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Yosemite Stereoview Collection: Hutchings' Hotel

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Photographic Images - Antique Start Price:100.00 USD Estimated At:200.00 - 400.00 USD
Yosemite Stereoview Collection: Hutchings' Hotel
SOLD
50.00USD+ (12.50) buyer's premium + applicable fees & taxes.
This item SOLD at 2017 Dec 02 @ 13:00UTC-8 : PST/AKDT
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Lot of four different rare stereoviews of the Hutchings' Hotel. Cards include: C.W. Woodward (Rochester, NY) view #600 showing the hotel and Sentinel Rock; a card from the Merrimac Stereoscopic Co. that shows hotel with people in front and the Merced River; different view of hotel and river with man in canoe, no photographer listed; similar to previous but different angle, also no photographer listed. James Hutchings was a Yosemite pioneer, visiting Yosemite in 1855. He published the first illustrations of the area in his Hutchings’ California Magazine with the total 60 issues, published from 1856 to 1861, helping to turn Yosemite into an overnight sensation. He purchased the Upper Hotel in 1864 and renamed it Hutchings' House. He expanded it during the next few years, creating the famous "Big Tree Room" around a 175-foot-tall incense cedar tree. He hired famous naturalist/writer John Muir to work for him, though the two eventually clashed as they both were looking to be Yosemite's spokesman. President Abraham Lincoln signed the Act of Congress transferring Yosemite Valley and the Mariposa Grove to the State of California as a grant reserved from settlement. This meant that the Hutchings family’s claim to the property was no longer valid and requested that the couple sign a lease for their hotel. The Hutchings mounted a bitter publicity campaign and legal battle that dragged on until 1874 when they received a $24,000 settlement from the state legislature. They then left for San Francisco. (Prag Collection) Date: Location: Yosemite, California HWAC # 50678