In the Garden of the Sun: Californias San Joaquin Valley
VAF 2008, Fresno
May 7th-10th, 2008
Online
Registration Available
Californias San Joaquin Valley has a distinct historic and cultural
landscape, a vestige of the Central Pacific railroad, agricultural colonies,
the lacework of canals,and tree- lined
boulevards of the late 19th century. Beginning in the 1870s a diversity
of ethnic and religious groups immigrated to this area seeking a place
in the sun. The image of The Garden of the Sun in
fact continued to serve as a promotional slogan through the 1930s to
advertise the area to prospective farmers.
The regions vernacular building record from both
the 19th and early 20th century reflects styles and types common throughout
the United States with some definite adaptations due to climate, ethnicity
and location and includes American foursquares, rural and urban tankhouses,
the Rooshian backhaus, courtyard housing (bungalow courts)
and the indigenous use of adobe and hardpan.
The 2008 conference will be held in Fresno and is sponsored
by the City of Fresnos Planning and Development Department in
cooperation with the Fresno City and County Historical Society. Fresno,
the market center for the richest agricultural county in the United
States, has a population of 500,000 and is located halfway between San
Francisco and Los Angeles. The area is served by the Fresno-Yosemite
International airport and Amtrak, which stops at the newly restored
1899 Santa Fe depot. The conference hotel is the Radisson.
|
|
All-day and half day bus tours as well as self-guided
walking tours will incorporate the following themes:
-
Canals, colonies and tree-lined boulevards:
the development of a San Joaquin Valley landscape.
-
Building in adobe and hardpan-- vernacular
as well as architect designed residential and commercial buildings.
-
Farm, labor, crops and capital: cycles of
investment in the Central Valley.
-
Ethnic heritage, the architecture and settlement
history of Chinese, Armenian, Germans from Russia, Mexican,
Scandinavians, Native Americans etc.
-
Yosemite, the arts and crafts movement and
the development of a National Park Service vernacular.
-
Preservation and spheres of influence: regional
planning for the next 50 years.
-
The New Deal turns 75.
A full schedule of activities will be posted on
the conference website later this year. Paper sessions will
also be announced at a later time. For more information please
contact the local arrangements chair,
Karana Hattersley-Drayton
(559) 621-8520
karana.hattersley-drayton@fresno.gov.
|
Gerald Haslam (in) The Great Central Valley: Californias Heartland,
University of California Press, 1993.
Norris Hundley, Jr. The Great Thirst: Californians and Water, 2nd
edition. University of California Press, 2001.
Leon S. Pitman, Domestic Tankhouses of Rural California,
Pioneer America 8 (1976): 84-97.
Wallace Smith, Garden of the Sun, A History of the San Joaquin Valley:
1772-1939 (second edition), Fresno: Linden Publishing Inc., 2004.
David Stark Wilson, Structures of Utility, Berkeley: Heyday Books,
2003.
|
|
|
|
Kearney Mansion, 1903
(Photo courtesy: Fresno Historical Society archives)
|
Koligian Tankhouse, Kearney Blvd. Fresno
(Photo: Karana Hattersley-Drayton)
|
|
|
|
|
Taoist Temple, c1890 - China Alley, Hanford
(Photo: Karana Hattersley-Drayton)
|
Covered Bridge, Wawona (Yosemite) 1857
(Photo: Karana Hattersley-Drayton)
|
|
|
|
|
Free Evangelical Lutheran Cross Church (in Germantown)
(1914)
(Photo: Karana Hattersley-Drayton)
|
Bing Kong Tong Association Building (1900)
(Photo: Karana Hattersley-Drayton)
|
|
|
|
|
Riverview Ranch (1890)
(Photo: Karana Hattersley-Drayton)
|
Van Ness Gate Entrance (1925)
(Photo: Karana Hattersley-Drayton)
|
|