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Sausalito (Spanish for "small willow grove") is a city in Marin County, California, United States, located 1.5 miles (2.4 kilometers) southeast of Marin City, 8 miles (13 km) south-southeast of San Rafael, [8] and about 4 miles (6 km) north of San Francisco from the Golden Gate Bridge.
Great Neck-- Middle Neck Road, Great Neck Plaza, North Shore Shopping Mart [28] Westbury-- Post Avenue, The Mall at the Source, The Galley at Westbury Plaza; Huntington-- New York Avenue, NY Route 110, Walt Whitman Mall; Patchogue-- Montauk Highway; East Hampton — Main Street, [29] Newtown Lane [30] Southampton — Main Street [31] Jobs Lane [31]
The city was served by The Sausalito Land and Ferry Company and the North Pacific Coast Railroad. [9] These provided access to Mill Valley, requiring a short ferry ride across the Bay from San Francisco to Sausalito, then a transfer to the railroad for another brief trip that terminated in Mill Valley. Mount Tamalpais lies only 12 miles (19 km ...
The Lime Point Tract Reservation is a historic name for Fort Baker, which became the new name in 1897. [2] The NRHP listing included one contributing building, 14 contributing structures and three contributing sites, with an area of 25 acres (10 ha). [1] Cavallo Point, now a conference center or hotel, is included.
Juanita Lois Musson (née Hudspeth; October 16, 1923 – February 26, 2011) was an American restaurateur who, from the 1950s to the 1980s, established and operated eleven restaurants (many of them named Juanita's Galley) in Sausalito, California, and around the San Francisco Bay Area, of which she was a longtime resident.
The American Folk Art Gallery, founded by Holger Cahill in partnership with Halpert and Goldsmith, opened in 1929 as the first folk art gallery, installing itself upstairs from the Downtown Gallery. The affinity between Halpert's artists and folk art was strong, and sales of folk art sustained the Downtown Gallery through the Depression.
The Downtown Gallery was the first commercial art gallery established in 1926 by Edith Halpert in Greenwich Village, New York City, United States. [1] At the time it was founded, it was the only New York gallery dedicated exclusively to contemporary American art by living artists.
An 1853 ad in Spanish in the bilingual Los Angeles Star for Lazard & Kremer dry goods S. Lazard & Co.'s store on Main St. between 1866 and 1872 Hamburger's, "The People's Store" Spring Street Early 1880s Stern, Cahn & Loeb's City of Paris department store at 105-7 N. Spring St. (post-1890 numbering: 205-7 Spring), sometime between 1883 and 1890 Hamburger's building (later May Co. flagship) at ...