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ThH | profile | all galleries >> == Spanish Missions of California == >> Mission San Francisco de Asís tree view | thumbnails | slideshow

Mission San Diego de Alcalá | Mission San Juan Capistrano | Mission Santa Barbara | Mission San Luis Obispo de Tolosa | Mission San Miguel Arcángel | Mission San Antonio de Padua | Mission Nuestra Señora de la Soledad | Mission San Juan Bautista | Mission San Carlos Borroméo de Carmelo | Mission Santa Cruz | Mission Santa Clara de Asis | Mission San José | Mission San Francisco de Asís | Mission San Rafael Arcángel | Mission San Fracisco Solano

Mission San Francisco de Asís

Mission San Francisco de Asís, also called Mission Dolores ---Under Construction---
(Seen in April 2026)

Founded by Francisco Palóu and Pedro Benito Cambón on June 29, 1776.

6th Mission in California.

Located in 3321 16th Street, San Francisco, CA 94114. The official Web-Page is: Mission San Francisco de Asís

(The Mission San Francisco de Asís is not to be confused with the later Mission San Francisco Solano in Sonoma Town, in the Napa/Sonoma Wine Country.)

The Mission ended up in the middle of one of the most known cities in the world. Next to it in year 1876 a large church was erected: the Mission Dolores Basilica. The original Mission church appears small next to the 1876 Basilica Mission Dolores. A side door in the Basilica leads to a court between these both churches. At its end is entry to the old Mission Cemetery. We do not know the details and reason for this, but: The wall around the cemetery is heavily fortified by a fence with barb wire atop of it. Gravediggers? Trespassers? Graffiti vandals? I think it is sad that such measures are needed in the United States. Thousands of historic cemeteries are across Europe, you will not see a barb wire fence there anyplace.

The original San Francisco de Asís Mission Church did not survived to our times. Especially in a milestone event in 1876 the archdiocese had razed the old church, replacing it with a large Gothic Revival Church. That church was destroyed in the well known dramatic 1906 San Francisco earthquake. Architect Willis Polk restored the Adobe Church building in 1917, what is an another example of a dedication of English speaking Californians to preserve the origins of Alta California. Polk's resting place is in the Mission Cemetery.

Wikipedia page of the Mission San Francisco de Asís.

R8_1133 St Francis and Dolores Basilica
R8_1133 St Francis and Dolores Basilica
R8_1177 St Francis and Dolores Basilica
R8_1177 St Francis and Dolores Basilica
R8_1129 Mission, visitor entry
R8_1129 Mission, visitor entry
R8_1135 I have never seen something like this
R8_1135 I have never seen something like this
R8_1131 St.Francis restored by Willis Polk
R8_1131 St.Francis restored by Willis Polk
R8_1161 Court toward the Cemetery
R8_1161 Court toward the Cemetery
R8_1166 Junipero Serra
R8_1166 Junipero Serra
R8_1163 The Cemetery
R8_1163 The Cemetery
Z52_1519 The Cemetery
Z52_1519 The Cemetery
Z52_1521
Z52_1521
Z52_1522 The Cemetery
Z52_1522 The Cemetery
155329 The Cemetery
155329 The Cemetery
155350 The Cemetery
155350 The Cemetery
R8_1164 Passage between St.Francis and Dolores Basilica
R8_1164 Passage between St.Francis and Dolores Basilica
R8_1152 Basilica Dolores, Interior
R8_1152 Basilica Dolores, Interior
R8_1140 Basilica Mission Dolores
R8_1140 Basilica Mission Dolores
R8_1145 The Orgel in the Chapel
R8_1145 The Orgel in the Chapel
R8_1149 Basilica Orgel
R8_1149 Basilica Orgel
R8_1144 Altar pattern looks almost Moorish
R8_1144 Altar pattern looks almost Moorish
R8_1142 Looks almost like Orthodox Christian
R8_1142 Looks almost like Orthodox Christian