Mission San Gabriel Arcángel/Gallery
(PD) Painting: Ferdinand Deppe
Mission San Gabriel Arcángel in 1832. In the foreground Native Americans (who frequently camped near trading centers such as military forts and missions) live in brush huts, with the Mission in the middle ground, and the San Gabriel Mountains as a backdrop. The work is believed to be the earliest known oil landscape of Southern California.(PD) Photo: Robert C. Post
A streetcar of the Pacific Electric Railway makes a stop at Mission San Gabriel Arcángel circa 1905.
(PD) Drawing: Rexford Newcomb
Artist Rexford Newcomb's rendition of Mission San Gabriel Arcángel's original campanile, or bell tower. The details are similar to those of the chapel at Mission Santa Inés.[1](PD) Photo: United States Navy
USNS Mission San Gabriel (T-AO-124) was the fourteenth of twenty-seven Mission Buenaventura-class tankers built during World War II for service as fleet oilers in the United States Navy. Scrapped in 1975, she was the only U.S. Naval vessel to have borne the name.[2]