This stereoview card depicts the extensive damage to Capp Street in San Francisco following the 1906 earthquake. The image shows large cracks and upheavals in the street and sidewalks, illustrating the severe ground movement caused by the disaster. Several early automobiles and pedestrians are visible in the background, providing scale to the destruction. The cracked pavement and tilted stones on the sidewalks reveal the violent shifting of the earth, with deep fissures and buckled surfaces extending across the street. The card includes printed descriptions in multiple languages describing the scene and the severity of the damage. It highlights the neighborhood's experience of the earthquake's convulsions, noting that many buildings were destroyed and the ground was fractured extensively. The detailed text also references the collapse of the nearby Valencia Hotel and other wreckage in the Mission district, emphasizing the widespread impact of the quake. This piece captures a rare, first-edition photographic record of the disaster's aftermath, offering a vivid visual and textual account of the devastation along Capp Street.