Mission Santa Clara: 8th Mission, founded 1777
How this blog was created
Note: This blog was created by James Truong via email using a service called Posterous. Posterous builds a blog when you email photographs. James took photographs using an iPhone (little camera). Some photographs were taken by his mother using a Canon Digital SLR (big camera). The photographs are all watermarked accordingly. All blog posts (except this one, and the set-up post) were typed by James whose typing speed is 3 words per minute. Some posts include a group of photos that were emailed at once, they form “sets” on the blog. 
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Mission period paintings
The mission entrance
There are steps, statues, a plaque, and a welcome mat at the mission’s entrance.

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The cornerstone of the third mission
“On Nov. 19, 1781, in an elaborate ritual, Father Serra blessed and laid a cornerstone for the third Mission Church. In a cavity in the cornerstone were placed a crucifix, religious images, and Spanish coins to signify the Church treasury. (The cornerstone was accidentally found by a workman digging for a gas main along Franklin Street in 1911. The cornerstone and its contents are on display in the Mission Room of the University’s de Saisset Museum.)”

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There are eight white crosses in front of the church

“The eight white crosses on the front lawn memorialize the 1989 martyrdom of the six University of Central America Jesuit priests and their co-workers during the Salvadoran Civil War. ”

A self-Guided Walking Tour of Mission Santa Clara 

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Inside the mission
The large wooden cross
The changing church
Painting of the mission on roof tile
Mission Santa Clara was built to convert the Ohlone people
The Ohlones lived in tule reed huts. They ground acorns with grinding stones. They used baskets for fishing, holding food, and carrying their babies. Mission Santa Clara recorded the most baptisms and deaths of native people of all the missions.

See and download the full gallery on posterous

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