1870
Arthur is born to Dr. and Mrs.Harlin Henry Pillsbury in Medford, Massachusetts where his father has established a medical practice after receiving his degree from Harvard University.
1883
Arthur comes to California with his family, Drs. Harlin Henry and Harriet Foster Pillsbury. They arrive by ship into San Francisco having taken a ship down the East Coast from New York, where Harriet graduated from the Women's Infirmary of New York in 1880 with a medical degree. Crossing the Isthmus by wagons, they again took ship to San Francisco. They settled in Auburn and purchased land and put in a fruit farm while practicing medicine there.
1889
Arthur has been experimenting with breeding chickens from the time he was twelve and selling them to local stores.
His parents brought the first two microscopes to California and he had early been using these for experiments he had carried out.
1892
Begins college at Stanford University.
1894
Arthur designs and builds a specimen slicer for producing slides for a microscope. While a student at Stanford University.
1895
Photos in archives, Stanford University, articles from local papers.
Photos were sold as solios from Pillsbury's shop in Palo Alto.
Builds the first motorcycle in California.
1896
Marries Ella C. Wing, the adopted daughter of his Senior Adviser.
1897
With Julius Boysen, Pillsbury bought a studio in Yosemite. His wife leaves him.
The marriage is annulled two years later. Ella becomes a nurse at what is now Stanford Medical Center.
She never marries.
Pillsbury decides to go to the Yukon to photograph the opening of the mining fields in the Yukon with his circuit panorama camera. Returned to Yukon for two years to continue photographing the Gold Rush.
Photos from archives and collectors and Harper’s Weekly, June 9, 1900. Documented
1899
Article: The San Francisco Call - Volume 85, Number 60, 29 January 1899 — "Worshiped by the Natives and Sacrifices Made to It Until Very Recently."
Meets and photographs John Muir while he is on his cruise with Harriman.
1902
Works as a stringer for Underwood and Underwood.
1903
Photographed President Theodore Roosevelt in Yosemite at the Grizzly Giant with his party.
Photo on file, Pillsbury Picture Company.
Pillsbury Article: Camera Craft Magazine, Vol. IV SAN FRANCISCO,
CALIFORNIA, APRIL, 1902 No. 6. titled, Through the High Sierras on Skis. Photos and article by Arthur C. Pillsbury.
Hired by the Examiner in San Francisco as a photojournalist.
1906
March - Quits the Examiner and starts the Pillsbury Picture Company.
With the proceeds from the San Francisco photos bought the Studio of the Three Arrows in Yosemite.
1908
1909
August - The Pacific Aero Club (PAC) held a static exhibition in the exhibit hall, AC Pillsbury, a PAC member, displayed his newly purchased balloon, the Fairy, with a 10,000 cubic foot capacity. It was the smallest manned balloon in the Bay area. Shown with it was Pillsbury's panoramic automatic camera built to be used from the balloon. AC Pillsbury had purchased the balloon from its creator, Roy Knabenshue. Name of PAC President was J. C. Irvine. Opening speech explained the Club's goal to popularize the science and sport or aeronautics.
1910
Documented, Sunset Magazine, March Issue, titled, From One Aircraft to Another.
1911
June - Reporter Cleve Shaffer of Aeronautics Magazine reports that in the San Francisco Bay area in June 1911 that A. Kneiling and AC Pillsbury were building an original biplane and motor another 30 others which included Adolph Sutro and Mr. Kierulf had begun building Sutro's huge boxy design which Sutro would later fly from the Bay prior to the Panama Pacific Exposition in 1915. Construction was taking place at the California Aero Manuracturing and Supply Company (CAMASCO). Source Wooden Wings Over the Golden Gate: Early Aviation in the San Francisco Bay Area 1910 - 1939 by Allan Herr
4 Monday - AC leaves on the train for Hollywood, where he will take custody of
the children.
5 - Tuesday - Notice appears in the Berkeley Daily Gazette.
November 13 - Arthur C. Pillsbury adopts Ernest S., Jr., Grace Sylvia, and Arthur Francis, the three children of his deceased brother at the Oakland Courthouse, Alameda, County. Adoption papers
1912
April - From Aeronautics Magazine, April 27, Page 103, powered by 12 cylinder motor. A Kneiling of PAC claimed to have built a tandem wing biplane at U. S. Cavalry Flat Air Field at the Presidio by the Golden Gate. The craft was powered by a 12 cylinder motor also built by him. The tandem wing configuration was employed by the failed Langley (Aerodrome) and Montgomery's ill-fated glider the Santa Clara. It is doubtful the ill-fated airplane ever flew.
Documented in written form in his book, Picturing Miracles of Plant and Animal Life, Lippincott, 1937. Also in news articles printed at the time.
Made the first lapse-time movie showing the blossoming of the wildflowers.
October 14 - 16 - Showed the first lapse-time movie of wildflowers for a Conference put on for Park Superintendents and concessionaires nationally. The conference was held in Yosemite Studio of the Three Arrows, Yosemite.
First hand report from Arthur F. Pillsbury.
Changed policy of the Park Service relating to conservation.
Documented, Picturing Miracles of Plant and Animal Life, Lippincott, 1937.
Started the first modern nature center at the Studio of the Three Arrows in Yosemite.
1913
1915
1916
Early June - Pillsbury drives over the Tioga Pass into Yosemite, the first car to do so that year.
The story is told by Hil Oehlmann, a Curry employee who accompanied Pillsbury and an artist friend of his and the friend's wife. The story was published in The Saga of a Century, edited by Jack Gyer. Publication date was January 1,1965.
Indian Field Days, Yosemite. Organized event for the economic benefit of the Miwok.
Pillsbury is holding workshops in photography at the Studio in Yosemite. Later, Earl Brooks, Harry Pidgeon and Ansel Adams will take his classes.
Documented, Arthur F. Pillsbury, oral transmission, Mariposa Gazette.
Pillsbury begins speaking tours showing his films and promoting the National Park Service and the Sierra Club.
1918
1919
Documented by photos and articles.
1921
1922
1924
1926
March 15 - Dinner Presentation for President Coolidge. During Pillsbury's regular speaking tour of the East Coast Pillsbury gives a lecture to the President and 70 guests of Secretary of the Interior, D. Hubert Work. The dinner takes place at the Willard Hotel.
1927
Invents the first microscopic motion picture camera, Berkeley, California.
Documented by article in Sunset Magazine, May issue. Documented in written form in his book, Picturing Miracles of Plant and Animal Life, Lippincott, 1937 and in news articles printed at the time.
November - Pillsbury Studio in Yosemite is burned and his collection of images is presumed destroyed.
1928
October 16 - Announcement of a lecture at Wheeler Auditorium, Berkeley for a lecture that
night by Pillsbury. Provided by Professor Kenneth H. Cardwell, Pres. Berkeley
1929
September 17 - George Banfield, a partner in the new Pillsbury Studio in Yosemite commits
December 18 - Wed., Dec. 18---ARTHUR C. PILLSBURY Lecture at the University of British
Columbia on "Processes of Life in the Plant and Animal Worlds "
(Motion Picture Flower Growth Pictures in Color, etc. )
1930
Documented in written form in his book, Picturing Miracles of Plant and Animal Life, Lippincott, 1937. Reference to use of film in papers in 1930.
1936
Filmed process of hydroponics at Berkeley of studies done by Dr. William F. Gericke at Berkeley.
Documented in written form in his book. Picturing Miracles of Plant and Animal Life, Lippincott, 1937.Used films for his lecture series.
1937
1942
July 24 - The Stanford Daily The Stanford Daily, Volume 102, Issue 22, 24 July 1942
Botanist Will Be Tuesday Speaker
Next week's Tuesday Evening Series program will feature a lecture on "Scientific Diversions" by Arthur C. Pillsbury, noted photographer and botanist. The lecture will be given at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Mr. Pillsbury will use colored motion pictures taken by special processes to tell the story of movement and growth in plants. Included in his picture will be flowers of California, both wild and cultivated, and those of Hawaii, Suva. Samoa, Panama, Colombia, and Jamaica, which he photographed on his various trips. Mr. Pillsbury has secured these visual records of plant life by the use of microscopes, cameras, a motor gear mechanism, and numerous other devices of his own invention, including a special camera that takes X-ray motion pictures of plants during their growth. He is able, by the use of 600 pictures, to show in detail the birth of a lily—a process which takes but 25 seconds.
Documented, Popular Science article.
1946
March 5 - Pillsbury dies.