Free content for your website, newsletters or ezines. Free articles for reprint | Lbry.com
corner Set as Homepage   |   Add to Favourites corner
 
Search for
Need more search features? Go to Advanced Search
 
 
Article Categories
Advertising
Direct Mail, PPC, Word of Mouth
Advice
Affiliate Programs
MLM
Arts
Auto & Trucks
Auto Leasing, Diesel vs. Gasoline Vehicles
Awards
Beauty, Personal Care & Grooming
Business & Finance
Finance, Management, Marketing, Sales
Careers
Communications
Computers & Internet
CD Duplication, Computers FAQs
Copywriting
EBooks
ECommerce
Education
Email
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Child Care
Food & Drink
Cooking & Recipes
Free
Furniture
Office Chairs
Gadgets & Gizmos
Games
Gardening
Gifts
Government
Health
Hair Loss, Headaches, Healthy Eating, Natural Cures
History
Hobbies
Boat Acquisition
Home Business
Home Improvement
Humour
Internet
Blogs, CGI, CSS, DHTML, HTML, Javascript, RSS
Kids and Teens
Law
Marriage
Men's Issues
Metaphysical
Motivational
Music & Movies
Newsletters
Online Business
Organization & Time Management
Parenting
Personal Security & Wellness
Credit Repair, Life Insurance
Pets & Animals
Cats, Dogs
Politics & Government
Press Releases
Psychology
Publishing
Real Estate
Home Mortgage
Recreation & Sports
Fitness, Mountain Biking, Tennis
Reference
Relationships
Religion & Faith
Scams
Science
Weather
Search Engines
Link Popularity, SE Optimization, SE Positioning, SE Tactics, Sitemaps
Self Help
Sexuality
Shopping
Signs & Astrology
Society
Work Life
Technology
Bluetooth, Podcasting
Travel & Adventure
Beach Vacations, Ski Vacations
True Life Stories
Websites
Domain Names, Site Promotion, Web Development, Web Hosting
Weight Loss
Women's Issues
Writing
 
 »  Home  »  Travel & Adventure  »  The Castle on the Hill
The Castle on the Hill
By Nate Soule | Published  11/28/2005 | Travel & Adventure | Unrated
The Castle on the Hill
Nate Soule
Nate Soule is a travel enthusiast and helps maintain the travel website AcrossDistance.com.

 

View all articles by Nate Soule
When you think of castles, such places as Windsor, Sterling, and London come to mind. One might not expect that San Francisco, California should be added to this list. Julius castle on beautiful Telegraph Hill is a little known secret; a treasure hidden away at the end of a secluded San Franciscan lane.

This castle was never used to defend a city. No King or Queen ever ruled from a throne here. However, a feast fit for royalty is prepared every night within this modern fortress. Looking out on the water from the Golden Gate to the Bay Bridge and beyond, Julius Castle provides one of the most amazing views in the city. If the food were not quite so delicious you could easily find yourself lost in a trance staring out at the rolling hills, slow moving ferries, and untouched islands.

Built to resemble a castle using Redwood trees, and maples from the Pan Pacific Expedition, Julius Castle dates back to the 1920’s. An Italian immigrant Julius Roz envisioned a “castle on the hill”, and his vision became reality when the doors opened in 1922. Patrons of the castle have watched the scenery outside its windows slowly change since then as the Bay Bridge began construction in 1933, and Treasure Island was literally built from the earth at the bottom of the bay for the 1939 World’s Fair.

In 1947 the film “Dark Passage” displayed the castle’s neighborhood for the world to see as Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall sought to help the falsely accused character Vincent Parry evade police, former friends, and small time crooks. The movie’s setting takes place only feet from where the castle stands and to this day a cut-out of Bogart watches diners as they approach the entrance.

If you find that you have enjoyed too much of the fine food and wine within the castle you may seek some after dinner activity by either venturing further up Telegraph Hill to Coit Tower, or down the hill via the Filbert Stairs. Located at the very peak of the hill Coit Tower overlooks the city both from its base, and even more spectacularly from the tip of its tower, another 63 meters high. The tower, which was built in 1933 with funds donated by Little Hitchcook Coit, offers more than just the scenic views outside. Painted murals adorn the interior of the structure depicting scenes from California during the great depression and other historic periods.

If climbing the hills of San Francisco has quickly lost its charm then traveling in the opposite direction down the Filbert Stairs may be a good choice. These stairs wind down to Sansome Street, right off of the famous Embarcadero through pristinely kept gardens and beautiful homes. As you marvel at the views on your 377 step journey down the hill make sure and appreciate that you are taking the only means of arriving at the 19th century cottages you pass, as there is no road access! Once you reach the bottom you are a short walk to the San Francisco ferry building, or Fisherman’s Wharf.

As you go off to explore these other exciting attractions, try not to forget that you just dined at a world class castle, right in the middle of modern California.

Note: Republishing this article is permitted in the following conditions:
 
author by-lines are kept intact and unchanged. Hyperlinks and/or URLs provided by authors must remain active.
 
 
a link to the Lbry.com site is required in the use of articles either as print or an active url on the articles web page as below:
[ Article from Lbry.com ]
How would you rate the quality of this article?
1 2 3 4 5
Poor Excellent
Tell us why you rated this way (optional):

Send to Author Post on Site

 
Comments


Article Options
Most popular articles

»

Dementia: Will I Get It?

By N/A | Published 12/31/1969 | Health | Rating:
In the article Dementia: Just What Is It, we have learned about a frightening term, Dementia, and just what it is or, rather, how it manifests itself in the human condition. I gave 5 examples from my personal knowledge, including myself.
 
  Read the full article   Print this article  
Report An Error    

»

Triumphing Over Tantrums

By N/A | Published 12/31/1969 | Family | Rating:
Patty Hone
 
  Read the full article   Print this article  
Report An Error    

»

Checked Into Nirvana. Where Is Joy?

By N/A | Published 12/31/1969 | Metaphysical | Rating:
Eckhart Tolle lived upto his twenty ninth year in a state of almost continual anxiety interspersed with periods of suicidal depression. Then he woke up one night with a feeling of absolute dread. The silence of the night, the vague outlines of the furniture in the dark room, the distant noise of a passing train - everything felt so alien, so hostile, and so utterly meaningless that it created in him a deep loathing of the world. "I cannot live with myself any longer." This was the thought that kept repeating itself in his mind. Suddenly he became aware that if he could not live with himself, there had to be two - he and the "self" he could not live with. He was stunned by the realization. He became enveloped by powerful feelings.
 
  Read the full article   Print this article  
Report An Error    

»

Celebrex Law Suits Looking Like a Strong Case

By N/A | Published 12/31/1969 | Law | Rating:
There is no data as yet that indicates how many former patients of Pfizer's anti-inflammatory and painkilling drug are filing Celebrex law suits, but given the magnitude of the company's perceived crime it is likely that there will be very many. And even a quick perusal of the alleged behaviour of the company regarding this drug seems to point to Celebrex law suits being something of a fait accompli.
 
  Read the full article   Print this article  
Report An Error    
No popular articles found.
 
Become an Author
 
Are you a writer and you want your work published?
 
 
Do you have a website and need free publicity?
 
 
Sign up for free as a Lbry.com author and have your articles published in no time!
Click here to become an author
 
Advertising
 
 
 
 
Lbry.com Sponsors