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302nd anniversary of Padre Eusebio Kino’s death commemorated through solar art at new Gutierrez Bridge

by on Mar. 15, 2013, under Arts, Life

Engraved on the pavement on the south side of the new Gutierrez Bridge (formerly called the Cushing Street Bridge), west of the I-10 over the Santa Cruz wash are these words:

Jesuit Priest Father Eusebio Francisco Kino was the first European to map the region of modern day Southern Arizona and Northern Sonora. His definitive Pimeria Alta map that located many now familiar historic landmarks was completed in 1702. Father Kino died March 15, 1711 in Magdalena, Mexico (Discovery Date and Time: March 15, 9:30 a.m.)

Today March 15, 2013, exactly 302 years after Padre Kino’s death many of us gathered at the Gutierrez Bridge before 9:30 a.m. to watch the sun shine through the image of one of the San Xavier del Bac Mission towers laser-cut in the shade canopy over the bridge, to align with that history and map embossed into the sidewalk along the pedestrian walkway. (You really have to see it to believe it, as I did on February 19, 2013 when I watched the shadow of the propeller blade image on the canopy align with pioneer Charles Hamilton’s bi-plane embossed image on the pavement.)

Photos above and below taken by former Tucson Citizen reporter Teya Vitu, which may help you to understand how the architect David Dobler of Structual Design Inc. aligned the 12 historic pavement images with the laser-cut drawings on the overhead canopies. He worked with bridge artist Brenda Semanick on this creation.

Shadow on San Xavier mission aligning at 9:30 a.m. with historic embossed history of Father Eusebio Kino, courtesy of Teya Vitu

Further background explanation and photos of this solar art project and bridge construction can be found at freelance writer Teya Vitu’s article “Solar Art Greets Pedestrians on new Luis G. Gutierrez Bridge” (click here).

Architect Dobler was present today to explain his work, as well as Charity Bidegain who created the facebook page for this project: www.facebook.com/luisggutierrezbridge which has photos and information about other Discovery Dates.

Attorney Mark O’Hare of the Kino Heritage Society passed out copies today of Padre Kino’s map of the Pimeria Alta, and info on an E-book which is on their website. The book is entitled “Padre Kino and the Trail to the Pacific”. Also on their website is a link about the newest book of the German Jesuit missionaries written by my husband UA Distinguished Professor Albrecht Classen, “Early History of the Southwest Through the Eyes of German-Speaking Jesuit Missionaries, A Transcultural Experience in the Eighteenth Century”.

Attendees at today’s solar alignment Discovery Date including architect David Dobler, Mark O’Hare of Kino Heritage Society, UA Professor/author Albrecht Classen, courtesy of Teya Vitu

Discovery Date solar calendar events at Luis G. Gutierrez bridge, with exact days/times:

Feb. 19 at 8:45 a.m.: First airplane flight by Charles Hamilton
Feb. 21 at 8:45 a.m.: First Rodeo (Fiesta de Los Vaqueros) Parade
March 15 at 9:30 a.m.: Date of Father Eusebio Kino’s death
March 20 at 8:30 a.m.: First Southern Pacific Railroad train to arrive
April 10 at 9:30 a.m.: First Mariachi conference
May 25 at 10:30 a.m.: Phoenix Mars Lander lands on Mars
June 1 at noon: The first electric streetcar
June 24 at 10:30 a.m.: El Dia de San Juan as proclaimed by explorer Francisco Coronado
July 3 at 10:45 a.m.: The monsoon seasons begins
Aug. 20 at 9:30 a.m.: The Presidio San Agustin de Tucson founded
Oct. 14 at 8:45 a.m.: Tucson Pressed Brick Company (founder Quintus Monier’s death date)
Oct. 26 at 8:15 a.m.: Commander Juan Bautista de Anza arrived at Santa Cruz River, on way to California

Upcoming in a few days will be the March 20 Discovery Date event when you can watch the shadow on the railway spike align with the historic pavement image of the first Southern Pacific train to arrive in Tucson. Be there just before 8:30 a.m.



  • Fraser007

    “Formely called Cushing St. Bridge…” Didnt know they changed the name of the bridge.? Who decided that and why? Guess nobody did any research on who Lt. Howard B, Cushing was. But thats another story. Will contact you on that.
    Not to throw cold water on Father Kino. And I sure dont want to be seen as anti-Catholic or as a raving left-winger (no way that can happen from my posts! lol) But the Tohono O’odham were not Catholic before he arrived they had their own religion for a couple of thousand of years. They are probably the relatives of (or in reality) the Hohokams who resided here since 300AD. (Anthropologists need to kick in here). Kino was here to move the Spanish Empie north.
    That northward movement also ran into the Apaches, We all know what they thought of that.
    We see this every August each year when we “celebrate” the founding the the Tucson Presidio. The people who put that on always have the Yaquis hanging around with their flag but never seem to invite the Apaches! Psssst hey committee…… the Yaquis have nothing to do with the founding of Tucson!
    We sure have blinders on when we “rename” briidges or celebrate “heros”….