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Timeline of San Francisco


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The following is a timeline of the history of the city of San Francisco, California, United States.






Contents






  • 1 Prior to the 1800s


  • 2 1800s


  • 3 1900s


    • 3.1 1900s–1940s


    • 3.2 1950s–1990s




  • 4 2000s


  • 5 See also


  • 6 References


  • 7 Bibliography


    • 7.1 Published in the 1800s


    • 7.2 Published in the 1900s


    • 7.3 Published in the 2000s




  • 8 External links





Prior to the 1800s[edit]


























  • 1776 – Presidio of San Francisco and Mission San Francisco de Asís established by colonists from Spain.

  • 1791 – Mission San Francisco de Asís building dedicated.



1800s[edit]



  • 1847


    • Yerba Buena renamed "San Francisco."

    • City hotel built.[1]



  • 1848

    • Territory ceded from Mexico to the United States per Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.


    • California Gold Rush begins.



  • 1849

    • St. Francis hotel built.[1]


    • Boudin Bakery, Olympic Amphitheatre,[2] and Union Iron Works[3] in business.

    • West Indian Benevolent Association established.[4]



  • 1850

    • April 15: City of San Francisco incorporated.[5]

    • May 1: John W. Geary becomes mayor.

    • October 29: San Francisco becomes part of the new U.S. State of California.

    • Chamber of Commerce[6]Society of California Pioneers,[7] and Jenny Lind Theatre[2] established.

    • Population: 34,000.[8]



  • 1851


    • May 3–4: Fire.[9]


    • San Francisco Committee of Vigilance organized.


    • Pioneer Race Course opens.



  • 1852


    • Ghirardelli in business.


    • Mercantile Library Association of San Francisco, Sons of the Emerald Isle, and San Francisco Turn Verein established.[7]


    • The Golden Era newspaper begins publication.



  • 1853 – California Academy of Sciences, Young Men's Christian Association,[7] and Russ garden[1] established.

  • 1854 – San Francisco Mechanics' Institute established.

  • 1855 – Hebrew Young Men's Literary Assoc. active.[10]

  • 1856 – Mirror of the Times[4] and Daily Morning Call[11] newspapers begin publication.

  • 1857 – State Convention of Colored People held in city.[12]

  • 1858 – Italian Benevolent Society organized.[7]

  • 1859 – San Francisco Schuetzen-Verein founded.[13]

  • 1860

    • March 27: Japanese embassy arrives.[14]


    • Olympic Club founded.[15]

    • Population: 56,802.[16]



  • 1861

    • Overland Telegraph Company begins operating (New York-San Francisco).[9]


    • Fraternitas Rosae Crucis lodge established.[17]



  • 1862

    • Heald's Business College[18] and Franchise League[4] established.


  • The San Francisco Stock and Bond Exchange was founded.[19]

  • 1863


    • San Francisco and San Jose Railroad begins operating soon.

    • St. Andrew's Society founded.[7]


    • Cliff House rebuilt.


    • Charlotte L. Brown sues a racially segregated San Francisco streetcar company and wins.[20]



  • 1864 –

    • Concordia-Argonaut Club founded.


    • Hugh Toland found the Toland Medical College, which would later become the University of California, San Francisco



  • 1865 – Daily Examiner and Daily Dramatic Chronicle newspapers begin publication.[11]

  • 1866 – Merchants' Exchange Association, Caledonian Club,[7] and Woodward's Gardens[1] established.

  • 1867


    • Street begging ban effected.[21]

    • San Francisco City and County Almshouse opens.[22]



  • 1868 – San Francisco County Medical Society[7] and Women’s Co-operative Printing Office [1] established.

  • 1869


    • California Theatre opens.

    • San Francisco Yacht Club founded.[7]

    • Grand hotel built.[1]



  • 1870


    • Golden Gate Park[9] and San Francisco Microscopical Society[23] established.

    • Population: 149,473.[16]



  • 1871 – San Francisco Art Association and St. Luke's Hospital[13][24] established.

  • 1872 – Bohemian Club and Bar Association of San Francisco founded.[7]

  • 1873


    • Clay Street Hill Railroad begins operating.

    • Polish Society of California organized.[7]



  • 1874 – California School of Design, and Territorial Pioneers of California[7] established.

  • 1875


    • Palace Hotel in business.[1]

    • Fire patrol established.[13]



  • 1876 – Pioneer Park, Pacific Homeopathic Dispensary Association, and Ligue Nationale Francaise established.[7]

  • 1877

    • Board of Trade, Spanish Mutual Benevolent Society,[7] and Workingmen's Party of California[25] established.

    • Anti-Chinese sentiment leads to riots against Chinatown residents and businesses.[26]

    • Baldwin hotel built.[1]



  • 1878 – San Francisco Public Library,[27][28] Pacific Yacht Club, and Young Women's Christian Association founded.[7]

  • 1879 – Golden Gate Kindergarten Association organized.[13]

  • 1881 – Geographical Society of the Pacific organized.[7]

  • 1883 – Pacific Coast Amateur Photographic Association headquartered in city.[29]

  • 1887 – Cogswell Polytechnical College established.[18]

  • 1888 – Associated Charities[13] and San Francisco Business College[18] established.

  • 1889 – Pacific-Union Club formed.

  • 1890

    • California Camera Club[30] and University Club of San Francisco established.

    • Population: 298,997.[8]



  • 1891 – Gregg Shorthand school established.[18]

  • 1892


    • Hibernia Bank built.[31]


    • Trocadero Hotel opens.



  • 1893 – Mark Hopkins Institute of Art established.[32]

  • 1894


    • Wilmerding School of Industrial Arts established.[33]


    • California Midwinter International Exposition of 1894 held; Japanese Tea Garden built.



  • 1895

    • California School of Mechanical Arts established.[33]


    • M. H. de Young Memorial Museum opens as Golden Gate Park Museum.[34]



  • 1896 – Sutro Baths open.

  • 1898


    • San Francisco Ferry Building opens.

    • City rechartered.[9]


    • League of California Municipalities headquartered in city.[35]

    • Buddhist temple founded.[36][37]



  • 1899


    • San Francisco State Normal School established.

    • City Hall built.



  • 1900 – Population: 342,782.[38]



1900s[edit]



1900s–1940s[edit]



  • 1901

    • Labor strike of restaurant workers.[39]

    • San Francisco Architectural Club organized.[34]



  • 1902 – Eugene Schmitz becomes mayor.

  • 1905 – 1908: San Francisco graft trials

  • 1906 – April 18: 1906 San Francisco earthquake.[40]

  • 1907

    • July: Mayor Eugene Schmitz imprisoned.[9]


    • International Hotel built.


    • A. Mutt comic strip begins publication in the San Francisco Chronicle.



  • 1908 – South San Francisco incorporated near city.[41]

  • 1910


    • San Francisco Housing Association organized.[42]

    • Population: 416,912.[8]



  • 1911


    • San Francisco Symphony founded.

    • Cort theatre opens.[43]



  • 1912

    • Lux School for Industrial Training for Girls opens.

    • Book Club of California established.[44]


    • James Rolph becomes mayor.


    • Tadich Grill in business.[45]



  • 1914 – San Francisco National Guard Armory and Arsenal built.

  • 1915

    • January 25: First transcontinental telephone call occurs (San Francisco-New York).

    • February 20: Panama–Pacific International Exposition opens; Tower of Jewels built.


    • San Francisco Labor Temple built.


    • San Francisco City Hall rebuilt.


    • Veterans Auditorium opens.



  • 1916


    • Preparedness Day Bombing.[46]

    • Legal Aid Society established.[citation needed]


    • Buena Vista Cafe in business.



  • 1917 – Strand Theater built.[43][31]

  • 1922 – Golden Gate Theatre and Castro Theatre built.[47]

  • 1923

    • January: Mae Nolan becomes U.S. representative for California's 5th congressional district.[48]

    • August 2: US President Harding dies in the Palace Hotel.[40]



  • 1924 – California Palace of the Legion of Honor opens.

  • 1925


    • Fleishhacker Pool built.


    • Florence Prag Kahn becomes U.S. representative for California's 4th congressional district.[49]



  • 1926 – Playland at the Beach in business.

  • 1927 – San Francisco Municipal Airport dedicated.[9]

  • 1928 – Amazon Theater opens.[43]

  • 1929


    • Fleishhacker Zoo established.


    • Topsy’s Roost (restaurant) in business.



  • 1930 – Pacific Stock Exchange Lunch Club formed.

  • 1931 – Stern Grove opens as city park.

  • 1932


    • War Memorial Opera House opens.

    • Photographers' Group f/64 founded.[50]



  • 1933


    • San Francisco Opera Ballet founded.


    • Coit Tower built.



  • 1934

    • May 9: General Strike begins.[46]


    • U.S. Penitentiary established on Alcatraz Island.


    • Golden Grain Macaroni Company in business.



  • 1935 – San Francisco Museum of Modern Art opens as San Francisco Museum of Art in Veterans Memorial Building.

  • 1936 – Bay Bridge opens.[51]

  • 1937 – May 27: Golden Gate Bridge opens.[9]

  • 1940 – Holly Courts housing project built.[9]

  • 1944 – Church for the Fellowship of All Peoples established.[52]

  • 1945


    • Tonga Room in business.

    • April 25: United Nations Conference on International Organization begins.

    • June 26: United Nations Charter signed.



  • 1946 – National Urban League branch[53] and Marines' Memorial Club established.

  • 1949 – Presidio Theatre built.[47]



1950s–1990s[edit]



  • 1952 – The Purple Onion nightclub in business.

  • 1953 – City Lights Bookstore in business.[46]

  • 1955 – City Lights Pocket Poets Series begins publication.

    • Allen Ginsberg reads his poem Howl for the first time at the Six Gallery


  • 1957


    • San Francisco International Film Festival founded.


    • Caffe Trieste in business.[54]


    • Sister city relationship established with Osaka, Japan.[55]

    • The San Francisco Stock and Bond Exchange (formed in 1882) and the Los Angeles Oil Exchange (formed in 1899) merge to create the Pacific Coast Stock Exchange.[19]



  • 1959 – Embarcadero Freeway opens.

  • 1960 – Mandarin restaurant in business.[56]

  • 1963– The Reverend Cecil Williams becomes pastor at Glide Memorial Church, shifting the church's politics to the left.[57]

  • 1964 – City's "San Francisco History Center" established.[2][3]

  • 1965 – Intersection for the Arts incorporated.
    • The musical group the Jefferson Airplane is created.


  • 1966– The Compton's Cafeteria riot breaks out when transgender patrons become angry over police harassment.[58]

  • 1967 – Summer of Love.

    • January: The Human Be-In takes place in Golden Gate park, a prelude to the Summer of Love.

    • The anarchist group The Diggers is founded, and begins distributing free food.[59]



  • 1968 – Sister city relationship established with Sydney, Australia.[55]
    • The Church of John Coltrane is established, and continues religious services until 2016.[60]


  • 1969


    • 555 California Street built.

    • Sister city relationships established with Assisi, Italy; and Taipei, Taiwan.[55]

    • The San Francisco Chronicle and Examiner receive their first letters from The Zodiac Killer.[61]



  • 1970 – Regional Metropolitan Transportation Commission established.

  • 1971 – Peoples Temple in San Francisco and Church of the Tree of Life[17] established.

  • 1972


    • San Francisco Pride begins.


    • Golden Gate National Recreation Area established.


    • Transamerica Pyramid built.



  • 1973

    • October: Zebra murders begin.[62]

    • Church of the Gentle Brothers and Sisters incorporated.[17]

    • Sister city relationship established with Haifa, Israel.[55]



  • 1974

    • People's Food System active (approximate date).[63]


    • Southern Exposure (art space)[64] and San Francisco Cable Car Museum established.

    • April 15: Hibernia Bank robbery by the Symbionese Liberation Army.



  • 1975


    • Rainbow Grocery Cooperative opens.[63]

    • Sister city relationship established with Seoul, South Korea.[55]



  • 1976 – Bay Area Video Coalition founded.

  • 1977


    • Theatre Rhinoceros and Suicide Club founded.

    • Golden Dragon massacre


    • San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association active.



  • 1978

    • June 25: Rainbow flag (LGBT movement) introduced.

    • November 18: Jonestown mass murder-suicide at the People's Temple Guyana compound.

    • November 27: Moscone–Milk assassinations.

    • December 4: Dianne Feinstein becomes mayor.



  • 1979

    • The Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence make their first appearance on Castro Street.

    • May 21: White Night riots.

    • Sister city relationship established with Shanghai, China.[55]



  • 1980 – Davies Symphony Hall opens.

  • 1981


    • San Francisco Symphony Youth Orchestra and Hansberry Theatre established.

    • Sister city relationship established with Manila, Philippines.[55]



  • 1982 – City/county handgun ban approved; later struck down by state court.[62]

  • 1983 – San Francisco General Hospital AIDS clinic established.[65]

  • 1984 – Sister city relationship established with Cork, Ireland.[55]

  • 1986


    • Cacophony Society formed.

    • A bonfire of a wooden man is held on Baker Beach which evolves into the Burning Man event.[66]

    • Sister city relationship established with Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire.[55]



  • 1987 – Luggage Store (arts organization) established.[64]

  • 1988 – San Francisco Museum and Historical Society founded.

  • 1989

    • October 17: Loma Prieta earthquake.

    • San Francisco becomes a sanctuary city for illegal immigrants.[67]



  • 1990

    • Population: 723,959.[16]

    • Sister city relationship established with Thessaloniki, Greece.[55]



  • 1991 – Museum of the City of San Francisco opens.[68]

  • 1992


    • Critical Mass (bicycle event) began.


    • Clarion Alley Mural Project organized.

    • Latino Coalition for a Healthy California headquartered in city.[4]



  • 1993 – Yerba Buena Center for the Arts opens.

  • 1993 – 101 California Street shooting occurs.[62]

  • 1994 – Santarchy begins.

  • 1995


    • Craigslist founded.

    • Sister city relationship established with Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.[55]



  • 1996

    • City website online (approximate date).[69][chronology citation needed]


    • Willie Brown becomes mayor.


    • Internet Archive headquartered in city.[70]


    • Long Now Foundation established.



  • 1997

    • Sister city relationship established with Paris, France.[55]


    • Pinecrest Diner, a popular all-night diner-style restaurant in San Francisco, becomes notorious for a murder over an order of eggs.[71]



  • 1998 – Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts founded.[64]

  • 2000 – Population: 776,733.[38]



2000s[edit]



  • 2003

    • Bernal Heights Preservation established.[72]

    • U.S. National Security Agency/AT&T Room 641A in operation.

    • Sister city relationship established with Zürich, Switzerland.[55]



  • 2004 – Gavin Newsom becomes mayor.

  • 2005 – November: Gun control ordinance San Francisco Proposition H (2005) passes; later struck down.

  • 2007


    • Twitter Inc. in business.[73]


    • Noisebridge founded.[74]



  • 2008


    • Edible Schoolyard established at San Francisco Boys and Girls Club.


    • One Rincon Hill (apartment building) constructed.


    • Airbnb in business.



  • 2009

    • The Millennium Tower opens, later sinking and tilting.


    • Uber (company) in business.

    • FailCon begins.[5]


    • San Francisco Appeal begins publication.[75]

    • Sister city relationships established with Bangalore, India; and Kraków, Poland.[55]



  • 2010


    • The Bay Citizen and Ocean Beach Bulletin begin publication.[75]

    • Population: 805,235; metro 4,335,391.[76]

    • Sister city relationships established with Amman, Jordan; and Barcelona, Spain.[55]



  • 2011

    • January 11: Ed Lee becomes mayor.

    • November 8: San Francisco mayoral election, 2011.


    • TechCrunch Disrupt conference begins.



  • 2013


    • San Francisco tech bus protests begin.

    • Civic Industries in business.[77]



  • 2014 – San Francisco Giants baseball team win World Series contest.

  • 2015 – Shooting of Kathryn Steinle.



See also[edit]



  • History of San Francisco

  • National Register of Historic Places listings in San Francisco, California

  • List of pre-statehood mayors of San Francisco


  • List of mayors of San Francisco (since 1850)


  • Timelines of San Francisco's sister cities: Abidjan, Amman, Barcelona, Haifa, Kraków, Manila, Osaka, Paris, Seoul, Shanghai, Sydney, Zürich

  • Timeline of the San Francisco Bay Area

  • Timelines of other cities in the Northern California area of California: Fresno, Mountain View, Oakland, Sacramento, San Jose



References[edit]





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    "Trading Floor's Final Day At Pacific Stock Exchange". The New York Times by Reuters. May 26, 2001. Retrieved April 5, 2017.



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  62. ^ abc Gregg Lee Carter, ed. (2012). "Chronology". Guns in American Society: An Encyclopedia of History, Politics, Culture, and the Law. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-0-313-38671-8.


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  67. ^ "San Francisco Votes to Keep Shielding Immigrants From Deportation Officials", New York Times, October 20, 2015


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    "About the Museum". Museum of the City of San Francisco. Archived from the original on March 2, 1999. Retrieved October 23, 2013.



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  70. ^
    "About the Archive". San Francisco: Internet Archive. Archived from the original on October 26, 2001.



  71. ^ Lisa Davis (6 Sep 2000). "A Killer Dies, a Mystery Lingers". San Francisco Weekly.


  72. ^ "About Bernal Heights and the Bernal History Project". San Francisco: Bernal Heights History Project. Retrieved October 23, 2013.


  73. ^ Nick Bilton (October 9, 2013), "All Is Fair in Love and Twitter", New York Times


  74. ^ "Bay Area Consortium of Hackerspaces". Hackerspaces. Retrieved November 9, 2013.


  75. ^ ab "California". CJR's Guide to Online News Startups. New York: Columbia Journalism Review. Retrieved October 23, 2013.


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Bibliography[edit]



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Published in the 1800s[edit]




  • Bogardus' San Francisco, Sacramento city and Marysville business directory. 1850.


  • Frank Soulé; John H. Gihon; James Nisbet (1855), Annals of San Francisco, New York: D. Appleton & Company


  • San Francisco (article) (1870) The Overland Monthly, January 1870 Vol. 4, No. 1, pp. 9–23. San Francisco: A. Roman & Co., Publishers


  • Adolph Wilhelm August Friedrich von Steinwehr (1874), "San Francisco", Centennial Gazetteer of the United States, Philadelphia: J.C. McCurdy & Company


  • "San Francisco", Appleton's Illustrated Hand-Book of American Cities, New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1876


  • B.E. Lloyd (1876), Lights and Shades in San Francisco, San Francisco: Printed by A.L. Bancroft, OCLC 25178673


  • John S. Hittell (1878), A History of the City of San Francisco, San Francisco: A. L. Bancroft & Co.


  • San Francisco Street Directory and Guide, San Francisco: W.C. Disturnell, 1882


  • Disturnell's Stranger's Guide to San Francisco and Vicinity, San Francisco: W.C. Disturnell, 1883


  • Frederick H. Hackett, ed. (1884), Industries of San Francisco, San Francisco: Payot, Upham & Co.


  • "San Francisco". Western and Southern States. Appletons' General Guide to the United States and Canada. New York: D. Appleton & Co. 1889.


  • Joseph Sabin, ed. (1889). "San Francisco". Bibliotheca Americana. 18. New York. OCLC 13972268.


  • Bay of San Francisco, the Metropolis of the Pacific Coast and Its Suburban Cities: a History, Lewis Publishing Company, 1892, OCLC 8666576


  • Mary Roberts Smith (1895). "Almshouse Women: A Study of Two Hundred and Twenty-Eight Women in the City and County Almshouse of San Francisco". Publications of the American Statistical Association. 4. JSTOR 2967126.


  • Faust's pocket map and guide with a complete street directory of San Francisco. H.W. Faust. 1898.



Published in the 1900s[edit]


1900s–1940s



  • Robert C. Brooks (1901), "San Francisco", Bibliography of Municipal Problems and City Conditions, Municipal Affairs, 5 (2nd ed.), New York: Reform Club, OCLC 1855351


  • San Francisco-Oakland Directory. Oakland: Walter S. Fry Co. 1907.


  • "San Francisco", United States (4th ed.), Leipzig: Karl Baedeker, 1909, OCLC 02338437


  • "San Francisco", Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.), New York, 1910, OCLC 14782424 – via Internet Archive


  • Percy V. Long (1912). "Consolidated City and County Government of San Francisco". American Political Science Review. 6. JSTOR 4616983.


  • Helen Throop Purdy (1912), San Francisco: As it Was, As It Is, and How to See It, P. Elder


  • Edward Hungerford (1913), "San Francisco: the Newest Phoenix", The Personality of American Cities, New York: McBride, Nast & Company


  • Frank Morton Todd (1914), Chamber of Commerce Handbook for San Francisco, San Francisco, OCLC 2650239


  • Robert Ernest Cowan (1914), "San Francisco", Bibliography of the History of California and the Pacific West, 1510–1906, San Francisco: Book Club of California


  • Andrew Cunningham McLaughlin and Albert Bushnell Hart, ed. (1914). "San Francisco". Cyclopedia of American Government. 3. D. Appleton and Company.


  • Crocker-Langley San Francisco Directory. San Francisco: H.S. Crocker Co. 1917.


  • Samuel Williams (1921). City of the Golden Gate: A Description of San Francisco in 1875. San Francisco: Book Club of California.


  • Directorio comercial de San Francisco, California, 1924 (in Spanish), San Francisco, Calif.: Juan Anino, 1924


  • Federal Writers' Project (1940), "Chronology of the San Francisco Bay Region", San Francisco: The Bay and Its Cities, American Guide Series, NY: Hastings House


1950s–1990s



  • Around the world in San Francisco: a guide book to the racial and ethnic minorities of the San Francisco-Oakland district, San Francisco: Abbey Press, 1955


  • Frank Mazzi (1973). "Harbingers of the City: Men and Their Monuments in Nineteenth Century San Francisco". Southern California Quarterly. 55. JSTOR 41170474.


  • Robert Mayer (1974), Howard B. Furer, ed., San Francisco: a Chronological & Documentary History, 1542–1970, American Cities Chronology Series, Dobbs Ferry, N.Y.: Oceana Publications, ISBN 0379006146


  • Neil L. Shumsky (1976). "San Francisco's Workingmen Respond to the Modern City". California Historical Quarterly. 55. JSTOR 25157608.


  • Maupin, Armistead (1978). Tales of the City. Harper Collins. ISBN 978-0-06-096404-7. OCLC 29847673.


  • Ferlinghetti, Lawrence (1980). Literary San Francisco: A pictorial history from its beginnings to the present day. Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-06-250325-1. OCLC 6683688.


  • Ory Mazar Nergal, ed. (1980), "San Francisco", Encyclopedia of American Cities, New York: E.P. Dutton, OL 4120668M


  • Margolin, Malcolm (1981). The Ohlone Way: Indian Life in the San Francisco-Monterey Bay Area. Heydey Books. ISBN 978-0-930588-01-4. OCLC 4628382.


  • Joseph A. Blum (1984). "South San Francisco: The Making of an Industrial City". California History. 63. JSTOR 25158206.


  • Asbury, Hubert (1989). The Barbary Coast: An Informal History of the San Francisco Underworld. Dorset Press. ISBN 978-0-88029-428-7. OCLC 22719465.


  • Lotchin, Roger W. (1997). San Francisco, 1846–1856: From Hamlet to City. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-06631-3. OCLC 35650934.


  • "San Francisco, California". Encyclopedia of Urban America. ABC-CLIO. 1998. ISBN 9780874368468 – via Credo Reference.
    (subscription required)



Published in the 2000s[edit]




  • Hartman, Chester (2002). City for Sale: The Transformation of San Francisco. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-08605-0. OCLC 48579085.


  • San Francisco, Lonely Planet, 2002, OL 8647758M


  • Chris Carlsson and Lisa Ruth Elliott, ed. (2010), Ten years that shook the city: San Francisco 1968–1978, San Francisco: City Lights Books, ISBN 1931404127

  • Solnit, Rebecca. Infinite City: A San Francisco Atlas (University of California Press, 2010). 144 pp. 
    ISBN 978-0-520-26250-8


  • Richard Hu (2012), Urban Design In Downtown San Francisco: A Paradigm Shift? – via International Planning History Society


  • Erica J. Peters (2013). San Francisco: A Food Biography. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 0759121532.


  • Susan Crawford; et al. (2014), Community Fiber in Washington, D.C., Seattle, WA, and San Francisco, CA: Developments and Lessons Learned, Berkman Center Research Publication (2014–9), SSRN 2439429 – via Social Science Research Network


  • Michael Kimmelman (May 29, 2014), "Urban Renewal, No Bulldozer: San Francisco Repurposes Old for the Future", New York Times




External links[edit]








  • "Decades". Found SF. Shaping San Francisco.

  • Digital Public Library of America. Items related to San Francisco, various dates


  • Noah Veltman. "History of SF Place Names".




Coordinates: 37°47′00″N 122°25′00″W / 37.783333°N 122.416667°W / 37.783333; -122.416667









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