The City of Paris in San Francisco was a beautiful department store that was founded in the years of the California Gold Rush. I remember it in its final location on Geary and Stockton. The store had an open rotunda which was a large open circular space that went all the way to the beautiful stained glass dome ceiling.
During the Christmas season the City of Paris filled their rotunda with a giant Christmas tree. The store fell on hard times and Neiman Marcus wanted to buy the property and tear down the building. The National Trust for Historic Preservation and many San Franciscans fought against it. Neiman Marcus won and they tore down the original building.
One happy note about this story is that they preserved the rotunda with the stained glass dome in the new store. Part of the stained glass image contains the motto “Fluctuat nec Mergitur,” which means It floats but never sinks.
Historical information from the Nora Leishman article on foundsf.org and More history of the City of Paris
How beautiful!
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Thank You. San Francisco has some beautiful sights, memories and history.
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I love the images and that quote, too, Deborah. Fluctuat nec Mergitur would make a great T-shirt.
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Thanks Mark. I am being nostalgic today.
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What a shame that the building was destroyed, but at least the rotunda was preserved. Very interesting pictures, Deborah.
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Thanks Anna. Yes the rotunda and the stained glass dome were preserved.
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The rotunda is gorgeous! As Anna said, I’m glad part of the building was saved. I’m trying to figure out where in SF that is: we were close to the Neiman Marcus building, I think, but didn’t go in.
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It is right off Union Square. Macys is near there.
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