Search

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Subject(s) san cristobal island (galapagos islands) Remove constraint Subject(s): san cristobal island (galapagos islands) Genre digital image Remove constraint Genre: digital image

Search Results

101. One Sucre Monetary Note Issued by Hacienda El Progreso in 1905

102. Holloway gout ointment jar

103. View of the Worker's Houses, Hacienda El Progreso in 1888

104. Manuel A. Cobos welcomes the Albemarle expedition to Galápagos. He strongly urges them to make San Cristóbal their terminal station.

105. Coral Sand Flat Back of Landing Beach, Wreck Bay Chatham Island

106. Lower Elevation Coastal Vegetation San Cristóbal 2014

107. El Rondel Traffic Circle Entrance to El Progreso, in 2012

108. El Progreso Plantation of Rogerio Alvarado, San Cristóbal, Galápagos

109. Monetary Note and Coins Issued by Hacienda El Progreso in 1905

110. When Albemarle sailed back to Panamá, Harry Randall moved in with Manuel A. Cobos. Nearly every day he went riding with his host.

111. The Wreck Bay pier in 1938

112. Chatham Island c. 1930s

113. Shell Buttons

114. Interior Plan of the Hacienda House in 1904

115. Rogerio Alvarado was married to Josefina, Manuel A. Cobos' older sister. He lived most of the time in Guayaquil.

116. Lined and Banded Earthenware Fragments

117. View Southwest from El Junco 2016

118. View of Worker's House, Hacienda El Progreso in 1888

119. Fragments of a colorless glass demijohn

120. El Progreso in 1947

121. Paul Bruun was captain of the Manuel J. Cobos for about 18 months before he started trading with the Norge. The island community was dependent on the old schooner to obtain provisions from the continent. Delays and fuel shortages proved fatal for Bruun, her former skipper. When this photo was taken in 1934, the schooner had been re-named San Cristóbal.

122. Concentrations of arboreal vs grass phytoliths and DP ratio signals

123. A selection of alcohol bottle finishes

124. Medicine Jar from the Mill Area

125. Manuel J. Cobos poses with Workers, Hacienda El Progreso in 1888

126. When Jens Aschehoug and Per Bang visited Galápagos in 1922, the steam-powered sugar factory was in full operation, but decay had set in.

127. Galapagos. Plantation. Ethnology, 1888. Chatham Isd.

128. Shell Button

129. Fancy Button

130. Manuel A. Cobos (4th from left) invites the Floreana party for sight-seeing at the sugar factory. Cobos wears a broad-rimmed hat, riding breeches and a revolver holster across his chest.

131. Highland Vegetation on San Cristóbal 2014

132. Colorless condiment bottle and a fragment of a tumbler

133. View North from El Junco 2016

134. Doll’s head, legs and arm

135. Manuel J. Cobos poses with Workers, Hacienda El Progreso in 1888

136. Barluet & Cie./Creil & Montereau White Earthenware Fragment

137. Hacienda El Progreso's Bodega at Puerto Chico in 1905

138. The local matazarno tree was excellent for house construction, but trunks of this size are not to be found in Galápagos. Photo is probably of a mainland tree.

139. Local Student Tour Group, El Progreso, 2014

140. Chatham Island c. 1930s

141. White Earthenware Plate Fragment with Gien Inscription

142. White Earthenware Plate Fragment with Johnson Brothers Inscription

143. Gálapagos Academic Institute of Arts and Sciences and Gálapagos Science Center, Playa Mann, in 2012

144. Map of Land Use in the Zone of Special Use (ZUE) in San Cristóbal Island

145. The Handling of the Hacienda Prisoners in 1905

146. The view looking towards Wreck Bay shows the rails leading to the pier, and what was for a long time the archipelago's only lighthouse. “Johnson from London” lived in the shack next to the light.

147. Central Park and Church in El Progreso, in 2014

148. Left: Manuel A. Cobos and Dagfinn on horseback, Progresso. Right: Karin, Tony, Dagfinn and Manuel Cobos. The photograph was taken in 1933 and was sent to friends Ruth and Alf Ødegård who, at that time, were back in Norway. The picture does not reveal anything about the great finanical crash which had already ruined both Manuel and his brother-in-law, Rogerio Alvarado.

149. WWII Cannon on Cañón Beach, Puerto Baquerizo Moreno, 2016

150. Hacienda El Progreso, Main Street in 1905