| Date: | 1896 | 
| Medium: | wall mural of unknown materials | 
| Size: | 10 by 12 feet (estimated) | 
| Inscription: | n.v. | 
| Verso: | not applicable | 
| Provenance: | in collection of Oak Grove Lodge 215, Free and Accepted Masons, Alameda, California; the building has since been sold and the murals may have been destroyed. | 
| Reproductions: | Photograph by Philip A. C. Harris, c. 1930; San Francisco Chronicle, 24 April 1896; Sherman, Edward A., Fifty Years of Masonry in California, page 406; | 
| Site: | Mount Shasta, Caalifornia, viewed from the southwest through an unidentified river valley. | 
| Description: | A snow-capped Mount Shasta stands in the center under a cloudless sky.  A river flows in the center directly toward the viewer, over a small waterfall.  Both banks of the river are forested; at the left edge is a large, boulder with a pointed top, while behind the forest on the right in the middle distance is a rocky ridge.  (From a monochrome photograph.) | 
| Note: | This was one of five [Murals of the Masonic lodge, Alameda, California].  For more information, see the notes in that entry. | 
| Identification: | From Sherman and the San Francisco Chronicle report. | 
| In index(es): | Title list, Mount Shasta and Shastina, murals |