Lovers Lane: Difference between revisions

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''Photos: Carla Lazer''
''Photos: Carla Lazer''
[[Image:presidio$lovers-lane$lane_itm$presidio-1870s.jpg]]
''Photo: Greg Gaar Collection''


Lovers' Lane got its name when off-duty soldiers in the 1860s used this path to walk into town to see their sweethearts. Originally, this straight path connected the Spanish garrison at the Presidio with the Mission at Dolores Lagoon, three miles southeast.
Lovers' Lane got its name when off-duty soldiers in the 1860s used this path to walk into town to see their sweethearts. Originally, this straight path connected the Spanish garrison at the Presidio with the Mission at Dolores Lagoon, three miles southeast.

Revision as of 18:18, 25 September 2008

Presidio$presidio-small-bridge.jpg

At the bottom of the path a small stone bridge crosses Tennessee Hollow and the creek whose source is El Polin Spring further south in the Presidio. This bridge is over 100 years old, built in approximately 1885. Lovers' Lane was an old path used by soldiers in the 1860's to go visit their sweethearts in town.

Presidio$lovers-lane-photo.jpg

Lovers' Lane

Photos: Carla Lazer

Presidio$lovers-lane$lane itm$presidio-1870s.jpg

Photo: Greg Gaar Collection

Lovers' Lane got its name when off-duty soldiers in the 1860s used this path to walk into town to see their sweethearts. Originally, this straight path connected the Spanish garrison at the Presidio with the Mission at Dolores Lagoon, three miles southeast.


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