Lotta Crabtree in SF: Difference between revisions

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'''<font face = arial light> <font color = maroon> <font size = 3>Unfinished History</font></font> </font>'''
[[Image:perfarts$lotta-crabtree-photograph.jpg]]
[[Image:perfarts$lotta-crabtree-photograph.jpg]]
Lotta Crabtree


'''LOTTA CRABTREE, variety star (1847-1924) '''
'''LOTTA CRABTREE, variety star (1847-1924) '''


Vivacious Lotta was a true child of the Gold Rush. She sang and danced in gold mining camps from the age of nine and held fond ties to San Francisco long after becoming New York's highest-paid stage star. She gave the city an ornate [http://shapingsf.org/wiki/popup_orvid?.html water fountain] that survived the 1906 earthquake and still stands today at Market and Kearny Streets.
Vivacious Lotta was a true child of the Gold Rush. She sang and danced in gold mining camps from the age of nine and held fond ties to San Francisco long after becoming New York's highest-paid stage star. She gave the city an ornate [[Lotta's Fountain| water fountain]] that survived the 1906 earthquake and still stands today at Market and Kearny Streets.


Contributors to this page include:
''Photo: SF Performing Arts Library and Museum ''


''SF Performing Arts Library and Museum - Publisher or Photographer ''
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SF Performing Arts Library and Museum - Writer
[[category:Performing Arts]] [[category:Gold Rush]] [[category:1860s]] [[category:1870s]] [[category:1900s]]
 
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Latest revision as of 00:16, 12 January 2009

Unfinished History

Perfarts$lotta-crabtree-photograph.jpg

LOTTA CRABTREE, variety star (1847-1924)

Vivacious Lotta was a true child of the Gold Rush. She sang and danced in gold mining camps from the age of nine and held fond ties to San Francisco long after becoming New York's highest-paid stage star. She gave the city an ornate water fountain that survived the 1906 earthquake and still stands today at Market and Kearny Streets.

Photo: SF Performing Arts Library and Museum

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