Browse Items (21 total)

fiesta001 - Children Festively Get Ready for the Floral Parade - watermark.jpg
The fashions of Old Spanish and the 1920's intermingle as children prepare for the parade down State Street.

fiesta019 - Preparing the Floral Parade - watermark.jpg
Children prepare for the parade as they play in and around one of the featured carts.

fiesta021 - State Street Floral Parade - watermark.jpg
Children look out at the State Street crowds at the Carillo intersection and welcome them to the festivities. In the background, the original County National Bank, today the Montecito Bank and Trust, can be seen.

fiesta003 - Dwight Murphy and his Palominos - watermark.jpg
Palomino horses, now a main feature in the Old Spanish Days Fiesta parade, are not native to Santa Barbara, but are the result of tireless work by Fiesta's first El Presidente, Dwight Murphy (above left). Golden Palomino horses, once known as…

fiesta008 - Old Spanish Day's Palominos - watermark.jpg
The palomino horse was coined as "the living symbol of Old Spanish Days fiesta" in an August 3, 1941 News-Press article. These fair-maned horses were garbed in silver and paraded down State Street in the earliest Fiestas, and visitors still enjoy…

fiesta005 - El Paseo, Santa Barbara's Connection to its Roots - watermark.jpg
El Paseo was not only central to Fiesta, but to Santa Barbara's Spanish style as a whole. El Paseo opened in 1923 and, along with Casa de la Guerra, became the inspiration for reconstruction after the 1925 earthquake devastated the Santa Barbara…

fiesta014 - The Street of Spain Welcomes Guests to the Mercado - watermark.jpg
Bernard and Irene Hoffman, the benefactors who hired James Osborne Craig to design El Paseo, hoped that the Street of Spain plan would be just "the beginning of a wonderful evolution which will take in all of the old Spanish town." Here, Fiesta…

fiesta018 - The Early Mercado - watermark.jpg
One of many traditions that have carried on from the original Fiesta, the mercado is still a local favorite. The original mercado featured vendors selling luscious fruit and vegetables.

fiesta013 - The set-up of the Mercado - watermark.jpg
Today, tents and booths line De La Guerra Street and De La Guerra Plaza; in the 1920s and 1930s, an open air market welcomed visitors and residents alike to De La Guerra Plaza and El Paseo.

fiesta012- Ladies of the Mercado - watermark.jpg
With large gourds resting on their heads, these women travel around the mercado with flowers, vegetables, and fruit.

fiesta002 - Performers Gather in El Paseo - watermark.jpg
Gathered in El Paseo, Fiesta performers would dress in traditional Spanish attire that also evoked the current Hollywood interpretation of California history.

fiesta017 - Music and Dancing in El Paseo - watermark.jpg
El Paseo, built in the early 1920's around Casa de la Guerra, was the heart of Old Spanish Days Fiesta with a mercado, performances, and public gatherings. Here, one lovely lady performs a romantic Spanish dance surrounded by a six-piece…
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