The history of the city of San Francisco has been greatly influenced by its location at the entrance of one of the world's
best natural harbors.
The first Native Americans to settle this
region found the bay to be a vast natural resource for hunting and gathering
their provisions and for the establishment of many small villages.
Collectively, these early Native Americans were known as the Ohlone.
The first Europeans that sailed the north
coast of California were Juan Cabrillo and Sir Francis Drake. Both failed to notice the entrance to the bay
most likely due to fog that is prevalent in the region.
The earliest European colonial enterprises
came in 1769, by Spaniards Don Gaspar de Portola and Fra Junipero Serra who
established military and religious settlements. San Francisco became part of the United States
in 1848.
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Mark Twain said that the coldest winter he ever experienced was a summer in San Francisco. Something tells me that Twain never lived through a winter quite like this one!
ReplyDeleteAs America's greatest novelist he is permitted to exaggerate. Now, as America's smallest essayist, I say that I have never experienced a summer as cold as in San Francisco.
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