Report of the Naval committee to the House of representatives, August, 1850, in favor of the establishment of a line of mail steamships to the western coast of Africa, and thence via the Mediterranean to London; . wers are each over twohundred feet in height, of Doric and Ionic architecture. Inthe western tower is the great bell, named after the patronsaint of Mexico, Santa Maria de Guadalupe, which measuresnineteen feet in height, being the largest, in size andweight, in the world. The basso-relievos, statues, andfriezes of the fagade are of White marble. The structuremeasures over four hundr


Report of the Naval committee to the House of representatives, August, 1850, in favor of the establishment of a line of mail steamships to the western coast of Africa, and thence via the Mediterranean to London; . wers are each over twohundred feet in height, of Doric and Ionic architecture. Inthe western tower is the great bell, named after the patronsaint of Mexico, Santa Maria de Guadalupe, which measuresnineteen feet in height, being the largest, in size andweight, in the world. The basso-relievos, statues, andfriezes of the fagade are of White marble. The structuremeasures over four hundred feet in length, and two hundredin width, and is in shape like a cross. Its roof is supportedby pillars, each thirty-five feet in circumference, and is onehundred and seventy-five feet from the floor. The highaltar was once the richest in the world, but during the var-ious revolutions, this—and the other six—has been de-spoiled, and millions of dollars have been put in circulationfrom it. The candlesticks were of solid gold, and thestatue of the Assumption was of the same metal, and studdedwith rubies and diamonds. But with all its losses, thechurch is decorated as no other on the American FAMOUS CATHEDRAL. 87 The railing of the choir gallery was manufactured in China,and was said to have cost one and a half millions of offer to replace it in solid silver was refused. On thesides of the church there are over a dozen chapels,inclosed in bronze gates, in one of which the body ofIturbide, the first Mexican Emperor, is buried. Two valu-able paintings hang upon the walls, one a Murillo, andthe other an original Michael Angelo. The dim lightwhich pervades the interior of the Cathedral, tempered bythe light of the tall candles, lends a weirdness to the scene,but the effect, generally, is not so good as that rendered byour stained windows. Here, in 1864, Maximilian andCarlotta were crowned Emperor and Empress of Mexico. The view from the top of the Cathedra


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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1850, bookidreportofnavalcom01unit