Accessions Processed in 2008
PHOTOGRAPHS OF UCSD
Scope and Content of Series
SERIES 1) PHOTOGRAPHS OF UCSD: Black-and-white contact sheets, negatives, and mounted photographs taken between 1965 and 1970.
Many of the photographs were taken to illustrate the brochure entitled
We Propose to Challenge (1966) and document instruction, laboratories, student life, and some faculty, including philosophy professor Herbert Marcuse.
Other photographs show Muir and Revelle Colleges, the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University Hospital, an "Electronic
Music Happening," and composer Ernst Krenek during his February 1970 visit to UCSD. Arranged alphabetically by subject.
Box 1, Folder 1
Electronic Music Happening
1968
General Note
Contact sheets.
Box 1, Folder 2
Krenek, Ernst - Visit to UCSD
1970 February
General Note
Contact sheets; 2 x 2 black and white negatives.
Box 1, Folder 3
Muir College
undated
General Note
Contact sheet.
Box 1, Folder 4
Revelle College
1967 August 23
General note
Contact sheets; 2 x 2 black and white negatives.
Box 1, Folder 5
Scripps Institution of Oceanography
1967, undated
General note
2 x 2 and 4 x 5 black and white negatives.
Box 1, Folder 6
University Hospital
1968 June - July
General note
Contact sheets and 2 x 2 black and white negatives; taken for a brochure.
We Propose to Challenge
1966
Box 1, Folder 8
Contact sheets for brochure; 4 x 5 negatives
Oversize FB-206, Folder 1-2
Oversize MC-051, Folder 01
Oversize FB-206, Folder 3
BAJA CALIFORNIA, 1967-1992
Scope and Content of Series
SERIES 2) BAJA CALIFORNIA, 1967-1992: Ninety-two black-and-white and color images of people and places in Baja California,
including peninsular mission architecture, historic places, everyday life on remote ranchos, and landmarks along the unpaved
transpeninsular highway. The photographs are arranged in the order in which they were exhibited. Arranged in three subseries:
A) Pre-history and History of Antigua California, 2) Life at Remote Ranches In Baja California, and 3) Landmarks Along the
Trans-Peninsular Highway.
The following subseries descriptions were written by Crosby and describe three groups of exhibited photographs.
A) Pre-History and History of Antigua California
"The Native Americans of the central and lower peninsula disappeared after less than two centuries of exposure to alien diseases
and European ideological and economic domination. Their material remains are few and, for the most part, inconspicuous. Thirty
years ago, during my first major adventure in Baja California, I was guided to magnificent displays of rock art, paintings
and engravings. That experience-- and the scant printed information available on the subject-- inspired me to spend fifteen
months in the mountains of the mid-peninsula during the next seven years. My investigations resulted in the text and illustrations
for
The Cave Paintings of Baja California [1975]. The pre-historic art of Baja California now attracts admiring visitors from around the world. The peninsula displays
a variety of other remains as well, items worked from or built of stone: hunting blinds, sleeping circles, metates, manos,
and other miscellaneous implements."
"The permanent Spanish presence in California began with a toehold established in 1697. During the eighteenth century, the
mission-based colony grew to encompass the entire peninsula and expanded onto the mainland to the northwest. I was introduced
to peninsular history when I was hired to illustrate a book commemorating the two hundredth anniversary [1969] of Spanish
entry into Alta California. My experience did not begin with books or documents, it came in the field in encounters with remains
of mission churches, el camino real-- the inter-mission road-- and other masonry constructions resulting from early economic
activity: mining, pearling, cattle ranching, and mission agriculture."
"Historic preservation was barely a concept during the peninsula's three Hispanic centuries. Known losses were great, but
most went unrecorded and can only be imagined. Since the opening of the paved highway in 1973, I have watched the patrimony
of the peninsula suffer accelerating losses from neglect, looting, and development. I hope that my work will stimulate interest
in finding, recording, and preserving the historical legacy. That is my appeal to Baja California's leaders and residents-
and to sincere aficionados wherever they reside."
B) Life at Remote Ranches in Baja California
"Peninsular California experienced profound changes during the first third of the nineteenth century. Mexican independence
[1821] ended Spanish interest and support; the new government lacked finances and was primarily involved in its own organization
and solving problems closer to the heart of the republic. By 1830, Baja California languished for lack of money, supplies,
and trade. As the numbers of mission Indians declined, missions were abandoned or secularized. The Presidio of Loreto, the
peninsula's largest employer, was scaled down, then abandoned. Local men turned to subsistence ranching or farming on small
land claims or, more frequently, to squatting on ex-mission properties or at remote water sources in the sierras or their
foothills. The population, so dispersed, developed the basis for much of the small economic activity in the area. The few
towns and villages became trading centers where merchants dealt with farmers and ranchers."
"This economy, with many of its practices and traditions almost unchanged, persisted to a remarkable degree in 1967 when I
first entered the remote areas. However, in half a dozen years, the paved road brought in the outside world and old ways quickly
began to fade. Goods and produce from the mainland and tourism from the United States changed the local economy by lowering
demand for more expensive local produce and by creating other needs for local labor. I was extremely fortunate to arrive before
those events, to travel to many dozens of inaccessible ranches, to know their people, and to experience the last days of a
culture hauntingly like that of our own American West in the nineteenth century. My 1981 book,
Last of the Californios, set forth my photographs, my experiences, and my research vis-à-vis this remarkable-- and remarkably nearby-- survival."
C) Landmarks Along the Wheeltracks Grandly Known as the 'Trans-Peninsular Highway'
"Since the second decade of the twentieth century, men have used automobiles to travel over the more level terrain in various
parts of the peninsula. Gradually, after truly heroic efforts with hand tools and a little dynamite and blasting powder--
the efforts of various communities, companies, and ranchers made it possible to traverse the entire length of Baja California,
usually with aid from local manpower and mulepower to pass through the most difficult terrain. By the 1940s, it was possible,
with favorable weather, to drive a high-clearance vehicle from San Diego to San José del Cabo, but few made the trip without
long delays due to mechanical problems or shortages of fuel or other wondrous difficulties. Such trips were adventures, often
the greatest adventures of the travelers' lives. A cult sprang up around Baja California travel. The individuals or families
that offered gas and meals along the way became in-group personalities. Howard Gulick and Peter Gerhard put their experiences
to use in creating a truly inspired handbook,
Lower California Guidebook-- a historically accurate and geographically sound work that assisted the traveler and educated him as he went."
"The same set of wheeltracks served the slow-growing peninsular economy as an avenue for imports from the U. S. and mainland
Mexico and for exports of local produce from fisheries, fields, or herds. Mexican truckers became part of the growing legend;
regulars often provided assistance to visitors in distress, sometimes pulling them from mud or sand, sometimes transporting
vital vehicle parts, sometimes carrying them to places from which they could get conventional transportation back to their
homes. I know at one time or another, I needed and got all of these services and much more. Travel was slow in those days,
stops were frequent and there was a lot of camaraderie; friendships were made between fellow travelers and with those who
lived or worked along the road. It was an idyll not truly appreciated until the paved road was built and opened in 1973. Changes
were sudden and mostly painful to old-timers, whether gringo or peninsular. Much of the romance disappeared. Few of those
who had provided services along the old road had the money or political clout to be involved in profits from the new tourism.
An era had ended;
Lower California Guidebook is a collectors' item. Sic transit gloria mundi...."
Pre-History and History of Antigua California
Oversize MC-143, Folder 03
Enrique Hambleton with petroglyphs, Sierra de San Francisco
1974
Oversize MC-143, Folder 01
Harry Crosby at Cueva Pintada, Sierra de San Francisco
1977
Oversize MC-143, Folder 03
Boca de San Julio, Sierra de San Francisco
1974
Oversize MC-144, Folder 01
Prehistoric hunting blinds
1973
Oversize MC-143, Folder 01
Daunting view of the Sierra de la Giganta from Chuenque on the Loreto Plain
1990
Oversize MC-143, Folder 01
Mision de San Javier seen from a high mesa to the east
1967
Oversize MC-144, Folder 01
View of San Javier from the south slope of the arroyo
1967
Oversize MC-144, Folder 01
Interior view of Mision de San Javier
1967
Oversize MC-143, Folder 03
Plaster detail on the arch beneath the choir loft at Mision de San Javier
1967
Oversize MC-144, Folder 01
View from San Javier's belfry
1967
Oversize MC-144, Folder 01
Lime kiln midway between the missions at San Javier and San Jose de Comondu
1986
Oversize MC-144, Folder 01
Foundations of the church built at Mision de San Jose de Comondu in 1716
1990
Oversize MC-144, Folder 01
One of several agricultural plots developed at Mision de San Jose de Comondu
1967
Oversize MC-144, Folder 01
Ruins of the chapel at the visiting station of Londo
1990
General note
Once an important cattle ranch for Mision de Loreto. 15 x 15
Oversize MC-144, Folder 02
Grapevines at Mision de San Ignacio
1974
General note
Long the most important of the peninsula's wine producing missions. 15 x 15
Oversize MC-144, Folder 02
Facade of Mision de San Ignacio
1967
Oversize MC-144, Folder 02
Great Muralla, or dike at Mision de San Ignacio
1971
Oversize MC-143, Folder 01
Mision de San Luis Gonzaga
1990
Oversize MC-144, Folder 02
El Camino Real midway between San Ignacio and Santa Gertrudis
1967
Oversize MC-143, Folder 01
El Camino Real in Arroyo del Infierno
1971
Oversize MC-144, Folder 02
El Camino Real crosses the Llano del Gentil as it approaches Mision de San Borja
1967
Oversize MC-143, Folder 03
El Camino Real crosses the Llano del Gentil - trail marker
1967
Oversize MC-144, Folder 02
Mision de Santa Maria de los Angeles
1967
Oversize MC-144, Folder 02
Bahia de la Ventana and the Surgidero de Cerralvo
1992
Oversize MC-144, Folder 02
Ruins of an eighteenth century silver refining installation
1974
Oversize MC-144, Folder 03
Oversize MC-143, Folder 01
Adobe ruins at Santa Ana
1974
Oversize MC-144, Folder 03
San Telmo Valley seen from foothills of the Sierra de San Pedro Martir
1968
Oversize MC-144, Folder 03
Life at Remote Ranches in Baja California
Oversize MC-144, Folder 03
View to the west looking down the arroyo of Rancho del Potrero
1980
Oversize MC-144, Folder 03
View northward over Rancho de San Antonio
1972
Oversize MC-144, Folder 03
Rancho de Santa Barbara on the eastern slope of Sierra de San Juan
1973
Oversize MC-144, Folder 03
Oversize MC-143, Folder 02
Rancho de San Dionisio in the foothills of the Sierra de la Laguna
1972
Oversize MC-144, Folder 03
Corredor at Rancho de la Soledad
1972
Oversize MC-144, Folder 04
Corredor at Rancho de las Calabazas
1971
Oversize MC-144, Folder 04
Rancho de la Purificacion
1972
Oversize MC-143, Folder 02
Chapel at Rancho de la Soledad
1972
Oversize MC-143, Folder 02
Las Jicamas, a seasonal goat ranch
1980
Oversize MC-144, Folder 04
Goats released after milking at Rancho de las Jicamas
1980
Oversize MC-144, Folder 04
Drawing water at Rancho de los Pozos
1971
Oversize MC-143, Folder 02
Kitchen scene at Rancho de Pie de la Cuesta
1971
Oversize MC-144, Folder 04
Kitchen scene at Rancho de la Vinorama [de arriba]
1980
Oversize MC-143, Folder 03
Berta's mural at Rancho de Santa Marta
1973
Oversize MC-144, Folder 04
Treadle sewing machine at Rancho de Pie de la Cuesta
1971
Oversize MC-144, Folder 04
Grindstone at Rancho de Guadalupe
1980
Oversize MC-144, Folder 04
Tanning Vats at Rancho de San Nicolas
1971
Oversize MC-144, Folder 05
Flume at Rancho de San Gregorio
1971
Oversize MC-144, Folder 05
Picking dates at Rancho de San Martin
1980
Oversize MC-144, Folder 05
Cattle in the tinaja at Rancho del Zorillo
1980
Oversize MC-144, Folder 05
Mule roundup near Rancho de San Martin
1980
Oversize MC-144, Folder 05
Mules in stone corral at Rancho de Vivelejos
1980
Oversize MC-144, Folder 05
Packtrain crosses the mesa del Tabardillo
1977
Oversize MC-143, Folder 02
Opening a cattle gate between the ranches of San Nicolas and San Pablo
1973
Oversize MC-144, Folder 05
Return from a three-day roundtrip to the nearest store
1980
Oversize MC-144, Folder 05
My party starts the descent from San Gabriel to San Narciso
1980
Oversize MC-144, Folder 06
Ranchers from San Antonio guide their animals through Arroyo del Infierno
1971
Oversize MC-144, Folder 06
Burros rest between burdens at Rancho Carricito
1980
Oversize MC-144, Folder 06
Loading a burro at Rancho de Santa Cruz
1972
Oversize MC-144, Folder 06
Loaded burros stop for water at Rancho de Guadalupe
1980
Landmarks Along the Trans-Peninsular Highway
Oversize MC-144, Folder 06
San Felipe as it was....
1952
Oversize MC-143, Folder 02
Oversize MC-145, Folder 01
Landform fifteen miles southeast of El Rosario
1990
Oversize MC-144, Folder 06
Oversize MC-144, Folder 06
Laguna Seca de Chapala
1967
Oversize MC-144, Folder 06
Laguna Seca de Chapala
1967
Oversize MC-143, Folder 03
Oversize MC-145, Folder 02
Gas Station/Rest Stop near Mezquital
1971
Oversize MC-145, Folder 02
Gas Station/Rest Stop near Mezquital
1971
Oversize MC-143, Folder 03
Roadside butcher shop in Villa Insurgentes
1967
Oversize MC-145, Folder 02
Hulks of old cars at Calmalli
1971
Oversize MC-145, Folder 02
Hulks of old cars at Calmalli
1967
Oversize MC-145, Folder 02
Stretch of the old dirt road near Rancho del Tablon
1971
Oversize MC-145, Folder 02
Old road into San Ignacio
1971
Oversize MC-145, Folder 02
Frank Fischer's Garage in San Ignacio
Oversize MC-145, Folder 02
Frank Fischer's Garage in San Ignacio
Oversize MC-145, Folder 03
Frank Fischer's Garage in San Ignacio
Oversize MC-143, Folder 03
Frank Fischer's Garage in San Ignacio
Oversize MC-145, Folder 03
Windmill and pump built from auto parts near San Ignacio
1972
Oversize MC-145, Folder 03
Old road from San Ignacio to Santa Rosalia
1975
Oversize MC-145, Folder 01
Santa Rosalia near sunset
1967
Oversize MC-145, Folder 01
Santa Rosalia: the Boleo mill in action
1967
Oversize MC-145, Folder 03
Santa Rosalia: Scrapped railroad wheels at the Boleo mill
1967
Oversize MC-145, Folder 03
Santa Rosalia: Narrow gauge engine at the Boleo mill
1967
Oversize MC-145, Folder 03
Santa Rosalia: A worker oiling machinery at the Boleo mill
1967
Oversize MC-145, Folder 03
Local ranchers scan horizon from atop El Picacho in the Sierra de la Laguna
1972
Oversize MC-145, Folder 03
Red volcanic agglomerate cliff in Arroyo de San Pablo
1977
General note
Sierra de San Francisco. 15 x 15
Oversize MC-145, Folder 04
Morning mists at Mesa del Tabardillo, northwest Sierra de San Francisco
1977
Oversize MC-145, Folder 01
Sea of Cortez from a beach north of the salina at San Evarito
1972
Oversize MC-145, Folder 04
Sea of Cortez from a beach south of Los Dolores
1972
Oversize MC-145, Folder 04
Large zalates (ficus palmeri) flourish in canyon above San Sebastian
1967
Oversize MC-145, Folder 01
Great Tinaja in Arroyo del Parral
1971
RURAL LIFE IN SONORA, 1960-1973
Scope and Content of Series
Series 3) RURAL LIFE IN SONORA, 1960-1973: Black and white mounted photographs of the Sonora region, including ranch owners
and their family, local traditions and crafts, historic or significant buildings, landmarks, and other images of daily life.
Arranged alphabetically by photograph title.
Oversize AB-18-F01
A-E
1960-1969
General Note
Includes following titles:
A Matachín During Holy Week at Santa María de Tepupa
Adobe Manufacture
Church Bells at Cedros
Cibuta on the Río Magdalena
Cobbled street in El Fuerte
Cobbler, Alamos
Construction of Fishing Boats, Puerto Peñasco (3)
El Campo Santo - Holy Ground, Movas
El Gran Desierto
Oversize AB-18-F02
F-L
1959-1969, 1986
General Note
Includes following titles:
Fire in the Night, Alamos (2)
In the Cool of the Evening, Suaqui de Batuc
La Dura
La Purísima Concepción de Nuestra Señora de Caborca (2)
La Purísima Concepción del Real de los Alamos
Las Trincheras
Lleñeros on an Alamos Street
Looking East over the Plaza Principal, Alamos
Oversize AB-18-F03
M-S
1962-1969
General Note
Includes following titles:
Mules
Nuestra Señora de la Asunción de Arizpe
Ox Cart, Rancho Cerro Agudo, Sinaloa
Ranch House at Capitahuaca, Eighteen Miles South of Alamos
Retail Stores
Río Sonora near Ures
San Antonio Paduano del Oquitoa
San Miguel Arcángel de Horcasitas
Oversize AB-18-F04
M-S
1962-1969
General
Includes following titles:
Nuestra Señora de la Concepción de Movas
Nuestro Padre San Ignacio de Cabórica
Pinacate (3)
Ranch House, Rancho Cerro Agudo, Sinaloa
Retail Stores, Villa de Sinaloa
Oversize AB-18-F05
S-W
1960-1973
General Note
Includes following titles:
Santa María de Tepupa
Street Scene in Alamos
Talabartero (Leatherworker), Alamos (2)
Tapete Weaver in Masiaca
The Municipal Laundry, Suaqui de Batuc
Vah Ki, Arizona
When the River is Your Only Water Source, Suaqui de Batuc
MANUSCRIPTS
Scope and Content of Series
SERIES 4) MANUSCRIPTS: Includes Crosby's treatment proposal for a book on Baja California mountain people, cave paintings,
and sierra life. The proposal led to his book entitled
The Cave Paintings of Baja California (1975). The volume includes Crosby's written proposal, a statement of professional background, his vita, maps of Baja California,
and 39 photographs. Also includes a chapter entitled "The Cape Sierra," regarding Crosby's exploration of the Baja California
region, and annotated to reflect desired photograph placements.
Box 1, Folder 9
Sierras of Baja California, The People of the Baja California Mountains
undated
General note
A proposal to the media for word and picture coverage of some nearby but remarkably isolated places and people. Includes photographs.
Box 1, Folder 10
"The Cape Sierra" chapter
2013
Oversize MC-136, Folder 18
Reprinted historical maps of Baja California
Oversize MC-136, Folder 19
Hydrographic maps of Baja California (US Navy, published)
NEGATIVES
Scope and Content of Series
SERIES 5) NEGATIVES: Black-and-white negatives arranged in three subseries: A) Baja California Sierra, B) Tijuana, and C)
Sonora. The first subseries contains negatives in 35mm, 2 1/4 in, 4x6 cm, 6x7 cm, 6x9 cm, and 6x12 cm formats and largely
document the ranches and ranch life in the Sierra de San Francisco, Sierra de Guadalupe, Sierra de San Borja, and Sierra de
la Laguna. This series does not contain images of cave paintings and mural art. The Tijuana subseries contains images from
a study of Tijuana, Mexico, taken in June 1964 and later published in
Tijuana 1964: una visión fotográfica e histórica. The Sonora subseries contains images of towns, missions, churches, and people in the state of Sonora, Mexico.
All content in this series has been digitized and is available for viewing on the UC San Diego Library Digital Collections
website.
Baja California Sierra
Note
3,323 black-and-white negatives; located in negative archive.
Tijuana
Note
644 black-and-white negatives; located in negative archive.
Sonora
Note
398 black-and-white negatives; located in negative archive.
Accession Processed in 2015
NEGATIVES AND SLIDES
Scope and Content of Series
Series 6) NEGATIVES AND SLIDES: Black and white and color negatives and slides, mostly 35mm and 2x2 inches. Baja California
is captured in scenes of desert ranchos and daily ranch life, rock art, Sierra de Laguna, Sierra de Guadalupe, Sinaloa, Sonora,
and other landscapes. The images are often labeled with Crosby's own numbering system. Many of the negatives can be cross-referenced
with Series 7) CONTACT SHEETS. Series is arranged alphabetically by subject.
Box 2, Folder 1
Baja California ranch portraits
1997, undated
General Note
Fernando Arce Sandoval. 2 x 2 black and white negatives.
Box 2, Folder 2
Baja Sierra
1967, 1971
General Note
Numbers 1403, 1167 920410, and 848A. Rosarito, BC. 2 x 2 black and white negatives. Also see Series 7) CONTACT SHEETS.
Box 2, Folder 3
Casas de Millan, Estremadura, Spain. Birthplace of Miguel del Barco
undated
General Note
35mm color slides.
Box 2, Folder 4
Cave Paintings of Baja California (Sunbelt Edition)
1998
General Note
Includes 35mm color slides, 35mm color negatives, and 2 x 2 color transparencies for Cave Painting collection.
Box 2, Folder 5
El Rosario
General Note
2 x 2 color transparencies.
Box 2, Folder 6
Nayarit
1989 November
General Note
Numbers 891101-891103. Chacala, Matanchén. 2 x 2 black and white negatives.
Box 2, Folder 7
Real de Santa Ana, Baja California Sur
1988 November 15
General Note
4 x 5 black and white negatives.
Box 2, Folder 8
Rock art in the Sierra de San Francisco
2011
General Note
Includes description of individual slides written by Harry Crosby. 35 mm color slides.
Box 2, Folder 9
San Felipe
1955
General Note
35mm color slides.
Box 2, Folder 10
San Rafael
undated
General Note
2 x 2 color transparency.
Box 2, Folder 11
San Telmo
undated
General Note
4 x 5 black and white negatives; 2 inch color transparency.
Sierra de Guadalupe
undated
General Note
Rancho San Miguel, Rancho Calabasas, Rancho Santa Teresa, Rancho Santo Domingo, Rancho Gueribito, Rancho Rosarito, Rancho
San Jorge, Rancho Santa Marta, San Francisco de la Sierra, and Tijuana. 2 x 2 color transparencies. These slides (1-77) are
housed in the negative archive.
Box 2, Folder 12
Sierra de Juarez
1955
General Note
Laguna Hanson, Mining Village: Ojos Negros, and Sawmill "El Aserradero". 35mm color slides.
Box 2, Folder 13
Sierra de la Laguna
1972
General Note
San Dionisio to Laguna Uplands, Paraje de Pepe. 35mm color slides.
Box 2, Folder 14
Sierra de la Laguna
undated
General Note
Rancho San Dionisio, Laguna uplands. Includes 35mm black and white negatives, 35mm color slides, and color transparencies.
Box 2, Folder 15
Sierra de San Francisco
1978
General Note
35mm color slides.
Box 2, Folder 16
Sierra rock painting trip
1973
General Note
Leree family in San Gregorito; Harry, Enrique Hambleton, Ramon Aree, and Tacho Aree. 35mm black and white negatives.
Box 2, Folder 17
Sinaloa
undated
General Note
4 x 5 black and white negatives.
Box 2, Folder 18
Sonora
1969-1970
General Note
Numbers 59D01, 69409-69413, 69N11, 60401, 60409, and 70004. Caborca, Alamos, Guayparín, La Dura. 35mm and 2x 2 black and white
negatives. Also see Series 7) CONTACT SHEETS.
CONTACT SHEETS
Scope and Content of Series
Series 7) CONTACT SHEETS: Black and white prints of negatives of Baja California, with a run of contact sheets depicting Sonora.
Images includes landmarks, ranchos and rancho life, families, buildings, and other natural scenes. Arranged numerically by
Crosby's own negative roll numbering systems. Researchers should note that the first half of the contact sheets captures Baja
California in general, while the second half focuses on Sonora, which is reflected by a change in how the rolls are numbered.
Box 2, Folder 19
Roll no. 361, 386, 419, 433, 434, 511, and 732
1967 February
General Note
Santa Rosalia mill, San Jose de Comonou, San Jose del Cabo, and Cabo San Lucas.
Box 2, Folder 20
Roll no. 827-844
1967
General Note
San Vicente, La Purisima, Arroyo San Sebastian, and San Javier.
Box 2, Folder 21
Roll no. 848-859, 896, 971, and 973
1967
General Note
Mission San Francisco de Borjas, San Borja, Yubay, Graxiola family, Cabo San Lucas, San Vicente.
Box 2, Folder 22
Roll no. 1150-1162
1971 December
General Note
El Rosario, El Pedregoso, San Ignacio, and San Borjitas.
Box 2, Folder 23
Roll no. 1163-1174
1971 December
General Note
Mulegé, Sierra de la Giganta, Palmár at Todos Santos, San Ignacio/Santa Rosalía, San Bartolo, and Pescadero Rancho Los Pozos.
Box 2, Folder 24
Roll no. 1281-1290
1972
General Note
Rancho La Trinidad, Pie de la Cuestra.
Box 2, Folder 25
Roll no. 1291-1300
1972
General Note
Rancho Rosarito, Gonzalez family, Rancho San Francisco, Rancho San Nicolás, and Rancho San Gregorio.
Box 2, Folder 26
Roll no. 1301-1310
1972
General Note
El Infierno, San Nicolás, Rancho San Gregorio, Rancho La Victoria, and Rancho San Dionisio.
Box 2, Folder 27
Roll no. 1311-1320
1972
General Note
Rancho La Victoria, Cape Sierra, Rancho San Dionisio, Rancho Kakigui, and Natividad Cave.
Box 2, Folder 28
Roll no. 1321-1330
1972 November
General Note
Altamirano family, Sandoval family, San Ignacio, Sierra de San Francisco, and Capilla Ruins at San Pablo.
Box 2, Folder 29
Roll no. 1331-1339
1972-1974
General Note
San Ignacio, Rancho La Soledad, La Purificación, and Giganta.
Box 2, Folder 30
Roll no. 1341-1349
1974
General Note
Santa Marta, San Gregorio, Santa Gertrudis, and San Borja.
Box 2, Folder 31
Roll no. 1375; 1400-1427
1969-1976
General Note
San Luis, Santa Cruz, San Telmo Valley, Real de Santa Ana, and San Antonio.
Box 2, Folder 32
Roll no. 1428-1500
1976-1978
General Note
Santa Rosalía, La Esperanza, the Agiular family, and Rancho San Gregorio.
Box 2, Folder 33
Roll no. 1501-1510
1980
General Note
Sierra de Gudalupe, Rancho Las Jicamas, San Martin, and Rancho El Zorrillo.
Box 3, Folder 1
Roll no. 1511-1521
1980 November
General Note
Rancho San Martin, Rancho Vivelejos, Rancho Santo Domingo, Sierra de Guadalupe, and San Gabriel.
Box 3, Folder 2
Roll no. 1522-1560
1987 March
General Note
San Ignacio, Granite Hills, and Cañon del Parral.
Box 3, Folder 3
Roll no. 1565-1576
1988 November
General Note
Comondu, Rancho Santa Rosa, Santa Ana, Rancho Santa Gertrudis, Real de Santa Ana, and Rancho El Palmarito.
Box 3, Folder 4
Roll no. 891101-901207
1990 December
General Note
Matanché Nayarit, La Giganta Range, Caduaño, Cerro La Vírgen, and Comondú Vejo.
Box 3, Folder 5
Roll no. 901208-901217
1990 December
General Note
Comondú Viejo.
Box 3, Folder 6
Roll no. 920401-920410
1992 April
General Note
Santa Rosalita, Quiñí, Comondú, EL Horno, and Giganta.
Box 3, Folder 7
Roll no. 920411-920416; 930401
1992 April
General Note
La Giganta, San José de Comondú, Vendana Bay, El Horno, Magdalena Bay, and Cataviña.
Box 3, Folder 8
Roll no. 95801-95808
1995 August
General Note
Cuestra de Ligui, El Patrocinio, San Jose de Gracia, and San Javier.
Box 3, Folder 9
Roll no. 951001-951006
1995 October 31
General Note
La Rinconada, La Arenosa on Rivera, and San Antonio.
Box 3, Folder 10
Roll no. 97401-97403
1997 April 24
General Note
Arroyo Grande and Rivera/Crespi.
Box 3, Folder 11
Roll no. 71101-72N01
1972
Box 3, Folder 12
Roll no. 86N01-86N02
1986
Box 3, Folder 13
Roll no. 62401-62408
undated
General Note
Pinacate and Puerto Peñasco, Sonora.
Box 3, Folder 14
Roll no. 62D01-62D02
undated
General Note
Alamos, Sonora.
Box 3, Folder 15
Roll no. 63401-63406
undated
General Note
Batuc/Tepupa, Sonora.
Box 3, Folder 16
Roll no. 69N01-69N11
1969 November
General Note
Horcasitas, Arizpe, Sonora River, Tubutama, Caborca, San Ignacio MIssion, Quijano, and Santa Ana, Sonora.
Box 3, Folder 17
Roll no. 69401-69413
1969 April
General Note
Sinaloa, Los Alamos, Rio Chico, La Dura, San Jose de Dimas, Onavas, Culiacán, Guayparín, and Cerro Agudo, Sonora.
Box 3, Folder 18
Roll no. 70001-70007
1970
General Note
San Xavier del Bac; Vah Ki; Gila Butte; Bapchule, Arizona; Picacho, Arizona; Sonora.
Box 3, Folder 19
Roll no. 68301-68303
1968 March
General Note
Pinacate, Sonora.
Box 3, Folder 20
Roll no. 60N01-60N03
undated
General Note
Las Trincheras, Onavas, Masiaca, Sonora.
Box 3, Folder 21
Roll no. 59D01-60409
undated
General Note
Caborca, Alamos, Pinacate, Sonora.
Box 3, Folder 22
List of prints by roll and frame number
undated
PRINTS
Scope and Content of Series
Series 8) PRINTS: Mounted and un-mounted black and white prints of Baja California, Sonora, and Tijuana. As with the other
series, the images include ranchos, landmarks, and daily life. Many prints are labeled with Crosby's corresponding negative
number. Arranged chronologically.
Oversize FB-537, Folder 1
1961-1963
General Note
Los Álamos leather worker and tortilla maker, Sinaloa, and Tepupa. See negative numbers 63403-008; 62001-003; 60405-004, 006,
and 010; 60402-002, 003, and 005; 60406-003, and 69401-006.
Oversize FB-537, Folder 2
1962, undated
General Note
See negative rolls 64408, 62408, 62407, 62D01, 63403, 69N07, 62D01, 69N10, 63401, 69402, 69N06, 69N08, 69404, 69405, 60ND2,
69N05, 69401, 69403, 60407, 69406, 60405, 86N02, and 69N10.
Oversize FB-537, Folder 3
circa 1965
General Note
Adobe workers, Nayarit; Álamos.
Oversize FB-537, Folder 4
Baja California
1967-1990
General Note
Includes Don Chale Espinoza, Cuestra de las Virgenes, Misión de San Luis Gonzaga, and San Javier. See negative numbers 1171-26,
1517-22, 901205-03, 901216-01, 1333-09, and 840-001.
Oversize FB-537, Folder 5
Assorted
undated
General Note
See negatives 69N10-004, 60407-011, 69406-002, 372-007, 231-007, 62408-009, 62407-007, and 63403-008.
Oversize FB-537, Folder 6
Rosalyn Turteck conducting at St. James, La Jolla
undated
Oversize FB-537, Folder 7
undated
General Note
See negatives 362-006, 357-012, 278-004, 276-004 and 009, 262-002, 249-009, and 234-012.
Oversize FB-537, Folder 8
undated
General Note
See negative rolls 357, 231-232, 234, 239, 259, 263-265, 273, 275-277, 278, 281, 284, 372, 302, 358, 356, 245, and 283.
Film footage of Baja California backcountry trip
Film footage of Baja California backcountry trip
Film footage of Baja California rock art sites
Film footage of Baja California rock art sites
Film footage of Baja California rock art sites
Film footage of Baja California rock art sites
Film footage of Baja California rock art sites
Film footage of Baja California rock art sites
Film footage of Baja California rock art sites
Film footage of Baja California rock art sites