern 2-acre portion occupies the area between Alameda Padré Serra, Mountain Drive and Mission Ridge Road at the park's northern terminus.
Park history
Following the 1925 Santa Barbara earthquake and post-restoration efforts made to the Santa Barbara Mission, the Franciscan Fathers of California offered to sell a 7.8 acre parcel of land extending from Laguna and East Los Olivos Streets north to Alameda Padré Serra. After securing private contributions, on June 30, 1928, the City Council agreed to purchase the land for $37,000 (to be paid over several years). By 1939, a total sum of $53,068.80 was paid in full (which included interest and other expenses). A master plan was approved by the Board of Park Commissioners in 1940.
In 1948, the remainder of the land comprising the present day park (the 2-acre parcel between Alameda Padré Serra and Mission Ridge Road) was gifted to the city by the Franciscan Fathers.
In 1954, the City developed a plan indicating a straightened Los Olivos Street through the park. The local citizenry and a number of organizations "vigorously objected" to the proposal. In March of that year, the City Council changed the name of the park from Mission Plaza (or Park) to Mission Historical Park, which had been suggested by Miss Pearl Chase five years previous.
By 1970, the City Park Commissioners once again called for a redesign of the park and surrounding streets.
The A.C. Postel Memorial Rose Garden
File:SB MissionParkACPostelRose 20150916 (22171897982).jpg
The A.C. Postel Memorial Rose Garden is an accredited show garden of the All-America Rose Selections (AARS).{{cite sign|title=All-American Rose Selections: Descriptive Garden and Floribunda labels|date=2015|type=Plaques within the park|publisher=All-American Rose Selections (AARS)|location=Santa Barbara, California}} The garden was initiated in 1955 with a donation of 500 pedigree rose bushes. In 1959, the non-profit Santa Barbara Rose Society was established.Santa Barbara Rose Society [http://www.sbrose.org/rosegarden.htm A.C. Postel Rose Garden] sbrose.org (accessed 24 Aug 2015) By 1961 the condition of the rose garden had deteriorated such that the Rose Society requested to sponsor it. In the following years, new bushes were established. In 1971, the Little Garden Club installed a fragrance garden for the blind.Histories of Individual Parks: City of Santa Barbara California, Days, Mary Louise, Santa Barbara Community Development Department, City Planning Division, June 1977 By the late 1970s, California Proposition 13 had substantially reduced funding for the Parks Department and thereby eliminated the full-time rose gardener's position. Remaining volunteers were unable to adequately maintain the garden and it hence deteriorated. In 1980, there had been considerations to replace the rose beds with tennis courts. However, in 1982 a committee was formed to save the rose garden. By 1984, the Virginia Firth Wade Endowment Fund donated $35,000 of the $51,000 needed to restore the garden on the condition that it be renamed; the A.C. Postel Memorial Rose Garden.
Today the garden holds over 1,500 plants sitsCity of Santa Barbara, California: Parks Division - [https://services.santabarbaraca.gov/eRecreation/Facilities/FacilitiesDetail.asp?FacilityId=41 Facility Details of Grassy Area - Mission Historical Park] (accessed 24 Aug 2015) and serves as one of over 130 recognized competitive demonstration rose gardens in the US, hosting a variety of roses including a number of All-America Rose Selections (AARS) winners.City of Santa Barbara, California: Parks Division - [http://www.santabarbaraca.gov/gov/depts/parksrec/parks/features/horticulture/acpostel.asp AC Postel Mission Rose Garden] (accessed 24 Aug 2015) An annual $5,000 grant from the Virginia Firth Wade Endowment Fund assists with the garden's maintenance, which includes; a part-time gardener, watering, grooming, and regular fertilization.
File:SB MissionParkRoseColorMagic 20150917.jpg
The garden is often utilized for wedding ceremonies in two locations; the open grassy section along its western side (which accommodates up to 200 people), or at a smaller area on the northern end of the garden along Plaza del Rubio Street (which accommodates up to 50 people).
= Rose collections =
A number of the Rose cultivar which have been cultivated within the garden (and listed by the All American Rose Selection Committee - AARS) include, but are not limited to; Chicago Peace (1962), China Doll (AARS 1946), Color Magic, Double Delight, Duet (AARS 1961), Iceberg, Just Joey, Over The Moon, Peace, Perfume Delight, Rainbow Sorbet, Scentimental, Sunshine Daydream (an AARS 2012 winner), Strike It Rich, Tahitian Sunset, Walking on Sunshine (an AARS 2011 winner), and Betty Boop (AARS 1999). Some of the rose cultivars named after people within the garden include; Barbra Streisand (AARS 2000), Henry Fonda (AARS 1995), Julia Child (2004), and Marilyn Monroe (AARS 2003).
Additionally, the collection hosts beds with ancient varieties, such as Gallicas, Albas, and Damasks in various states of health. Other roses maintained within the garden include Old Garden Roses, Hybrid Perpetuals originally cultivated during the 1800s, and Chinas (e.g. Mutabulis and Old Blush from 1752).
Grassy area
File:Map showing the arrangement of the Mission Santa Barbara in 1840, ca.1920 (CHS-8950).jpg
The park's grassy area encompasses roughly half of the original southern 8-acre parcel that was sold to the City in 1928.
During 1840, a three-acre orchard consisting of pear, apple, apricot, fig and other fruit trees existed about 100-yards in front of the Mission (i.e. the present day location of the grassy area which abuts East Los Olivos Street).{{cite book|title=The Early Days of Santa Barbara California: From the First Discoveries of Europeans to December, 1846|last1=Hawley|first1=Walter, Augustus|publisher=Schauer Printing Studio|location=Santa Barbara, California|year=1920|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=itQ-AAAAYAAJ&pg=PA57|pages=57–63}} By the early 1900s, the orchard had diminished considerably.
{{blockquote|text="The fruit trees gradually died or were removed, until fifteen years ago there were only three standing. Now there is but one, which is still vigorous, though its bark is moss covered and its branches are much overgrown."|sign=Hawley, Walter A.|source=The Early Days of Santa Barbara California, 1909}}
The orchard was surrounded by a six-sided wall reinforced with "heavy buttresses of masonry". A portion of the northern section and eastern corner of the wall were still in place during 1910–20.
Historical waterworks and production facilities
Much of the historical infrastructure within the park had been constructed by Chumash people who were often subject to the California Missions under the exploitative Mission industry system of the period. Some of the facilities and their functions are further described below.
= Upper reservoir and grist mill =
File:SB MissionParkUpperReservoir1 20150914.jpg
Around 1827, a water-powered grist mill and its adjacent reservoir were constructed by the Chumash laborers under the direction of Fr. Antonio Ripoll.{{cite sign|title=Mission Historical Park|date=May 18, 1953|type=Plaque within the park|publisher=Santa Barbara Chapter of the National Society Daughters of the American Colonists|location=Santa Barbara, California}} The hexagon-shaped sandstone reservoir was paved with bricks and plastered with pink-hued cement. The ruins of the {{convert|31|ft|m|2|abbr=on}} grist mill remain. Signage in the park indicate that water was introduced into the mill via a wooden-gated penstock. A customized clay pipe then allowed for water to flow downward at a 35 degree angle against the buckets of the mill's water wheel, thus causing it to rotate and generate power for the millstones to grind grain into flour. The water then proceeded from the mill to the lower reservoir where it was channeled to irrigate fields, orchards, and the fountain.
= Filter house =
Abutting the upper reservoir to its north are the ruins of a filter house,{{cite web|url={{NRHP url|id=66000237}}|title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory - Nomination Form: Santa Barbara Mission|author1=Charles W. Snell|author2=Patricia Heintzelman|access-date=2015-12-01|format=PDF|date=September 1975|publisher=National Park Service}} {{NRHP url|id=66000237|title=16 Photos (1975)|photos=y}} which purified water for domestic purposes. The incoming water flowed through a concoction of charcoal and sandstone before it was channeled via an aqueduct to the lower reservoir.
= Lower reservoir =
In 1806, a square stone reservoir was constructed as part of an irrigation system providing water for the Mission's orchards and gardens.{{cite book|title=Historic Spots in California, Third Edition|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wYGaAAAAIAAJ&q=mission+historical+park+santa+barbara&pg=PA418|isbn=0-8047-0079-6|author1=Hoover, M.B.|author2=Rensch, H.E.|author3=Rensch, E.G.|publisher=Stanford University Press|location=Stanford, California|year=1966|page=417}} Originally measuring {{convert|7|ft|m|2|abbr=on}} deep with an area of 110 ft2, the reservoir was capable of holding some 535,000 gallons of water.{{cite sign|title=Mission Historical Park|type=Interpretive signage within the park|publisher=City of Santa Barbara Parks & Recreation Department|location=Santa Barbara, California}} Located north of Almeda Padre Serra within Mission Park, this reservoir was well-crafted enough to be utilized by the city for water storage until 1993. It was hence transferred from the Public Works Department to the Parks Department to serve as part of Mission Historical Park.City of Santa Barbara General Plan - [http://www.santabarbaraca.gov/civicax/filebank/blobdload.aspx?BlobID=16916 Appendix C: History of the City], December 2011, page 97.
= Aqueduct =
File:SB Mission 20150914 (21995024668).jpg
In 1807, a dam and complementary aqueduct system was constructed in Mission Canyon to supply water to the residents of the Mission. One dam was built across the west fork of Mission Creek (formerly Pedregosa Creek), approximately 1.5 miles north of the Santa Barbara Mission. Another was built across the east fork of the creek, located about 3 miles from the Mission.{{cite book|title=Monograph on the Old Franciscan Mission: Santa Barbara, California|last1=Weekes-Wilson|first1=Leila|publisher=Pacific Coast Publishing|location=California|date=October 1913|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GYYrAQAAMAAJ&q=pedregosa+creek+historic+santa+barbara&pg=PT14}} A remaining portion of the lower aqueduct wall still exists north of the grassy area within the park.
= Tannery =
The Tannery housed the massive stone vats containing treatment chemicals that were used to convert animal hides into leather. The leather product was used to manufacture horse saddles, footwear, and other leather accessories.
= Pottery =
The Pottery is located at just north of the intersection of Alameda Padre Serra and East Los Olivos Street. Built in 1808, the facility was where the Chumash workers produced tiles, water pipes, and cooking pottery. In 1914, a portion of the pottery was destroyed in order to construct the Alameda Padre Serra roadway.
Gallery
Image:SB MissionParkACPostelRosePlaque2 20150916.jpg|Commemoration plaque for the rose garden
Image:SB MissionParkACPostelRose2 20150916 (22241169334).jpg|View of the Santa Barbara Mission from the Rose Garden
Image:SB MissionParkRoseJustJoey 20150917.jpg|"Just Joey" (AARS 1972) cultivar rose within the garden
Image:Mission Santa Barbara, showing ruins of the old mill, California, 1898 (CHS-462).jpg|The ruins of the grist mill, 1898
Image:SBCA MissionPark GristMill 2017.jpg|The ruins of the grist mill, 2017
Image:SBCA MissionHistoricalPark 2014.jpg|Northerly view of a Santa Ynez peak from the park.
Image:SB MissionParkPlaque1 20150914 (22805693514).jpg|Plaque adjacent to the historic waterworks infrastructure
Image:SB_MissionParkPottery1_20150914.jpg|The Pottery located just east of E. Los Olivos Street
Image:SB MissionParkUpperReservoir2 20150914 (23433671665).jpg|Western view of the upper reservoir
Image:SB MissionParkLowerReservoir 20150914 (23406890406).jpg|Lower reservoir adjacent to the historic grist mill ruins (right), 2015
Image:SB MissionParkPlaque2 20150914 (23435849665).jpg|Historic plaque documenting the 1827 grist mill
Image:SB MissionParkUnknownBldg 20150914 (22809316654).jpg|Unidentified historic building foundation within the park (possibly a guardhouse)
References
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External links
{{commons category|Mission Park (Santa Barbara, California)}}
- {{Official website|http://www.santabarbaraca.gov/gov/depts/parksrec/parks/features/views/missionhistorical.asp}} City of Santa Barbara, California: Mission Historical Park