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Small dia de los muertos altar
Small dia de los muertos altar












I post new blogs pretty often, so you might want to bookmark and check back from time to time. Thank you for visiting Cool San Diego Sights! You can sign up at the counter inside the Robinson-Rose Visitor Information Center! The guided tour lasts a little less than an hour. A limited number of people can participate. I encourage those visiting Old Town San Diego State Historic Park this week to sign up for the daily 3 pm Día de los Muertos altar tour. Most Californio families, like the Estudillos, were Roman Catholic…traveling priests performed weddings, baptisms, and memorial services here in the Sala for the people of San Diego. The sprawling adobe and its beautiful courtyard, built by Presidio comandante José María Estudillo and his son, lieutenant José Antonio Estudillo, became San Diego’s social and religious center during the Mexican and early American periods. I know nothing specific about it…Īnd finally, probably the most impressive of all the Old Town altars is the one inside the sala (living room) of La Casa de Estudillo. The following example on a cart can be found in Wallach & Goldman Square, among many shops. The next two altars that I photographed today were not part of the tour. This altar is quite unusual in that it contains a pile of sorts–small typesetting pieces used to assemble words, that were subsequently printed in columns on sheets of paper using a hand press. Briseño, a native of Chile, was the printer. Bushyhead was not only a Cherokee miner and lawman, but he was the newspaper’s first publisher. The photos are of Edward “Ned” Bushyhead and José Narciso Briseño. Our group finally headed to the small historic San Diego Union Building, where an altar remembered two figures in the early history of our city’s major newspaper. It was interesting to see that the ofrendas (offerings) on the floor in front of this altar include playing cards, a pipe and liquor!įood and objects that brought pleasure in life are meant to entice souls back to our world–at least during Día de los Muertos. Stewart was a shipmate of famous author Richard Henry Dana, Jr., who described a visit to the house in Two Years Before the Mast. Their daughter, Rosa Machado, married a New Englander named John “Jack” Collins Stewart and thereby inherited this house. The images in this altar are of José Manuel Machado and his wife María Serafina Valdez de Machado. Next came an altar inside La Casa de Machado y Stewart. The newly married couple was gifted this house by María’s father José Manuel Machado, who commanded the military guards at nearby Mission San Diego. Some photographs in the altar showed relatives of María Antonia and her husband, José Antonio Nicasio Silvas. In one room of the historic adobe a large, beautiful altar paid tribute to many notable residents of San Diego in the mid-1800s. Inside, we learned about this old adobe’s history. We then proceeded across a corner of Old Town’s grassy plaza to La Casa de Machado y Silvas, which is now the Commercial Restaurant museum. Without dedicated volunteers, maintaining the vibrancy of this very special place wouldn’t be possible. Over 4 million visitors come to this State Park every year, including many school children.

small dia de los muertos altar

The touching altar honored and remembered Old Town State Park volunteers who had passed on from this life. Our group began by looking at a small altar set up on a cart by the Visitor Center’s front door. You can learn all about the Day of the Dead by checking out this Wikipedia page here. Our group began in front of the Robinson-Rose Visitor Information Center, where we learned about the history of Día de los Muertos, its origin, meaning, and the rich symbolism contained in the traditional altars. Our friendly and knowledgeable guide was Aaron, whom I’d seen a few minutes prior to the tour hammering away in Old Town’s Blacksmith Shop! Today I and several other visitors enjoyed an educational tour of four particular altars. These altars pay tribute to people who lived in early San Diego.

SMALL DIA DE LOS MUERTOS ALTAR FREE

Several of the beautiful altars you are about to see have been installed in historical buildings that operate in the State Park as free museums. The holiday stretches from November 1st to 2nd.

small dia de los muertos altar

They were built for Mexico’s traditional Día de los Muertos celebration, which begins in a little over a week. Many beautiful Día de los Muertos altars can now be viewed in Old Town San Diego State Historic Park.












Small dia de los muertos altar