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	<title>San Francisco California &#187; chineseSan Francisco California | </title>
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		<title>1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime</title>
		<link>https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/2026/01/1914-antique-california-history-chinese-gold-san-francisco-crime/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 22 Jan 2026 03:26:58 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[antique]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[california]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[chinese]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[crime]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[francisco]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gold]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[history]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime. SCROLL DOWN for MORE PHOTOS. To view or search ANTIQUE. This listing is for the hardcover, cloth over board book shown. Measures approx 6&#8243;x9&#8243; with 329 pages. An Intimate History by .....]]></description>
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  <img class="yoqi2i2e2hj6i5iUhn9n72j2gn9iKgn9n8oAgn9n72i2eo92g2in5o6i4n7o9o7i5kgj2go6j9h5i9n8j2j2h5i9n5jAeo9o9i9i9i9o5h5i8jf97n8i7o5n6h5i82ch5i8j2o9h5jdOj2h5i8j2o92l2n2h2i2f2g2l2g2o2j2h2fo8h5i8j2i4j4h5jdOn5oqh2n2n2d2j2l2m2o2o2d2n2f2m2j2j2d2oo7n6n8h5i8j2h5i9n5h5jdOn5oqj2l2l2j2g2g2g2h2k2go7j2h5i82ch5i82ch5i8n7h5jdOn5oqn2o2o2o2no7n6jfVj2h5i82ch5i8j2h5jdOn5o2n5h5i8j2jAc2h2j2j2o2ko7h5i8j2i4h5i8jf5dUoqno7h5i8j2i4n6h5jdOn5oqno7h5jdOn6h5i8jfDi9nUcn6n8j2md95oqm2f2m2m2lj2j2j5098" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/1914_antique_CALIFORNIA_HISTORY_chinese_gold_san_francisco_crime_13_qecq.jpg" title="1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime" alt="1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime"/>		<br/>  	<img class="yoqi2i2e2hj6i5iUhn9n72j2gn9iKgn9n8oAgn9n72i2eo92g2in5o6i4n7o9o7i5kgj2go6j9h5i9n8j2j2h5i9n5jAeo9o9i9i9i9o5h5i8jf97n8i7o5n6h5i82ch5i8j2o9h5jdOj2h5i8j2o92l2n2h2i2f2g2l2g2o2j2h2fo8h5i8j2i4j4h5jdOn5oqh2n2n2d2j2l2m2o2o2d2n2f2m2j2j2d2oo7n6n8h5i8j2h5i9n5h5jdOn5oqj2l2l2j2g2g2g2h2k2go7j2h5i82ch5i82ch5i8n7h5jdOn5oqn2o2o2o2no7n6jfVj2h5i82ch5i8j2h5jdOn5o2n5h5i8j2jAc2h2j2j2o2ko7h5i8j2i4h5i8jf5dUoqno7h5i8j2i4n6h5jdOn5oqno7h5jdOn6h5i8jfDi9nUcn6n8j2md95oqm2f2m2m2lj2j2j5098" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/1914_antique_CALIFORNIA_HISTORY_chinese_gold_san_francisco_crime_14_hm.jpg" title="1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime" alt="1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime"/><br/><img class="yoqi2i2e2hj6i5iUhn9n72j2gn9iKgn9n8oAgn9n72i2eo92g2in5o6i4n7o9o7i5kgj2go6j9h5i9n8j2j2h5i9n5jAeo9o9i9i9i9o5h5i8jf97n8i7o5n6h5i82ch5i8j2o9h5jdOj2h5i8j2o92l2n2h2i2f2g2l2g2o2j2h2fo8h5i8j2i4j4h5jdOn5oqh2n2n2d2j2l2m2o2o2d2n2f2m2j2j2d2oo7n6n8h5i8j2h5i9n5h5jdOn5oqj2l2l2j2g2g2g2h2k2go7j2h5i82ch5i82ch5i8n7h5jdOn5oqn2o2o2o2no7n6jfVj2h5i82ch5i8j2h5jdOn5o2n5h5i8j2jAc2h2j2j2o2ko7h5i8j2i4h5i8jf5dUoqno7h5i8j2i4n6h5jdOn5oqno7h5jdOn6h5i8jfDi9nUcn6n8j2md95oqm2f2m2m2lj2j2j5098" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/1914_antique_CALIFORNIA_HISTORY_chinese_gold_san_francisco_crime_15_ofne.jpg" title="1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime" alt="1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime"/>	

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 <img class="yoqi2i2e2hj6i5iUhn9n72j2gn9iKgn9n8oAgn9n72i2eo92g2in5o6i4n7o9o7i5kgj2go6j9h5i9n8j2j2h5i9n5jAeo9o9i9i9i9o5h5i8jf97n8i7o5n6h5i82ch5i8j2o9h5jdOj2h5i8j2o92l2n2h2i2f2g2l2g2o2j2h2fo8h5i8j2i4j4h5jdOn5oqh2n2n2d2j2l2m2o2o2d2n2f2m2j2j2d2oo7n6n8h5i8j2h5i9n5h5jdOn5oqj2l2l2j2g2g2g2h2k2go7j2h5i82ch5i82ch5i8n7h5jdOn5oqn2o2o2o2no7n6jfVj2h5i82ch5i8j2h5jdOn5o2n5h5i8j2jAc2h2j2j2o2ko7h5i8j2i4h5i8jf5dUoqno7h5i8j2i4n6h5jdOn5oqno7h5jdOn6h5i8jfDi9nUcn6n8j2md95oqm2f2m2m2lj2j2j5098" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/1914_antique_CALIFORNIA_HISTORY_chinese_gold_san_francisco_crime_18_ts.jpg" title="1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime" alt="1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime"/><br/>

  
<img class="yoqi2i2e2hj6i5iUhn9n72j2gn9iKgn9n8oAgn9n72i2eo92g2in5o6i4n7o9o7i5kgj2go6j9h5i9n8j2j2h5i9n5jAeo9o9i9i9i9o5h5i8jf97n8i7o5n6h5i82ch5i8j2o9h5jdOj2h5i8j2o92l2n2h2i2f2g2l2g2o2j2h2fo8h5i8j2i4j4h5jdOn5oqh2n2n2d2j2l2m2o2o2d2n2f2m2j2j2d2oo7n6n8h5i8j2h5i9n5h5jdOn5oqj2l2l2j2g2g2g2h2k2go7j2h5i82ch5i82ch5i8n7h5jdOn5oqn2o2o2o2no7n6jfVj2h5i82ch5i8j2h5jdOn5o2n5h5i8j2jAc2h2j2j2o2ko7h5i8j2i4h5i8jf5dUoqno7h5i8j2i4n6h5jdOn5oqno7h5jdOn6h5i8jfDi9nUcn6n8j2md95oqm2f2m2m2lj2j2j5098" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/1914_antique_CALIFORNIA_HISTORY_chinese_gold_san_francisco_crime_19_nx.jpg" title="1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime" alt="1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime"/>  <br/>	  
<img class="yoqi2i2e2hj6i5iUhn9n72j2gn9iKgn9n8oAgn9n72i2eo92g2in5o6i4n7o9o7i5kgj2go6j9h5i9n8j2j2h5i9n5jAeo9o9i9i9i9o5h5i8jf97n8i7o5n6h5i82ch5i8j2o9h5jdOj2h5i8j2o92l2n2h2i2f2g2l2g2o2j2h2fo8h5i8j2i4j4h5jdOn5oqh2n2n2d2j2l2m2o2o2d2n2f2m2j2j2d2oo7n6n8h5i8j2h5i9n5h5jdOn5oqj2l2l2j2g2g2g2h2k2go7j2h5i82ch5i82ch5i8n7h5jdOn5oqn2o2o2o2no7n6jfVj2h5i82ch5i8j2h5jdOn5o2n5h5i8j2jAc2h2j2j2o2ko7h5i8j2i4h5i8jf5dUoqno7h5i8j2i4n6h5jdOn5oqno7h5jdOn6h5i8jfDi9nUcn6n8j2md95oqm2f2m2m2lj2j2j5098" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/1914_antique_CALIFORNIA_HISTORY_chinese_gold_san_francisco_crime_20_dx.jpg" title="1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime" alt="1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime"/>
<br/>	 	  <img class="yoqi2i2e2hj6i5iUhn9n72j2gn9iKgn9n8oAgn9n72i2eo92g2in5o6i4n7o9o7i5kgj2go6j9h5i9n8j2j2h5i9n5jAeo9o9i9i9i9o5h5i8jf97n8i7o5n6h5i82ch5i8j2o9h5jdOj2h5i8j2o92l2n2h2i2f2g2l2g2o2j2h2fo8h5i8j2i4j4h5jdOn5oqh2n2n2d2j2l2m2o2o2d2n2f2m2j2j2d2oo7n6n8h5i8j2h5i9n5h5jdOn5oqj2l2l2j2g2g2g2h2k2go7j2h5i82ch5i82ch5i8n7h5jdOn5oqn2o2o2o2no7n6jfVj2h5i82ch5i8j2h5jdOn5o2n5h5i8j2jAc2h2j2j2o2ko7h5i8j2i4h5i8jf5dUoqno7h5i8j2i4n6h5jdOn5oqno7h5jdOn6h5i8jfDi9nUcn6n8j2md95oqm2f2m2m2lj2j2j5098" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/1914_antique_CALIFORNIA_HISTORY_chinese_gold_san_francisco_crime_21_yg.jpg" title="1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime" alt="1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime"/>
 
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	<img class="yoqi2i2e2hj6i5iUhn9n72j2gn9iKgn9n8oAgn9n72i2eo92g2in5o6i4n7o9o7i5kgj2go6j9h5i9n8j2j2h5i9n5jAeo9o9i9i9i9o5h5i8jf97n8i7o5n6h5i82ch5i8j2o9h5jdOj2h5i8j2o92l2n2h2i2f2g2l2g2o2j2h2fo8h5i8j2i4j4h5jdOn5oqh2n2n2d2j2l2m2o2o2d2n2f2m2j2j2d2oo7n6n8h5i8j2h5i9n5h5jdOn5oqj2l2l2j2g2g2g2h2k2go7j2h5i82ch5i82ch5i8n7h5jdOn5oqn2o2o2o2no7n6jfVj2h5i82ch5i8j2h5jdOn5o2n5h5i8j2jAc2h2j2j2o2ko7h5i8j2i4h5i8jf5dUoqno7h5i8j2i4n6h5jdOn5oqno7h5jdOn6h5i8jfDi9nUcn6n8j2md95oqm2f2m2m2lj2j2j5098" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/voxap.gif" title="1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime" alt="1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime"/>  
 <br/>
 1914 antique CALIFORNIA HISTORY chinese gold san francisco crime. SCROLL DOWN for MORE PHOTOS. To view or search ANTIQUE. This listing is for the hardcover, cloth over board book shown. Measures approx 6&#8243;x9&#8243; with 329 pages. An Intimate History by Gertrude Atherton. Harper &#038; Brothers Publishers, 1914. The Geological Drama II. The Mission Padres 15 III. The Spanish Governors &#8211; I 36 IV. The Spanish Governors &#8211; II 47 V. The Mexican Governors &#8211; I 62 VI. The Mexican Governors &#8211; II 78 VII. Fremont and the Bear-flag Revolution 94 VIII. San Francisco 130 X. Crime and Fire 144 XI. James King of Wm 174 XIII. The Vigilance Committee of 1856 190 XIV. The Vigilance Committee and David S. Broderick and Gwin 230 XVII. The Broderick-Terry Duel 249 XVIII. The War 263 XIX. The Terrible Seventies 272 XX. The Chinese in California 282 XXI. &#8220;The Chinese Must Go&#8221; 290 XXII. Last Phases 308 ILLUSTRATIONS The Native Sons&#8217; Fountain From a photograph by Charles Weidner. Kaweah Mountains, near Kern River Canon Three Brothers, Showing the Merced River. From a photograph by Taber. Glacier Point, 3,300 Feet, and South Dome. Statue of Padre Junipero Serra From a photograph by Charles Weidner. Santa Barbara Mission &#8211; Founded 1786&#8230;. From a photograph by Graham &#038; Morrill. San Gabriel Mission (First Gold Found in 1842) From a photograph by Graham &#038; Morrill. Don Jose de la Guerra Don Pablo de la Guerra From a photograph in the Charles B. Don Jose Castro From a photograph loaned by Delfina de la Guerra. Casa Grande, the Home of the De la Guerras. From a photograph loaned by Delfjia de la Guerra. Sutter From a photograph in the Charles B. Fremont From Harper&#8217;s Weekly, i860. Vallejo From a photograph by Taber loaned by Delfina de la Guerra. Mission San Juan Bautista Sutter&#8217;s Fort as It Was in 1848 From California Illustrated, l853- March of the Caravan From The Expedition of the Donner Party. From &#8220;London Punch, &#8221; i860 The &#8220;El Dorado&#8221; Gambling Saloon From Annals of San Francisco. 6 Sacramento, California, 1850 Facing p. From The United Slates Illustrated. San Francisco From an old print. First Admission-Day Celebration, 1850, California and Montgomery Streets From an old print. James King of Wm From a photograph in the Charles B. Back of a Typical Letter-sheet Such as was Used for Personal Letters to Correspondents &#8220;East&#8221;. From an old print in the Charles B. Fort Vigilance, or Fort Gunnybags. Coleman, President of the Committee of Vigilance. From a photograph in the Charles B. Ralston [Insert], who Frequently Took His Guests to Yosemite and Big Trees, was the First TO Drive a Four-in-hand through &#8220;Wawona&#8221;. Phelan From a photograph by Hartsook. Judge Lawlor From a photograph by Vaughan &#038; Fraser. Rudolph Spreckels From a photograph by Habenicht Francis J. Heney Fremont Older From a photograph by Estey. Hiram Johnson From a photograph by Pach Brothers. Prune-orchard From a photograph in the Charles B. Wheat-field from a photograph in the Charles B. CONDITION : Some wear and light stains to covers, hinges &#038; binding weak, previous owner bookplate. See listing description and photos. Powered by SixBit&#8217;s eCommerce Solution. 
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		<title>1905 Chinese Slave Girl Chinatown San Francisco postcard Britton &amp; Rey Tucker</title>
		<link>https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/2025/11/1905-chinese-slave-girl-chinatown-san-francisco-postcard-britton-rey-tucker/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Nov 2025 12:59:24 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[chinese]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[britton]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[girl]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/2025/11/1905-chinese-slave-girl-chinatown-san-francisco-postcard-britton-rey-tucker/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[1905 Chinese Slave Girl Chinatown San Francisco postcard Britton &#038; Rey Tucker. Visit our store for more like this.]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<img class="ek9mf8f77mdrf2f2md66k4m2l9k6al9k6k5ld79k6k4mf77l6l9mf62l3ak4l6l4f2g8m2l9l3g6md68k8l2k9if4d4d65k5k5h6m3m6m7k3h6m5l3l5id79k8l5idQi8i5i9i6i6i3i5i7i5i9i9h9l5l7ld79m4h3i4jd5dAi6i8i9jf5fAjdKi9i6i6h2jfGm5m7l5l2l9m4h3i6i8i8i6i3i3i3i4i7i3h8k8l3l3l6l9m4h3jd5f5f5f5dGm5k7k9k8l3l5l9m4h3m4l5k9hfMi6i6jfPh8l5l7m3k6k8h3jdGl5l7m5l9m4h3jdGl9m5m3l2hf85m7k8e2f5f9m4h3i9i5i9jfPi9f9f4g0065" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/1905_Chinese_Slave_Girl_Chinatown_San_Francisco_postcard_Britton_Rey_Tucker_01_mc.jpg" title="1905 Chinese Slave Girl Chinatown San Francisco postcard Britton &#038; Rey Tucker" alt="1905 Chinese Slave Girl Chinatown San Francisco postcard Britton &#038; Rey Tucker"/><br/>
  	 <img class="ek9mf8f77mdrf2f2md66k4m2l9k6al9k6k5ld79k6k4mf77l6l9mf62l3ak4l6l4f2g8m2l9l3g6md68k8l2k9if4d4d65k5k5h6m3m6m7k3h6m5l3l5id79k8l5idQi8i5i9i6i6i3i5i7i5i9i9h9l5l7ld79m4h3i4jd5dAi6i8i9jf5fAjdKi9i6i6h2jfGm5m7l5l2l9m4h3i6i8i8i6i3i3i3i4i7i3h8k8l3l3l6l9m4h3jd5f5f5f5dGm5k7k9k8l3l5l9m4h3m4l5k9hfMi6i6jfPh8l5l7m3k6k8h3jdGl5l7m5l9m4h3jdGl9m5m3l2hf85m7k8e2f5f9m4h3i9i5i9jfPi9f9f4g0065" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/1905_Chinese_Slave_Girl_Chinatown_San_Francisco_postcard_Britton_Rey_Tucker_02_nouk.jpg" title="1905 Chinese Slave Girl Chinatown San Francisco postcard Britton &#038; Rey Tucker" alt="1905 Chinese Slave Girl Chinatown San Francisco postcard Britton &#038; Rey Tucker"/><br/>


	 <img class="ek9mf8f77mdrf2f2md66k4m2l9k6al9k6k5ld79k6k4mf77l6l9mf62l3ak4l6l4f2g8m2l9l3g6md68k8l2k9if4d4d65k5k5h6m3m6m7k3h6m5l3l5id79k8l5idQi8i5i9i6i6i3i5i7i5i9i9h9l5l7ld79m4h3i4jd5dAi6i8i9jf5fAjdKi9i6i6h2jfGm5m7l5l2l9m4h3i6i8i8i6i3i3i3i4i7i3h8k8l3l3l6l9m4h3jd5f5f5f5dGm5k7k9k8l3l5l9m4h3m4l5k9hfMi6i6jfPh8l5l7m3k6k8h3jdGl5l7m5l9m4h3jdGl9m5m3l2hf85m7k8e2f5f9m4h3i9i5i9jfPi9f9f4g0065" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/1905_Chinese_Slave_Girl_Chinatown_San_Francisco_postcard_Britton_Rey_Tucker_03_lbf.jpg" title="1905 Chinese Slave Girl Chinatown San Francisco postcard Britton &#038; Rey Tucker" alt="1905 Chinese Slave Girl Chinatown San Francisco postcard Britton &#038; Rey Tucker"/>	<br/>
	<br/>
	  
   <img class="ek9mf8f77mdrf2f2md66k4m2l9k6al9k6k5ld79k6k4mf77l6l9mf62l3ak4l6l4f2g8m2l9l3g6md68k8l2k9if4d4d65k5k5h6m3m6m7k3h6m5l3l5id79k8l5idQi8i5i9i6i6i3i5i7i5i9i9h9l5l7ld79m4h3i4jd5dAi6i8i9jf5fAjdKi9i6i6h2jfGm5m7l5l2l9m4h3i6i8i8i6i3i3i3i4i7i3h8k8l3l3l6l9m4h3jd5f5f5f5dGm5k7k9k8l3l5l9m4h3m4l5k9hfMi6i6jfPh8l5l7m3k6k8h3jdGl5l7m5l9m4h3jdGl9m5m3l2hf85m7k8e2f5f9m4h3i9i5i9jfPi9f9f4g0065" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/voxap.gif" title="1905 Chinese Slave Girl Chinatown San Francisco postcard Britton &#038; Rey Tucker" alt="1905 Chinese Slave Girl Chinatown San Francisco postcard Britton &#038; Rey Tucker"/>  <br/>
1905 Chinese Slave Girl Chinatown San Francisco postcard Britton &#038; Rey Tucker. Visit our store for more like this.
 <br/>   	  
   <img class="ek9mf8f77mdrf2f2md66k4m2l9k6al9k6k5ld79k6k4mf77l6l9mf62l3ak4l6l4f2g8m2l9l3g6md68k8l2k9if4d4d65k5k5h6m3m6m7k3h6m5l3l5id79k8l5idQi8i5i9i6i6i3i5i7i5i9i9h9l5l7ld79m4h3i4jd5dAi6i8i9jf5fAjdKi9i6i6h2jfGm5m7l5l2l9m4h3i6i8i8i6i3i3i3i4i7i3h8k8l3l3l6l9m4h3jd5f5f5f5dGm5k7k9k8l3l5l9m4h3m4l5k9hfMi6i6jfPh8l5l7m3k6k8h3jdGl5l7m5l9m4h3jdGl9m5m3l2hf85m7k8e2f5f9m4h3i9i5i9jfPi9f9f4g0065" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/voxap.gif" title="1905 Chinese Slave Girl Chinatown San Francisco postcard Britton &#038; Rey Tucker" alt="1905 Chinese Slave Girl Chinatown San Francisco postcard Britton &#038; Rey Tucker"/>	<br/> 
]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Chinese Trump Goes Instantly Viral After Hilariously Mocking Trump</title>
		<link>https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/2025/11/chinese-trump-goes-instantly-viral-after-hilariously-mocking-trump/</link>
		<comments>https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/2025/11/chinese-trump-goes-instantly-viral-after-hilariously-mocking-trump/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Nov 2025 12:28:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[admin]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[chinese]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[goes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hilariously]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[instantly]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mocking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[trump]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[viral]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>SAN FRANCISCO CHINESE NEW YEAR 1970 Original USA Tourism poster 18&#215;25 NM</title>
		<link>https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/2025/10/san-francisco-chinese-new-year-1970-original-usa-tourism-poster-18x25-nm/</link>
		<comments>https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/2025/10/san-francisco-chinese-new-year-1970-original-usa-tourism-poster-18x25-nm/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 27 Oct 2025 22:44:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[admin]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[francisco]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[18x25]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[chinese]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[original]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poster]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tourism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[year]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/2025/10/san-francisco-chinese-new-year-1970-original-usa-tourism-poster-18x25-nm/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[SAN FRANCISCO CHINESE NEW YEAR FESTIVAL (1970). Rare original US tourism poster advertising Chinese New Year in San Francisco&#8217;s Chinatown. Format : 18X25 inches (46X64 cm). Will be sent rolled in a sturdy tube. For larger quantities, a separate invoice .....]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[ <img class="re9gf2a7gc6y5oUgd06e4g2f9e605a9e6e5fdne6e4ga7f6f9g1e2fyTe4f6fI5o68g2f9fy66eo4oYeo4oYeo4oXeI4oXe7gf2d2c6c6c6dke5e8e9058f6e705e4oZ0Vgc4o5S5804oYeo4oZ0Vgc7e73g6g5g7072gI7dvg707e73f904oZ05y5c4oYe704o5S58e6f3gI7o72f2g607c7e7y73fo72go7fug6fo73f8e7e904oZ05y4oXeI4o5S58e6f3g607c7dug3g3g3g4g7g3f804oYeo5e5e4oYeS4o5S58e6fy7o7y7y7y72f8e706o4oXe704oYeo5e4oZ05y4o5S58e6f3e604oZ05y4oXe7ag4g6g6073g7f804oZ05y5d0S6e4oYe2fy72f804oZ05y5d0704o5S58e6fy72f804o5S58e7eS4oXe4ae7e904oYeo91e6fy72g5g6gy73gS6e6o58005" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/SAN_FRANCISCO_CHINESE_NEW_YEAR_1970_Original_USA_Tourism_poster_18x25_NM_01_lkna.jpg" title="SAN FRANCISCO CHINESE NEW YEAR 1970 Original USA Tourism poster 18x25 NM" alt="SAN FRANCISCO CHINESE NEW YEAR 1970 Original USA Tourism poster 18x25 NM"/> 	  <br/>
 <br/>  <img class="re9gf2a7gc6y5oUgd06e4g2f9e605a9e6e5fdne6e4ga7f6f9g1e2fyTe4f6fI5o68g2f9fy66eo4oYeo4oYeo4oXeI4oXe7gf2d2c6c6c6dke5e8e9058f6e705e4oZ0Vgc4o5S5804oYeo4oZ0Vgc7e73g6g5g7072gI7dvg707e73f904oZ05y5c4oYe704o5S58e6f3gI7o72f2g607c7e7y73fo72go7fug6fo73f8e7e904oZ05y4oXeI4o5S58e6f3g607c7dug3g3g3g4g7g3f804oYeo5e5e4oYeS4o5S58e6fy7o7y7y7y72f8e706o4oXe704oYeo5e4oZ05y4o5S58e6f3e604oZ05y4oXe7ag4g6g6073g7f804oZ05y5d0S6e4oYe2fy72f804oZ05y5d0704o5S58e6fy72f804o5S58e7eS4oXe4ae7e904oYeo91e6fy72g5g6gy73gS6e6o58005" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/voxap.gif" title="SAN FRANCISCO CHINESE NEW YEAR 1970 Original USA Tourism poster 18x25 NM" alt="SAN FRANCISCO CHINESE NEW YEAR 1970 Original USA Tourism poster 18x25 NM"/> 
<br/>



	SAN FRANCISCO CHINESE NEW YEAR FESTIVAL (1970). Rare original US tourism poster advertising Chinese New Year in San Francisco&#8217;s Chinatown. Format : 18X25 inches (46X64 cm). Will be sent rolled in a sturdy tube. For larger quantities, a separate invoice will be sent. This is one of the many movie and music posters which can be found at ILLUSTRACTION GALLERY &#8211; ART THAT POPS! A brand new online poster gallery devoted to the celebration of the poster artists behind the art of the movie, music and comic book. We only sell Vintage and rare posters (no cheap reproductions). Specialized in art by Robert McGinnis Ray (Raymond Elseviers), Frank McCarthy, Gunther Kieser, Hans Hillmann, Jack Kirby, Marvel Third Eye Black light&#8230; As well as Steve McQueen, Audrey Hepburn, Clint Eastwood, Steve McQueen, Alain Delon, Jean-Paul Belmondo, Brigitte Bardot, Sophia Loren, Catherine Deneuve, Paul Newman, Raquel Welch and many other actors and actresses and Italian fotobusta (photobusta), Japanese B2 posters, Belgian posters, French posters, German A1 posters, Fillmore posters, Family Dog posters, Airlines and travel posters, Munich 1972 Olympics posters and many more colorful images which can be discovered on the site. Watch the other listings. Feel free to contact the gallery for any queries/questions. Thanks for your business. ILLUSTRACTION GALLERY &#8211; Art That Pops!  <br/>
 <img class="re9gf2a7gc6y5oUgd06e4g2f9e605a9e6e5fdne6e4ga7f6f9g1e2fyTe4f6fI5o68g2f9fy66eo4oYeo4oYeo4oXeI4oXe7gf2d2c6c6c6dke5e8e9058f6e705e4oZ0Vgc4o5S5804oYeo4oZ0Vgc7e73g6g5g7072gI7dvg707e73f904oZ05y5c4oYe704o5S58e6f3gI7o72f2g607c7e7y73fo72go7fug6fo73f8e7e904oZ05y4oXeI4o5S58e6f3g607c7dug3g3g3g4g7g3f804oYeo5e5e4oYeS4o5S58e6fy7o7y7y7y72f8e706o4oXe704oYeo5e4oZ05y4o5S58e6f3e604oZ05y4oXe7ag4g6g6073g7f804oZ05y5d0S6e4oYe2fy72f804oZ05y5d0704o5S58e6fy72f804o5S58e7eS4oXe4ae7e904oYeo91e6fy72g5g6gy73gS6e6o58005" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/voxap.gif" title="SAN FRANCISCO CHINESE NEW YEAR 1970 Original USA Tourism poster 18x25 NM" alt="SAN FRANCISCO CHINESE NEW YEAR 1970 Original USA Tourism poster 18x25 NM"/><br/>  
	]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Chinese Servant With Child White Boy Snapshot Rare Handsome Young</title>
		<link>https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/2025/10/chinese-servant-with-child-white-boy-snapshot-rare-handsome-young-16/</link>
		<comments>https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/2025/10/chinese-servant-with-child-white-boy-snapshot-rare-handsome-young-16/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 25 Oct 2025 22:34:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[admin]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[chinese]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[child]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[handsome]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rare]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[servant]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[snapshot]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[white]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[young]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[EARLY 1900&#8217;S SNAPSHOT OF DUAI BUAI? SO AND JAMES READY FOR PLAY. A CHINESE SERVANT WITH A YOUNG BOY. MOST LIKELY SAN FRANCISCO SINCE THIS IS WHERE I OBTAINED THE PHOTOGRAPH ORIGINALLY. MEASURES 3 1/2 X 2 3/8 INCHES. As .....]]></description>
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 <br/>	 	 <img class="v2c2g2go82aWi3iAa97nUhpd97i2pd97n62dpd97nUgo8o72e2gn3o4i2n5o7o5i3j92h2eo4j7m2ld7d74lfBi6n5h3i6jdBi6jd67k7k7j3m5i5i6k5j3i4l5l7h3i6jd8f7d77h3i6jd94h3i8i4h3i8i4if94n5i2n4h3i8i4n5h3i6i9h3i8i4h3i7n8l7l9l2mf86jdBi8i4n4n4i9ifBi6i9n3n5n5i9n4i2n3if4fRn5h3i6n8i4i6l7l4mf86jd4fBi6i9h3i6i9ifxg9g9h3i8i4nfxh3i6n8ld75l5l8mf86jd94n5n5n5n4h3i6n8i4k9lf7d75l7mf86jd86l7lfQh3i8i4if4f95nfBi6n8l7l9m5k8ld5d94h3i6n8l7l9i4mf86jd94h3i6n8mfMm5l4i8i4i6l02hm6jd93h3i7n6n3nf93n4i9jfO096" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/Chinese_Servant_With_Child_White_Boy_Snapshot_Rare_Handsome_Young_02_fg.jpg" title="Chinese Servant With Child White Boy Snapshot Rare Handsome Young" alt="Chinese Servant With Child White Boy Snapshot Rare Handsome Young"/>
  

<br/>	 	  <br/> 
 
 
<img class="v2c2g2go82aWi3iAa97nUhpd97i2pd97n62dpd97nUgo8o72e2gn3o4i2n5o7o5i3j92h2eo4j7m2ld7d74lfBi6n5h3i6jdBi6jd67k7k7j3m5i5i6k5j3i4l5l7h3i6jd8f7d77h3i6jd94h3i8i4h3i8i4if94n5i2n4h3i8i4n5h3i6i9h3i8i4h3i7n8l7l9l2mf86jdBi8i4n4n4i9ifBi6i9n3n5n5i9n4i2n3if4fRn5h3i6n8i4i6l7l4mf86jd4fBi6i9h3i6i9ifxg9g9h3i8i4nfxh3i6n8ld75l5l8mf86jd94n5n5n5n4h3i6n8i4k9lf7d75l7mf86jd86l7lfQh3i8i4if4f95nfBi6n8l7l9m5k8ld5d94h3i6n8l7l9i4mf86jd94h3i6n8mfMm5l4i8i4i6l02hm6jd93h3i7n6n3nf93n4i9jfO096" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/voxap.gif" title="Chinese Servant With Child White Boy Snapshot Rare Handsome Young" alt="Chinese Servant With Child White Boy Snapshot Rare Handsome Young"/>
<br/> 
EARLY 1900&#8217;S SNAPSHOT OF DUAI BUAI? SO AND JAMES READY FOR PLAY. A CHINESE SERVANT WITH A YOUNG BOY. MOST LIKELY SAN FRANCISCO SINCE THIS IS WHERE I OBTAINED THE PHOTOGRAPH ORIGINALLY. MEASURES 3 1/2 X 2 3/8 INCHES. As of 2012, 21.4% of the population in San Francisco was of Chinese descent, and at least 150,000 Chinese American residents. [1] The Chinese are the largest Asian American subgroup in San Francisco. [2] San Francisco has the highest percentage of residents of Chinese descent of any major U. City, and the second largest Chinese American population, after New York City. The San Francisco Bay Area is 7.9% Chinese American, with many residents in Oakland and Santa Clara County. San Francisco&#8217;s Chinese community has ancestry mainly from Guangdong province, China and Hong Kong, although there is a sizable population of ethnic Chinese with ancestry from other parts of mainland China and Taiwan as well. Prior to health care. Struggles to establish health care. First medical facility: Tung Wah Dispensary. Natural disaster led to the first modern hospital. The Gateway Arch (Dragon Gate) on Grant Avenue at Bush Street in Chinatown. The Chinese arriving in San Francisco, primarily from the Taishan and Zhongshan regions as well as Guangdong province of mainland China, did so at the height of the California Gold Rush, and many worked in the mines scattered throughout the northern part of the state. [3] Chinatown was the one geographical region deeded by the city government and private property owners which allowed Chinese people to inherit and inhabit dwellings. The majority of these Chinese shopkeepers, restaurant owners, and hired workers in San Francisco Chinatown were predominantly Hoisanese and male[citation needed]. Many Chinese found jobs working for large companies, most famously as part of the Central Pacific[4] on the Transcontinental Railroad. Other early immigrants worked as mine workers or independent prospectors hoping to strike it rich during the California Gold Rush. Although many of the earlier waves of Chinese immigration were predominantly men searching for jobs, Chinese women also began making the journey towards the United States. The first known Chinese woman to immigrate was Marie Seise who arrived in 1848 and worked in the household of Charles V. [5] Within a matter of months of Seise&#8217;s arrival to the West Coast, the rush for gold in California commenced which brought a flooding of prospective miners from around the globe. Among this group were Chinese, primarily from the Guangdong Province, most of whom were seafarers who had already established Western contacts. Few women accompanied these early sojourners, many of whom expected to return from after they made their fortune. Although the oceanic voyage to the United States offered new and exciting opportunities, dangers also loomed for women while traveling and many were discouraged from making the trip due to the harsh living conditions. Chinese immigrants would have to ride in the steerage where food was stored. Many were given rice bowls to eat during the voyage. In 1892, a federal law passed to ensure immigrants who were on board, needed a certificate. Due to tight arrangements, unhygienic situations and scarcity in food, this led to health degradation. [7] Many immigrants were unable to board these voyages due to the Geary Act of 1892 which blocked the reunion of immigrants in America with their families not with them. [8] Many diseases found through these voyages were Hookworm Yersinia pestis which contributed greatly to the Bubonic Plague. &#8220;During the Gold Rush era, when Chinese men were a common sight in California, Chinese women were an oddity&#8221; and in urban spaces were rarely seen in public. Unlike the rural areas, Chinatown afforded few opportunities for women to come into contact with the larger society. &#8220;[6] Simultaneously, Chinese women also participated in urban sex work, which resulted in local laws like one passed in April 1854 that sought to shut down &#8220;houses of ill-fame, &#8221; not racialized in name but practically deployed to &#8220;[single] out Mexican and Chinese houses of ill fame, starting with Charles Walden&#8217;s Golden Rule House on Pacific Street and moving on to establishments run by Ah-Choo, C. Lossen, and Ah Yow. With national unemployment in the wake of the Panic of 1873, racial tensions in the city boiled over into full blown race riots. In response to the violence, the Consolidated Chinese Benevolent Association or the Chinese Six Companies, which evolved out of the labor recruiting organizations for different areas of Guangdong province, was created as a means of providing a unified voice for the community. The heads of these companies were the leaders of the Chinese merchants, who represented the Chinese community in front of the business community as a whole and the city government. Numerous white citizens defended the Chinese community, among them Pastor Franklin Rhoda whose numerous letters appeared in the local press. The anti-immigrant sentiment became law as the United States Government passed the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 &#8211; the first immigration restriction law aimed at a single ethnic group. This law, along with other immigration restriction laws such as the Geary Act, greatly reduced the number of Chinese people allowed into the country and the city, and in theory limited Chinese immigration to single men only. Exceptions were granted to the families of wealthy merchants, but the law was still effective enough to reduce the population of the neighborhood to an all-time low in the 1920s. The exclusion act was repealed during World War II under the Magnuson Act, in recognition of the important role of China as an ally in the war, although tight quotas still applied. Not unlike much of San Francisco, a period of criminality ensued in some Chinese gangs known as tongs, which were on the produce of smuggling, gambling and prostitution, and by the early 1880s, the population had adopted the term Tong war to describe periods of violence in Chinatown, the San Francisco Police Department had established its so-called Chinatown Squad. One of the more successful sergeants, Jack Manion, was appointed in 1921 and served for two decades. The squad was finally disbanded in August 1955 by police chief George Healey, upon the request of the influential Chinese World newspaper, which had editorialized that the squad was an &#8220;affront to Americans of Chinese descent&#8221;. [11] The neighborhood was completely destroyed in the 1906 earthquake that leveled most of the city. From 1910 to 1940, Chinese immigrants were detained at the Angel Island immigration station in the San Francisco Bay. To be permitted entry to the United States, thousands of mostly Chinese immigrants crossing the Pacific to San Francisco had to enter through the gauntlet of Angel Island, and were detained for months in a purgatory of isolation. Some spent years on the island waiting for entry to the U. Many working-class Hong Kong Chinese immigrants began arriving in Chinatown in large numbers in the 1960s, and despite their status and professions in Hong Kong, had to find low-paying employment in restaurants and garment factories in Chinatown because of limited English fluency. An increase in Cantonese-speaking immigrants from Hong Kong and Guangdong has gradually led to the replacement of the Taishanese (Hoisanese) dialect with the standard Cantonese dialect. The Golden Dragon massacre occurred in 1977. In the Sunset District in western San Francisco, a demographic shift began in the late 1960s and accelerated from the 1980s as Asian immigration to San Francisco increased dramatically. Much of the original, largely Irish American population of the Sunset moved to other neighborhoods and outlying suburban areas, although there is still a significant Irish American and Irish minority in the neighborhood. Informal Chinatowns have emerged on Irving Street between 19th Avenue and 24th Avenue as well as on the commercial sections of Taraval Street and Noriega Street west of 19th Avenue. About half of the Sunset District&#8217;s residents are Asian American, mostly of Chinese birth and descent. The immigrants in the Sunset District were both Mandarin- and Cantonese-speaking. As of 2012, many immigrants from China and Taiwan moved to the San Francisco Bay Area due to jobs in the technological industry. Many of them reside in the South Bay Area cities of Cupertino, Sunnyvale, Santa Clara, San Jose, and Fremont. Chinatowns in San Francisco. Clement Street Chinatown, San Francisco, the &#8220;Second Chinatown&#8221;. Irving Street Chinatown, San Francisco, the &#8220;Third Chinatown&#8221;. Noriega Street Chinatown, San Francisco, the &#8220;Fourth Chinatown&#8221;. Chinatowns around San Francisco. Chinatown, San Jose, California. Milpitas Square, a Chinese shopping center in Milpitas, California. The Chinese Culture Center, a community-based, non-profit organization, is located between Chinatown and the Financial District in San Francisco. According to the book, &#8220;Handbook of Asian American Health&#8221; by Grace J. Yoo, of the chapter 26 : Early Chinese Immigrants Organizing for Healthcare: The Establishment of the Chinese Hospital in San Francisco, by Lauren D. Hom states that In the late 19th century it was the period of major epidemic of diseases in San Francisco, such as the bubonic plague, smallpox, and cholera. These diseases were commonly found in the poor, and working classes (at this time most Chinese were part of these category), due to the over-populated areas in San Francisco Chinatown. The disease spreading during this time, were not spread due to the &#8220;germ theory&#8221;, but because of the &#8220;miasma theory&#8221;, which was known as spreading disease due to &#8220;breathing sick air&#8221;. Therefore, majority of the citizens in San Francisco believed that this theory was relevant in Chinatown and they avoided any contact to the Chinese in Chinatown. The reason that Chinatown was in that condition at this time was because the Americans at this time wanted to get rid of the Chinese, because they were struggling to find jobs, due to the competition created by the Chinese for jobs. Therefore, in the part of discriminating the Chinese, the Americans did not provide the services needed to receive the best health care. As a result, the unsanitary and over populated housing that Chinese had to live in, caused them to get sick even more, and without any health care, and physicians to help them get better. Most of the time the Chinese would be accused responsible for the cause of the plague in San Francisco Chinatown. According to Hom, In 1876, the Chinese were blamed as the source of the disease because of the unsanitary conditions of Chinatown. Before the Chinese had any particular health care system for their community, all of them had to go through the following barriers: they had to walk a very long distance to receive any medical attention at a hospital, and they were denied coverage due to unaffordable rates of the services provided by the hospitals. Instead most Chinese relied on &#8220;folk healer&#8221; than on western medicine. The &#8220;Folk Healers&#8221; were those that provided Chinese traditional medicine to the Chinese community in San Francisco Chinatown. Therefore, many Chinese did not bother to go to the hospital unless it was a crisis. The first medical care place in San Francisco Chinatown was the Tung Wah Dispensary. It was provided by the Chinese Six Companies, and it was built in 1900 on 828 Sacramento Street. The dispensary was named after the Tung Wah Hospital in Hong Kong, and it housed 25 beds, provided both western and Chinese medicine, free or to low cost care to patients, and its staff was volunteers from the community and physicians from outside of the community. Of those physicians three were American physicians and the rest were Chinese American physicians who helped with the Chinese medicine and translating from Chinese to English for the American physicians. In 1906, due to the great earthquake in San Francisco, the Tung Wah Dispensary was destroyed, but was rebuilt in Trenton Alley. However, with the many injuries due to the natural disaster, a lot more Chinese patients needed medical attention, and the dispensary was beginning to overflow with patients. Therefore, they decided to expand the dispensary to a Modern hospital, the idea of this began to revolve in 1918. By April 18, 1925 the San Francisco Chinese Hospital in the San Francisco Chinatown, and was established. It is the only Chinese-language hospital in the United States. [16][17] The Asian Aids Project (AAP) was started in the 1987, it is made to help them fight the AIDS epidemic in the Asian Community including the Chinese Americans. This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. Chinese School, San Francisco. Chinese Education Center Elementary School. The Chinese American International School, Cumberland Chinese School, North Valley Chinese School, and Mei Jia Chinese Learning Center are located in San Francisco. Palo Alto Chinese School is located in Palo Alto, and has classes teaching both Mandarin and Cantonese. The Shoong Family Chinese Cultural Center in Oakland serves as the premier Chinese-language school in the East Bay Area, and Contra Costa Chinese School is located in Pleasant Hill. The North Valley Chinese School in Milpitas and San Jose Chinese school both serve the greater San Jose area. The Redwood Empire Chinese Center&#8217;s Chinese school in Santa Rosa serves the North Bay. The New York-based worldwide distributed newspaper Epoch Times has a branch office in San Francisco. The Hong Kong-based newspaper Sing Tao Daily has an office in San Francisco. East West, The Chinese American Journal folded in 1989. The Chinese-American newspaper World Journal has an office in Millbrae. Previously the Taiwanese airline China Airlines operated a bus to San Francisco International Airport from Milpitas and Cupertino in California. The Chinese New Year Parade in San Francisco is held on every Chinese New Year&#8217;s, and is celebrated in Chinatown. It is the largest Chinese New Year event in North America. [21] The Taiwanese American Cultural Festival, started in 1993, is held in Union Square, San Francisco every May. This includes ethnic Chinese in the San Francisco Bay Area. Wilma Chan, member of the Alameda County Board of Supervisors. Raymond Chow Kwok Cheung, criminal. Sandra Lee Fewer, politician. Edsel Ford Fong, waiter at Sam Wo. Heather Fong, former Chief of San Francisco Police Department. Fred Lau, former Chief of San Francisco Police Department. Bruce Lee, actor, born in Chinatown. Ed Lee, former Mayor of San Francisco[2]. Betty Ong, American Airlines Flight 11 flight attendant. Willie &#8220;Woo Woo&#8221; Wong, basketball player, who a playground in Chinatown is named after. Gene Luen Yang, cartoonist. San Francisco, officially the City and County of San Francisco and colloquially known as SF, San Fran, Frisco, or The City, [19][20] is the cultural, commercial, and financial center of Northern California. San Francisco is the 15th most populous city in the United States, and the fourth most populous in California, with 883,305 residents as of 2018. [14] It covers an area of about 46.89 square miles (121.4 km2), [21] mostly at the north end of the San Francisco Peninsula in the San Francisco Bay Area, making it the second most densely populated large U. City, and the fifth most densely populated U. County, behind only four of the five New York City boroughs. [22] With San Jose, it forms the fifth most populous combined statistical area in the United States, the San Jose-San Francisco-Oakland, CA Combined Statistical Area (9.67 million residents in 2018). [26] Of the 500+ primary statistical areas in the U. [26] San Francisco was ranked 12th in the world and 2nd in the United States on the Global Financial Centres Index as of September 2019. [27] As of 2016, the San Francisco metropolitan area had the highest GDP per capita, labor productivity, and household income levels in the OECD. [28] As of 2019, it is the highest rated American city on world liveability rankings. San Francisco was founded on June 29, 1776, when colonists from Spain established Presidio of San Francisco at the Golden Gate and Mission San Francisco de Asís a few miles away, all named for St. [2] The California Gold Rush of 1849 brought rapid growth, making it the largest city on the West Coast at the time. San Francisco became a consolidated city-county in 1856. [30] San Francisco&#8217;s status as the West Coast&#8217;s largest city peaked between 1870 and 1900, when around 25% of California&#8217;s population resided in the city proper. [31] After three-quarters of the city was destroyed by the 1906 earthquake and fire, [32] San Francisco was quickly rebuilt, hosting the Panama-Pacific International Exposition nine years later. [33] It then became the birthplace of the United Nations in 1945. [34][35][36] After the war, the confluence of returning servicemen, significant immigration, liberalizing attitudes, along with the rise of the &#8220;hippie&#8221; counterculture, the Sexual Revolution, the Peace Movement growing from opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War, and other factors led to the Summer of Love and the gay rights movement, cementing San Francisco as a center of liberal activism in the United States. Politically, the city votes strongly along liberal Democratic Party lines. A popular tourist destination, [37] San Francisco is known for its cool summers, fog, steep rolling hills, eclectic mix of architecture, and landmarks, including the Golden Gate Bridge, cable cars, the former Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary, Fisherman&#8217;s Wharf, and its Chinatown district. San Francisco is also the headquarters of five major banking institutions and various other companies such as Levi Strauss &#038; Co. Fitbit, Salesforce. Com, Dropbox, Reddit, Square, Inc. Dolby, Airbnb, Weebly, Pacific Gas and Electric Company, Yelp, Pinterest, Twitter, Uber, Lyft, Mozilla, Wikimedia Foundation and Craigslist. The city, and the surrounding Bay Area, is a global center of the sciences and arts[38][39] and is home to a number of educational and cultural institutions, such as the University of San Francisco (USF), University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), San Francisco State University (SFSU), the De Young Museum, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the SFJAZZ Center, and the California Academy of Sciences. Race, ethnicity, religion, and languages. Education, households, and income. Culture and contemporary life. Primary and secondary schools. See also: History of San Francisco and Timeline of San Francisco. Mission San Francisco de Asís (Mission Dolores). Yelamu villages in San Francisco. Bond of the City and County of San Francisco, issued 1. The earliest archaeological evidence of human habitation of the territory of the city of San Francisco dates to 3000 BC. [40] The Yelamu group of the Ohlone people resided in a few small villages when an overland Spanish exploration party, led by Don Gaspar de Portolá, arrived on November 2, 1769, the first documented European visit to San Francisco Bay. [41] Seven years later, on March 28, 1776, the Spanish established the Presidio of San Francisco, followed by a mission, Mission San Francisco de Asís (Mission Dolores), established by the Spanish explorer Juan Bautista de Anza. View of San Francisco 1846-47. 1853 United States Coast Survey map. Upon independence from Spain in 1821, the area became part of Mexico. Under Mexican rule, the mission system gradually ended, and its lands became privatized. In 1835, William Richardson, a naturalized Mexican citizen of English birth, erected the first independent homestead, [42] near a boat anchorage around what is today Portsmouth Square. Together with Alcalde Francisco de Haro, he laid out a street plan for the expanded settlement, and the town, named Yerba Buena, began to attract American settlers. Sloat claimed California for the United States on July 7, 1846, during the Mexican-American War, and Captain John B. Montgomery arrived to claim Yerba Buena two days later. Yerba Buena was renamed San Francisco on January 30 of the next year, and Mexico officially ceded the territory to the United States at the end of the war. Despite its attractive location as a port and naval base, San Francisco was still a small settlement with inhospitable geography. Francis Samuel Marryat, Hilltop of San Francisco, California, Looking toward the Bay, 1849. Port of San Francisco in 1851. The California Gold Rush brought a flood of treasure seekers (known as &#8220;forty-niners&#8221;, as in &#8220;1849&#8221;). With their sourdough bread in tow, [44] prospectors accumulated in San Francisco over rival Benicia, [45] raising the population from 1,000 in 1848 to 25,000 by December 1849. [46] The promise of great wealth was so strong that crews on arriving vessels deserted and rushed off to the gold fields, leaving behind a forest of masts in San Francisco harbor. By 1870 Yerba Buena Cove had been filled to create new land. California was quickly granted statehood in 1850, and the U. Military built Fort Point at the Golden Gate and a fort on Alcatraz Island to secure the San Francisco Bay. Silver discoveries, including the Comstock Lode in Nevada in 1859, further drove rapid population growth. [49] With hordes of fortune seekers streaming through the city, lawlessness was common, and the Barbary Coast section of town gained notoriety as a haven for criminals, prostitution, and gambling. Entrepreneurs sought to capitalize on the wealth generated by the Gold Rush. Early winners were the banking industry, with the founding of Wells Fargo in 1852 and the Bank of California in 1864. Development of the Port of San Francisco and the establishment in 1869 of overland access to the eastern U. Rail system via the newly completed Pacific Railroad (the construction of which the city only reluctantly helped support[51]) helped make the Bay Area a center for trade. Catering to the needs and tastes of the growing population, Levi Strauss opened a dry goods business and Domingo Ghirardelli began manufacturing chocolate. Chinese immigrants made the city a polyglot culture, drawn to &#8220;Old Gold Mountain&#8221;, creating the city&#8217;s Chinatown quarter. In 1870, Asians made up 8% of the population. [52] The first cable cars carried San Franciscans up Clay Street in 1873. The city&#8217;s sea of Victorian houses began to take shape, and civic leaders campaigned for a spacious public park, resulting in plans for Golden Gate Park. San Franciscans built schools, churches, theaters, and all the hallmarks of civic life. The Presidio developed into the most important American military installation on the Pacific coast. [53] By 1890, San Francisco&#8217;s population approached 300,000, making it the eighth-largest city in the United States at the time. Around 1901, San Francisco was a major city known for its flamboyant style, stately hotels, ostentatious mansions on Nob Hill, and a thriving arts scene. As buildings collapsed from the shaking, ruptured gas lines ignited fires that spread across the city and burned out of control for several days. With water mains out of service, the Presidio Artillery Corps attempted to contain the inferno by dynamiting blocks of buildings to create firebreaks. [56] More than three-quarters of the city lay in ruins, including almost all of the downtown core. [32] Contemporary accounts reported that 498 people lost their lives, though modern estimates put the number in the several thousands. [57] More than half of the city&#8217;s population of 400,000 was left homeless. [58] Refugees settled temporarily in makeshift tent villages in Golden Gate Park, the Presidio, on the beaches, and elsewhere. Many fled permanently to the East Bay. Not in history has a modern imperial city been so completely destroyed. San Francisco is gone. Jack London after the 1906 earthquake and fire[59]. The Palace of Fine Arts at the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition. Rebuilding was rapid and performed on a grand scale. Rejecting calls to completely remake the street grid, San Franciscans opted for speed. [60] Amadeo Giannini&#8217;s Bank of Italy, later to become Bank of America, provided loans for many of those whose livelihoods had been devastated. The influential San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association or SPUR was founded in 1910 to address the quality of housing after the earthquake. [61] The earthquake hastened development of western neighborhoods that survived the fire, including Pacific Heights, where many of the city&#8217;s wealthy rebuilt their homes. [62] In turn, the destroyed mansions of Nob Hill became grand hotels. City Hall rose again in splendid Beaux Arts style, and the city celebrated its rebirth at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition in 1915. It was during this period San Francisco built some of its most important infrastructure. Civil Engineer Michael O&#8217;Shaughnessy was hired by San Francisco Mayor James Rolph as chief engineer for the city in September 1912 to supervise the construction of the Twin Peaks Reservoir, the Stockton Street Tunnel, the Twin Peaks Tunnel, the San Francisco Municipal Railway, the Auxiliary Water Supply System, and new sewers. San Francisco&#8217;s streetcar system, of which the J, K, L, M, and N lines survive today, was pushed to completion by O&#8217;Shaughnessy between 1915 and 1927. It was the O&#8217;Shaughnessy Dam, Hetch Hetchy Reservoir, and Hetch Hetchy Aqueduct that would have the largest effect on San Francisco. [64] An abundant water supply enabled San Francisco to develop into the city it has become today. The Bay Bridge, under construction in 1935, took forty months to complete. In ensuing years, the city solidified its standing as a financial capital; in the wake of the 1929 stock market crash, not a single San Francisco-based bank failed. [65] Indeed, it was at the height of the Great Depression that San Francisco undertook two great civil engineering projects, simultaneously constructing the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge and the Golden Gate Bridge, completing them in 1936 and 1937, respectively. It was in this period that the island of Alcatraz, a former military stockade, began its service as a federal maximum security prison, housing notorious inmates such as Al Capone, and Robert Franklin Stroud, the Birdman of Alcatraz. San Francisco later celebrated its regained grandeur with a World&#8217;s fair, the Golden Gate International Exposition in 1939-40, creating Treasure Island in the middle of the bay to house it. The USS San Francisco steams under the Golden Gate Bridge in 1942, during World War II. [33] The explosion of jobs drew many people, especially African Americans from the South, to the area. After the end of the war, many military personnel returning from service abroad and civilians who had originally come to work decided to stay. The United Nations Charter creating the United Nations was drafted and signed in San Francisco in 1945 and, in 1951, the Treaty of San Francisco officially ended the war with Japan. Urban planning projects in the 1950s and 1960s involved widespread destruction and redevelopment of west-side neighborhoods and the construction of new freeways, of which only a series of short segments were built before being halted by citizen-led opposition. [66] The onset of containerization made San Francisco&#8217;s small piers obsolete, and cargo activity moved to the larger Port of Oakland. [67] The city began to lose industrial jobs and turned to tourism as the most important segment of its economy. [68] The suburbs experienced rapid growth, and San Francisco underwent significant demographic change, as large segments of the white population left the city, supplanted by an increasing wave of immigration from Asia and Latin America. [69][70] From 1950 to 1980, the city lost over 10 percent of its population. Over this period, San Francisco became a magnet for America&#8217;s counterculture. Beat Generation writers fueled the San Francisco Renaissance and centered on the North Beach neighborhood in the 1950s. [71] Hippies flocked to Haight-Ashbury in the 1960s, reaching a peak with the 1967 Summer of Love. [72] In 1974, the Zebra murders left at least 16 people dead. [73] In the 1970s, the city became a center of the gay rights movement, with the emergence of The Castro as an urban gay village, the election of Harvey Milk to the Board of Supervisors, and his assassination, along with that of Mayor George Moscone, in 1978. Bank of America completed 555 California Street in 1969 and the Transamerica Pyramid was completed in 1972, [75] igniting a wave of &#8220;Manhattanization&#8221; that lasted until the late 1980s, a period of extensive high-rise development downtown. [76] The 1980s also saw a dramatic increase in the number of homeless people in the city, an issue that remains today, despite many attempts to address it. [77] The 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake caused destruction and loss of life throughout the Bay Area. In San Francisco, the quake severely damaged structures in the Marina and South of Market districts and precipitated the demolition of the damaged Embarcadero Freeway and much of the damaged Central Freeway, allowing the city to reclaim The Embarcadero as its historic downtown waterfront and revitalizing the Hayes Valley neighborhood. Two recent decades have seen two booms driven by the internet industry. First was the dot-com boom of the late 1990s, startup companies invigorated the San Francisco economy. Large numbers of entrepreneurs and computer application developers moved into the city, followed by marketing, design, and sales professionals, changing the social landscape as once-poorer neighborhoods became increasingly gentrified. [78] Demand for new housing and office space ignited a second wave of high-rise development, this time in the South of Market district. [79] By 2000, the city&#8217;s population reached new highs, surpassing the previous record set in 1950. When the bubble burst in 2001, many of these companies folded and their employees were laid off. Yet high technology and entrepreneurship remain mainstays of the San Francisco economy. By the mid-2000s (decade), the social media boom had begun, with San Francisco becoming a popular location for tech offices and a common place to live for people employed in Silicon Valley companies such as Apple and Google. The Ferry Station Post Office Building, Armour &#038; Co. Building, Atherton House, and YMCA Hotel are historic buildings among dozens of historical landmarks in the city according to the National Register of Historic Places listings in San Francisco. The San Francisco Peninsula. San Francisco is located on the West Coast of the United States at the north end of the San Francisco Peninsula and includes significant stretches of the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay within its boundaries. Several picturesque islands-Alcatraz, Treasure Island and the adjacent Yerba Buena Island, and small portions of Alameda Island, Red Rock Island, and Angel Island-are part of the city. Also included are the uninhabited Farallon Islands, 27 miles (43 km) offshore in the Pacific Ocean. The mainland within the city limits roughly forms a &#8220;seven-by-seven-mile square&#8221;, a common local colloquialism referring to the city&#8217;s shape, though its total area, including water, is nearly 232 square miles (600 km2). Cars navigate Lombard Street to descend Russian Hill. There are more than 50 hills within the city limits. [81] Some neighborhoods are named after the hill on which they are situated, including Nob Hill, Potrero Hill, and Russian Hill. Near the geographic center of the city, southwest of the downtown area, are a series of less densely populated hills. Twin Peaks, a pair of hills forming one of the city&#8217;s highest points, forms an overlook spot. San Francisco&#8217;s tallest hill, Mount Davidson, is 928 feet (283 m) high and is capped with a 103-foot (31 m) tall cross built in 1934. [82] Dominating this area is Sutro Tower, a large red and white radio and television transmission tower. The nearby San Andreas and Hayward Faults are responsible for much earthquake activity, although neither physically passes through the city itself. The San Andreas Fault caused the earthquakes in 1906 and 1989. Minor earthquakes occur on a regular basis. The threat of major earthquakes plays a large role in the city&#8217;s infrastructure development. The city constructed an auxiliary water supply system and has repeatedly upgraded its building codes, requiring retrofits for older buildings and higher engineering standards for new construction. [83] However, there are still thousands of smaller buildings that remain vulnerable to quake damage. [84] USGS has released the California earthquake forecast which models earthquake occurrence in California. San Francisco&#8217;s shoreline has grown beyond its natural limits. Entire neighborhoods such as the Marina, Mission Bay, and Hunters Point, as well as large sections of the Embarcadero, sit on areas of landfill. Treasure Island was constructed from material dredged from the bay as well as material resulting from the excavation of the Yerba Buena Tunnel through Yerba Buena Island during the construction of the Bay Bridge. Such land tends to be unstable during earthquakes. The resulting soil liquefaction causes extensive damage to property built upon it, as was evidenced in the Marina district during the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake. [86] Most of the city&#8217;s natural watercourses, such as Islais Creek and Mission Creek, have been culverted and built over, although the Public Utilities Commission is studying proposals to daylight or restore some creeks. Main article: List of Landmarks and Historic Places in San Francisco. Downtown San Francisco, seen from Twin Peaks, in October 2006. Downtown San Francisco, seen from Twin Peaks at dusk, in December 2009. Aerial view from the west in April 2018. San Francisco is seen in the foreground, with Oakland in the background. Main article: Neighborhoods in San Francisco. See also: List of tallest buildings in San Francisco. San Francisco&#8217;s Chinatown is the oldest and one of the largest in North America. The historic center of San Francisco is the northeast quadrant of the city anchored by Market Street and the waterfront. It is here that the Financial District is centered, with Union Square, the principal shopping and hotel district, and the Tenderloin nearby. Cable cars carry riders up steep inclines to the summit of Nob Hill, once the home of the city&#8217;s business tycoons, and down to the waterfront tourist attractions of Fisherman&#8217;s Wharf, and Pier 39, where many restaurants feature Dungeness crab from a still-active fishing industry. Also in this quadrant are Russian Hill, a residential neighborhood with the famously crooked Lombard Street; North Beach, the city&#8217;s Little Italy and the former center of the Beat Generation; and Telegraph Hill, which features Coit Tower. Abutting Russian Hill and North Beach is San Francisco&#8217;s Chinatown, the oldest Chinatown in North America. [88][89][90][91] The South of Market, which was once San Francisco&#8217;s industrial core, has seen significant redevelopment following the construction of Oracle Park and an infusion of startup companies. New skyscrapers, live-work lofts, and condominiums dot the area. Further development is taking place just to the south in Mission Bay area, a former railroad yard, which now has a second campus of the University of California, San Francisco and Chase Center, which opened in 2019 as the new home of the Golden State Warriors. West of downtown, across Van Ness Avenue, lies the large Western Addition neighborhood, which became established with a large African American population after World War II. The Western Addition is usually divided into smaller neighborhoods including Hayes Valley, the Fillmore, and Japantown, which was once the largest Japantown in North America but suffered when its Japanese American residents were forcibly removed and interned during World War II. The Western Addition survived the 1906 earthquake with its Victorians largely intact, including the famous &#8220;Painted Ladies&#8221;, standing alongside Alamo Square. To the south, near the geographic center of the city is Haight-Ashbury, famously associated with 1960s hippie culture. The Haight is now home to some expensive boutiques[93] and a few controversial chain stores, [94] although it still retains some bohemian character. Skyscrapers are common in northeast San Francisco, the city&#8217;s downtown. North of the Western Addition is Pacific Heights, an affluent neighborhood that features the homes built by wealthy San Franciscans in the wake of the 1906 earthquake. Directly north of Pacific Heights facing the waterfront is the Marina, a neighborhood popular with young professionals that was largely built on reclaimed land from the Bay. The Transamerica Pyramid was the tallest building in San Francisco until 2016, when Salesforce Tower surpassed it. In the south-east quadrant of the city is the Mission District-populated in the 19th century by Californios and working-class immigrants from Germany, Ireland, Italy, and Scandinavia. In the 1910s, a wave of Central American immigrants settled in the Mission and, in the 1950s, immigrants from Mexico began to predominate. [96] In recent years, gentrification has changed the demographics of parts of the Mission from Latino, to twenty-something professionals. Noe Valley to the southwest and Bernal Heights to the south are both increasingly popular among young families with children. East of the Mission is the Potrero Hill neighborhood, a mostly residential neighborhood that features sweeping views of downtown San Francisco. West of the Mission, the area historically known as Eureka Valley, now popularly called the Castro, was once a working-class Scandinavian and Irish area. It has become North America&#8217;s first gay village, and is now the center of gay life in the city. [97] Located near the city&#8217;s southern border, the Excelsior District is one of the most ethnically diverse neighborhoods in San Francisco. The predominantly African American Bayview-Hunters Point in the far southeast corner of the city is one of the poorest neighborhoods and suffers from a high rate of crime, though the area has been the focus of several revitalizing and controversial urban renewal projects. The construction of the Twin Peaks Tunnel in 1918 connected southwest neighborhoods to downtown via streetcar, hastening the development of West Portal, and nearby affluent Forest Hill and St. Further west, stretching all the way to the Pacific Ocean and north to Golden Gate Park lies the vast Sunset District, a large middle class area with a predominantly Asian population. [98] The northwestern quadrant of the city contains the Richmond, also a mostly middle-class neighborhood north of Golden Gate Park, home to immigrants from other parts of Asia as well as many Russian and Ukrainian immigrants. Together, these areas are known as The Avenues. These two districts are each sometimes further divided into two regions: the Outer Richmond and Outer Sunset can refer to the more western portions of their respective district and the Inner Richmond and Inner Sunset can refer to the more eastern portions. Many piers remained derelict for years until the demolition of the Embarcadero Freeway reopened the downtown waterfront, allowing for redevelopment. The centerpiece of the port, the Ferry Building, while still receiving commuter ferry traffic, has been restored and redeveloped as a gourmet marketplace. San Francisco has a warm-summer Mediterranean climate (Köppen Csb) characteristic of California&#8217;s coast, with moist mild winters and dry summers. [99] San Francisco&#8217;s weather is strongly influenced by the cool currents of the Pacific Ocean on the west side of the city, and the water of San Francisco Bay to the north and east. This moderates temperature swings and produces a remarkably mild year-round climate with little seasonal temperature variation. Fog is a regular feature of San Francisco summers. Cities, San Francisco has the coolest daily mean, maximum, and minimum temperatures for June, July, and August. [100] During the summer, rising hot air in California&#8217;s interior valleys creates a low pressure area that draws winds from the North Pacific High through the Golden Gate, which creates the city&#8217;s characteristic cool winds and fog. [101] The fog is less pronounced in eastern neighborhoods and during the late summer and early fall. As a result, the year&#8217;s warmest month, on average, is September, and on average, October is warmer than July, especially in daytime. Because of its sharp topography and maritime influences, San Francisco exhibits a multitude of distinct microclimates. The high hills in the geographic center of the city are responsible for a 20% variance in annual rainfall between different parts of the city. They also protect neighborhoods directly to their east from the foggy and sometimes very cold and windy conditions experienced in the Sunset District; for those who live on the eastern side of the city, San Francisco is sunnier, with an average of 260 clear days, and only 105 cloudy days per year. Temperatures reach or exceed 80 °F (27 °C) on an average of only 21 and 23 days a year at downtown and San Francisco International Airport (SFO), respectively. [102] The dry period of May to October is mild to warm, with the normal monthly mean temperature peaking in September at 62.7 °F (17.1 °C). [102] The rainy period of November to April is slightly cooler, with the normal monthly mean temperature reaching its lowest in January at 51.3 °F (10.7 °C). [102] On average, there are 73 rainy days a year, and annual precipitation averages 23.65 inches (601 mm). [102] Variation in precipitation from year to year is high. Above average rain years are often associated with warm El Niño conditions in the Pacific while dry years often occur in cold water La Niña periods. In 2013 (a &#8220;La Niña&#8221; year), a record low 5.59 in (142 mm) of rainfall was recorded at downtown San Francisco, where records have been kept since 1849. [102] Snowfall in the city is very rare, with only 10 measurable accumulations recorded since 1852, most recently in 1976 when up to 5 inches (130 mm) fell on Twin Peaks. The highest recorded temperature at the official National Weather Service downtown observation station (currently at the United States Mint building) was 106 °F (41 °C) on September 1, 2017. [105] The lowest recorded temperature was 27 °F (? 3 °C) on December 11, 1932. [106] The National Weather Service provides a helpful visual aid[107] graphing the information in the table below to display visually by month the annual typical temperatures, the past year&#8217;s temperatures, and record temperatures. San Francisco falls under the USDA 10b Plant Hardiness zone. Record high °F (°C). Mean maximum °F (°C). Average high °F (°C). Daily mean °F (°C). Average low °F (°C). Mean minimum °F (°C). Record low °F (°C). Average rainfall inches (mm). Average rainy days (? 0.01 in). Average relative humidity (%). Mean monthly sunshine hours. Source #2: Met Office for humidity[112]. Main article: Demographics of San Francisco. Decennial Census, [113][14][46][114][115]. See also: Population Graph. Census Bureau estimates San Francisco&#8217;s population to be 883,305 as of July 1, 2018, with a population density of 18,838/sq mi. [14] With roughly one-quarter the population density of Manhattan, San Francisco is the second-most densely populated large American city, behind only New York City among cities greater than 200,000 population, and the fifth-most densely populated U. County, following only four of the five New York City boroughs. San Francisco forms part of the five-county San Francisco-Oakland-Hayward, CA Metropolitan Statistical Area, a region of 4.7 million people, and has served as its traditional demographic focal point. It is also part of the greater 14-county San Jose-San Francisco-Oakland, CA Combined Statistical Area, whose population is over 9.6 million, making it the fifth-largest in the United States as of 2018. San Francisco has a minority-majority population, as non-Hispanic whites comprise less than half of the population, 41.9%, down from 92.5% in 1940. [52] As of the 2010 census, the ethnic makeup and population of San Francisco included: 390,387 whites (48%), 267,915 Asians (33%), 48,870 African Americans (6%), and others. There were 121,744 Hispanics or Latinos of any race (15%). In 2010, residents of Chinese ethnicity constituted the largest single ethnic minority group in San Francisco at 21% of the population; the other Asian groups are Filipinos (5%) and Vietnamese (2%). [116] The population of Chinese ancestry is most heavily concentrated in Chinatown, Sunset District, and Richmond District, whereas Filipinos are most concentrated in the Crocker-Amazon (which is contiguous with the Filipino community of Daly City, which has one of the highest concentrations of Filipinos in North America), as well as in SoMa. [116][117] The Tenderloin District is home to a large portion of the city&#8217;s Vietnamese population as well as businesses and restaurants, which is known as the city&#8217;s Little Saigon. The principal Hispanic groups in the city were those of Mexican (7%) and Salvadoran (2%) ancestry. The Hispanic population is most heavily concentrated in the Mission District, Tenderloin District, and Excelsior District. [118] The city&#8217;s percentage of Hispanic residents is less than half of that of the state. The population of African Americans in San Francisco is 6% of the city&#8217;s population. [52][119] The percentage of African Americans in San Francisco is similar to that of California. [119] The majority of the city&#8217;s black population reside within the neighborhoods of Bayview-Hunters Point, Visitacion Valley, and in the Fillmore District. Map of racial distribution in San Francisco Bay Area, 2010 U. Each dot is 25 people: White, Black, Asian, Hispanic, or Other (yellow). Demographic profile[120][121][122]. Black or African American. Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander. Two or more races. Hispanic or Latino (of any race). According to a 2014 study by the Pew Research Center, the largest religious groupings in San Francisco&#8217;s metropolitan area are Christians (48%), followed by those of no religion (35%), Hindus (5%), Jews (3%), Buddhists (2%), Muslims (1%) and a variety of other religions have smaller followings. According to the same study by the Pew Research Center, about 20% of residents in the area are Protestant, and 25% professing Roman Catholic beliefs. Meanwhile, 10% of the residents in metropolitan San Francisco identifies as agnostics, while 5% identifies as atheists. As of 2010, 55% (411,728) of San Francisco residents spoke only English at home, while 19% (140,302) spoke a variety of Chinese (mostly Taishanese and Cantonese[126][127]), 12% (88,147) Spanish, 3% (25,767) Tagalog, and 2% (14,017) Russian. In total, 45% (342,693) of San Francisco&#8217;s population spoke a language at home other than English. 805,235 &#8211; 100%. 121,774 &#8211; 15.1%. 390,387 &#8211; 48.5%. 48,870 &#8211; 6.1%. 267,915 &#8211; 33.3%. 4,024 &#8211; 0.5%. Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander. 3,359 &#8211; 0.4%. 53,021 &#8211; 6.6%. 37,659 &#8211; 4.7%. San Francisco has several prominent Chinese, Mexican, and Filipino ethnic neighborhoods including Chinatown and the Mission District. Research collected on the immigrant clusters in the city show that more than half of the Asian population in San Francisco is either Chinese born (40.3%) or Philippine born (13.1%), and of the Mexican population 21% were Mexican born, meaning these are people who recently immigrated to the United States. [130] Between the years of 1990 and 2000, the number foreign born residents increased from 33% to nearly 40%, [130] During this same time period, the San Francisco Metropolitan area received 850,000 immigrants, ranking third in the United States after Los Angeles and New York. Of all major cities in the United States, San Francisco has the second-highest percentage of residents with a college degree, behind only Seattle. Over 44% of adults have a bachelor&#8217;s or higher degree. [131] San Francisco had the highest rate at 7,031 per square mile, or over 344,000 total graduates in the city&#8217;s 46.7 square miles (121 km2). San Francisco has the highest percentage of gay and lesbian individuals of any of the 50 largest U. [133] San Francisco also has the highest percentage of same-sex households of any American county, with the Bay Area having a higher concentration than any other metropolitan area. Per capita income[135]. Median household income[136]. Median family income[137]. [119] An emigration of middle-class families has left the city with a lower proportion of children than any other large American city, [139] with the dog population cited as exceeding the child population of 115,000, in 2018. [140] The city&#8217;s poverty rate is 12%, lower than the national average. [141] Homelessness has been a chronic problem for San Francisco since the early 1970s. [142] The city is believed to have the highest number of homeless inhabitants per capita of any major U. There are 345,811 households in the city, out of which: 133,366 households (39%) were individuals, 109,437 (32%) were opposite-sex married couples, 63,577 (18%) had children under the age of 18 living in them, 21,677 (6%) were unmarried opposite-sex partnerships, and 10,384 (3%) were same-sex married couples or partnerships. The average household size was 2.26; the average family size was 3.11. 452,986 people (56%) lived in rental housing units, and 327,985 people (41%) lived in owner-occupied housing units. The median age of the city population is 38 years. San Francisco declared itself a sanctuary city in 1989, and city officials strengthened the stance in 2013 with its&#8217;Due Process for All&#8217; ordinance. The law declared local authorities could not hold immigrants for immigration officials if they had no violent felonies on their records and did not currently face charges. [145] The city issues a Resident ID Card regardless of the applicant&#8217;s immigration status. See also: Homelessness in the San Francisco Bay Area. Homelessness, historically, has been a major problem in the city and remains a growing problem in modern times. In 2017, 7,500 homeless people were officially counted in the city, two-thirds of whom were dealing with serious health issues like mental illness or HIV. In January 2018 a United Nations special rapporteur on homelessness, Leilani Farha, stated that she was &#8220;completely shocked&#8221; by San Francisco&#8217;s homelessness crisis during a visit to the city. She compared the &#8220;deplorable conditions&#8221; of the homeless camps she witnessed on San Francisco&#8217;s streets to those she had seen in Mumbai. See also: List of companies based in San Francisco. According to academic Rob Wilson, San Francisco is a global city, a status that pre-dated the city&#8217;s popularity during the California Gold Rush. [151] Such cities are characterized by their ethnic clustering, network of international connectivity, and convergence of technological innovation. [130] Global cities, such as San Francisco, are considered to be complex and require a high level of talent as well as large masses of low wage workers. A divide is created within the city of ethnic, typically lower-class neighborhoods, and expensive ones with newly developed buildings. This in turn creates a population of highly educated, white-collar individuals as well as blue-collar workers, many of whom are immigrants, and who both are drawn to the increasing number of opportunities available. [152] Competition for these opportunities pushes growth and adaptation in world centers. San Francisco has a diversified service economy, with employment spread across a wide range of professional services, including financial services, tourism, and (increasingly) high technology. [154] In 2016, approximately 27% of workers were employed in professional business services; 14% in leisure and hospitality; 13% in government services; 12% in education and health care; 11% in trade, transportation, and utilities; and 8% in financial activities. [157] Marin County, directly to the north over the Golden Gate Bridge, and San Mateo County, directly to the south on the Peninsula, were the 5th and 9th highest-income counties respectively. California Street in the Financial District. The legacy of the California Gold Rush turned San Francisco into the principal banking and finance center of the West Coast in the early twentieth century. [158] Bank of America, a pioneer in making banking services accessible to the middle class, was founded in San Francisco and in the 1960s, built the landmark modern skyscraper at 555 California Street for its corporate headquarters. Many large financial institutions, multinational banks, and venture capital firms are based in or have regional headquarters in the city. With over 30 international financial institutions, [159] six Fortune 500 companies, [160] and a large support infrastructure of professional services-including law, public relations, architecture and design-San Francisco is designated as an Alpha(-) World City. [161] The 2017 Global Financial Centres Index ranked San Francisco as the sixth-most competitive financial center in the world. Alcatraz receives 1.5 million visitors per year. Since the 1990s, San Francisco&#8217;s economy has diversified away from finance and tourism towards the growing fields of high tech, biotechnology, and medical research. [164] Technology jobs accounted for just 1 percent of San Francisco&#8217;s economy in 1990, growing to 4 percent in 2010 and an estimated 8 percent by the end of 2013. [165] San Francisco became a center of Internet start-up companies during the dot-com bubble of the 1990s and the subsequent social media boom of the late 2000s (decade). Mission Bay hosts the UCSF Medical Center, the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences, and Gladstone Institutes, [171] as well as more than 40 private-sector life sciences companies. The top employer in the city is the city government itself, employing 5.6% (31,000+ people) of the city&#8217;s workforce, followed by UCSF with over 25,000 employees. [173] The largest private-sector employer is Salesforce, with 8,500 employees, as of 2018. [174] Small businesses with fewer than 10 employees and self-employed firms make up 85% of city establishments, [175] and the number of San Franciscans employed by firms of more than 1,000 employees has fallen by half since 1977. [176] The growth of national big box and formula retail chains into the city has been made intentionally difficult by political and civic consensus. In an effort to buoy small privately owned businesses in San Francisco and preserve the unique retail personality of the city, the Small Business Commission started a publicity campaign in 2004 to keep a larger share of retail dollars in the local economy, [177] and the Board of Supervisors has used the planning code to limit the neighborhoods where formula retail establishments can set up shop, [178] an effort affirmed by San Francisco voters. [179] However, by 2016, San Francisco was rated low by small businesses in a Business Friendliness Survey. Cities, San Francisco once had a significant manufacturing sector employing nearly 60,000 workers in 1969, but nearly all production left for cheaper locations by the 1980s. [181] As of 2014, San Francisco has seen a small resurgence in manufacturing, with more than 4,000 manufacturing jobs across 500 companies, doubling since 2011. The city&#8217;s largest manufacturing employer is Anchor Brewing Company, and the largest by revenue is Timbuk2. San Francisco became a hub for technological driven economic growth during the internet boom of the 1990s, and still holds an important position in the world city network today. [130][153] Intense redevelopment towards the &#8220;new economy&#8221; makes business more technologically minded. Between the years of 1999 and 2000, the job growth rate was 4.9%, creating over 50,000 jobs in technology firms and internet content production. In the second technological boom driven by social media in the mid 2000s, San Francisco became a location for companies such as Apple, Google, Facebook and Twitter to base their tech offices and for their employees to live. [182] Since then, tech employment has continued to increase. In 2014, San Francisco&#8217;s tech employment grew nearly 90% between 2010 and 2014, beating out Silicon Valley&#8217;s 30% growth rate over the same period. The tech sector&#8217;s dominance in the Bay Area is internationally recognized and continues to attract new businesses and young entrepreneurs from all over the globe. [183] San Francisco is now widely considered the most important city in the world for new technology startups. [184] A recent high of 7 billion dollars in venture capital was invested in the region. [183] These startup companies hire a high concentration of well educated individuals looking to work in the tech industry, and creates a city population of highly concentrated levels of education. Over 50% of San Franciscans have a 4-year university degree, ranking the city among the highest levels of education in the country and world. See also: Port of San Francisco. Tourism is one of the city&#8217;s largest private-sector industries, accounting for more than one out of seven jobs in the city. [164][185] The city&#8217;s frequent portrayal in music, film, and popular culture has made the city and its landmarks recognizable worldwide. In 2016, it attracted the fifth-highest number of foreign tourists of any city in the United States. [187] With a large hotel infrastructure and a world-class convention facility in the Moscone Center, San Francisco is a popular destination for annual conventions and conferences. Lombard Street is a popular tourist destination in San Francisco, known for its &#8220;crookedness&#8221;. Some of the most popular tourist attractions in San Francisco noted by the Travel Channel include the Golden Gate Bridge and Alamo Square Park, which is home to the famous &#8220;Painted Ladies&#8221;. Both of these locations were often used as landscape shots for the hit American sitcom Full House. There is also Lombard Street, known for its &#8220;crookedness&#8221; and extensive views. Tourists also visit Pier 39, which offers dining, shopping, entertainment, and views of the bay, sun-bathing seals, and the famous Alcatraz Island. San Francisco also offers tourists cultural and unique nightlife in its neighborhoods. The Ferry Building along the Embarcadero. The new Terminal Project at Pier 27 opened September 25, 2014 as a replacement for the old Pier 35. A heightened interest in conventioneering in San Francisco, marked by the establishment of convention centers such as Yerba Buena, acted as a feeder into the local tourist economy and resulted in an increase in the hotel industry: In 1959, the city had fewer than thirty-three hundred first-class hotel rooms; by 1970, the number was nine thousand; and by 1999, there were more than thirty thousand. [192] The commodification of the Castro District has contributed to San Francisco&#8217;s tourist economy. Main article: Culture of San Francisco. See also: San Francisco in popular culture. Boutiques along Fillmore Street in Pacific Heights. Although the Financial District, Union Square, and Fisherman&#8217;s Wharf are well known around the world, San Francisco is also characterized by its numerous culturally rich streetscapes featuring mixed-use neighborhoods anchored around central commercial corridors to which residents and visitors alike can walk. Because of these characteristics, San Francisco is ranked the second &#8220;most walkable&#8221; city in the United States by Walkscore. Com. [194] Many neighborhoods feature a mix of businesses, restaurants and venues that cater to both the daily needs of local residents while also serving many visitors and tourists. Some neighborhoods are dotted with boutiques, cafés and nightlife such as Union Street in Cow Hollow, 24th Street in Noe Valley, Valencia Street in the Mission, Grant Avenue in North Beach, and Irving Street in the Inner Sunset. This approach especially has influenced the continuing South of Market neighborhood redevelopment with businesses and neighborhood services rising alongside high-rise residences. High-rises surround Yerba Buena Gardens, South of Market. Since the 1990s, the demand for skilled information technology workers from local startups and nearby Silicon Valley has attracted white-collar workers from all over the world and created a high standard of living in San Francisco. [196] Many neighborhoods that were once blue-collar, middle, and lower class have been gentrifying, as many of the city&#8217;s traditional business and industrial districts have experienced a renaissance driven by the redevelopment of the Embarcadero, including the neighborhoods South Beach and Mission Bay. The city&#8217;s property values and household income have risen to among the highest in the nation, [197][198][199] creating a large and upscale restaurant, retail, and entertainment scene. According to a 2014 quality of life survey of global cities, San Francisco has the highest quality of living of any U. [200] However, due to the exceptionally high cost of living, many of the city&#8217;s middle and lower-class families have been leaving the city for the outer suburbs of the Bay Area, or for California&#8217;s Central Valley. [202] The high cost of living is due in part to restrictive planning laws which limit new residential construction. The international character that San Francisco has enjoyed since its founding is continued today by large numbers of immigrants from Asia and Latin America. With 39% of its residents born overseas, [176] San Francisco has numerous neighborhoods filled with businesses and civic institutions catering to new arrivals. In particular, the arrival of many ethnic Chinese, which accelerated beginning in the 1970s, has complemented the long-established community historically based in Chinatown throughout the city and has transformed the annual Chinese New Year Parade into the largest event of its kind in its hemisphere. With the arrival of the &#8220;beat&#8221; writers and artists of the 1950s and societal changes culminating in the Summer of Love in the Haight-Ashbury district during the 1960s, San Francisco became a center of liberal activism and of the counterculture that arose at that time. The Democrats and to a lesser extent the Green Party have dominated city politics since the late 1970s, after the last serious Republican challenger for city office lost the 1975 mayoral election by a narrow margin. San Francisco has not voted more than 20% for a Republican presidential or senatorial candidate since 1988. [206] In 2007, the city expanded its Medicaid and other indigent medical programs into the Healthy San Francisco program, [207] which subsidizes certain medical services for eligible residents. San Francisco also has had a very active environmental community. Starting with the founding of the Sierra Club in 1892 to the establishment of the non-profit Friends of the Urban Forest in 1981, San Francisco has been at the forefront of many global discussions regarding the environment. [211][212] The 1980 San Francisco Recycling Program was one of the earliest curbside recycling programs. [213] The city&#8217;s GoSolarSF incentive promotes solar installations and the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission is rolling out the CleanPowerSF program to sell electricity from local renewable sources. [214][215] SF Greasecycle is a program to recycle used cooking oil for conversion to biodiesel. The Sunset Reservoir Solar Project, completed in 2010, installed 24,000 solar panels on the roof of the reservoir. The 5-megawatt plant more than tripled the city&#8217;s 2-megawatt solar generation capacity when it opened in December 2010. Main article: LGBT culture in San Francisco. The rainbow flag, symbol of LGBT pride, originated in San Francisco; banners like this one decorate streets in The Castro. San Francisco has long had an LGBT-friendly history. It was home to the first lesbian-rights organization in the United States, Daughters of Bilitis; the first openly gay person to run for public office in the United States, José Sarria; the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in California, Harvey Milk; the first openly lesbian judge appointed in the U. Morgan; and the first transgender police commissioner, Theresa Sparks. The city&#8217;s large gay population has created and sustained a politically and culturally active community over many decades, developing a powerful presence in San Francisco&#8217;s civic life. Survey data released in 2015 by Gallup place the proportion of the San Francisco metro area at 6.2%, which is the highest such proportion observed of the 50 most populous metropolitan areas as measured by the polling organization. One of the most popular destinations for gay tourists internationally, the city hosts San Francisco Pride, one of the largest and oldest pride parades. San Francisco Pride events have been held continuously since 1972. The events are themed and a new theme is created each year. In 2013, over 1.5 million people attended, around 500,000 more than the previous year. Main article: Folsom Street Fair. The Folsom Street Fair (FSF) is an annual BDSM and leather subculture street fair that is held in September, capping San Francisco&#8217;s &#8220;Leather Pride Week&#8221;. [221] It started in 1984 and is California&#8217;s third-largest single-day, outdoor spectator event and the world&#8217;s largest leather event and showcase for BDSM products and culture. Main article: Media in the San Francisco Bay Area. San Francisco Chronicle Building. The major daily newspaper in San Francisco is the San Francisco Chronicle, which is currently Northern California&#8217;s most widely circulated newspaper. [223] The Chronicle is most famous for a former columnist, the late Herb Caen, whose daily musings attracted critical acclaim and represented the &#8220;voice of San Francisco&#8221;. The San Francisco Examiner, once the cornerstone of William Randolph Hearst&#8217;s media empire and the home of Ambrose Bierce, declined in circulation over the years and now takes the form of a free daily tabloid, under new ownership. [224][225] Sing Tao Daily claims to be the largest of several Chinese language dailies that serve the Bay Area. [226] SF Weekly is the city&#8217;s alternative weekly newspaper. San Francisco and 7&#215;7 are major glossy magazines about San Francisco. The national newsmagazine Mother Jones is also based in San Francisco. The San Francisco Bay Area is the sixth-largest television market[227] and the fourth-largest radio market[228] in the U. The city&#8217;s oldest radio station, KCBS, began as an experimental station in San Jose in 1909, before the beginning of commercial broadcasting. KALW was the city&#8217;s first FM radio station when it signed on the air in 1941. The city&#8217;s first television station was KPIX, which began broadcasting in 1948. Television networks have affiliates serving the region, with most of them based in the city. CNN, MSNBC, BBC, Al Jazeera America, Russia Today, and CCTV America also have regional news bureaus in San Francisco. Bloomberg West was launched in 2011 from a studio on the Embarcadero and CNBC broadcasts from One Market Plaza since 2015. ESPN uses the local ABC studio for their broadcasting. The regional sports network, Comcast SportsNet Bay Area and its sister station Comcast SportsNet California, are both located in San Francisco. The Pac-12 Network is also based in San Francisco. Public broadcasting outlets include both a television station and a radio station, both broadcasting under the call letters KQED from a facility near the Potrero Hill neighborhood. KQED-FM is the most-listened-to National Public Radio affiliate in the country. [229] Another local broadcaster, KPOO, is an independent, African-American owned and operated noncommercial radio station established in 1971. [230] CNET, founded 1994, and Salon. Com, 1995, are based in San Francisco. San Francisco-based inventors made important contributions to modern media. During the 1870s, Eadweard Muybridge began recording motion photographically and invented a zoopraxiscope with which to view his recordings. These were the first motion pictures. Then in 1927, Philo Farnsworth&#8217;s image dissector camera tube transmitted its first image. This was the first television. San Francisco has several nicknames, including &#8220;The City by the Bay&#8221;, &#8220;Golden Gate City&#8221;, [231] &#8220;Frisco&#8221;, &#8220;SF&#8221;, &#8220;San Fran&#8221;, and &#8220;Fog City&#8221;, as well as older ones like &#8220;The City that Knows How&#8221;, &#8220;Baghdad by the Bay&#8221;, &#8220;The Paris of the West&#8221;, or, as locals call it, &#8220;The City&#8221;. [1] San Fran and Frisco are only used outside of San Francisco itself and disaparaged by residents. Main article: List of theatres in San Francisco. The lobby of the War Memorial Opera House, one of the last buildings erected in Beaux Arts style in the United States. San Francisco&#8217;s War Memorial and Performing Arts Center hosts some of the most enduring performing-arts companies in the country. The War Memorial Opera House houses the San Francisco Opera, the second-largest opera company in North America[235] as well as the San Francisco Ballet, while the San Francisco Symphony plays in Davies Symphony Hall. Opened in 2013, the SFJAZZ Center hosts jazz performances year round. The Fillmore is a music venue located in the Western Addition. It is the second incarnation of the historic venue that gained fame in the 1960s, housing the stage where now-famous musicians such as the Grateful Dead, Janis Joplin, Led Zeppelin and Jefferson Airplane first performed, fostering the San Francisco Sound. San Francisco has a large number of theaters and live performance venues. Local theater companies have been noted for risk taking and innovation. [236] The Tony Award-winning non-profit American Conservatory Theater A. Is a member of the national League of Resident Theatres. Other local winners of the Regional Theatre Tony Award include the San Francisco Mime Troupe. [237] San Francisco theaters frequently host pre-Broadway engagements and tryout runs, [238] and some original San Francisco productions have later moved to Broadway. Main article: List of museums in San Francisco Bay Area, California § San Francisco. The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) houses 20th century and contemporary works of art. It moved to its current building in the South of Market neighborhood in 1995 and attracted more than 600,000 visitors annually. [240] SFMOMA closed for renovation and expansion in 2013. The museum reopened on May 14, 2016 with an addition, designed by Snøhetta, that has doubled the museum&#8217;s size. The Palace of the Legion of Honor holds primarily European antiquities and works of art at its Lincoln Park building modeled after its Parisian namesake. The de Young Museum in Golden Gate Park features American decorative pieces and anthropological holdings from Africa, Oceania and the Americas, while Asian art is housed in the Asian Art Museum. Opposite the de Young stands the California Academy of Sciences, a natural history museum that also hosts the Morrison Planetarium and Steinhart Aquarium. Located on Pier 15 on the Embarcadero, the Exploratorium is an interactive science museum. The Contemporary Jewish Museum is a non-collecting institution that hosts a broad array of temporary exhibitions. On Nob Hill, the Cable Car Museum is a working museum featuring the cable car power house, which drives the cables. See also: List of parks in San Francisco. Ocean Beach, San Francisco with a view of the Cliff House. Golden Gate Park as seen from Strawberry Hill. Several of San Francisco&#8217;s parks and nearly all of its beaches form part of the regional Golden Gate National Recreation Area, one of the most visited units of the National Park system in the United States with over 13 million visitors a year. Among the GGNRA&#8217;s attractions within the city are Ocean Beach, which runs along the Pacific Ocean shoreline and is frequented by a vibrant surfing community, and Baker Beach, which is located in a cove west of the Golden Gate and part of the Presidio, a former military base. Also within the Presidio is Crissy Field, a former airfield that was restored to its natural salt marsh ecosystem. The GGNRA also administers Fort Funston, Lands End, Fort Mason, and Alcatraz. Alamo Square is one of the most well known parks in the area, and is often a symbol of San Francisco for its popular location for film and pop culture. There are more than 220 parks maintained by the San Francisco Recreation &#038; Parks Department. [243] The largest and best-known city park is Golden Gate Park, [244] which stretches from the center of the city west to the Pacific Ocean. Once covered in native grasses and sand dunes, the park was conceived in the 1860s and was created by the extensive planting of thousands of non-native trees and plants. The large park is rich with cultural and natural attractions such as the Conservatory of Flowers, Japanese Tea Garden and San Francisco Botanical Garden. Lake Merced is a fresh-water lake surrounded by parkland and near the San Francisco Zoo, a city-owned park that houses more than 250 animal species, many of which are endangered. [245] The only park managed by the California State Park system located principally in San Francisco, Candlestick Point was the state&#8217;s first urban recreation area. San Francisco is the first city in the U. To have a park within a 10-Minute Walk of every resident. [247][248] It also ranks fifth in the U. For park access and quality in the 2018 ParkScore ranking of the top 100 park systems across the United States, according to the nonprofit Trust for Public Land. Oracle Park opened in 2000. Main article: Sports in the San Francisco Bay Area. Major League Baseball&#8217;s San Francisco Giants have played in San Francisco since moving from New York in 1958. The Giants play at Oracle Park, which opened in 2000. [250] The Giants won World Series titles in 2010, 2012, and in 2014. The Giants have boasted such stars as Willie Mays, Willie McCovey and Barry Bonds. In 2012, San Francisco was ranked No. 1 in a study that examined which U. Metro areas have produced the most Major Leaguers since 1920. The San Francisco 49ers of the National Football League (NFL) were the longest-tenured major professional sports franchise in the city until moving in 2013. The team began play in 1946 as an All-America Football Conference (AAFC) league charter member, moved to the NFL in 1950 and into Candlestick Park in 1971. The team began playing its home games at Levi&#8217;s Stadium in Santa Clara in 2014, closer to the city of San Jose. [252][253] The 49ers won five Super Bowl titles in the 1980s and 1990s. [254] The Warrior&#8217;s arena, Chase Center, is currently located in San Francisco. [255] They have won 6 championships, [256] including three of the last five. At the collegiate level, the San Francisco Dons compete in NCAA Division I. Bill Russell led the Don&#8217;s basketball team to NCAA championships in 1955 and 1956. There is also the San Francisco State Gators, who compete in NCAA Division II. [257] Oracle Park hosted the annual Fight Hunger Bowl college football game from 2002 through 2013 before it moved to Santa Clara. The Bay to Breakers footrace, held annually since 1912, is best known for colorful costumes and a celebratory community spirit. [258] The San Francisco Marathon attracts more than 21,000 participants. [259] The Escape from Alcatraz triathlon has, since 1980, attracted 2,000 top professional and amateur triathletes for its annual race. [260] The Olympic Club, founded in 1860, is the oldest athletic club in the United States. Its private golf course has hosted the U. Open on five occasions. San Francisco hosted the 2013 America&#8217;s Cup yacht racing competition. With an ideal climate for outdoor activities, San Francisco has ample resources and opportunities for amateur and participatory sports and recreation. There are more than 200 miles (320 km) of bicycle paths, lanes and bike routes in the city. [262] San Francisco residents have often ranked among the fittest in the country. [263] Golden Gate Park has miles of paved and unpaved running trails as well as a golf course and disc golf course. Boating, sailing, windsurfing and kitesurfing are among the popular activities on San Francisco Bay, and the city maintains a yacht harbor in the Marina District. Main articles: Government of San Francisco, Politics of San Francisco, and Mayors of San Francisco. San Francisco-officially known as the City and County of San Francisco-is a consolidated city-county, a status it has held since the 1856 secession of what is now San Mateo County. [30] It is the only such consolidation in California. [264] The mayor is also the county executive, and the county Board of Supervisors acts as the city council. The government of San Francisco is a charter city and is constituted of two co-equal branches: the executive branch is headed by the mayor and includes other citywide elected and appointed officials as well as the civil service; the 11-member Board of Supervisors, the legislative branch, is headed by a president and is responsible for passing laws and budgets, though San Franciscans also make use of direct ballot initiatives to pass legislation. San Francisco City Hall. The members of the Board of Supervisors are elected as representatives of specific districts within the city. [266] Upon the death or resignation of mayor, the President of the Board of Supervisors becomes acting mayor until the full Board elects an interim replacement for the remainder of the term. In 1978, Dianne Feinstein assumed the office following the assassination of George Moscone and was later selected by the board to finish the term. In 2011, Ed Lee was selected by the board to finish the term of Gavin Newsom, who resigned to take office as Lieutenant Governor of California. [267] Lee (who won 2 elections to remain mayor) was temporarily replaced by San Francisco Board of Supervisors President London Breed after he died on December 12, 2017. Supervisor Mark Farrell was appointed by the Board of Supervisors to finish Lee&#8217;s term on January 23, 2018. Because of its unique city-county status, the local government is able to exercise jurisdiction over certain property outside city limits. San Francisco International Airport, though located in San Mateo County, is owned and operated by the City and County of San Francisco. San Francisco&#8217;s largest jail complex County Jail No. 5 is located in San Mateo County, in an unincorporated area adjacent to San Bruno. San Francisco was also granted a perpetual leasehold over the Hetch Hetchy Valley and watershed in Yosemite National Park by the Raker Act in 1913. San Francisco serves as the regional hub for many arms of the federal bureaucracy, including the U. Court of Appeals, the Federal Reserve Bank, and the U. Until decommissioning in the early 1990s, the city had major military installations at the Presidio, Treasure Island, and Hunters Point-a legacy still reflected in the annual celebration of Fleet Week. The State of California uses San Francisco as the home of the state supreme court and other state agencies. Foreign governments maintain more than seventy consulates in San Francisco. [270] The City of San Francisco spends more per resident than any city other than Washington D. [270] The city employs around 27,000 workers. In the United States House of Representatives, San Francisco is split between California&#8217;s 12th and 14th districts. The following table includes the number of incidents reported and the rate per 1,000 persons for each type of offense. Population and crime rates (2012). CHP officers enforce the California Vehicle Code, pursue fugitives spotted on the highways, and attend to all significant obstructions and accidents within their jurisdiction. In 2011, 50 murders were reported, which is 6.1 per 100,000 people. [273] There were about 134 rapes, 3,142 robberies, and about 2,139 assaults. There were about 4,469 burglaries, 25,100 thefts, and 4,210 motor vehicle thefts. [274] The Tenderloin area has the highest crime rate in San Francisco: 70% of the city&#8217;s violent crimes, and around one-fourth of the city&#8217;s murders, occur in this neighborhood. The Tenderloin also sees high rates of drug abuse, gang violence, and prostitution. [275] Another area with high crime rates is the Bayview-Hunters Point area. In the first six months of 2015 there were 25 murders compared to 14 in the first six months of 2014. However, the murder rate is still much lower than in past decades. [276] That rate, though, did rise again by the close of 2016. According to the San Francisco Police Department, there were 59 murders in the city in 2016, an annual total that marked a 13.5% increase in the number of homicides (52) from 2015. During the first half of 2018, human feces on San Francisco sidewalks were the second-most-frequent complaint of city residents, with about 65 calls per day. The city has formed a &#8220;poop patrol&#8221; to attempt to combathow? Several street gangs operate in the city, including MS-13, [279] the Sureños and Norteños in the Mission District. [280] African-American street gangs familiar in other cities, including the Crips, have struggled to establish footholds in San Francisco, [281] while police and prosecutors have been accused of liberally labeling young African-American males as gang members. [282] Criminal gangs with shotcallers in China, including Triad groups such as the Wo Hop To, have been reported active in San Francisco. [283] In 1977, an ongoing rivalry between two Chinese gangs led to a shooting attack at the Golden Dragon restaurant in Chinatown, which left 5 people dead and 11 wounded. None of the victims in this attack were gang members. Five members of the Joe Boys gang were arrested and convicted of the crime. [284] In 1990, a gang-related shooting killed one man and wounded six others outside a nightclub near Chinatown. [285] In 1998, six teenagers were shot and wounded at the Chinese Playground; a 16-year-old boy was subsequently arrested. The San Francisco Police Department was founded in 1849. [287] The portions of Golden Gate National Recreation Area located within the city, including the Presidio and Ocean Beach, are patrolled by the United States Park Police. The San Francisco Fire Department provides both fire suppression and emergency medical services to the city. The city operates 22 public &#8220;pit stop&#8221; toilets. Main articles: Sister cities of San Francisco, California and List of diplomatic missions in San Francisco. San Francisco participates in the Sister Cities program. [289] A total of 41 consulates general and 23 honorary consulates have offices in the San Francisco Bay Area. The Lone Mountain Campus of the University of San Francisco. See also: List of colleges and universities in San Francisco. San Francisco State University Main Quad. The University of California, San Francisco is the sole campus of the University of California system entirely dedicated to graduate education in health and biomedical sciences. It is ranked among the top five medical schools in the United States[291] and operates the UCSF Medical Center, which ranks as the number one hospital in California and the number 5 in the country. [292] UCSF is a major local employer, second in size only to the city and county government. [293][294][295] A 43-acre (17 ha) Mission Bay campus was opened in 2003, complementing its original facility in Parnassus Heights. It contains research space and facilities to foster biotechnology and life sciences entrepreneurship and will double the size of UCSF&#8217;s research enterprise. [296] All in all, UCSF operates more than 20 facilities across San Francisco. [297] The University of California, Hastings College of the Law, founded in Civic Center in 1878, is the oldest law school in California and claims more judges on the state bench than any other institution. [298] San Francisco&#8217;s two University of California institutions have recently formed an official affiliation in the UCSF/UC Hastings Consortium on Law, Science &#038; Health Policy. San Francisco State University is part of the California State University system and is located near Lake Merced. [300] The school has approximately 30,000 students and awards undergraduate, master&#8217;s and doctoral degrees in more than 100 disciplines. [300] The City College of San Francisco, with its main facility in the Ingleside district, is one of the largest two-year community colleges in the country. It has an enrollment of about 100,000 students and offers an extensive continuing education program. Founded in 1855, the University of San Francisco, a private Jesuit university located on Lone Mountain, is the oldest institution of higher education in San Francisco and one of the oldest universities established west of the Mississippi River. [302] Golden Gate University is a private, nonsectarian, coeducational university formed in 1901 and located in the Financial District. With an enrollment of 13,000 students, the Academy of Art University is the largest institute of art and design in the nation. [303] Founded in 1871, the San Francisco Art Institute is the oldest art school west of the Mississippi. [304] The California College of the Arts, located north of Potrero Hill, has programs in architecture, fine arts, design, and writing. [305] The San Francisco Conservatory of Music, the only independent music school on the West Coast, grants degrees in orchestral instruments, chamber music, composition, and conducting. The California Culinary Academy, associated with the Le Cordon Bleu program, offers programs in the culinary arts, baking and pastry arts, and hospitality and restaurant management. California Institute of Integral Studies, founded in 1968, offers a variety of graduate programs in its Schools of Professional Psychology &#038; Health, and Consciousness and Transformation. See also: List of high schools in California § San Francisco County. Public schools are run by the San Francisco Unified School District as well as the State Board of Education for some charter schools. Lowell High School, the oldest public high school in the U. West of the Mississippi, [306] and the smaller School of the Arts High School are two of San Francisco&#8217;s magnet schools at the secondary level. Public school students attend schools based on an assignment system rather than neighborhood proximity. Just under 30% of the city&#8217;s school-age population attends one of San Francisco&#8217;s more than 100 private or parochial schools, compared to a 10% rate nationwide. [308] Nearly 40 of those schools are Catholic schools managed by the Archdiocese of San Francisco. San Francisco has nearly 300 preschool programs primarily operated by Head Start, San Francisco Unified School District, private for-profit, private non-profit and family child care providers. [310] All 4-year-old children living in San Francisco are offered universal access to preschool through the Preschool for All program. See also: Transportation in the San Francisco Bay Area. The Bay Bridge offers the only direct automobile connection to the East Bay. Main article: List of streets in San Francisco. Due to its unique geography, and the freeway revolts of the late 1950s, [312] Interstate 80 begins at the approach to the Bay Bridge and is the only direct automobile link to the East Bay. Route 101 connects to the western terminus of Interstate 80 and provides access to the south of the city along San Francisco Bay toward Silicon Valley. Northward, the routing for U. 101 uses arterial streets to connect to the Golden Gate Bridge, the only direct automobile link to Marin County and the North Bay. The Golden Gate Bridge is the only road connection to the North Bay. State Route 1 also enters San Francisco from the north via the Golden Gate Bridge and bisects the city as the 19th Avenue arterial thoroughfare, joining with Interstate 280 at the city&#8217;s southern border. Interstate 280 continues south from San Francisco, and also turns to the east along the southern edge of the city, terminating just south of the Bay Bridge in the South of Market neighborhood. After the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, city leaders demolished the Embarcadero Freeway and a portion of the Central Freeway, converting them into street-level boulevards. State Route 35 enters the city from the south as Skyline Boulevard and terminates at its intersection with Highway 1. State Route 82 enters San Francisco from the south as Mission Street, and terminates shortly thereafter at its junction with 280. The Western Terminus of the historic transcontinental Lincoln Highway, the first road across America, is in San Francisco&#8217;s Lincoln Park. See also: San Francisco Municipal Railway. A cable car ascending Hyde St, with Alcatraz on the bay behind. 32% of San Francisco residents use public transportation for their daily commute to work, ranking it first on the West Coast and third overall in the United States. [313] The San Francisco Municipal Railway, known as Muni, is the primary public transit system of San Francisco. Muni is the seventh-largest transit system in the United States, with 210,848,310 rides in 2006. [314] The system operates a combined light rail and subway system, the Muni Metro, as well as large bus and trolley coach networks. [315] Additionally, it runs a historic streetcar line, which runs on Market Street from Castro Street to Fisherman&#8217;s Wharf. [315] It also operates the famous cable cars, [315] which have been designated as a National Historic Landmark and are a major tourist attraction. Bay Area Rapid Transit, a regional Rapid Transit system, connects San Francisco with the East Bay through the underwater Transbay Tube. The line runs under Market Street to Civic Center where it turns south to the Mission District, the southern part of the city, and through northern San Mateo County, to the San Francisco International Airport, and Millbrae. Another commuter rail system, Caltrain, runs from San Francisco along the San Francisco Peninsula to San Jose. [315] Historically, trains operated by Southern Pacific Lines ran from San Francisco to Los Angeles, via Palo Alto and San Jose. Amtrak California Thruway Motorcoach runs a shuttle bus from three locations in San Francisco to its station across the bay in Emeryville. [317] Additionally, BART offers connections to San Francisco from Amtrak&#8217;s stations in Emeryville, Oakland and Richmond, and Caltrain offers connections in San Jose and Santa Clara. Thruway service also runs south to San Luis Obispo with connection to the Pacific Surfliner. The Golden Gate Ferry M/V Del Norte docked at the Ferry Building. San Francisco Bay Ferry operates from the Ferry Building and Pier 39 to points in Oakland, Alameda, Bay Farm Island, South San Francisco, and north to Vallejo in Solano County. [318] The Golden Gate Ferry is the other ferry operator with service between San Francisco and Marin County. [319] SolTrans runs supplemental bus service between the Ferry Building and Vallejo. San Francisco was an early adopter of carsharing in America. The non-profit City CarShare opened in 2001. [320] Zipcar closely followed. To accommodate the large amount of San Francisco citizens who commute to the Silicon Valley daily, companies like Google and Apple have begun to provide private bus transportation for their employees, from San Francisco locations to the tech start-up hotspot. These buses have quickly become a heated topic of debate within the city, as protesters claim they block bus lanes and delay public buses. Main article: San Francisco International Airport. San Francisco International Airport is the primary airport of San Francisco and the Bay Area. Though located 13 miles (21 km) south of downtown in unincorporated San Mateo County, San Francisco International Airport (SFO) is under the jurisdiction of the City and County of San Francisco. [324] SFO is a major international gateway to Asia and Europe, with the largest international terminal in North America. [325] In 2011, SFO was the eighth-busiest airport in the U. Located across the bay, Oakland International Airport is a popular, low-cost alternative to SFO. Geographically, Oakland Airport is approximately the same distance from downtown San Francisco as SFO, but due to its location across San Francisco Bay, it is greater driving distance from San Francisco. Cycling is a popular mode of transportation in San Francisco. 75,000 residents commute by bicycle per day. [327] Ford GoBike, previously named Bay Area Bike Share at inception, launched in August 2013 with 700 bikes in downtown San Francisco, selected cities in the East Bay, and San Jose. The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency and Bay Area Air Quality Management District are responsible for the operation with management provided by Motivate. [328] A major expansion started in 2017 along with a rebranding as Ford GoBike. [329] Pedestrian traffic is a major mode of transport. In 2015, Walk Score ranked San Francisco the second-most walkable city in the United States. San Francisco has significantly higher rates of pedestrian and bicyclist traffic deaths than the United States on average. In 2013, 21 pedestrians were killed in vehicle collisions, the highest since 2001, [333] which is 2.5 deaths per 100,000 population &#8211; 70% higher than the national average of 1.5 deaths per 100,000 population. Cycling is growing in San Francisco. Annual bicycle counts conducted by the Municipal Transportation Agency (MTA) in 2010 showed the number of cyclists at 33 locations had increased 58% from the 2006 baseline counts. [335] In 2008, the MTA estimated that about 128,000 trips were made by bicycle each day in the city, or 6% of total trips. [336] Since 2002, improvements in cycling infrastructure in recent years, including additional bike lanes and parking racks, have made cycling in San Francisco safer and more convenient. [337] Since 2006, San Francisco has received a Bicycle Friendly Community status of &#8220;Gold&#8221; from the League of American Bicyclists.
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		<title>Handsome Young Chinese Servants With White Men Snapshot Rare</title>
		<link>https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/2025/10/handsome-young-chinese-servants-with-white-men-snapshot-rare-17/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 25 Oct 2025 10:32:19 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[handsome]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[chinese]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rare]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[servants]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[snapshot]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[white]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[young]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[LATE 1800&#8217;S SNAPSHOT OF CHINESE SERVANTS WITH 2 WHITE MEN. MEASURES APPROXIMATELY 4 X 3 3/4 INCHES ON A THICK CARD MEASURING 4 1/4 X 6 1/2 INCHES. As of 2012, 21.4% of the population in San Francisco was of .....]]></description>
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 	<br/>	   <img class="fj2k4k4kd63e609S95k3i9i7k5k2i9094k2i9i8j3k2i9i7k4kd59k2k4i5j6094i7j9j7095ak5k2j6e908S99i8e2eo8S99i5e3kd59j9099099099jS8S981di7i8097j5i608S98jc8S98e2j908Tb96eo8S98e2j9k9k3k3k5k9kf7d64k6kf6f7d5808S98eo94eI8Tb96i5j2k3k9k9jf65k7k8ld7d5f69kf68k5k5jf7dZi6i808S98eo8S99iS8Tb96i5j2k5k7k7k5k2k2k2k3k6k2j7eo8S98jc8S98jc8S98i708Tb96i5j2k9ld7d7d69j7i61de3eo8S98jc8S98eo8Tb96i5j2iS8S98e2e3jd63k5k5ld66j708S98eo9I8S981d1ce2j2k9j708S98eo94i608Tb96i5j2k9j708Tb96i608S981d08S99i5jdOi8e2hdNj2k8k4k8k6k8k9099ey99048" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/voxap.gif" title="Handsome Young Chinese Servants With White Men Snapshot Rare" alt="Handsome Young Chinese Servants With White Men Snapshot Rare"/>

<br/>
 LATE 1800&#8217;S SNAPSHOT OF CHINESE SERVANTS WITH 2 WHITE MEN. MEASURES APPROXIMATELY 4 X 3 3/4 INCHES ON A THICK CARD MEASURING 4 1/4 X 6 1/2 INCHES. As of 2012, 21.4% of the population in San Francisco was of Chinese descent, and at least 150,000 Chinese American residents. [1] The Chinese are the largest Asian American subgroup in San Francisco. [2] San Francisco has the highest percentage of residents of Chinese descent of any major U. City, and the second largest Chinese American population, after New York City. The San Francisco Bay Area is 7.9% Chinese American, with many residents in Oakland and Santa Clara County. San Francisco&#8217;s Chinese community has ancestry mainly from Guangdong province, China and Hong Kong, although there is a sizable population of ethnic Chinese with ancestry from other parts of mainland China and Taiwan as well. Prior to health care. Struggles to establish health care. First medical facility: Tung Wah Dispensary. Natural disaster led to the first modern hospital. The Gateway Arch (Dragon Gate) on Grant Avenue at Bush Street in Chinatown. The Chinese arriving in San Francisco, primarily from the Taishan and Zhongshan regions as well as Guangdong province of mainland China, did so at the height of the California Gold Rush, and many worked in the mines scattered throughout the northern part of the state. [3] Chinatown was the one geographical region deeded by the city government and private property owners which allowed Chinese people to inherit and inhabit dwellings. The majority of these Chinese shopkeepers, restaurant owners, and hired workers in San Francisco Chinatown were predominantly Hoisanese and male[citation needed]. Many Chinese found jobs working for large companies, most famously as part of the Central Pacific[4] on the Transcontinental Railroad. Other early immigrants worked as mine workers or independent prospectors hoping to strike it rich during the California Gold Rush. Although many of the earlier waves of Chinese immigration were predominantly men searching for jobs, Chinese women also began making the journey towards the United States. The first known Chinese woman to immigrate was Marie Seise who arrived in 1848 and worked in the household of Charles V. [5] Within a matter of months of Seise&#8217;s arrival to the West Coast, the rush for gold in California commenced which brought a flooding of prospective miners from around the globe. Among this group were Chinese, primarily from the Guangdong Province, most of whom were seafarers who had already established Western contacts. Few women accompanied these early sojourners, many of whom expected to return from after they made their fortune. Although the oceanic voyage to the United States offered new and exciting opportunities, dangers also loomed for women while traveling and many were discouraged from making the trip due to the harsh living conditions. Chinese immigrants would have to ride in the steerage where food was stored. Many were given rice bowls to eat during the voyage. In 1892, a federal law passed to ensure immigrants who were on board, needed a certificate. Due to tight arrangements, unhygienic situations and scarcity in food, this led to health degradation. [7] Many immigrants were unable to board these voyages due to the Geary Act of 1892 which blocked the reunion of immigrants in America with their families not with them. [8] Many diseases found through these voyages were Hookworm Yersinia pestis which contributed greatly to the Bubonic Plague. &#8220;During the Gold Rush era, when Chinese men were a common sight in California, Chinese women were an oddity&#8221; and in urban spaces were rarely seen in public. Unlike the rural areas, Chinatown afforded few opportunities for women to come into contact with the larger society. &#8220;[6] Simultaneously, Chinese women also participated in urban sex work, which resulted in local laws like one passed in April 1854 that sought to shut down &#8220;houses of ill-fame, &#8221; not racialized in name but practically deployed to &#8220;[single] out Mexican and Chinese houses of ill fame, starting with Charles Walden&#8217;s Golden Rule House on Pacific Street and moving on to establishments run by Ah-Choo, C. Lossen, and Ah Yow. With national unemployment in the wake of the Panic of 1873, racial tensions in the city boiled over into full blown race riots. In response to the violence, the Consolidated Chinese Benevolent Association or the Chinese Six Companies, which evolved out of the labor recruiting organizations for different areas of Guangdong province, was created as a means of providing a unified voice for the community. The heads of these companies were the leaders of the Chinese merchants, who represented the Chinese community in front of the business community as a whole and the city government. Numerous white citizens defended the Chinese community, among them Pastor Franklin Rhoda whose numerous letters appeared in the local press. The anti-immigrant sentiment became law as the United States Government passed the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 &#8211; the first immigration restriction law aimed at a single ethnic group. This law, along with other immigration restriction laws such as the Geary Act, greatly reduced the number of Chinese people allowed into the country and the city, and in theory limited Chinese immigration to single men only. Exceptions were granted to the families of wealthy merchants, but the law was still effective enough to reduce the population of the neighborhood to an all-time low in the 1920s. The exclusion act was repealed during World War II under the Magnuson Act, in recognition of the important role of China as an ally in the war, although tight quotas still applied. Not unlike much of San Francisco, a period of criminality ensued in some Chinese gangs known as tongs, which were on the produce of smuggling, gambling and prostitution, and by the early 1880s, the population had adopted the term Tong war to describe periods of violence in Chinatown, the San Francisco Police Department had established its so-called Chinatown Squad. One of the more successful sergeants, Jack Manion, was appointed in 1921 and served for two decades. The squad was finally disbanded in August 1955 by police chief George Healey, upon the request of the influential Chinese World newspaper, which had editorialized that the squad was an &#8220;affront to Americans of Chinese descent&#8221;. [11] The neighborhood was completely destroyed in the 1906 earthquake that leveled most of the city. From 1910 to 1940, Chinese immigrants were detained at the Angel Island immigration station in the San Francisco Bay. To be permitted entry to the United States, thousands of mostly Chinese immigrants crossing the Pacific to San Francisco had to enter through the gauntlet of Angel Island, and were detained for months in a purgatory of isolation. Some spent years on the island waiting for entry to the U. Many working-class Hong Kong Chinese immigrants began arriving in Chinatown in large numbers in the 1960s, and despite their status and professions in Hong Kong, had to find low-paying employment in restaurants and garment factories in Chinatown because of limited English fluency. An increase in Cantonese-speaking immigrants from Hong Kong and Guangdong has gradually led to the replacement of the Taishanese (Hoisanese) dialect with the standard Cantonese dialect. The Golden Dragon massacre occurred in 1977. In the Sunset District in western San Francisco, a demographic shift began in the late 1960s and accelerated from the 1980s as Asian immigration to San Francisco increased dramatically. Much of the original, largely Irish American population of the Sunset moved to other neighborhoods and outlying suburban areas, although there is still a significant Irish American and Irish minority in the neighborhood. Informal Chinatowns have emerged on Irving Street between 19th Avenue and 24th Avenue as well as on the commercial sections of Taraval Street and Noriega Street west of 19th Avenue. About half of the Sunset District&#8217;s residents are Asian American, mostly of Chinese birth and descent. The immigrants in the Sunset District were both Mandarin- and Cantonese-speaking. As of 2012, many immigrants from China and Taiwan moved to the San Francisco Bay Area due to jobs in the technological industry. Many of them reside in the South Bay Area cities of Cupertino, Sunnyvale, Santa Clara, San Jose, and Fremont. Chinatowns in San Francisco. Clement Street Chinatown, San Francisco, the &#8220;Second Chinatown&#8221;. Irving Street Chinatown, San Francisco, the &#8220;Third Chinatown&#8221;. Noriega Street Chinatown, San Francisco, the &#8220;Fourth Chinatown&#8221;. Chinatowns around San Francisco. Chinatown, San Jose, California. Milpitas Square, a Chinese shopping center in Milpitas, California. The Chinese Culture Center, a community-based, non-profit organization, is located between Chinatown and the Financial District in San Francisco. According to the book, &#8220;Handbook of Asian American Health&#8221; by Grace J. Yoo, of the chapter 26 : Early Chinese Immigrants Organizing for Healthcare: The Establishment of the Chinese Hospital in San Francisco, by Lauren D. Hom states that In the late 19th century it was the period of major epidemic of diseases in San Francisco, such as the bubonic plague, smallpox, and cholera. These diseases were commonly found in the poor, and working classes (at this time most Chinese were part of these category), due to the over-populated areas in San Francisco Chinatown. The disease spreading during this time, were not spread due to the &#8220;germ theory&#8221;, but because of the &#8220;miasma theory&#8221;, which was known as spreading disease due to &#8220;breathing sick air&#8221;. Therefore, majority of the citizens in San Francisco believed that this theory was relevant in Chinatown and they avoided any contact to the Chinese in Chinatown. The reason that Chinatown was in that condition at this time was because the Americans at this time wanted to get rid of the Chinese, because they were struggling to find jobs, due to the competition created by the Chinese for jobs. Therefore, in the part of discriminating the Chinese, the Americans did not provide the services needed to receive the best health care. As a result, the unsanitary and over populated housing that Chinese had to live in, caused them to get sick even more, and without any health care, and physicians to help them get better. Most of the time the Chinese would be accused responsible for the cause of the plague in San Francisco Chinatown. According to Hom, In 1876, the Chinese were blamed as the source of the disease because of the unsanitary conditions of Chinatown. Before the Chinese had any particular health care system for their community, all of them had to go through the following barriers: they had to walk a very long distance to receive any medical attention at a hospital, and they were denied coverage due to unaffordable rates of the services provided by the hospitals. Instead most Chinese relied on &#8220;folk healer&#8221; than on western medicine. The &#8220;Folk Healers&#8221; were those that provided Chinese traditional medicine to the Chinese community in San Francisco Chinatown. Therefore, many Chinese did not bother to go to the hospital unless it was a crisis. The first medical care place in San Francisco Chinatown was the Tung Wah Dispensary. It was provided by the Chinese Six Companies, and it was built in 1900 on 828 Sacramento Street. The dispensary was named after the Tung Wah Hospital in Hong Kong, and it housed 25 beds, provided both western and Chinese medicine, free or to low cost care to patients, and its staff was volunteers from the community and physicians from outside of the community. Of those physicians three were American physicians and the rest were Chinese American physicians who helped with the Chinese medicine and translating from Chinese to English for the American physicians. In 1906, due to the great earthquake in San Francisco, the Tung Wah Dispensary was destroyed, but was rebuilt in Trenton Alley. However, with the many injuries due to the natural disaster, a lot more Chinese patients needed medical attention, and the dispensary was beginning to overflow with patients. Therefore, they decided to expand the dispensary to a Modern hospital, the idea of this began to revolve in 1918. By April 18, 1925 the San Francisco Chinese Hospital in the San Francisco Chinatown, and was established. It is the only Chinese-language hospital in the United States. [16][17] The Asian Aids Project (AAP) was started in the 1987, it is made to help them fight the AIDS epidemic in the Asian Community including the Chinese Americans. This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. Chinese School, San Francisco. Chinese Education Center Elementary School. The Chinese American International School, Cumberland Chinese School, North Valley Chinese School, and Mei Jia Chinese Learning Center are located in San Francisco. Palo Alto Chinese School is located in Palo Alto, and has classes teaching both Mandarin and Cantonese. The Shoong Family Chinese Cultural Center in Oakland serves as the premier Chinese-language school in the East Bay Area, and Contra Costa Chinese School is located in Pleasant Hill. The North Valley Chinese School in Milpitas and San Jose Chinese school both serve the greater San Jose area. The Redwood Empire Chinese Center&#8217;s Chinese school in Santa Rosa serves the North Bay. The New York-based worldwide distributed newspaper Epoch Times has a branch office in San Francisco. The Hong Kong-based newspaper Sing Tao Daily has an office in San Francisco. East West, The Chinese American Journal folded in 1989. The Chinese-American newspaper World Journal has an office in Millbrae. Previously the Taiwanese airline China Airlines operated a bus to San Francisco International Airport from Milpitas and Cupertino in California. The Chinese New Year Parade in San Francisco is held on every Chinese New Year&#8217;s, and is celebrated in Chinatown. It is the largest Chinese New Year event in North America. [21] The Taiwanese American Cultural Festival, started in 1993, is held in Union Square, San Francisco every May. This includes ethnic Chinese in the San Francisco Bay Area. Wilma Chan, member of the Alameda County Board of Supervisors. Raymond Chow Kwok Cheung, criminal. Sandra Lee Fewer, politician. Edsel Ford Fong, waiter at Sam Wo. Heather Fong, former Chief of San Francisco Police Department. Fred Lau, former Chief of San Francisco Police Department. Bruce Lee, actor, born in Chinatown. Ed Lee, former Mayor of San Francisco[2]. Betty Ong, American Airlines Flight 11 flight attendant. Willie &#8220;Woo Woo&#8221; Wong, basketball player, who a playground in Chinatown is named after. Gene Luen Yang, cartoonist. San Francisco, officially the City and County of San Francisco and colloquially known as SF, San Fran, Frisco, or The City, [19][20] is the cultural, commercial, and financial center of Northern California. San Francisco is the 15th most populous city in the United States, and the fourth most populous in California, with 883,305 residents as of 2018. [14] It covers an area of about 46.89 square miles (121.4 km2), [21] mostly at the north end of the San Francisco Peninsula in the San Francisco Bay Area, making it the second most densely populated large U. City, and the fifth most densely populated U. County, behind only four of the five New York City boroughs. [22] With San Jose, it forms the fifth most populous combined statistical area in the United States, the San Jose-San Francisco-Oakland, CA Combined Statistical Area (9.67 million residents in 2018). [26] Of the 500+ primary statistical areas in the U. [26] San Francisco was ranked 12th in the world and 2nd in the United States on the Global Financial Centres Index as of September 2019. [27] As of 2016, the San Francisco metropolitan area had the highest GDP per capita, labor productivity, and household income levels in the OECD. [28] As of 2019, it is the highest rated American city on world liveability rankings. San Francisco was founded on June 29, 1776, when colonists from Spain established Presidio of San Francisco at the Golden Gate and Mission San Francisco de Asís a few miles away, all named for St. [2] The California Gold Rush of 1849 brought rapid growth, making it the largest city on the West Coast at the time. San Francisco became a consolidated city-county in 1856. [30] San Francisco&#8217;s status as the West Coast&#8217;s largest city peaked between 1870 and 1900, when around 25% of California&#8217;s population resided in the city proper. [31] After three-quarters of the city was destroyed by the 1906 earthquake and fire, [32] San Francisco was quickly rebuilt, hosting the Panama-Pacific International Exposition nine years later. [33] It then became the birthplace of the United Nations in 1945. [34][35][36] After the war, the confluence of returning servicemen, significant immigration, liberalizing attitudes, along with the rise of the &#8220;hippie&#8221; counterculture, the Sexual Revolution, the Peace Movement growing from opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War, and other factors led to the Summer of Love and the gay rights movement, cementing San Francisco as a center of liberal activism in the United States. Politically, the city votes strongly along liberal Democratic Party lines. A popular tourist destination, [37] San Francisco is known for its cool summers, fog, steep rolling hills, eclectic mix of architecture, and landmarks, including the Golden Gate Bridge, cable cars, the former Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary, Fisherman&#8217;s Wharf, and its Chinatown district. San Francisco is also the headquarters of five major banking institutions and various other companies such as Levi Strauss &#038; Co. Fitbit, Salesforce. Com, Dropbox, Reddit, Square, Inc. Dolby, Airbnb, Weebly, Pacific Gas and Electric Company, Yelp, Pinterest, Twitter, Uber, Lyft, Mozilla, Wikimedia Foundation and Craigslist. The city, and the surrounding Bay Area, is a global center of the sciences and arts[38][39] and is home to a number of educational and cultural institutions, such as the University of San Francisco (USF), University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), San Francisco State University (SFSU), the De Young Museum, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the SFJAZZ Center, and the California Academy of Sciences. Race, ethnicity, religion, and languages. Education, households, and income. Culture and contemporary life. Primary and secondary schools. See also: History of San Francisco and Timeline of San Francisco. Mission San Francisco de Asís (Mission Dolores). Yelamu villages in San Francisco. Bond of the City and County of San Francisco, issued 1. The earliest archaeological evidence of human habitation of the territory of the city of San Francisco dates to 3000 BC. [40] The Yelamu group of the Ohlone people resided in a few small villages when an overland Spanish exploration party, led by Don Gaspar de Portolá, arrived on November 2, 1769, the first documented European visit to San Francisco Bay. [41] Seven years later, on March 28, 1776, the Spanish established the Presidio of San Francisco, followed by a mission, Mission San Francisco de Asís (Mission Dolores), established by the Spanish explorer Juan Bautista de Anza. View of San Francisco 1846-47. 1853 United States Coast Survey map. Upon independence from Spain in 1821, the area became part of Mexico. Under Mexican rule, the mission system gradually ended, and its lands became privatized. In 1835, William Richardson, a naturalized Mexican citizen of English birth, erected the first independent homestead, [42] near a boat anchorage around what is today Portsmouth Square. Together with Alcalde Francisco de Haro, he laid out a street plan for the expanded settlement, and the town, named Yerba Buena, began to attract American settlers. Sloat claimed California for the United States on July 7, 1846, during the Mexican-American War, and Captain John B. Montgomery arrived to claim Yerba Buena two days later. Yerba Buena was renamed San Francisco on January 30 of the next year, and Mexico officially ceded the territory to the United States at the end of the war. Despite its attractive location as a port and naval base, San Francisco was still a small settlement with inhospitable geography. Francis Samuel Marryat, Hilltop of San Francisco, California, Looking toward the Bay, 1849. Port of San Francisco in 1851. The California Gold Rush brought a flood of treasure seekers (known as &#8220;forty-niners&#8221;, as in &#8220;1849&#8221;). With their sourdough bread in tow, [44] prospectors accumulated in San Francisco over rival Benicia, [45] raising the population from 1,000 in 1848 to 25,000 by December 1849. [46] The promise of great wealth was so strong that crews on arriving vessels deserted and rushed off to the gold fields, leaving behind a forest of masts in San Francisco harbor. By 1870 Yerba Buena Cove had been filled to create new land. California was quickly granted statehood in 1850, and the U. Military built Fort Point at the Golden Gate and a fort on Alcatraz Island to secure the San Francisco Bay. Silver discoveries, including the Comstock Lode in Nevada in 1859, further drove rapid population growth. [49] With hordes of fortune seekers streaming through the city, lawlessness was common, and the Barbary Coast section of town gained notoriety as a haven for criminals, prostitution, and gambling. Entrepreneurs sought to capitalize on the wealth generated by the Gold Rush. Early winners were the banking industry, with the founding of Wells Fargo in 1852 and the Bank of California in 1864. Development of the Port of San Francisco and the establishment in 1869 of overland access to the eastern U. Rail system via the newly completed Pacific Railroad (the construction of which the city only reluctantly helped support[51]) helped make the Bay Area a center for trade. Catering to the needs and tastes of the growing population, Levi Strauss opened a dry goods business and Domingo Ghirardelli began manufacturing chocolate. Chinese immigrants made the city a polyglot culture, drawn to &#8220;Old Gold Mountain&#8221;, creating the city&#8217;s Chinatown quarter. In 1870, Asians made up 8% of the population. [52] The first cable cars carried San Franciscans up Clay Street in 1873. The city&#8217;s sea of Victorian houses began to take shape, and civic leaders campaigned for a spacious public park, resulting in plans for Golden Gate Park. San Franciscans built schools, churches, theaters, and all the hallmarks of civic life. The Presidio developed into the most important American military installation on the Pacific coast. [53] By 1890, San Francisco&#8217;s population approached 300,000, making it the eighth-largest city in the United States at the time. Around 1901, San Francisco was a major city known for its flamboyant style, stately hotels, ostentatious mansions on Nob Hill, and a thriving arts scene. As buildings collapsed from the shaking, ruptured gas lines ignited fires that spread across the city and burned out of control for several days. With water mains out of service, the Presidio Artillery Corps attempted to contain the inferno by dynamiting blocks of buildings to create firebreaks. [56] More than three-quarters of the city lay in ruins, including almost all of the downtown core. [32] Contemporary accounts reported that 498 people lost their lives, though modern estimates put the number in the several thousands. [57] More than half of the city&#8217;s population of 400,000 was left homeless. [58] Refugees settled temporarily in makeshift tent villages in Golden Gate Park, the Presidio, on the beaches, and elsewhere. Many fled permanently to the East Bay. Not in history has a modern imperial city been so completely destroyed. San Francisco is gone. Jack London after the 1906 earthquake and fire[59]. The Palace of Fine Arts at the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition. Rebuilding was rapid and performed on a grand scale. Rejecting calls to completely remake the street grid, San Franciscans opted for speed. [60] Amadeo Giannini&#8217;s Bank of Italy, later to become Bank of America, provided loans for many of those whose livelihoods had been devastated. The influential San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association or SPUR was founded in 1910 to address the quality of housing after the earthquake. [61] The earthquake hastened development of western neighborhoods that survived the fire, including Pacific Heights, where many of the city&#8217;s wealthy rebuilt their homes. [62] In turn, the destroyed mansions of Nob Hill became grand hotels. City Hall rose again in splendid Beaux Arts style, and the city celebrated its rebirth at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition in 1915. It was during this period San Francisco built some of its most important infrastructure. Civil Engineer Michael O&#8217;Shaughnessy was hired by San Francisco Mayor James Rolph as chief engineer for the city in September 1912 to supervise the construction of the Twin Peaks Reservoir, the Stockton Street Tunnel, the Twin Peaks Tunnel, the San Francisco Municipal Railway, the Auxiliary Water Supply System, and new sewers. San Francisco&#8217;s streetcar system, of which the J, K, L, M, and N lines survive today, was pushed to completion by O&#8217;Shaughnessy between 1915 and 1927. It was the O&#8217;Shaughnessy Dam, Hetch Hetchy Reservoir, and Hetch Hetchy Aqueduct that would have the largest effect on San Francisco. [64] An abundant water supply enabled San Francisco to develop into the city it has become today. The Bay Bridge, under construction in 1935, took forty months to complete. In ensuing years, the city solidified its standing as a financial capital; in the wake of the 1929 stock market crash, not a single San Francisco-based bank failed. [65] Indeed, it was at the height of the Great Depression that San Francisco undertook two great civil engineering projects, simultaneously constructing the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge and the Golden Gate Bridge, completing them in 1936 and 1937, respectively. It was in this period that the island of Alcatraz, a former military stockade, began its service as a federal maximum security prison, housing notorious inmates such as Al Capone, and Robert Franklin Stroud, the Birdman of Alcatraz. San Francisco later celebrated its regained grandeur with a World&#8217;s fair, the Golden Gate International Exposition in 1939-40, creating Treasure Island in the middle of the bay to house it. The USS San Francisco steams under the Golden Gate Bridge in 1942, during World War II. [33] The explosion of jobs drew many people, especially African Americans from the South, to the area. After the end of the war, many military personnel returning from service abroad and civilians who had originally come to work decided to stay. The United Nations Charter creating the United Nations was drafted and signed in San Francisco in 1945 and, in 1951, the Treaty of San Francisco officially ended the war with Japan. Urban planning projects in the 1950s and 1960s involved widespread destruction and redevelopment of west-side neighborhoods and the construction of new freeways, of which only a series of short segments were built before being halted by citizen-led opposition. [66] The onset of containerization made San Francisco&#8217;s small piers obsolete, and cargo activity moved to the larger Port of Oakland. [67] The city began to lose industrial jobs and turned to tourism as the most important segment of its economy. [68] The suburbs experienced rapid growth, and San Francisco underwent significant demographic change, as large segments of the white population left the city, supplanted by an increasing wave of immigration from Asia and Latin America. [69][70] From 1950 to 1980, the city lost over 10 percent of its population. Over this period, San Francisco became a magnet for America&#8217;s counterculture. Beat Generation writers fueled the San Francisco Renaissance and centered on the North Beach neighborhood in the 1950s. [71] Hippies flocked to Haight-Ashbury in the 1960s, reaching a peak with the 1967 Summer of Love. [72] In 1974, the Zebra murders left at least 16 people dead. [73] In the 1970s, the city became a center of the gay rights movement, with the emergence of The Castro as an urban gay village, the election of Harvey Milk to the Board of Supervisors, and his assassination, along with that of Mayor George Moscone, in 1978. Bank of America completed 555 California Street in 1969 and the Transamerica Pyramid was completed in 1972, [75] igniting a wave of &#8220;Manhattanization&#8221; that lasted until the late 1980s, a period of extensive high-rise development downtown. [76] The 1980s also saw a dramatic increase in the number of homeless people in the city, an issue that remains today, despite many attempts to address it. [77] The 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake caused destruction and loss of life throughout the Bay Area. In San Francisco, the quake severely damaged structures in the Marina and South of Market districts and precipitated the demolition of the damaged Embarcadero Freeway and much of the damaged Central Freeway, allowing the city to reclaim The Embarcadero as its historic downtown waterfront and revitalizing the Hayes Valley neighborhood. Two recent decades have seen two booms driven by the internet industry. First was the dot-com boom of the late 1990s, startup companies invigorated the San Francisco economy. Large numbers of entrepreneurs and computer application developers moved into the city, followed by marketing, design, and sales professionals, changing the social landscape as once-poorer neighborhoods became increasingly gentrified. [78] Demand for new housing and office space ignited a second wave of high-rise development, this time in the South of Market district. [79] By 2000, the city&#8217;s population reached new highs, surpassing the previous record set in 1950. When the bubble burst in 2001, many of these companies folded and their employees were laid off. Yet high technology and entrepreneurship remain mainstays of the San Francisco economy. By the mid-2000s (decade), the social media boom had begun, with San Francisco becoming a popular location for tech offices and a common place to live for people employed in Silicon Valley companies such as Apple and Google. The Ferry Station Post Office Building, Armour &#038; Co. Building, Atherton House, and YMCA Hotel are historic buildings among dozens of historical landmarks in the city according to the National Register of Historic Places listings in San Francisco. The San Francisco Peninsula. San Francisco is located on the West Coast of the United States at the north end of the San Francisco Peninsula and includes significant stretches of the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay within its boundaries. Several picturesque islands-Alcatraz, Treasure Island and the adjacent Yerba Buena Island, and small portions of Alameda Island, Red Rock Island, and Angel Island-are part of the city. Also included are the uninhabited Farallon Islands, 27 miles (43 km) offshore in the Pacific Ocean. The mainland within the city limits roughly forms a &#8220;seven-by-seven-mile square&#8221;, a common local colloquialism referring to the city&#8217;s shape, though its total area, including water, is nearly 232 square miles (600 km2). Cars navigate Lombard Street to descend Russian Hill. There are more than 50 hills within the city limits. [81] Some neighborhoods are named after the hill on which they are situated, including Nob Hill, Potrero Hill, and Russian Hill. Near the geographic center of the city, southwest of the downtown area, are a series of less densely populated hills. Twin Peaks, a pair of hills forming one of the city&#8217;s highest points, forms an overlook spot. San Francisco&#8217;s tallest hill, Mount Davidson, is 928 feet (283 m) high and is capped with a 103-foot (31 m) tall cross built in 1934. [82] Dominating this area is Sutro Tower, a large red and white radio and television transmission tower. The nearby San Andreas and Hayward Faults are responsible for much earthquake activity, although neither physically passes through the city itself. The San Andreas Fault caused the earthquakes in 1906 and 1989. Minor earthquakes occur on a regular basis. The threat of major earthquakes plays a large role in the city&#8217;s infrastructure development. The city constructed an auxiliary water supply system and has repeatedly upgraded its building codes, requiring retrofits for older buildings and higher engineering standards for new construction. [83] However, there are still thousands of smaller buildings that remain vulnerable to quake damage. [84] USGS has released the California earthquake forecast which models earthquake occurrence in California. San Francisco&#8217;s shoreline has grown beyond its natural limits. Entire neighborhoods such as the Marina, Mission Bay, and Hunters Point, as well as large sections of the Embarcadero, sit on areas of landfill. Treasure Island was constructed from material dredged from the bay as well as material resulting from the excavation of the Yerba Buena Tunnel through Yerba Buena Island during the construction of the Bay Bridge. Such land tends to be unstable during earthquakes. The resulting soil liquefaction causes extensive damage to property built upon it, as was evidenced in the Marina district during the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake. [86] Most of the city&#8217;s natural watercourses, such as Islais Creek and Mission Creek, have been culverted and built over, although the Public Utilities Commission is studying proposals to daylight or restore some creeks. Main article: List of Landmarks and Historic Places in San Francisco. Downtown San Francisco, seen from Twin Peaks, in October 2006. Downtown San Francisco, seen from Twin Peaks at dusk, in December 2009. Aerial view from the west in April 2018. San Francisco is seen in the foreground, with Oakland in the background. Main article: Neighborhoods in San Francisco. See also: List of tallest buildings in San Francisco. San Francisco&#8217;s Chinatown is the oldest and one of the largest in North America. The historic center of San Francisco is the northeast quadrant of the city anchored by Market Street and the waterfront. It is here that the Financial District is centered, with Union Square, the principal shopping and hotel district, and the Tenderloin nearby. Cable cars carry riders up steep inclines to the summit of Nob Hill, once the home of the city&#8217;s business tycoons, and down to the waterfront tourist attractions of Fisherman&#8217;s Wharf, and Pier 39, where many restaurants feature Dungeness crab from a still-active fishing industry. Also in this quadrant are Russian Hill, a residential neighborhood with the famously crooked Lombard Street; North Beach, the city&#8217;s Little Italy and the former center of the Beat Generation; and Telegraph Hill, which features Coit Tower. Abutting Russian Hill and North Beach is San Francisco&#8217;s Chinatown, the oldest Chinatown in North America. [88][89][90][91] The South of Market, which was once San Francisco&#8217;s industrial core, has seen significant redevelopment following the construction of Oracle Park and an infusion of startup companies. New skyscrapers, live-work lofts, and condominiums dot the area. Further development is taking place just to the south in Mission Bay area, a former railroad yard, which now has a second campus of the University of California, San Francisco and Chase Center, which opened in 2019 as the new home of the Golden State Warriors. West of downtown, across Van Ness Avenue, lies the large Western Addition neighborhood, which became established with a large African American population after World War II. The Western Addition is usually divided into smaller neighborhoods including Hayes Valley, the Fillmore, and Japantown, which was once the largest Japantown in North America but suffered when its Japanese American residents were forcibly removed and interned during World War II. The Western Addition survived the 1906 earthquake with its Victorians largely intact, including the famous &#8220;Painted Ladies&#8221;, standing alongside Alamo Square. To the south, near the geographic center of the city is Haight-Ashbury, famously associated with 1960s hippie culture. The Haight is now home to some expensive boutiques[93] and a few controversial chain stores, [94] although it still retains some bohemian character. Skyscrapers are common in northeast San Francisco, the city&#8217;s downtown. North of the Western Addition is Pacific Heights, an affluent neighborhood that features the homes built by wealthy San Franciscans in the wake of the 1906 earthquake. Directly north of Pacific Heights facing the waterfront is the Marina, a neighborhood popular with young professionals that was largely built on reclaimed land from the Bay. The Transamerica Pyramid was the tallest building in San Francisco until 2016, when Salesforce Tower surpassed it. In the south-east quadrant of the city is the Mission District-populated in the 19th century by Californios and working-class immigrants from Germany, Ireland, Italy, and Scandinavia. In the 1910s, a wave of Central American immigrants settled in the Mission and, in the 1950s, immigrants from Mexico began to predominate. [96] In recent years, gentrification has changed the demographics of parts of the Mission from Latino, to twenty-something professionals. Noe Valley to the southwest and Bernal Heights to the south are both increasingly popular among young families with children. East of the Mission is the Potrero Hill neighborhood, a mostly residential neighborhood that features sweeping views of downtown San Francisco. West of the Mission, the area historically known as Eureka Valley, now popularly called the Castro, was once a working-class Scandinavian and Irish area. It has become North America&#8217;s first gay village, and is now the center of gay life in the city. [97] Located near the city&#8217;s southern border, the Excelsior District is one of the most ethnically diverse neighborhoods in San Francisco. The predominantly African American Bayview-Hunters Point in the far southeast corner of the city is one of the poorest neighborhoods and suffers from a high rate of crime, though the area has been the focus of several revitalizing and controversial urban renewal projects. The construction of the Twin Peaks Tunnel in 1918 connected southwest neighborhoods to downtown via streetcar, hastening the development of West Portal, and nearby affluent Forest Hill and St. Further west, stretching all the way to the Pacific Ocean and north to Golden Gate Park lies the vast Sunset District, a large middle class area with a predominantly Asian population. [98] The northwestern quadrant of the city contains the Richmond, also a mostly middle-class neighborhood north of Golden Gate Park, home to immigrants from other parts of Asia as well as many Russian and Ukrainian immigrants. Together, these areas are known as The Avenues. These two districts are each sometimes further divided into two regions: the Outer Richmond and Outer Sunset can refer to the more western portions of their respective district and the Inner Richmond and Inner Sunset can refer to the more eastern portions. Many piers remained derelict for years until the demolition of the Embarcadero Freeway reopened the downtown waterfront, allowing for redevelopment. The centerpiece of the port, the Ferry Building, while still receiving commuter ferry traffic, has been restored and redeveloped as a gourmet marketplace. San Francisco has a warm-summer Mediterranean climate (Köppen Csb) characteristic of California&#8217;s coast, with moist mild winters and dry summers. [99] San Francisco&#8217;s weather is strongly influenced by the cool currents of the Pacific Ocean on the west side of the city, and the water of San Francisco Bay to the north and east. This moderates temperature swings and produces a remarkably mild year-round climate with little seasonal temperature variation. Fog is a regular feature of San Francisco summers. Cities, San Francisco has the coolest daily mean, maximum, and minimum temperatures for June, July, and August. [100] During the summer, rising hot air in California&#8217;s interior valleys creates a low pressure area that draws winds from the North Pacific High through the Golden Gate, which creates the city&#8217;s characteristic cool winds and fog. [101] The fog is less pronounced in eastern neighborhoods and during the late summer and early fall. As a result, the year&#8217;s warmest month, on average, is September, and on average, October is warmer than July, especially in daytime. Because of its sharp topography and maritime influences, San Francisco exhibits a multitude of distinct microclimates. The high hills in the geographic center of the city are responsible for a 20% variance in annual rainfall between different parts of the city. They also protect neighborhoods directly to their east from the foggy and sometimes very cold and windy conditions experienced in the Sunset District; for those who live on the eastern side of the city, San Francisco is sunnier, with an average of 260 clear days, and only 105 cloudy days per year. Temperatures reach or exceed 80 °F (27 °C) on an average of only 21 and 23 days a year at downtown and San Francisco International Airport (SFO), respectively. [102] The dry period of May to October is mild to warm, with the normal monthly mean temperature peaking in September at 62.7 °F (17.1 °C). [102] The rainy period of November to April is slightly cooler, with the normal monthly mean temperature reaching its lowest in January at 51.3 °F (10.7 °C). [102] On average, there are 73 rainy days a year, and annual precipitation averages 23.65 inches (601 mm). [102] Variation in precipitation from year to year is high. Above average rain years are often associated with warm El Niño conditions in the Pacific while dry years often occur in cold water La Niña periods. In 2013 (a &#8220;La Niña&#8221; year), a record low 5.59 in (142 mm) of rainfall was recorded at downtown San Francisco, where records have been kept since 1849. [102] Snowfall in the city is very rare, with only 10 measurable accumulations recorded since 1852, most recently in 1976 when up to 5 inches (130 mm) fell on Twin Peaks. The highest recorded temperature at the official National Weather Service downtown observation station (currently at the United States Mint building) was 106 °F (41 °C) on September 1, 2017. [105] The lowest recorded temperature was 27 °F (? 3 °C) on December 11, 1932. [106] The National Weather Service provides a helpful visual aid[107] graphing the information in the table below to display visually by month the annual typical temperatures, the past year&#8217;s temperatures, and record temperatures. San Francisco falls under the USDA 10b Plant Hardiness zone. Record high °F (°C). Mean maximum °F (°C). Average high °F (°C). Daily mean °F (°C). Average low °F (°C). Mean minimum °F (°C). Record low °F (°C). Average rainfall inches (mm). Average rainy days (? 0.01 in). Average relative humidity (%). Mean monthly sunshine hours. Source #2: Met Office for humidity[112]. Main article: Demographics of San Francisco. Decennial Census, [113][14][46][114][115]. See also: Population Graph. Census Bureau estimates San Francisco&#8217;s population to be 883,305 as of July 1, 2018, with a population density of 18,838/sq mi. [14] With roughly one-quarter the population density of Manhattan, San Francisco is the second-most densely populated large American city, behind only New York City among cities greater than 200,000 population, and the fifth-most densely populated U. County, following only four of the five New York City boroughs. San Francisco forms part of the five-county San Francisco-Oakland-Hayward, CA Metropolitan Statistical Area, a region of 4.7 million people, and has served as its traditional demographic focal point. It is also part of the greater 14-county San Jose-San Francisco-Oakland, CA Combined Statistical Area, whose population is over 9.6 million, making it the fifth-largest in the United States as of 2018. San Francisco has a minority-majority population, as non-Hispanic whites comprise less than half of the population, 41.9%, down from 92.5% in 1940. [52] As of the 2010 census, the ethnic makeup and population of San Francisco included: 390,387 whites (48%), 267,915 Asians (33%), 48,870 African Americans (6%), and others. There were 121,744 Hispanics or Latinos of any race (15%). In 2010, residents of Chinese ethnicity constituted the largest single ethnic minority group in San Francisco at 21% of the population; the other Asian groups are Filipinos (5%) and Vietnamese (2%). [116] The population of Chinese ancestry is most heavily concentrated in Chinatown, Sunset District, and Richmond District, whereas Filipinos are most concentrated in the Crocker-Amazon (which is contiguous with the Filipino community of Daly City, which has one of the highest concentrations of Filipinos in North America), as well as in SoMa. [116][117] The Tenderloin District is home to a large portion of the city&#8217;s Vietnamese population as well as businesses and restaurants, which is known as the city&#8217;s Little Saigon. The principal Hispanic groups in the city were those of Mexican (7%) and Salvadoran (2%) ancestry. The Hispanic population is most heavily concentrated in the Mission District, Tenderloin District, and Excelsior District. [118] The city&#8217;s percentage of Hispanic residents is less than half of that of the state. The population of African Americans in San Francisco is 6% of the city&#8217;s population. [52][119] The percentage of African Americans in San Francisco is similar to that of California. [119] The majority of the city&#8217;s black population reside within the neighborhoods of Bayview-Hunters Point, Visitacion Valley, and in the Fillmore District. Map of racial distribution in San Francisco Bay Area, 2010 U. Each dot is 25 people: White, Black, Asian, Hispanic, or Other (yellow). Demographic profile[120][121][122]. Black or African American. Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander. Two or more races. Hispanic or Latino (of any race). According to a 2014 study by the Pew Research Center, the largest religious groupings in San Francisco&#8217;s metropolitan area are Christians (48%), followed by those of no religion (35%), Hindus (5%), Jews (3%), Buddhists (2%), Muslims (1%) and a variety of other religions have smaller followings. According to the same study by the Pew Research Center, about 20% of residents in the area are Protestant, and 25% professing Roman Catholic beliefs. Meanwhile, 10% of the residents in metropolitan San Francisco identifies as agnostics, while 5% identifies as atheists. As of 2010, 55% (411,728) of San Francisco residents spoke only English at home, while 19% (140,302) spoke a variety of Chinese (mostly Taishanese and Cantonese[126][127]), 12% (88,147) Spanish, 3% (25,767) Tagalog, and 2% (14,017) Russian. In total, 45% (342,693) of San Francisco&#8217;s population spoke a language at home other than English. 805,235 &#8211; 100%. 121,774 &#8211; 15.1%. 390,387 &#8211; 48.5%. 48,870 &#8211; 6.1%. 267,915 &#8211; 33.3%. 4,024 &#8211; 0.5%. Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander. 3,359 &#8211; 0.4%. 53,021 &#8211; 6.6%. 37,659 &#8211; 4.7%. San Francisco has several prominent Chinese, Mexican, and Filipino ethnic neighborhoods including Chinatown and the Mission District. Research collected on the immigrant clusters in the city show that more than half of the Asian population in San Francisco is either Chinese born (40.3%) or Philippine born (13.1%), and of the Mexican population 21% were Mexican born, meaning these are people who recently immigrated to the United States. [130] Between the years of 1990 and 2000, the number foreign born residents increased from 33% to nearly 40%, [130] During this same time period, the San Francisco Metropolitan area received 850,000 immigrants, ranking third in the United States after Los Angeles and New York. Of all major cities in the United States, San Francisco has the second-highest percentage of residents with a college degree, behind only Seattle. Over 44% of adults have a bachelor&#8217;s or higher degree. [131] San Francisco had the highest rate at 7,031 per square mile, or over 344,000 total graduates in the city&#8217;s 46.7 square miles (121 km2). San Francisco has the highest percentage of gay and lesbian individuals of any of the 50 largest U. [133] San Francisco also has the highest percentage of same-sex households of any American county, with the Bay Area having a higher concentration than any other metropolitan area. Per capita income[135]. Median household income[136]. Median family income[137]. [119] An emigration of middle-class families has left the city with a lower proportion of children than any other large American city, [139] with the dog population cited as exceeding the child population of 115,000, in 2018. [140] The city&#8217;s poverty rate is 12%, lower than the national average. [141] Homelessness has been a chronic problem for San Francisco since the early 1970s. [142] The city is believed to have the highest number of homeless inhabitants per capita of any major U. There are 345,811 households in the city, out of which: 133,366 households (39%) were individuals, 109,437 (32%) were opposite-sex married couples, 63,577 (18%) had children under the age of 18 living in them, 21,677 (6%) were unmarried opposite-sex partnerships, and 10,384 (3%) were same-sex married couples or partnerships. The average household size was 2.26; the average family size was 3.11. 452,986 people (56%) lived in rental housing units, and 327,985 people (41%) lived in owner-occupied housing units. The median age of the city population is 38 years. San Francisco declared itself a sanctuary city in 1989, and city officials strengthened the stance in 2013 with its&#8217;Due Process for All&#8217; ordinance. The law declared local authorities could not hold immigrants for immigration officials if they had no violent felonies on their records and did not currently face charges. [145] The city issues a Resident ID Card regardless of the applicant&#8217;s immigration status. See also: Homelessness in the San Francisco Bay Area. Homelessness, historically, has been a major problem in the city and remains a growing problem in modern times. In 2017, 7,500 homeless people were officially counted in the city, two-thirds of whom were dealing with serious health issues like mental illness or HIV. In January 2018 a United Nations special rapporteur on homelessness, Leilani Farha, stated that she was &#8220;completely shocked&#8221; by San Francisco&#8217;s homelessness crisis during a visit to the city. She compared the &#8220;deplorable conditions&#8221; of the homeless camps she witnessed on San Francisco&#8217;s streets to those she had seen in Mumbai. See also: List of companies based in San Francisco. According to academic Rob Wilson, San Francisco is a global city, a status that pre-dated the city&#8217;s popularity during the California Gold Rush. [151] Such cities are characterized by their ethnic clustering, network of international connectivity, and convergence of technological innovation. [130] Global cities, such as San Francisco, are considered to be complex and require a high level of talent as well as large masses of low wage workers. A divide is created within the city of ethnic, typically lower-class neighborhoods, and expensive ones with newly developed buildings. This in turn creates a population of highly educated, white-collar individuals as well as blue-collar workers, many of whom are immigrants, and who both are drawn to the increasing number of opportunities available. [152] Competition for these opportunities pushes growth and adaptation in world centers. San Francisco has a diversified service economy, with employment spread across a wide range of professional services, including financial services, tourism, and (increasingly) high technology. [154] In 2016, approximately 27% of workers were employed in professional business services; 14% in leisure and hospitality; 13% in government services; 12% in education and health care; 11% in trade, transportation, and utilities; and 8% in financial activities. [157] Marin County, directly to the north over the Golden Gate Bridge, and San Mateo County, directly to the south on the Peninsula, were the 5th and 9th highest-income counties respectively. California Street in the Financial District. The legacy of the California Gold Rush turned San Francisco into the principal banking and finance center of the West Coast in the early twentieth century. [158] Bank of America, a pioneer in making banking services accessible to the middle class, was founded in San Francisco and in the 1960s, built the landmark modern skyscraper at 555 California Street for its corporate headquarters. Many large financial institutions, multinational banks, and venture capital firms are based in or have regional headquarters in the city. With over 30 international financial institutions, [159] six Fortune 500 companies, [160] and a large support infrastructure of professional services-including law, public relations, architecture and design-San Francisco is designated as an Alpha(-) World City. [161] The 2017 Global Financial Centres Index ranked San Francisco as the sixth-most competitive financial center in the world. Alcatraz receives 1.5 million visitors per year. Since the 1990s, San Francisco&#8217;s economy has diversified away from finance and tourism towards the growing fields of high tech, biotechnology, and medical research. [164] Technology jobs accounted for just 1 percent of San Francisco&#8217;s economy in 1990, growing to 4 percent in 2010 and an estimated 8 percent by the end of 2013. [165] San Francisco became a center of Internet start-up companies during the dot-com bubble of the 1990s and the subsequent social media boom of the late 2000s (decade). Mission Bay hosts the UCSF Medical Center, the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences, and Gladstone Institutes, [171] as well as more than 40 private-sector life sciences companies. The top employer in the city is the city government itself, employing 5.6% (31,000+ people) of the city&#8217;s workforce, followed by UCSF with over 25,000 employees. [173] The largest private-sector employer is Salesforce, with 8,500 employees, as of 2018. [174] Small businesses with fewer than 10 employees and self-employed firms make up 85% of city establishments, [175] and the number of San Franciscans employed by firms of more than 1,000 employees has fallen by half since 1977. [176] The growth of national big box and formula retail chains into the city has been made intentionally difficult by political and civic consensus. In an effort to buoy small privately owned businesses in San Francisco and preserve the unique retail personality of the city, the Small Business Commission started a publicity campaign in 2004 to keep a larger share of retail dollars in the local economy, [177] and the Board of Supervisors has used the planning code to limit the neighborhoods where formula retail establishments can set up shop, [178] an effort affirmed by San Francisco voters. [179] However, by 2016, San Francisco was rated low by small businesses in a Business Friendliness Survey. Cities, San Francisco once had a significant manufacturing sector employing nearly 60,000 workers in 1969, but nearly all production left for cheaper locations by the 1980s. [181] As of 2014, San Francisco has seen a small resurgence in manufacturing, with more than 4,000 manufacturing jobs across 500 companies, doubling since 2011. The city&#8217;s largest manufacturing employer is Anchor Brewing Company, and the largest by revenue is Timbuk2. San Francisco became a hub for technological driven economic growth during the internet boom of the 1990s, and still holds an important position in the world city network today. [130][153] Intense redevelopment towards the &#8220;new economy&#8221; makes business more technologically minded. Between the years of 1999 and 2000, the job growth rate was 4.9%, creating over 50,000 jobs in technology firms and internet content production. In the second technological boom driven by social media in the mid 2000s, San Francisco became a location for companies such as Apple, Google, Facebook and Twitter to base their tech offices and for their employees to live. [182] Since then, tech employment has continued to increase. In 2014, San Francisco&#8217;s tech employment grew nearly 90% between 2010 and 2014, beating out Silicon Valley&#8217;s 30% growth rate over the same period. The tech sector&#8217;s dominance in the Bay Area is internationally recognized and continues to attract new businesses and young entrepreneurs from all over the globe. [183] San Francisco is now widely considered the most important city in the world for new technology startups. [184] A recent high of 7 billion dollars in venture capital was invested in the region. [183] These startup companies hire a high concentration of well educated individuals looking to work in the tech industry, and creates a city population of highly concentrated levels of education. Over 50% of San Franciscans have a 4-year university degree, ranking the city among the highest levels of education in the country and world. See also: Port of San Francisco. Tourism is one of the city&#8217;s largest private-sector industries, accounting for more than one out of seven jobs in the city. [164][185] The city&#8217;s frequent portrayal in music, film, and popular culture has made the city and its landmarks recognizable worldwide. In 2016, it attracted the fifth-highest number of foreign tourists of any city in the United States. [187] With a large hotel infrastructure and a world-class convention facility in the Moscone Center, San Francisco is a popular destination for annual conventions and conferences. Lombard Street is a popular tourist destination in San Francisco, known for its &#8220;crookedness&#8221;. Some of the most popular tourist attractions in San Francisco noted by the Travel Channel include the Golden Gate Bridge and Alamo Square Park, which is home to the famous &#8220;Painted Ladies&#8221;. Both of these locations were often used as landscape shots for the hit American sitcom Full House. There is also Lombard Street, known for its &#8220;crookedness&#8221; and extensive views. Tourists also visit Pier 39, which offers dining, shopping, entertainment, and views of the bay, sun-bathing seals, and the famous Alcatraz Island. San Francisco also offers tourists cultural and unique nightlife in its neighborhoods. The Ferry Building along the Embarcadero. The new Terminal Project at Pier 27 opened September 25, 2014 as a replacement for the old Pier 35. A heightened interest in conventioneering in San Francisco, marked by the establishment of convention centers such as Yerba Buena, acted as a feeder into the local tourist economy and resulted in an increase in the hotel industry: In 1959, the city had fewer than thirty-three hundred first-class hotel rooms; by 1970, the number was nine thousand; and by 1999, there were more than thirty thousand. [192] The commodification of the Castro District has contributed to San Francisco&#8217;s tourist economy. Main article: Culture of San Francisco. See also: San Francisco in popular culture. Boutiques along Fillmore Street in Pacific Heights. Although the Financial District, Union Square, and Fisherman&#8217;s Wharf are well known around the world, San Francisco is also characterized by its numerous culturally rich streetscapes featuring mixed-use neighborhoods anchored around central commercial corridors to which residents and visitors alike can walk. Because of these characteristics, San Francisco is ranked the second &#8220;most walkable&#8221; city in the United States by Walkscore. Com. [194] Many neighborhoods feature a mix of businesses, restaurants and venues that cater to both the daily needs of local residents while also serving many visitors and tourists. Some neighborhoods are dotted with boutiques, cafés and nightlife such as Union Street in Cow Hollow, 24th Street in Noe Valley, Valencia Street in the Mission, Grant Avenue in North Beach, and Irving Street in the Inner Sunset. This approach especially has influenced the continuing South of Market neighborhood redevelopment with businesses and neighborhood services rising alongside high-rise residences. High-rises surround Yerba Buena Gardens, South of Market. Since the 1990s, the demand for skilled information technology workers from local startups and nearby Silicon Valley has attracted white-collar workers from all over the world and created a high standard of living in San Francisco. [196] Many neighborhoods that were once blue-collar, middle, and lower class have been gentrifying, as many of the city&#8217;s traditional business and industrial districts have experienced a renaissance driven by the redevelopment of the Embarcadero, including the neighborhoods South Beach and Mission Bay. The city&#8217;s property values and household income have risen to among the highest in the nation, [197][198][199] creating a large and upscale restaurant, retail, and entertainment scene. According to a 2014 quality of life survey of global cities, San Francisco has the highest quality of living of any U. [200] However, due to the exceptionally high cost of living, many of the city&#8217;s middle and lower-class families have been leaving the city for the outer suburbs of the Bay Area, or for California&#8217;s Central Valley. [202] The high cost of living is due in part to restrictive planning laws which limit new residential construction. The international character that San Francisco has enjoyed since its founding is continued today by large numbers of immigrants from Asia and Latin America. With 39% of its residents born overseas, [176] San Francisco has numerous neighborhoods filled with businesses and civic institutions catering to new arrivals. In particular, the arrival of many ethnic Chinese, which accelerated beginning in the 1970s, has complemented the long-established community historically based in Chinatown throughout the city and has transformed the annual Chinese New Year Parade into the largest event of its kind in its hemisphere. With the arrival of the &#8220;beat&#8221; writers and artists of the 1950s and societal changes culminating in the Summer of Love in the Haight-Ashbury district during the 1960s, San Francisco became a center of liberal activism and of the counterculture that arose at that time. The Democrats and to a lesser extent the Green Party have dominated city politics since the late 1970s, after the last serious Republican challenger for city office lost the 1975 mayoral election by a narrow margin. San Francisco has not voted more than 20% for a Republican presidential or senatorial candidate since 1988. [206] In 2007, the city expanded its Medicaid and other indigent medical programs into the Healthy San Francisco program, [207] which subsidizes certain medical services for eligible residents. San Francisco also has had a very active environmental community. Starting with the founding of the Sierra Club in 1892 to the establishment of the non-profit Friends of the Urban Forest in 1981, San Francisco has been at the forefront of many global discussions regarding the environment. [211][212] The 1980 San Francisco Recycling Program was one of the earliest curbside recycling programs. [213] The city&#8217;s GoSolarSF incentive promotes solar installations and the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission is rolling out the CleanPowerSF program to sell electricity from local renewable sources. [214][215] SF Greasecycle is a program to recycle used cooking oil for conversion to biodiesel. The Sunset Reservoir Solar Project, completed in 2010, installed 24,000 solar panels on the roof of the reservoir. The 5-megawatt plant more than tripled the city&#8217;s 2-megawatt solar generation capacity when it opened in December 2010. Main article: LGBT culture in San Francisco. The rainbow flag, symbol of LGBT pride, originated in San Francisco; banners like this one decorate streets in The Castro. San Francisco has long had an LGBT-friendly history. It was home to the first lesbian-rights organization in the United States, Daughters of Bilitis; the first openly gay person to run for public office in the United States, José Sarria; the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in California, Harvey Milk; the first openly lesbian judge appointed in the U. Morgan; and the first transgender police commissioner, Theresa Sparks. The city&#8217;s large gay population has created and sustained a politically and culturally active community over many decades, developing a powerful presence in San Francisco&#8217;s civic life. Survey data released in 2015 by Gallup place the proportion of the San Francisco metro area at 6.2%, which is the highest such proportion observed of the 50 most populous metropolitan areas as measured by the polling organization. One of the most popular destinations for gay tourists internationally, the city hosts San Francisco Pride, one of the largest and oldest pride parades. San Francisco Pride events have been held continuously since 1972. The events are themed and a new theme is created each year. In 2013, over 1.5 million people attended, around 500,000 more than the previous year. Main article: Folsom Street Fair. The Folsom Street Fair (FSF) is an annual BDSM and leather subculture street fair that is held in September, capping San Francisco&#8217;s &#8220;Leather Pride Week&#8221;. [221] It started in 1984 and is California&#8217;s third-largest single-day, outdoor spectator event and the world&#8217;s largest leather event and showcase for BDSM products and culture. Main article: Media in the San Francisco Bay Area. San Francisco Chronicle Building. The major daily newspaper in San Francisco is the San Francisco Chronicle, which is currently Northern California&#8217;s most widely circulated newspaper. [223] The Chronicle is most famous for a former columnist, the late Herb Caen, whose daily musings attracted critical acclaim and represented the &#8220;voice of San Francisco&#8221;. The San Francisco Examiner, once the cornerstone of William Randolph Hearst&#8217;s media empire and the home of Ambrose Bierce, declined in circulation over the years and now takes the form of a free daily tabloid, under new ownership. [224][225] Sing Tao Daily claims to be the largest of several Chinese language dailies that serve the Bay Area. [226] SF Weekly is the city&#8217;s alternative weekly newspaper. San Francisco and 7&#215;7 are major glossy magazines about San Francisco. The national newsmagazine Mother Jones is also based in San Francisco. The San Francisco Bay Area is the sixth-largest television market[227] and the fourth-largest radio market[228] in the U. The city&#8217;s oldest radio station, KCBS, began as an experimental station in San Jose in 1909, before the beginning of commercial broadcasting. KALW was the city&#8217;s first FM radio station when it signed on the air in 1941. The city&#8217;s first television station was KPIX, which began broadcasting in 1948. Television networks have affiliates serving the region, with most of them based in the city. CNN, MSNBC, BBC, Al Jazeera America, Russia Today, and CCTV America also have regional news bureaus in San Francisco. Bloomberg West was launched in 2011 from a studio on the Embarcadero and CNBC broadcasts from One Market Plaza since 2015. ESPN uses the local ABC studio for their broadcasting. The regional sports network, Comcast SportsNet Bay Area and its sister station Comcast SportsNet California, are both located in San Francisco. The Pac-12 Network is also based in San Francisco. Public broadcasting outlets include both a television station and a radio station, both broadcasting under the call letters KQED from a facility near the Potrero Hill neighborhood. KQED-FM is the most-listened-to National Public Radio affiliate in the country. [229] Another local broadcaster, KPOO, is an independent, African-American owned and operated noncommercial radio station established in 1971. [230] CNET, founded 1994, and Salon. Com, 1995, are based in San Francisco. San Francisco-based inventors made important contributions to modern media. During the 1870s, Eadweard Muybridge began recording motion photographically and invented a zoopraxiscope with which to view his recordings. These were the first motion pictures. Then in 1927, Philo Farnsworth&#8217;s image dissector camera tube transmitted its first image. This was the first television. San Francisco has several nicknames, including &#8220;The City by the Bay&#8221;, &#8220;Golden Gate City&#8221;, [231] &#8220;Frisco&#8221;, &#8220;SF&#8221;, &#8220;San Fran&#8221;, and &#8220;Fog City&#8221;, as well as older ones like &#8220;The City that Knows How&#8221;, &#8220;Baghdad by the Bay&#8221;, &#8220;The Paris of the West&#8221;, or, as locals call it, &#8220;The City&#8221;. [1] San Fran and Frisco are only used outside of San Francisco itself and disaparaged by residents. Main article: List of theatres in San Francisco. The lobby of the War Memorial Opera House, one of the last buildings erected in Beaux Arts style in the United States. San Francisco&#8217;s War Memorial and Performing Arts Center hosts some of the most enduring performing-arts companies in the country. The War Memorial Opera House houses the San Francisco Opera, the second-largest opera company in North America[235] as well as the San Francisco Ballet, while the San Francisco Symphony plays in Davies Symphony Hall. Opened in 2013, the SFJAZZ Center hosts jazz performances year round. The Fillmore is a music venue located in the Western Addition. It is the second incarnation of the historic venue that gained fame in the 1960s, housing the stage where now-famous musicians such as the Grateful Dead, Janis Joplin, Led Zeppelin and Jefferson Airplane first performed, fostering the San Francisco Sound. San Francisco has a large number of theaters and live performance venues. Local theater companies have been noted for risk taking and innovation. [236] The Tony Award-winning non-profit American Conservatory Theater A. Is a member of the national League of Resident Theatres. Other local winners of the Regional Theatre Tony Award include the San Francisco Mime Troupe. [237] San Francisco theaters frequently host pre-Broadway engagements and tryout runs, [238] and some original San Francisco productions have later moved to Broadway. Main article: List of museums in San Francisco Bay Area, California § San Francisco. The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) houses 20th century and contemporary works of art. It moved to its current building in the South of Market neighborhood in 1995 and attracted more than 600,000 visitors annually. [240] SFMOMA closed for renovation and expansion in 2013. The museum reopened on May 14, 2016 with an addition, designed by Snøhetta, that has doubled the museum&#8217;s size. The Palace of the Legion of Honor holds primarily European antiquities and works of art at its Lincoln Park building modeled after its Parisian namesake. The de Young Museum in Golden Gate Park features American decorative pieces and anthropological holdings from Africa, Oceania and the Americas, while Asian art is housed in the Asian Art Museum. Opposite the de Young stands the California Academy of Sciences, a natural history museum that also hosts the Morrison Planetarium and Steinhart Aquarium. Located on Pier 15 on the Embarcadero, the Exploratorium is an interactive science museum. The Contemporary Jewish Museum is a non-collecting institution that hosts a broad array of temporary exhibitions. On Nob Hill, the Cable Car Museum is a working museum featuring the cable car power house, which drives the cables. See also: List of parks in San Francisco. Ocean Beach, San Francisco with a view of the Cliff House. Golden Gate Park as seen from Strawberry Hill. Several of San Francisco&#8217;s parks and nearly all of its beaches form part of the regional Golden Gate National Recreation Area, one of the most visited units of the National Park system in the United States with over 13 million visitors a year. Among the GGNRA&#8217;s attractions within the city are Ocean Beach, which runs along the Pacific Ocean shoreline and is frequented by a vibrant surfing community, and Baker Beach, which is located in a cove west of the Golden Gate and part of the Presidio, a former military base. Also within the Presidio is Crissy Field, a former airfield that was restored to its natural salt marsh ecosystem. The GGNRA also administers Fort Funston, Lands End, Fort Mason, and Alcatraz. Alamo Square is one of the most well known parks in the area, and is often a symbol of San Francisco for its popular location for film and pop culture. There are more than 220 parks maintained by the San Francisco Recreation &#038; Parks Department. [243] The largest and best-known city park is Golden Gate Park, [244] which stretches from the center of the city west to the Pacific Ocean. Once covered in native grasses and sand dunes, the park was conceived in the 1860s and was created by the extensive planting of thousands of non-native trees and plants. The large park is rich with cultural and natural attractions such as the Conservatory of Flowers, Japanese Tea Garden and San Francisco Botanical Garden. Lake Merced is a fresh-water lake surrounded by parkland and near the San Francisco Zoo, a city-owned park that houses more than 250 animal species, many of which are endangered. [245] The only park managed by the California State Park system located principally in San Francisco, Candlestick Point was the state&#8217;s first urban recreation area. San Francisco is the first city in the U. To have a park within a 10-Minute Walk of every resident. [247][248] It also ranks fifth in the U. For park access and quality in the 2018 ParkScore ranking of the top 100 park systems across the United States, according to the nonprofit Trust for Public Land. Oracle Park opened in 2000. Main article: Sports in the San Francisco Bay Area. Major League Baseball&#8217;s San Francisco Giants have played in San Francisco since moving from New York in 1958. The Giants play at Oracle Park, which opened in 2000. [250] The Giants won World Series titles in 2010, 2012, and in 2014. The Giants have boasted such stars as Willie Mays, Willie McCovey and Barry Bonds. In 2012, San Francisco was ranked No. 1 in a study that examined which U. Metro areas have produced the most Major Leaguers since 1920. The San Francisco 49ers of the National Football League (NFL) were the longest-tenured major professional sports franchise in the city until moving in 2013. The team began play in 1946 as an All-America Football Conference (AAFC) league charter member, moved to the NFL in 1950 and into Candlestick Park in 1971. The team began playing its home games at Levi&#8217;s Stadium in Santa Clara in 2014, closer to the city of San Jose. [252][253] The 49ers won five Super Bowl titles in the 1980s and 1990s. [254] The Warrior&#8217;s arena, Chase Center, is currently located in San Francisco. [255] They have won 6 championships, [256] including three of the last five. At the collegiate level, the San Francisco Dons compete in NCAA Division I. Bill Russell led the Don&#8217;s basketball team to NCAA championships in 1955 and 1956. There is also the San Francisco State Gators, who compete in NCAA Division II. [257] Oracle Park hosted the annual Fight Hunger Bowl college football game from 2002 through 2013 before it moved to Santa Clara. The Bay to Breakers footrace, held annually since 1912, is best known for colorful costumes and a celebratory community spirit. [258] The San Francisco Marathon attracts more than 21,000 participants. [259] The Escape from Alcatraz triathlon has, since 1980, attracted 2,000 top professional and amateur triathletes for its annual race. [260] The Olympic Club, founded in 1860, is the oldest athletic club in the United States. Its private golf course has hosted the U. Open on five occasions. San Francisco hosted the 2013 America&#8217;s Cup yacht racing competition. With an ideal climate for outdoor activities, San Francisco has ample resources and opportunities for amateur and participatory sports and recreation. There are more than 200 miles (320 km) of bicycle paths, lanes and bike routes in the city. [262] San Francisco residents have often ranked among the fittest in the country. [263] Golden Gate Park has miles of paved and unpaved running trails as well as a golf course and disc golf course. Boating, sailing, windsurfing and kitesurfing are among the popular activities on San Francisco Bay, and the city maintains a yacht harbor in the Marina District. Main articles: Government of San Francisco, Politics of San Francisco, and Mayors of San Francisco. San Francisco-officially known as the City and County of San Francisco-is a consolidated city-county, a status it has held since the 1856 secession of what is now San Mateo County. [30] It is the only such consolidation in California. [264] The mayor is also the county executive, and the county Board of Supervisors acts as the city council. The government of San Francisco is a charter city and is constituted of two co-equal branches: the executive branch is headed by the mayor and includes other citywide elected and appointed officials as well as the civil service; the 11-member Board of Supervisors, the legislative branch, is headed by a president and is responsible for passing laws and budgets, though San Franciscans also make use of direct ballot initiatives to pass legislation. San Francisco City Hall. The members of the Board of Supervisors are elected as representatives of specific districts within the city. [266] Upon the death or resignation of mayor, the President of the Board of Supervisors becomes acting mayor until the full Board elects an interim replacement for the remainder of the term. In 1978, Dianne Feinstein assumed the office following the assassination of George Moscone and was later selected by the board to finish the term. In 2011, Ed Lee was selected by the board to finish the term of Gavin Newsom, who resigned to take office as Lieutenant Governor of California. [267] Lee (who won 2 elections to remain mayor) was temporarily replaced by San Francisco Board of Supervisors President London Breed after he died on December 12, 2017. Supervisor Mark Farrell was appointed by the Board of Supervisors to finish Lee&#8217;s term on January 23, 2018. Because of its unique city-county status, the local government is able to exercise jurisdiction over certain property outside city limits. San Francisco International Airport, though located in San Mateo County, is owned and operated by the City and County of San Francisco. San Francisco&#8217;s largest jail complex County Jail No. 5 is located in San Mateo County, in an unincorporated area adjacent to San Bruno. San Francisco was also granted a perpetual leasehold over the Hetch Hetchy Valley and watershed in Yosemite National Park by the Raker Act in 1913. San Francisco serves as the regional hub for many arms of the federal bureaucracy, including the U. Court of Appeals, the Federal Reserve Bank, and the U. Until decommissioning in the early 1990s, the city had major military installations at the Presidio, Treasure Island, and Hunters Point-a legacy still reflected in the annual celebration of Fleet Week. The State of California uses San Francisco as the home of the state supreme court and other state agencies. Foreign governments maintain more than seventy consulates in San Francisco. [270] The City of San Francisco spends more per resident than any city other than Washington D. [270] The city employs around 27,000 workers. In the United States House of Representatives, San Francisco is split between California&#8217;s 12th and 14th districts. The following table includes the number of incidents reported and the rate per 1,000 persons for each type of offense. Population and crime rates (2012). CHP officers enforce the California Vehicle Code, pursue fugitives spotted on the highways, and attend to all significant obstructions and accidents within their jurisdiction. In 2011, 50 murders were reported, which is 6.1 per 100,000 people. [273] There were about 134 rapes, 3,142 robberies, and about 2,139 assaults. There were about 4,469 burglaries, 25,100 thefts, and 4,210 motor vehicle thefts. [274] The Tenderloin area has the highest crime rate in San Francisco: 70% of the city&#8217;s violent crimes, and around one-fourth of the city&#8217;s murders, occur in this neighborhood. The Tenderloin also sees high rates of drug abuse, gang violence, and prostitution. [275] Another area with high crime rates is the Bayview-Hunters Point area. In the first six months of 2015 there were 25 murders compared to 14 in the first six months of 2014. However, the murder rate is still much lower than in past decades. [276] That rate, though, did rise again by the close of 2016. According to the San Francisco Police Department, there were 59 murders in the city in 2016, an annual total that marked a 13.5% increase in the number of homicides (52) from 2015. During the first half of 2018, human feces on San Francisco sidewalks were the second-most-frequent complaint of city residents, with about 65 calls per day. The city has formed a &#8220;poop patrol&#8221; to attempt to combathow? Several street gangs operate in the city, including MS-13, [279] the Sureños and Norteños in the Mission District. [280] African-American street gangs familiar in other cities, including the Crips, have struggled to establish footholds in San Francisco, [281] while police and prosecutors have been accused of liberally labeling young African-American males as gang members. [282] Criminal gangs with shotcallers in China, including Triad groups such as the Wo Hop To, have been reported active in San Francisco. [283] In 1977, an ongoing rivalry between two Chinese gangs led to a shooting attack at the Golden Dragon restaurant in Chinatown, which left 5 people dead and 11 wounded. None of the victims in this attack were gang members. Five members of the Joe Boys gang were arrested and convicted of the crime. [284] In 1990, a gang-related shooting killed one man and wounded six others outside a nightclub near Chinatown. [285] In 1998, six teenagers were shot and wounded at the Chinese Playground; a 16-year-old boy was subsequently arrested. The San Francisco Police Department was founded in 1849. [287] The portions of Golden Gate National Recreation Area located within the city, including the Presidio and Ocean Beach, are patrolled by the United States Park Police. The San Francisco Fire Department provides both fire suppression and emergency medical services to the city. The city operates 22 public &#8220;pit stop&#8221; toilets. Main articles: Sister cities of San Francisco, California and List of diplomatic missions in San Francisco. San Francisco participates in the Sister Cities program. [289] A total of 41 consulates general and 23 honorary consulates have offices in the San Francisco Bay Area. The Lone Mountain Campus of the University of San Francisco. See also: List of colleges and universities in San Francisco. San Francisco State University Main Quad. The University of California, San Francisco is the sole campus of the University of California system entirely dedicated to graduate education in health and biomedical sciences. It is ranked among the top five medical schools in the United States[291] and operates the UCSF Medical Center, which ranks as the number one hospital in California and the number 5 in the country. [292] UCSF is a major local employer, second in size only to the city and county government. [293][294][295] A 43-acre (17 ha) Mission Bay campus was opened in 2003, complementing its original facility in Parnassus Heights. It contains research space and facilities to foster biotechnology and life sciences entrepreneurship and will double the size of UCSF&#8217;s research enterprise. [296] All in all, UCSF operates more than 20 facilities across San Francisco. [297] The University of California, Hastings College of the Law, founded in Civic Center in 1878, is the oldest law school in California and claims more judges on the state bench than any other institution. [298] San Francisco&#8217;s two University of California institutions have recently formed an official affiliation in the UCSF/UC Hastings Consortium on Law, Science &#038; Health Policy. San Francisco State University is part of the California State University system and is located near Lake Merced. [300] The school has approximately 30,000 students and awards undergraduate, master&#8217;s and doctoral degrees in more than 100 disciplines. [300] The City College of San Francisco, with its main facility in the Ingleside district, is one of the largest two-year community colleges in the country. It has an enrollment of about 100,000 students and offers an extensive continuing education program. Founded in 1855, the University of San Francisco, a private Jesuit university located on Lone Mountain, is the oldest institution of higher education in San Francisco and one of the oldest universities established west of the Mississippi River. [302] Golden Gate University is a private, nonsectarian, coeducational university formed in 1901 and located in the Financial District. With an enrollment of 13,000 students, the Academy of Art University is the largest institute of art and design in the nation. [303] Founded in 1871, the San Francisco Art Institute is the oldest art school west of the Mississippi. [304] The California College of the Arts, located north of Potrero Hill, has programs in architecture, fine arts, design, and writing. [305] The San Francisco Conservatory of Music, the only independent music school on the West Coast, grants degrees in orchestral instruments, chamber music, composition, and conducting. The California Culinary Academy, associated with the Le Cordon Bleu program, offers programs in the culinary arts, baking and pastry arts, and hospitality and restaurant management. California Institute of Integral Studies, founded in 1968, offers a variety of graduate programs in its Schools of Professional Psychology &#038; Health, and Consciousness and Transformation. See also: List of high schools in California § San Francisco County. Public schools are run by the San Francisco Unified School District as well as the State Board of Education for some charter schools. Lowell High School, the oldest public high school in the U. West of the Mississippi, [306] and the smaller School of the Arts High School are two of San Francisco&#8217;s magnet schools at the secondary level. Public school students attend schools based on an assignment system rather than neighborhood proximity. Just under 30% of the city&#8217;s school-age population attends one of San Francisco&#8217;s more than 100 private or parochial schools, compared to a 10% rate nationwide. [308] Nearly 40 of those schools are Catholic schools managed by the Archdiocese of San Francisco. San Francisco has nearly 300 preschool programs primarily operated by Head Start, San Francisco Unified School District, private for-profit, private non-profit and family child care providers. [310] All 4-year-old children living in San Francisco are offered universal access to preschool through the Preschool for All program. See also: Transportation in the San Francisco Bay Area. The Bay Bridge offers the only direct automobile connection to the East Bay. Main article: List of streets in San Francisco. Due to its unique geography, and the freeway revolts of the late 1950s, [312] Interstate 80 begins at the approach to the Bay Bridge and is the only direct automobile link to the East Bay. Route 101 connects to the western terminus of Interstate 80 and provides access to the south of the city along San Francisco Bay toward Silicon Valley. Northward, the routing for U. 101 uses arterial streets to connect to the Golden Gate Bridge, the only direct automobile link to Marin County and the North Bay. The Golden Gate Bridge is the only road connection to the North Bay. State Route 1 also enters San Francisco from the north via the Golden Gate Bridge and bisects the city as the 19th Avenue arterial thoroughfare, joining with Interstate 280 at the city&#8217;s southern border. Interstate 280 continues south from San Francisco, and also turns to the east along the southern edge of the city, terminating just south of the Bay Bridge in the South of Market neighborhood. After the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, city leaders demolished the Embarcadero Freeway and a portion of the Central Freeway, converting them into street-level boulevards. State Route 35 enters the city from the south as Skyline Boulevard and terminates at its intersection with Highway 1. State Route 82 enters San Francisco from the south as Mission Street, and terminates shortly thereafter at its junction with 280. The Western Terminus of the historic transcontinental Lincoln Highway, the first road across America, is in San Francisco&#8217;s Lincoln Park. See also: San Francisco Municipal Railway. A cable car ascending Hyde St, with Alcatraz on the bay behind. 32% of San Francisco residents use public transportation for their daily commute to work, ranking it first on the West Coast and third overall in the United States. [313] The San Francisco Municipal Railway, known as Muni, is the primary public transit system of San Francisco. Muni is the seventh-largest transit system in the United States, with 210,848,310 rides in 2006. [314] The system operates a combined light rail and subway system, the Muni Metro, as well as large bus and trolley coach networks. [315] Additionally, it runs a historic streetcar line, which runs on Market Street from Castro Street to Fisherman&#8217;s Wharf. [315] It also operates the famous cable cars, [315] which have been designated as a National Historic Landmark and are a major tourist attraction. Bay Area Rapid Transit, a regional Rapid Transit system, connects San Francisco with the East Bay through the underwater Transbay Tube. The line runs under Market Street to Civic Center where it turns south to the Mission District, the southern part of the city, and through northern San Mateo County, to the San Francisco International Airport, and Millbrae. Another commuter rail system, Caltrain, runs from San Francisco along the San Francisco Peninsula to San Jose. [315] Historically, trains operated by Southern Pacific Lines ran from San Francisco to Los Angeles, via Palo Alto and San Jose. Amtrak California Thruway Motorcoach runs a shuttle bus from three locations in San Francisco to its station across the bay in Emeryville. [317] Additionally, BART offers connections to San Francisco from Amtrak&#8217;s stations in Emeryville, Oakland and Richmond, and Caltrain offers connections in San Jose and Santa Clara. Thruway service also runs south to San Luis Obispo with connection to the Pacific Surfliner. The Golden Gate Ferry M/V Del Norte docked at the Ferry Building. San Francisco Bay Ferry operates from the Ferry Building and Pier 39 to points in Oakland, Alameda, Bay Farm Island, South San Francisco, and north to Vallejo in Solano County. [318] The Golden Gate Ferry is the other ferry operator with service between San Francisco and Marin County. [319] SolTrans runs supplemental bus service between the Ferry Building and Vallejo. San Francisco was an early adopter of carsharing in America. The non-profit City CarShare opened in 2001. [320] Zipcar closely followed. To accommodate the large amount of San Francisco citizens who commute to the Silicon Valley daily, companies like Google and Apple have begun to provide private bus transportation for their employees, from San Francisco locations to the tech start-up hotspot. These buses have quickly become a heated topic of debate within the city, as protesters claim they block bus lanes and delay public buses. Main article: San Francisco International Airport. San Francisco International Airport is the primary airport of San Francisco and the Bay Area. Though located 13 miles (21 km) south of downtown in unincorporated San Mateo County, San Francisco International Airport (SFO) is under the jurisdiction of the City and County of San Francisco. [324] SFO is a major international gateway to Asia and Europe, with the largest international terminal in North America. [325] In 2011, SFO was the eighth-busiest airport in the U. Located across the bay, Oakland International Airport is a popular, low-cost alternative to SFO. Geographically, Oakland Airport is approximately the same distance from downtown San Francisco as SFO, but due to its location across San Francisco Bay, it is greater driving distance from San Francisco. Cycling is a popular mode of transportation in San Francisco. 75,000 residents commute by bicycle per day. [327] Ford GoBike, previously named Bay Area Bike Share at inception, launched in August 2013 with 700 bikes in downtown San Francisco, selected cities in the East Bay, and San Jose. The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency and Bay Area Air Quality Management District are responsible for the operation with management provided by Motivate. [328] A major expansion started in 2017 along with a rebranding as Ford GoBike. [329] Pedestrian traffic is a major mode of transport. In 2015, Walk Score ranked San Francisco the second-most walkable city in the United States. San Francisco has significantly higher rates of pedestrian and bicyclist traffic deaths than the United States on average. In 2013, 21 pedestrians were killed in vehicle collisions, the highest since 2001, [333] which is 2.5 deaths per 100,000 population &#8211; 70% higher than the national average of 1.5 deaths per 100,000 population. Cycling is growing in San Francisco. Annual bicycle counts conducted by the Municipal Transportation Agency (MTA) in 2010 showed the number of cyclists at 33 locations had increased 58% from the 2006 baseline counts. [335] In 2008, the MTA estimated that about 128,000 trips were made by bicycle each day in the city, or 6% of total trips. [336] Since 2002, improvements in cycling infrastructure in recent years, including additional bike lanes and parking racks, have made cycling in San Francisco safer and more convenient. [337] Since 2006, San Francisco has received a Bicycle Friendly Community status of &#8220;Gold&#8221; from the League of American Bicyclists.  <br/>   <img class="fj2k4k4kd63e609S95k3i9i7k5k2i9094k2i9i8j3k2i9i7k4kd59k2k4i5j6094i7j9j7095ak5k2j6e908S99i8e2eo8S99i5e3kd59j9099099099jS8S981di7i8097j5i608S98jc8S98e2j908Tb96eo8S98e2j9k9k3k3k5k9kf7d64k6kf6f7d5808S98eo94eI8Tb96i5j2k3k9k9jf65k7k8ld7d5f69kf68k5k5jf7dZi6i808S98eo8S99iS8Tb96i5j2k5k7k7k5k2k2k2k3k6k2j7eo8S98jc8S98jc8S98i708Tb96i5j2k9ld7d7d69j7i61de3eo8S98jc8S98eo8Tb96i5j2iS8S98e2e3jd63k5k5ld66j708S98eo9I8S981d1ce2j2k9j708S98eo94i608Tb96i5j2k9j708Tb96i608S981d08S99i5jdOi8e2hdNj2k8k4k8k6k8k9099ey99048" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/voxap.gif" title="Handsome Young Chinese Servants With White Men Snapshot Rare" alt="Handsome Young Chinese Servants With White Men Snapshot Rare"/> <br/>	]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Chinese Architectural Photographer Lee Vintage 8&#215;10 In Photo 1968 Renowned</title>
		<link>https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/2025/10/chinese-architectural-photographer-lee-vintage-8x10-in-photo-1968-renowned-19/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Oct 2025 22:28:28 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[chinese]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[8x10]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architectural]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[photo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[photographer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[renowned]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[vintage]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Lee is a renowned architectural photographer WHO TOOK THIS 8X10 INCH PHOTO IN 1968 FOR THE SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER. Leland documented the work of many great 20th century architects and designers. His images have appeared in numerous prestigious publications. Lee .....]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<img class="nk9mf8f77mdrf2f2md66k4m2l9k6al9k6k5ld79k6k4mf77l6l9mf62l3ak4l6l4f2g8m2l9l3g6id86m6h2m7f6f5f5m3m3m3j4i3i6i7mfWi5h3h5f5h9m6h5f5e2f6k7f9f9g1e2f6k7e2f5f9f7e2f5f9gdmf9gdih5h7hdHi4ja9e2f6k7e2f6k7jdpe2f6k2e2f5k7e2f5f9e2f5f9jd02f6k7f7e2f5k7gf2f5d02f5f9f3i5i7h5h2h9i4jfpe2f6k2e2f6k2ga8f8f8f9g2f8f3m6h3h3h6h9i4j1e2f6k7e2f5f9e2f5f9e2f5f9e2f6k7f3i5m5m7m6h3h5h9i4jfMh5m7i9f9gfpe2f5f9g2f3h5h7i3m4m6j1e2f6k7f3h5h7i5h9i4j1e2f6k7f3h9i5i3h2i9i5i7m6lfMj1e2f5k7gd02f5k7g2e2f5k7e2f6k7ga8g0065" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/Chinese_Architectural_Photographer_Lee_Vintage_8x10_In_Photo_1968_Renowned_01_dngf.jpg" title="Chinese Architectural Photographer Lee Vintage 8x10 In Photo 1968 Renowned" alt="Chinese Architectural Photographer Lee Vintage 8x10 In Photo 1968 Renowned"/> 	  <br/>  <img class="nk9mf8f77mdrf2f2md66k4m2l9k6al9k6k5ld79k6k4mf77l6l9mf62l3ak4l6l4f2g8m2l9l3g6id86m6h2m7f6f5f5m3m3m3j4i3i6i7mfWi5h3h5f5h9m6h5f5e2f6k7f9f9g1e2f6k7e2f5f9f7e2f5f9gdmf9gdih5h7hdHi4ja9e2f6k7e2f6k7jdpe2f6k2e2f5k7e2f5f9e2f5f9jd02f6k7f7e2f5k7gf2f5d02f5f9f3i5i7h5h2h9i4jfpe2f6k2e2f6k2ga8f8f8f9g2f8f3m6h3h3h6h9i4j1e2f6k7e2f5f9e2f5f9e2f5f9e2f6k7f3i5m5m7m6h3h5h9i4jfMh5m7i9f9gfpe2f5f9g2f3h5h7i3m4m6j1e2f6k7f3h5h7i5h9i4j1e2f6k7f3h9i5i3h2i9i5i7m6lfMj1e2f5k7gd02f5k7g2e2f5k7e2f6k7ga8g0065" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/Chinese_Architectural_Photographer_Lee_Vintage_8x10_In_Photo_1968_Renowned_02_jc.jpg" title="Chinese Architectural Photographer Lee Vintage 8x10 In Photo 1968 Renowned" alt="Chinese Architectural Photographer Lee Vintage 8x10 In Photo 1968 Renowned"/>


	
	 
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  <img class="nk9mf8f77mdrf2f2md66k4m2l9k6al9k6k5ld79k6k4mf77l6l9mf62l3ak4l6l4f2g8m2l9l3g6id86m6h2m7f6f5f5m3m3m3j4i3i6i7mfWi5h3h5f5h9m6h5f5e2f6k7f9f9g1e2f6k7e2f5f9f7e2f5f9gdmf9gdih5h7hdHi4ja9e2f6k7e2f6k7jdpe2f6k2e2f5k7e2f5f9e2f5f9jd02f6k7f7e2f5k7gf2f5d02f5f9f3i5i7h5h2h9i4jfpe2f6k2e2f6k2ga8f8f8f9g2f8f3m6h3h3h6h9i4j1e2f6k7e2f5f9e2f5f9e2f5f9e2f6k7f3i5m5m7m6h3h5h9i4jfMh5m7i9f9gfpe2f5f9g2f3h5h7i3m4m6j1e2f6k7f3h5h7i5h9i4j1e2f6k7f3h9i5i3h2i9i5i7m6lfMj1e2f5k7gd02f5k7g2e2f5k7e2f6k7ga8g0065" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/voxap.gif" title="Chinese Architectural Photographer Lee Vintage 8x10 In Photo 1968 Renowned" alt="Chinese Architectural Photographer Lee Vintage 8x10 In Photo 1968 Renowned"/>  <br/>

Lee is a renowned architectural photographer WHO TOOK THIS 8X10 INCH PHOTO IN 1968 FOR THE SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER. Leland documented the work of many great 20th century architects and designers. His images have appeared in numerous prestigious publications. Lee studied and worked for eight years with the icon of architectural photography, Julius Shulman, prior to venturing out on his own in 1961. In 1968, he was the first to photograph the famous Elrod House, designed by renowned architect John Lautner, overlooking Palm Springs. Lee called this shoot his single most rewarding experience as an architectural photographer. These photographs were rescued and printed from his fading Ektachrome transparencies and show the house exactly as interior designer Arthur Elrod envisioned, at the pinnacle of his career when it was first built, before his untimely death in 1974 at age 49. The Elrod House was immortalized in 1971 as the sophisticated modern location for the James Bond film, Diamonds are Forever, with Sean Connery. Lee was born Lay Quonn Yuen (&#8220;Deep Spring&#8221;), the youngest of a family of four children in San Francisco&#8217;s Chinatown during the deadly influenza pandemic of 1918. The city was still rebuilding from the great fire of 1906 from which his parents and older siblings had narrowly escaped. His earliest memories are of a home lit by gas lamps and getting around town by horse drawn carriage. His father was a Chinese immigrant and tailor, specializing in brightly colored silk shirts popular with young men who frequented the entertainment district known as the Barbary Coast, home to jazz clubs, dance halls, vaudeville theaters and brothels. Soon after the young Lee could talk, he was translating for his mother who spoke only Cantonese, despite having been a native-born lifelong resident of San Francisco. Lee, an architectural photographer who overcame racial barriers and helped create iconic images of the American twentieth century built environment, died on February 27, 2016 in Lynwood, California. For four decades, Lee photographed the works of some of the era&#8217;s most important architects such as John Lautner, Pierre Koenig, A. Quincy Jones, Edward Fickett, Albert Frey and Buff &#038; Hensman for such leading publications as Architectural Digest, House Beautiful, House &#038; Garden, Good Housekeeping, House &#038; Home, and the LA Times&#8217; influential Home Magazine, among others. Orphaned at eight, Lee was sent to a boys&#8217; camp where an art project of his was published in the San Francisco Call-Bulletin newspaper with the racially insensitive caption &#8220;Wong Does It Right&#8221;. This proved to be a seminal event and launched a lifelong career in art and photography. The story in the Call-Bulletin caught the attention of a recruiter for the then-new Voorhis School for Boys, an experimental progressive school for underprivileged youth in San Dimas, California founded by Jerry Voorhis, scion of a wealthy political dynasty who would later serve in Congress. The ten year old Lee was given a scholarship and would become not only a protoge of Voorhis&#8217;, but a friend to the entire Voorhis family for the rest of his life. It was at the Voorhis school that Lee first studied photography and developed a love for the craft. The Voorhis school is now part of California State Polytechnic University (Cal Poly Pomona). Soon after the attack on Pearl Harbor, and after narrowly avoiding relocation to an internment camp for being mistaken as Japanese, Lee was drafted into the Army Air Corps in 1942 and spent the war years serving in Morocco, India, Nepal and China, achieving the rank of Master Sergeant. While in Shanghai, Lee connected with his father&#8217;s relatives who introduced him to the woman who would become his wife, Ye Lien, later Americanized to Gracelynn. They were married in Shanghai on June 1, 1946. After the war, Lee found work in portrait studios and freelancing for commercial assignments before returning to school on the GI Bill to study photography, earning a Bachelor&#8217;s degree from the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena. It was there that he attended a lecture given by the world-renowned architectural photographer Julius Shulman. Shortly after, Lee answered a blind ad in the newspaper for a photographer&#8217;s assistant which turned out to be for Shulman. Lee worked as Shulman&#8217;s assistant for nearly a decade from 1952 to 1961. The two worked together on many of Shulman&#8217;s most iconic photographs, often with Lee standing-in to provide scale. He is the man standing in a bathing suit by the pool in the 1954 photos of the Albert Frey House in Palm Springs. He is the man standing at the edge of a cliff under the cantilevered roof of the Stahl House in 1960, Pierre Koenig&#8217;s Case Study House #22. And he is seen riding in the funicular of John Lautner&#8217;s Chemosphere House in Shulman&#8217;s famous 1961 photo. The formally-educated Lee had to be diplomatic when making suggestions to the self-taught Shulman and is responsible for introducing his boss to the use of infrared film which was famously used when photographing the Chapel of the Holy Cross in Sedona, Arizona in 1956, adding sharp contrasts, depth and drama to the images. At Julius Shulman&#8217;s memorial at the Getty Center in 2009, Shulman&#8217;s daughter, Judy McKee, credited Lee for his contributions to her father&#8217;s career. In 1961, Lee struck out on his own. He photographed a hillside house in Silverlake, California by architect Raul Garduno for the Los Angeles Times&#8217; Home Magazine in 1962. For the next four decades, Lee photographed the homes of the rich and famous from Sonny &#038; Cher, Kirk Douglas and Dinah Shore to Mary Tyler Moore, Ike &#038; Tina Turner, and Ronald &#038; Nancy Reagan. Lee&#8217;s most notable assignment came in 1968 when he photographed architect John Lautner&#8217;s then latest project, a house for interior designer Arthur Elrod in Palm Springs for House &#038; Garden magazine. Lee was struck by the house&#8217;s monumentality with its spiraling circus tent-like concrete roof, indoor-outdoor infinity-edge swimming pool, and natural rock outcroppings that jutted up through the floors or formed walls throughout the interior of the house. Lee had to order out for more film and a boom crane to fully capture the house&#8217;s drama. Lee&#8217;s photographs led to the house&#8217;s use as the villain&#8217;s lair in the 1971 James Bond film &#8220;Diamonds Are Forever&#8221; where two bikini-clad bodyguards wrestle James Bond into the pool. Twin tragedies struck Lee at the turn of the millennium with the death of his beloved Lyn to breast cancer in 2001, followed by a house fire in 2002 caused by his freshly-serviced car smoldering in the garage, destroying most of his film archive. Lee retired but would remain active attending and participating in art events, lectures, museum and gallery openings including exhibitions of what survived of his own work. He traveled alone on a seven month around-the-world photo safari visiting remote areas of Africa, South America, and the Galapagos as well as the northern reaches of China. Lee would return to the Elrod House in 2012 at the age of 93 for special celebrations and exhibitions of his photographs as part of that year&#8217;s Palm Springs Modernism Show. He was interviewed for publications including Palm Springs Life, Modernism Magazine and Los Angeles Magazine as well as several coffee-table books by Taschen recollecting Lee&#8217;s and Shulman&#8217;s iconic photographs. Lee remained active and traveled frequently visiting family and friends until late 2015, attributing his longevity and youthful energy to surrounding himself with &#8220;young people&#8221;. Lee&#8217;s work continues to resurface, discovered in the vaults of defunct magazines, in the backrooms of long-closed galleries, or in the store-rooms of shuttered architectural offices. As with the work of his contemporaries Julius Shulman, Ezra Stoller, and Art Center classmate Pedro Guerrero, Lee&#8217;s work serves as a valuable record of a unique time in America&#8217;s built environment, when architects reinvented the profession and houses broke all the rules of convention. What survives or continues to turn up of Lee&#8217;s work will be archived at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California. Lee is survived by his sons Miles and Alexander of Los Angeles; grandsons Erick and wife Stacy of Stevenson Ranch, and Patrick and wife Kelli of San Antonio, Texas; niece Lyena Griffith and husband Jay of Arcadia, California; niece Jeanette (Lawrence) Wong of Chicago, Illinois; nephews Tony Tam of Pasadena and Will Leong of Sacramento and five great-grandchildren, Samantha, Evan, Ava, Katherine and Isabella, and grand-niece Asia. ART &#038; DESIGN AROUND THE GLOBE. Revisiting Lautner&#8217;s Elrod House through. The Lens o/Leland Lee. By Tilll o thy Bras e t h. Ph o tograph y b y L e l and Lee. It was a balmy evening in Palm Springs, which pretty much describes any. Evening in the Southern California desert town. But that&#8217;s Just about all that. Was ordinary that February night in 2010. The well-dressed crowd gathering. At the Michael H. Lord Gallery was not there to see the latest work from the. Newest enfant terrible of the art scene. They came to honor a nonagenarian. Photographer and view his best-known works from over 40 years earlier: his. Remarkable photographs of John Lautner&#8217;s masterpiece, the Elrod House. And Lee&#8217;s public appearances still ignite a crowd, like his. Surprise visit to the house during a recent Modernism Week tour. Above Perched high above the desert. John Lautner&#8217;s space-age creation was. Perfectly cast as a James Bond hideaway. Thanks to Leland Lee&#8217;s striking 1968. The original curving column. In this photograph was replaced by the. Square column seen today to accommodate. A redesigned glass wall. Opposite Lautner&#8217;s original zig-zag. Mitered glass wall was blown out by the. Desert winds soon after Lee&#8217;s photo shoot. Replaced by a retractable curving glass wall. That brought half the pool indoors. The story of Lee&#8217;s life and career is a classic American one, with tt, e. Familiar themes of Ilardsllip overcome, pluckiness, being in the right. Place at tile right time and knowing wilen to make a move. Approached his 94ttl birtllday, Modernism sat down for a cllat with. Lee in the Elrod House. Lee: I was born in 1918, a terrible year you know. A worldwide influenza epidemic. It was a miracle that I survived, being born in San. Francisco to a glletto existence. But I wasn&#8217;t aware of it because. I had a very happy childhood. Lee&#8217;s parents were Chinese immigrants and his motller spoke no. His previously widowed father, 56 years old when Leland. Was born, was more like a doting grandfatller to I, is youngest and. Witt&#8217; his father working long hours as a tailor, and I, is. Mother ill, Lee&#8217;s sisters, nine and fifteen years older, raised him. Until tlleir father passed away in 1927. Lee: Losing my father when I was not yet nine, I qualified as a. I was [sent] to a camp in Marin County. It was a country. Retreat sponsored by tile Call Bulletin newspaper in San Francisco. Was tile first time I ever had an opportunity to use modeling clay. Made a Doctor Dolittle animal, a pushmi-pullyu. So taken, she asked tile newspaper to send a photographer out. Photograpller took a picture. It was printed in tile Call Bulletin with. Tile caption &#8220;Wong does it right&#8221; &#8211; it didn&#8217;t even Ilave my name on it! Above Leland Lee, left, assisting Julius Shulman In the studio. Shortly after becoming his assistant in 1952. Work together for nearly a decade, launching Lee&#8217;s solo career. Top Rather than dynamiting the site to create a flat building. Pad, Lautner incorporated the natural rocky outcroppings into. The interior as supporting walls, as. In the lounge area of the master bedroom. Opposite Mirrored walls in the master bedroom reflect views. Of the surrounding mountains and desert scape from every. Angle, continuing the theme of bringing the outdoors in. On tile day the picture appeared in the paper, Lee&#8217;s sister happened. To be on a date with a young man who was on the lookout for. Prospective students for the new Voorhis School for Boys. Of California State Polytechnic University in Pomona, the school was. Founded in 1927 by Jerry Voorllis, scion of a prominent, progressive family, who would later serve in Congress. The young man was. Telling Lee&#8217;s Sister, Ivy, about the SCI100I. When he pulled the news. Clipping from his pocket. Lee: Ivy said That&#8217;s my brother! So wilen the opportunity. Came to attend school away from Ilome, I was off like a shot. Lee completed his studies at the Voorhis Sdlool, where he learned. The basics of photograpllY, then landed&#8217; a job at a prestigious photo. Studio in San Francisco. In 1942, he was drafted into tile army, serving in Morocco, India and, finally, China, where a cousin in Shanghai. Introduced him to the woman who would become Ilis wife, Ye Lien. She later took the Western name Grace Lynn. Lee: I met her in 1946. I had a jeep. I learned to get around. I hadl a lot of free time. We&#8217;d have dinner. My time in the service was corning to a close. We were married June 1, 1946. And she passed away in 2000. PllOtographer for a few years, and in 1951, with the first of their. Two sons, they settled in California so that Lee could pursue his. Ambitions in fashion photography. Lee: I decided that I needed more polish and technical information, so I came back to California to attend tile Art Center. College of Design photography department [in Pasadena]. I attended a lecture about.. Pretty soon, my wife saw an advertisement in. The paper: architectural photographer wants an assistant: So. I called the number. So that&#8217;s how I got to be on Julius&#8217;s staff. Through Silulman, Lee met and mingled with the luminaries. Of arcllitecture and publishing, on whom he made a lasting. Lee: Of course, I was merely an assistant, but I was omnipresent. And I had learned to be conversant about architecture. Errands to run between Julius&#8217;s office and Arts &#038; Architecture. MagaZine editor John Entenza&#8217;s office. It was a good rapport. I became not just an assistant, I became somebody who could. Relate to all these notables. It was a gOOd springboard. Lee, witll his formal tecilllical training ill photography, 11ad to hold. His tongue around the self-taught Shulman. Lee: You see, I had already learned pllotography per se and I. Had my own response to what I saw. And I respected Ilis stature and Ilis reputation and I tried to remain in the background. Because I knew my place. But if I thougllt of any innovation, I. Had to be very judicious and make it seem to be Ilis own idea. One of those innovations was the infrared film that Lee suggested. Silulman use wilen photographing tile Chapel of the Holy Cross. In Sedona, Arizona, in 1956, witll the resulting sharp contrast. Adding deptll and drama to the stunning images. Lee&#8217;s turning point came one evening at Silulman&#8217;s home. Studio in about 1961, wilen Ile had been working for Ilim for. More tllan eight years. Shulman Ilosted a reception for every. Available young architect in the area, and invited Will Mehlhorn. The architecture editor of House &#038; Garden. It would be tllrough. Mehlhorn, some seven years later, Hlat Lee would land tile. Commission to photograph the Elrod House. Soon after tllat evening, Lee felt tile tug to venture out on his. With tile birth of a second son in 1960, he needed to earn. Earlier words of advice from a mentor at tile Art Center, fasllion. Photographer John Engstead, rang in Lee&#8217;s ears. Lee: He said to me, If you&#8217;re going to al1lount to any tiling. You&#8217;ve got to strike out, sink or swim, starve a little while. It was now or never. In 1961, he got Ilis big break. Lee: I had met Case Study House arcl1itect Jolln Rex years. I guess Ile watched my progress, being publislled In. Itlle Los Angeles Times Home Magazine and this and tllat and I. Was a known entity to Ilim. So he called me himself. You know, Leland, I&#8217;ve done a wonderful project. I think it&#8217;s. Left A discrete, vortexlike entry lures visitors. Breatlltaking sight of the. Roof of poured concrete. Opposite Arthur, I&#8217;m. Elrod had a cherrypicker delivered to the. Site from which Lee took. One of tile best residential tllings I;&#8217;ve ever done. It&#8217;s way up in. Every magaZine will want. But I want you to Ilave it. Lee&#8217;s photos of Jolln Rex&#8217;s Wyle House were published, but not. Lee: Tiley sent tllf&#8217;m to a French magazine. Back to me, they sent them to Architectural Digest and before I. Knew it, they published tllem! Witll SUCll a presHgious debut, Lee&#8217;s solo career took off, Witll. Frequent aSSignments for SUCll publications as House Beautiful. House &#038; Garden, Architectural Digest and Home Magazine. Photographed everything from mobile Ilomes to tract houses to. Interior design to celebrity Ilomes including, later, tile house of. Ronald Reagan when Ile was preparing to run for president. Especially enjoyed his role as exclusive pllotographer for tile LA. Pililhannonic&#8217;s annual showcase house, Wllicll Ile first shot in. 1964 and continued pilotograplllllg for tile next 25 years. In 1968, Lee got the call from House &#038; Garden&#8217;s Mellillorn, to. Photograph what would become his signature project, Lautner&#8217;s. Newly completed Arthur Elrod House in Palm Springs. Lee: He called me Ilimself, came out from New York, stayed at. Tile Beverly Hills Hotel Wednesday nigllt. Wei came out in. My station wagon, came up here, and I was overwhelmed! Was flabbergasted by tile scale. Because I had never seen any. Preliminary drawings, I had not been prepared for tile scope. Tile monumentality of this project. Really, it&#8217;s a one of a kind. Wanted to capture its quality, its architecture, its strength. Know, it&#8217;s not just a Ilouse, it&#8217;s a monument. Right away I said,&#8217;Arthur, I don&#8217;t have wings. If I were a hummingbird, I could get up in the air and take pictures: So witllin an. Hour, he hacl a cllerry picker Ilere. And, of course, tile glass was. Mitered, whicll was really the hallmark of this wall. Wind blew it out it&#8217;s a pity they didn&#8217;t replace the glass. Lee refers to the original zig-zag mitered-glass wall, prominent in his. Soon after the photo SllOOt, it was blown out in a windstorm. And replaced by tile curved, retractable wall of glass til at brought. Half Ule swimming pool indoors and remains one of the many strikIng features of the house today. Wilen published in House &#038; Gan1en later that year, Lee&#8217;s photos. Caused a sensation, Soon after, the house was used in the 1971. James Bond thriller Diamonds Are Forever. Audiences the world over. Know the house as Willard Whyte&#8217;S desert retreat where he is held. Hostage under the watch of two bikini-clad bodyguards, who wrestle. Bond into the pool when he comes to Whyte&#8217;S rescue. Lee&#8217;s career flourished for the next three decades until another. Fateful moment in 2003 when his car, fresh from servicing, burst. Into flames, engulfing the garage and Lee&#8217;s entire archive. Few transparencies survived, including, fortunately, the photographs. Above Forty-four years after the photo shoot. That helped make it famous, the 93-year-old. 2012 Palm Springs Modernism week. Of the Elrod House from 1968. Then 85 years old, Lee accepted. The fire as a sign til at it was time to hang up his camera and retire. But retirement hardly meant putting Ilis feet up and relaxing; the. Energetic Lee is in constant motion attending cultural events almost. Daily, including frequent trips to Palm Springs wllere he is still feted. At gallery and museum events, lectures and interviews. Lee&#8217;s fUll collection of photographs of the Elrod House can be. Seen at the Michael H. Lord Gallery in Palm Springs. And there&#8217;s an. OngOing searcll for transparencies and prints of his lost works that. May be in the archives of the many magazines that published them. Anyone with knowledge of tllem is invited to contact tile gallery or. Timothy Bruseth is a Los Angeles-based real estate deveioper, specializing ill the restoration of historic and midcentury modern. Homes through his firms Willow Glen Partners and ArtCrajt Homes, He. Blogs about architecture at jetsetmodernist. Tumblr. Com.<br/> <img class="nk9mf8f77mdrf2f2md66k4m2l9k6al9k6k5ld79k6k4mf77l6l9mf62l3ak4l6l4f2g8m2l9l3g6id86m6h2m7f6f5f5m3m3m3j4i3i6i7mfWi5h3h5f5h9m6h5f5e2f6k7f9f9g1e2f6k7e2f5f9f7e2f5f9gdmf9gdih5h7hdHi4ja9e2f6k7e2f6k7jdpe2f6k2e2f5k7e2f5f9e2f5f9jd02f6k7f7e2f5k7gf2f5d02f5f9f3i5i7h5h2h9i4jfpe2f6k2e2f6k2ga8f8f8f9g2f8f3m6h3h3h6h9i4j1e2f6k7e2f5f9e2f5f9e2f5f9e2f6k7f3i5m5m7m6h3h5h9i4jfMh5m7i9f9gfpe2f5f9g2f3h5h7i3m4m6j1e2f6k7f3h5h7i5h9i4j1e2f6k7f3h9i5i3h2i9i5i7m6lfMj1e2f5k7gd02f5k7g2e2f5k7e2f6k7ga8g0065" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/voxap.gif" title="Chinese Architectural Photographer Lee Vintage 8x10 In Photo 1968 Renowned" alt="Chinese Architectural Photographer Lee Vintage 8x10 In Photo 1968 Renowned"/>
	 
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		<title>San Francisco 1910 RPPC Chinese Fortune Teller EDW Mitchell Postcard Addressed</title>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 19 Oct 2025 22:14:45 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Original 1910 Real Photo Postcard (RPPC) featuring an intriguing image of a Chinese Fortune Teller in San Francisco. This vintage postcard was produced by the noted photographer and publisher EDW Mitchell of San Francisco, known for his authentic and historic .....]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<img class="smf93n3m9n2h5g4g4n2l8l6n4nf78g3nf78l7m2nf78l6n3m9m8nf93l4m5g3l6m8m6g4id94nf85h8f4g7l9k7k7g8g5m2mf8f64k4k4l7f4g7l6f4g9g5f4g8l7k2l7fdxhf8a4g8l4k7hf8f9d86m5m9nf86m4m7m4m8nf9f8d3fBg6f4g8l4g3l4m5nf9a4g7hd87m9nd92n2f4g7hd9f83nd87m7f4g7hd92l9fdig8l7hfwf4g8l4g3l4m7m9m9m7m4m4m4m5m8m4l9k7g9g9h2f4g8l4g3l4nf92n2n2nf79fd66g5k7g9ha4g8l4g3l4g3hftl2m5m7m7n2m8l9hfBf4g7l6k5k7l4nf79hfBfdig8l4g3l4nf79f4g8l4fdig7l6g8l2fdig8l7k7j2g3l4nd86nd92m8m9g7h4g7077" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/San_Francisco_1910_RPPC_Chinese_Fortune_Teller_EDW_Mitchell_Postcard_Addressed_01_crqj.jpg" title="San Francisco 1910 RPPC Chinese Fortune Teller EDW Mitchell Postcard Addressed" alt="San Francisco 1910 RPPC Chinese Fortune Teller EDW Mitchell Postcard Addressed"/>


<br/><img class="smf93n3m9n2h5g4g4n2l8l6n4nf78g3nf78l7m2nf78l6n3m9m8nf93l4m5g3l6m8m6g4id94nf85h8f4g7l9k7k7g8g5m2mf8f64k4k4l7f4g7l6f4g9g5f4g8l7k2l7fdxhf8a4g8l4k7hf8f9d86m5m9nf86m4m7m4m8nf9f8d3fBg6f4g8l4g3l4m5nf9a4g7hd87m9nd92n2f4g7hd9f83nd87m7f4g7hd92l9fdig8l7hfwf4g8l4g3l4m7m9m9m7m4m4m4m5m8m4l9k7g9g9h2f4g8l4g3l4nf92n2n2nf79fd66g5k7g9ha4g8l4g3l4g3hftl2m5m7m7n2m8l9hfBf4g7l6k5k7l4nf79hfBfdig8l4g3l4nf79f4g8l4fdig7l6g8l2fdig8l7k7j2g3l4nd86nd92m8m9g7h4g7077" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/San_Francisco_1910_RPPC_Chinese_Fortune_Teller_EDW_Mitchell_Postcard_Addressed_02_elru.jpg" title="San Francisco 1910 RPPC Chinese Fortune Teller EDW Mitchell Postcard Addressed" alt="San Francisco 1910 RPPC Chinese Fortune Teller EDW Mitchell Postcard Addressed"/> <br/>
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<img class="smf93n3m9n2h5g4g4n2l8l6n4nf78g3nf78l7m2nf78l6n3m9m8nf93l4m5g3l6m8m6g4id94nf85h8f4g7l9k7k7g8g5m2mf8f64k4k4l7f4g7l6f4g9g5f4g8l7k2l7fdxhf8a4g8l4k7hf8f9d86m5m9nf86m4m7m4m8nf9f8d3fBg6f4g8l4g3l4m5nf9a4g7hd87m9nd92n2f4g7hd9f83nd87m7f4g7hd92l9fdig8l7hfwf4g8l4g3l4m7m9m9m7m4m4m4m5m8m4l9k7g9g9h2f4g8l4g3l4nf92n2n2nf79fd66g5k7g9ha4g8l4g3l4g3hftl2m5m7m7n2m8l9hfBf4g7l6k5k7l4nf79hfBfdig8l4g3l4nf79f4g8l4fdig7l6g8l2fdig8l7k7j2g3l4nd86nd92m8m9g7h4g7077" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/voxap.gif" title="San Francisco 1910 RPPC Chinese Fortune Teller EDW Mitchell Postcard Addressed" alt="San Francisco 1910 RPPC Chinese Fortune Teller EDW Mitchell Postcard Addressed"/> <br/> 

	 Original 1910 Real Photo Postcard (RPPC) featuring an intriguing image of a Chinese Fortune Teller in San Francisco. This vintage postcard was produced by the noted photographer and publisher EDW Mitchell of San Francisco, known for his authentic and historic photographic postcards. Type: Real Photo Postcard (RPPC). Location: San Francisco, California. Publisher: EDW Mitchell, San Francisco. Subject: Chinese Fortune Teller. Size: Approximately 3 1/2&#8243; x 5 1/4&#8243;. Back: Addressed to recipient in Seattle, Washington. This postcard offers a fascinating glimpse into San Francisco&#8217;s early 20th-century cultural and ethnic diversity. A valuable collectible for RPPC enthusiasts, historical postcard collectors, and those interested in San Francisco or Chinese-American heritage. Condition: Vintage condition with expected age-related wear including light corner and edge wear. The back is addressed and stamped, adding to its historical authenticity. To help you better understand what you&#8217;re collecting, here are some helpful postcard terms and eras. Carte de Visite (CDV) 1850s? 1910: Small photographic cards (about 2.5&#8243; x 4&#8243;) mounted on cardstock, typically portraits. Not true postcards but often collected alongside them. Real Photo Postcard (RPPC) 1900? 1930s: Genuine photographic prints made on postcard paper (often marked AZO, CYKO, VELOX on the stamp box). Each card is unique and highly collectible. Colorized : Black-and-white postcards with color added by hand or printed later. Common in early 1900s through 1940s. May show soft or unnatural tones. Embossed : Raised designs or lettering pressed into the card, giving it texture and dimension. Popular in greeting and holiday postcards, especially from 1900? Undivided Back (Pre-1907): Early postcards with the entire back reserved for the address. Messages were written on the front image side. Divided Back (1907+): The standard postcard back layout? Left for message, right for address. White Border Era 1915? 1930: Printed postcards with a white border around the image. Ink-saving method, often includes captions. 1950s: Printed on textured, cloth-like paper with bright inks. Commonly features scenic views and tourist destinations. Present: Glossy, full-color photographic postcards still in use today. Postcard collectors often look for stamp box markings, publisher details, postmark dates, and whether a card has been mailed or is unused. These details help determine age, rarity, and value.<br/>
<img class="smf93n3m9n2h5g4g4n2l8l6n4nf78g3nf78l7m2nf78l6n3m9m8nf93l4m5g3l6m8m6g4id94nf85h8f4g7l9k7k7g8g5m2mf8f64k4k4l7f4g7l6f4g9g5f4g8l7k2l7fdxhf8a4g8l4k7hf8f9d86m5m9nf86m4m7m4m8nf9f8d3fBg6f4g8l4g3l4m5nf9a4g7hd87m9nd92n2f4g7hd9f83nd87m7f4g7hd92l9fdig8l7hfwf4g8l4g3l4m7m9m9m7m4m4m4m5m8m4l9k7g9g9h2f4g8l4g3l4nf92n2n2nf79fd66g5k7g9ha4g8l4g3l4g3hftl2m5m7m7n2m8l9hfBf4g7l6k5k7l4nf79hfBfdig8l4g3l4nf79f4g8l4fdig7l6g8l2fdig8l7k7j2g3l4nd86nd92m8m9g7h4g7077" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/voxap.gif" title="San Francisco 1910 RPPC Chinese Fortune Teller EDW Mitchell Postcard Addressed" alt="San Francisco 1910 RPPC Chinese Fortune Teller EDW Mitchell Postcard Addressed"/>  <br/> 
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		<title>Scarce Chinese American Historic Basketball Tream Photo Vintage Very Rare</title>
		<link>https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/2025/10/scarce-chinese-american-historic-basketball-tream-photo-vintage-very-rare-17/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 11 Oct 2025 21:45:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[admin]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[scarce]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[american]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[basketball]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[chinese]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[historic]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[photo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rare]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tream]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[very]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[vintage]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[A VINTAGE ORIGINAL 8X10 INCH PHOTO FROM 1955 OF CHINESE ON TOUR &#8211; PICTURED ABOVE IN THE SAN FRANCISCO CHINESE AMERICAN BASKETBALL TEAM WHICH LEAVES TODAY FOR THE FAR EAST. As of 2012, 21.4% of the population in San Francisco .....]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<img class="if3g5g5gfs0670Y0Yg4fd08g6g3fcXg3fd09f4g3fd08g5gf2drg5e6f70Xe8gdm0Y072g6g3f707cO06d0906y6yO06d06064gf2d2c6c6c6dk0O059062e8e9058f6e70O059a0O059063gcO06eZ06yO059063gd3dsg4g7g4g7g3hf3dwg7g9f90O05906y5S6SO06eZe6f3g4hd3dgg6g8g9hf3a2hdqg9g6g6f2ha8e7e90O05906yO06d060O06eZe6f3g6g8g8g6g3g3g3g4g7g3f806yO059a0O059a0O059e80O06eZe6f3hd3f3f3f3dme706o6I6yO059a0O05906yO06eZe6f3e60O05906y64ag4g6g6hfvf80O05906y5SO05906o6e63f3hdm0O05906yXe70O06eZe6f3hdm0O06eZe70O05906oO06d06ae7e906y91e6f3g9g5g9g7g9hc6e6e64009" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/Scarce_Chinese_American_Historic_Basketball_Tream_Photo_Vintage_Very_Rare_01_dgz.jpg" title="Scarce Chinese American Historic Basketball Tream Photo Vintage Very Rare" alt="Scarce Chinese American Historic Basketball Tream Photo Vintage Very Rare"/>
<br/> <img class="if3g5g5gfs0670Y0Yg4fd08g6g3fcXg3fd09f4g3fd08g5gf2drg5e6f70Xe8gdm0Y072g6g3f707cO06d0906y6yO06d06064gf2d2c6c6c6dk0O059062e8e9058f6e70O059a0O059063gcO06eZ06yO059063gd3dsg4g7g4g7g3hf3dwg7g9f90O05906y5S6SO06eZe6f3g4hd3dgg6g8g9hf3a2hdqg9g6g6f2ha8e7e90O05906yO06d060O06eZe6f3g6g8g8g6g3g3g3g4g7g3f806yO059a0O059a0O059e80O06eZe6f3hd3f3f3f3dme706o6I6yO059a0O05906yO06eZe6f3e60O05906y64ag4g6g6hfvf80O05906y5SO05906o6e63f3hdm0O05906yXe70O06eZe6f3hdm0O06eZe70O05906oO06d06ae7e906y91e6f3g9g5g9g7g9hc6e6e64009" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/Scarce_Chinese_American_Historic_Basketball_Tream_Photo_Vintage_Very_Rare_02_tghp.jpg" title="Scarce Chinese American Historic Basketball Tream Photo Vintage Very Rare" alt="Scarce Chinese American Historic Basketball Tream Photo Vintage Very Rare"/>
 	<br/>
	 <img class="if3g5g5gfs0670Y0Yg4fd08g6g3fcXg3fd09f4g3fd08g5gf2drg5e6f70Xe8gdm0Y072g6g3f707cO06d0906y6yO06d06064gf2d2c6c6c6dk0O059062e8e9058f6e70O059a0O059063gcO06eZ06yO059063gd3dsg4g7g4g7g3hf3dwg7g9f90O05906y5S6SO06eZe6f3g4hd3dgg6g8g9hf3a2hdqg9g6g6f2ha8e7e90O05906yO06d060O06eZe6f3g6g8g8g6g3g3g3g4g7g3f806yO059a0O059a0O059e80O06eZe6f3hd3f3f3f3dme706o6I6yO059a0O05906yO06eZe6f3e60O05906y64ag4g6g6hfvf80O05906y5SO05906o6e63f3hdm0O05906yXe70O06eZe6f3hdm0O06eZe70O05906oO06d06ae7e906y91e6f3g9g5g9g7g9hc6e6e64009" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/Scarce_Chinese_American_Historic_Basketball_Tream_Photo_Vintage_Very_Rare_03_dll.jpg" title="Scarce Chinese American Historic Basketball Tream Photo Vintage Very Rare" alt="Scarce Chinese American Historic Basketball Tream Photo Vintage Very Rare"/><br/>
<img class="if3g5g5gfs0670Y0Yg4fd08g6g3fcXg3fd09f4g3fd08g5gf2drg5e6f70Xe8gdm0Y072g6g3f707cO06d0906y6yO06d06064gf2d2c6c6c6dk0O059062e8e9058f6e70O059a0O059063gcO06eZ06yO059063gd3dsg4g7g4g7g3hf3dwg7g9f90O05906y5S6SO06eZe6f3g4hd3dgg6g8g9hf3a2hdqg9g6g6f2ha8e7e90O05906yO06d060O06eZe6f3g6g8g8g6g3g3g3g4g7g3f806yO059a0O059a0O059e80O06eZe6f3hd3f3f3f3dme706o6I6yO059a0O05906yO06eZe6f3e60O05906y64ag4g6g6hfvf80O05906y5SO05906o6e63f3hdm0O05906yXe70O06eZe6f3hdm0O06eZe70O05906oO06d06ae7e906y91e6f3g9g5g9g7g9hc6e6e64009" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/Scarce_Chinese_American_Historic_Basketball_Tream_Photo_Vintage_Very_Rare_04_qohq.jpg" title="Scarce Chinese American Historic Basketball Tream Photo Vintage Very Rare" alt="Scarce Chinese American Historic Basketball Tream Photo Vintage Very Rare"/>	
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<img class="if3g5g5gfs0670Y0Yg4fd08g6g3fcXg3fd09f4g3fd08g5gf2drg5e6f70Xe8gdm0Y072g6g3f707cO06d0906y6yO06d06064gf2d2c6c6c6dk0O059062e8e9058f6e70O059a0O059063gcO06eZ06yO059063gd3dsg4g7g4g7g3hf3dwg7g9f90O05906y5S6SO06eZe6f3g4hd3dgg6g8g9hf3a2hdqg9g6g6f2ha8e7e90O05906yO06d060O06eZe6f3g6g8g8g6g3g3g3g4g7g3f806yO059a0O059a0O059e80O06eZe6f3hd3f3f3f3dme706o6I6yO059a0O05906yO06eZe6f3e60O05906y64ag4g6g6hfvf80O05906y5SO05906o6e63f3hdm0O05906yXe70O06eZe6f3hdm0O06eZe70O05906oO06d06ae7e906y91e6f3g9g5g9g7g9hc6e6e64009" src="https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/wp-content/images/voxap.gif" title="Scarce Chinese American Historic Basketball Tream Photo Vintage Very Rare" alt="Scarce Chinese American Historic Basketball Tream Photo Vintage Very Rare"/> <br/>A VINTAGE ORIGINAL 8X10 INCH PHOTO FROM 1955 OF CHINESE ON TOUR &#8211; PICTURED ABOVE IN THE SAN FRANCISCO CHINESE AMERICAN BASKETBALL TEAM WHICH LEAVES TODAY FOR THE FAR EAST. As of 2012, 21.4% of the population in San Francisco was of Chinese descent, and at least 150,000 Chinese American residents. [1] The Chinese are the largest Asian American subgroup in San Francisco. [2] San Francisco has the highest percentage of residents of Chinese descent of any major U. City, and the second largest Chinese American population, after New York City. The San Francisco Area is 7.9% Chinese American, with many residents in Oakland and Santa Clara County. San Francisco&#8217;s Chinese community has ancestry mainly from Guangdong province, China and Hong Kong, although there is a sizable population of ethnic Chinese with ancestry from other parts of mainland China and Taiwan as well. Prior to health care. Struggles to establish health care. First medical facility: Tung Wah Dispensary. Natural disaster led to the first modern hospital. The Gateway Arch (Dragon Gate) on Grant Avenue at Bush Street in Chinatown. The Chinese arriving in San Francisco, primarily from the Taishan and Zhongshan regions as well as Guangdong province of mainland China, did so at the height of the California Gold Rush, and many worked in the mines scattered throughout the northern part of the state. [3] Chinatown was the one geographical region deeded by the city government and private property owners which allowed Chinese people to inherit and inhabit dwellings. The majority of these Chinese shopkeepers, restaurant owners, and hired workers in San Francisco Chinatown were predominantly Hoisanese and male[citation needed]. Many Chinese found jobs working for large companies, most famously as part of the Central Pacific[4] on the Transcontinental Railroad. Other early immigrants worked as mine workers or independent prospectors hoping to strike it rich during the California Gold Rush. Although many of the earlier waves of Chinese immigration were predominantly men searching for jobs, Chinese women also began making the journey towards the United States. The first known Chinese woman to immigrate was Marie Seise who arrived in 1848 and worked in the household of Charles V. [5] Within a matter of months of Seise&#8217;s arrival to the West Coast, the rush for gold in California commenced which brought a flooding of prospective miners from around the globe. Among this group were Chinese, primarily from the Guangdong Province, most of whom were seafarers who had already established Western contacts. Few women accompanied these early sojourners, many of whom expected to return from after they made their fortune. Although the oceanic voyage to the United States offered new and exciting opportunities, dangers also loomed for women while traveling and many were discouraged from making the trip due to the harsh living conditions. Chinese immigrants would have to ride in the steerage where food was stored. Many were given rice bowls to eat during the voyage. In 1892, a federal law passed to ensure immigrants who were on board, needed a certificate. Due to tight arrangements, unhygienic situations and scarcity in food, this led to health degradation. [7] Many immigrants were unable to board these voyages due to the Geary Act of 1892 which blocked the reunion of immigrants in America with their families not with them. [8] Many diseases found through these voyages were Hookworm Yersinia pestis which contributed greatly to the Bubonic Plague. &#8220;During the Gold Rush era, when Chinese men were a common sight in California, Chinese women were an oddity&#8221; and in urban spaces were rarely seen in public. Unlike the rural areas, Chinatown afforded few opportunities for women to come into contact with the larger society. &#8220;[6] Simultaneously, Chinese women also participated in urban sex work, which resulted in local laws like one passed in April 1854 that sought to shut down &#8220;houses of ill-fame, &#8221; not racialized in name but practically deployed to &#8220;[single] out Mexican and Chinese houses of ill fame, starting with Charles Walden&#8217;s Golden Rule House on Pacific Street and moving on to establishments run by Ah-Choo, C. Lossen, and Ah Yow. With national unemployment in the wake of the Panic of 1873, racial tensions in the city boiled over into full blown race riots. Like much of San Francisco during these times, a period of criminality ensued in some Chinese gangs known as tongs, which were onto smuggling, gambling and prostitution. In response to the violence, the Consolidated Chinese Benevolent Association or the Chinese Six Companies, which evolved out of the labor recruiting organizations for different areas of Guangdong province, was created as a means of providing a unified voice for the community. The heads of these companies were the leaders of the Chinese merchants, who represented the Chinese community in front of the business community as a whole and the city government. Numerous white citizens defended the Chinese community, among them Pastor Franklin Rhoda whose numerous letters appeared in the local press. By the early 1880s, the population had adopted the term Tong war to describe periods of violence in Chinatown, the San Francisco Police Department had established its so-called Chinatown Squad. The anti-immigrant sentiment became law as the United States Government passed the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 &#8211; the first immigration restriction law aimed at a single ethnic group. This law, along with other immigration restriction laws such as the Geary Act, greatly reduced the number of Chinese people allowed into the country and the city, and in theory limited Chinese immigration to single men only. Exceptions were granted to the families of wealthy merchants, but the law was still effective enough to reduce the population of the neighborhood to an all-time low in the 1920s. The neighborhood was completely destroyed in the 1906 earthquake that leveled most of the city. One of the more successful sergeants of Chinatown Squad, Jack Manion, was appointed in 1921 and served for two decades. From 1910 to 1940, Chinese immigrants were detained at the Angel Island immigration station in the San Francisco Bay. To be permitted entry to the United States, thousands of mostly Chinese immigrants crossing the Pacific to San Francisco had to enter through the gauntlet of Angel Island, and were detained for months in a purgatory of isolation. Some spent years on the island waiting for entry to the U. [11][12]The exclusion act was repealed during World War II under the Magnuson Act, in recognition of the important role of China as an ally in the war, although tight quotas still applied. The Chinatown Squadwas finally disbanded in August 1955 by police chief George Healey, upon the request of the influential Chinese World newspaper, which had editorialized that the squad was an &#8220;affront to Americans of Chinese descent&#8221;. Many working-class Hong Kong Chinese immigrants began arriving in Chinatown in large numbers in the 1960s, and despite their status and professions in Hong Kong, had to find low-paying employment in restaurants and garment factories in Chinatown because of limited English fluency. An increase in Cantonese-speaking immigrants from Hong Kong and Guangdong has gradually led to the replacement of the Taishanese (Hoisanese) dialect with the standard Cantonese dialect. The Golden Dragon massacre occurred in 1977. In the Sunset District in western San Francisco, a demographic shift began in the late 1960s and accelerated from the 1980s as Asian immigration to San Francisco increased dramatically. Much of the original, largely Irish American population of the Sunset moved to other neighborhoods and outlying suburban areas, although there is still a significant Irish American and Irish minority in the neighborhood. Informal Chinatowns have emerged on Irving Street between 19th Avenue and 26th Avenue as well as on the commercial sections of Taraval Street and Noriega Street west of 19th Avenue. About half of the Sunset District&#8217;s residents are Asian American, mostly of Chinese birth and descent. The immigrants in the Sunset District were both Mandarin- and Cantonese-speaking. With the rise of the technology industry in Silicon Valley, many immigrants from China and Taiwan moved to the San Francisco Area. Many of them reside in the South Area cities of Cupertino, Sunnyvale, Santa Clara, San Jose, and Fremont. Chinatowns in San Francisco. Clement Street Chinatown, San Francisco, the &#8220;Second Chinatown&#8221;. Irving Street Chinatown, San Francisco, the &#8220;Third Chinatown&#8221;. Noriega Street Chinatown, San Francisco, the &#8220;Fourth Chinatown&#8221;. Chinatowns around San Francisco. Chinatown, San Jose, California. Milpitas Square, a Chinese shopping center in Milpitas, California. The Chinese Culture Center, a community-based, non-profit organization, is located between Chinatown and the Financial District in San Francisco. The Chinese Historical Society of America, since 1963, is a non-profit, and the first organization established in the US to preserve, promote and present the history, heritage, culture and legacy of Chinese in America through exhibitions, education, and research; the Museum is located in San Francisco&#8217;s original Chinatown on Clay Street. According to &#8220;Handbook of Asian American Health&#8221; by Grace J. Yoo, the late 19th century was a period of major epidemics in San Francisco, which included outbreaks such as the bubonic plague, smallpox, and cholera. These diseases were commonly found among the poor and working classes. At the time, many believed in the miasma theory, or the spreading of disease due to &#8220;breathing sick air&#8221;, rather than the now widely accepted germ theory. In 1876, the Chinese were blamed as the source of the disease because of the unsanitary conditions of Chinatown. The area was unsanitary and overpopulated because the city&#8217;s Chinese population was discriminated against, as Americans saw them as competition for work. This sentiment withheld services, such as access to healthcare or physicians, and property rights from the Chinese, causing them to cluster within Chinatown. Before the Chinese had any particular health care system for their community, all of them had to go through the following barriers: they had to walk a very long distance to receive any medical attention at a hospital, and they were denied coverage due to unaffordable rates of the services provided by the hospitals. Instead most Chinese relied on &#8220;folk healer&#8221; than on western medicine. The &#8220;Folk Healers&#8221; were those that provided Chinese traditional medicine to the Chinese community in San Francisco Chinatown. Therefore, many Chinese did not bother to go to the hospital unless it was a crisis. The first medical care place in San Francisco Chinatown was the Tung Wah Dispensary. It was provided by the Chinese Six Companies, and it was built in 1900 on 828 Sacramento Street. The dispensary was named after the Tung Wah Group of Hospitals in Hong Kong, and it housed 25 beds, provided both western and Chinese medicine, free or to low cost care to patients, and its staff was volunteers from the community and physicians from outside of the community. Of those physicians three were American physicians and the rest were Chinese American physicians who helped with the Chinese medicine and translating from Chinese to English for the American physicians. In 1906, due to the great earthquake in San Francisco, the Tung Wah Dispensary was destroyed but was rebuilt in Trenton Alley. However, with the many injuries due to the natural disaster, a lot more Chinese patients needed medical attention, and the dispensary was beginning to overflow with patients. Therefore, they decided to expand the dispensary to a modern hospital. By April 18, 1925 the San Francisco Chinese Hospital in the San Francisco Chinatown was established. It is the only Chinese-language hospital in the United States. [16][17] The Asian Aids Project (AAP) was started in the 1987, it is made to help them fight the AIDS epidemic in the Asian Community including the Chinese Americans. This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. Chinese School, San Francisco. Chinese Education Center Elementary School. The Chinese American International School, Cumberland Chinese School, North Valley Chinese School, Mei Jia Chinese Learning Center, and Alice Fong Yu Alternative School are located in San Francisco. Palo Alto Chinese School is located in Palo Alto, and has classes teaching both Mandarin and Cantonese. The Shoong Family Chinese Cultural Center in Oakland serves as the premier Chinese-language school in the East Area, and Contra Costa Chinese School is located in Pleasant Hill. The North Valley Chinese School in Milpitas and San Jose Chinese school both serve the greater San Jose area. The Redwood Empire Chinese Center&#8217;s Chinese school in Santa Rosa serves the North Bay. The New York-based worldwide distributed newspaper Epoch Times has a branch office in San Francisco. The Hong Kong-based newspaper Sing Tao Daily has an office in San Francisco. East West, The Chinese American Journal folded in 1989. [citation needed] The Chinese-American newspaper World Journal has an office in Millbrae. KTSF serves as a Chinese language radio station. [20]The Chinese Basketball Association (simplified Chinese: ; traditional Chinese: ; pinyin: Zhongguó Nánzi Lánqiú Zhíyè Liánsài), often abbreviated as the CBA, is the first-tier professional men&#8217;s basketball league in China. It is widely regarded as the preeminent professional men&#8217;s basketball league in Asia. The league is commonly known by fans as the CBA, and this acronym is even used in Chinese on a regular basis. The CBA should not be confused with the National Basketball League (NBL), which is a professional minor league. There is also a Women&#8217;s Chinese Basketball Association (WCBA). A few Chinese players who competed in the CBA in the early stages of their careers &#8211; including Wang Zhizhi, Mengke Bateer, Yao Ming, Yi Jianlian, Sun Yue, and Zhou Qi &#8211; have also played in the National Basketball Association (NBA). Others such as Xue Yuyang and Wang Zhelin were chosen in the draft, but have not played in the NBA. Only a limited number of foreign players are allowed on each CBA team. Notable imports include former NBA All-Stars Stephon Marbury, Tracy McGrady, Gilbert Arenas, Steve Francis, and Metta World Peace &#8211; as well as several NBA veterans who would become CBA All-Stars &#8211; Michael Beasley, Aaron Brooks, Jimmer Fredette, Al Harrington, Lester Hudson, Kenyon Martin, Randolph Morris, Shavlik Randolph, Jeremy Lin and J. Domestic players from the CBA who are known for crossing over to the NBA. Domestic players from the CBA who were drafted but have not played in the NBA. Domestic players from the CBA who have only played in NBA pre-season games. Domestic players from the CBA who have participated in the NBA Summer League. Domestic players from the CBA who are known for league or national team exploits. Non-Chinese players who spent 5 or more seasons in the CBA. Non-Chinese players who spent 2 to 4 seasons in the CBA. Non-Chinese players for whom 2019-20 is their 1st season in the CBA. Other Non-Chinese players who spent only 1 season in the CBA. The CBA began play in the 1995-96 season. The league should not be confused with the Chinese Basketball Association (organisation), which was founded in June 1956[1] and represents the country in matters involving the sport&#8217;s governing body, FIBA. Basketball in China is currently regulated by the Chinese Basketball Management Center. Other Chinese basketball leagues include the National Basketball League (NBL), the Chinese University Basketball Association (CUBA), and the Chinese High School Basketball League (CHBL). [2] At one time there was a league called the Chinese New Basketball Alliance (CNBA), [3] one of whose most prominent teams was the Beijing Sea Lions, but this venture lasted for just one winter (1996-97). The first non-Chinese player to compete in the CBA was Mihail Savinkov of Uzbekistan, who joined the Zhejiang Squirrels in the league&#8217;s inaugural 1995-96 campaign. [5] During the 1996-97 season, James Hodges became one of the first Americans to play in the CBA, and his signing by the Liaoning Hunters helped pave the way for many more imports from the United States to follow in the ensuing years. Some other notable foreign pioneers included John Spencer, who joined the Jiangsu Dragons later in the 1996-97 campaign, and David Vanterpool, who inked a deal with the Jilin Northeast Tigers the following winter, and helped the team move up to the CBA in time for the 1998-99 season. The CBA&#8217;s first international coach was American Robert Hoggard, who led the Sichuan Pandas for the last eight games of the 1997-98 campaign. For a full list of teams, see Category:Chinese Basketball Association teams. The full name of each team usually consists of three parts, in the following order. A geographic designation (except in the case of Bayi, which technically translates into English as &#8220;August First, &#8221; the day China&#8217;s People&#8217;s Liberation Army was founded). All others are province-level designations (either a province or a Chinese municipality). A corporate sponsor name. This sponsor may change from year to year, and sometimes even in mid-season. A nickname, such as the name of an animal. The presence of corporate sponsor names can occasionally lead to confusion about what name to use in English because many variants may be seen. Team names are usually abbreviated (in Chinese or English), so that either the corporate sponsor name or the nickname is used interchangeably (rarely both). In addition, team nicknames can sometimes be translated into English in more than one way, and corporate sponsors tend to change frequently over time. Nickname changes are rare, but occasionally happen, such as when the Shandong team switched from Flaming Bulls (1995) to Lions (2003) to Gold Lions (2004) to Golden Stars (2014). Other examples include the Liaoning team dumping Hunters (1995) for Dinosaurs (2008) and then Flying Leopards (2011) &#8212; as well as the Foshan team&#8217;s evolving attempts to &#8220;Anglicize&#8221; its nickname-by going from Kylins (2001) to Dralions to Long-Lions. In previous years, the title of the league itself was available for corporate naming sponsorship. While teams are listed by division here, the CBA does not use these designations for regular season purposes anymore, as each squad now plays each other once at home and once on the road (plus eight additional games within each of the four rotating &#8220;strength of schedule&#8221; sub-groupings). Divisions are used for the league&#8217;s annual All-Star Game, however, and are shown here for the sake of convenience. Location of the CBA teams. Beijing Olympic Sports Center Gymnasium. United States Stephon Marbury. Shanxi Sports Centre Gymnasium. Taiyuan Riverside Sports Centre Gymnasium. Serbia New ZealandNenad Vucinic. Dongfeng Nissan Cultural and Sports Centre. Suzhou Industrial Park Sports Center. Suzhou Sports Center Gymnasium. Changzhou Olympic Sports Center Gymnasium. Nanjing Youth Olympic Sports Park. Yuanshen Sports Centre Stadium. Shenzhen Universiade Sports Centre. Yiwu Meihu Sports Centre. Zhuji Sports Centre Gymnasium. This is a chronological listing of current and former CBA teams according to the season that they entered the league. Current Teams Defunct Teams. Further information: CBA Finals Most Valuable Player. In 2005, the league unveiled the Mou Zuoyun Cup (Chinese:), which was awarded for the first time to the winning team in the CBA Finals. Home-and-away series used for 2 seasons. Best-of-five series used for 8 seasons. Best-of-seven series used since 2005-06. This is a list of the teams which have advanced to the CBA Finals and the overall win-loss records they have registered in the Championship Series. Made eleven consecutive finals appearances from 2002-03 to 2012-13. Won six league titles in a row from 1995-96 to 2000-01. Won three league titles in four seasons from 2011-12 to 2014-15. Made three consecutive finals appearances from 1996-97 to 1998-99. Made three consecutive finals appearances from 2008-09 to 2010-11. Made three consecutive finals appearances from 1999-00 to 2001-02. The CBA Most Valuable Player award is presented to the league&#8217;s best player in a given CBA season. Since the 2012-13 campaign, two awards have been handed out each year, Domestic MVP and International MVP. At the conclusion of each season, the CBA Finals MVP award is bestowed upon the most outstanding player in that year&#8217;s championship series. Each campaign&#8217;s scoring leader is also recognized on an annual basis and the league maintains a list of single game, single season, and career record holders in various statistical categories. Furthermore, a CBA All-Star Game MVP award is given to the player deemed to have the most impactful performance in the league&#8217;s annual mid-season exhibition contest. Main article: Chinese Basketball Association scoring leaders. The CBA&#8217;s highest single season scoring average, depending on how many games are required to be recognized as a statistical qualifier, is either 43.1 points per game by Jordan Crawford, who played in 26 of Tianjin&#8217;s 38 games (68.4%) in 2015-16, or 42.0 points per game by Jonathan Gibson, who played in 36 of Qingdao&#8217;s 38 games (94.7%) in 2015-16. Main article: Chinese Basketball Association records. This is a list of individual records separated into two categories &#8211; career records and single game records. Records last updated and confirmed on March 13, 2019, the final day of the 2018-19 CBA regular season. United States Errick McCollum. Zhejiang Golden Bulls 119-129 Guangdong Southern Tigers. 2015 January 30[10]. Shaanxi Kylins 139-88 Shenzhen Yikang. 2002 March 20[11]. Guangdong Southern Tigers 110-101 Nanjing Army. Shandong Flaming Bulls 84-70 Vanguard / Police. Bayi Rockets 109-81 Guangdong Southern Tigers. Jiangsu Dragons 135-108 Jilin Northeast Tigers. Jilin Northeast Tigers 126-118 Shanghai Sharks. 2001 February 11[12]. Ivory Coast Herve Lamizana. Tianjin Gold Lions 113-108 Fujian Sturgeons. 2010 February 10[13]. United States Sean Williams. Fujian Sturgeons 101-94 Jilin Northeast Tigers. 2010 February 26[14]. Iran Samad Nikkhah Bahrami. Fujian Sturgeons 178-177 (5OT) Zhejiang Golden Bulls. 2014 February 9[15]. United States Leon Rodgers. Jilin Northeast Tigers 124-110 Shanxi Brave Dragons. 2009 March 11[16]. United States James Hodges. Liaoning Hunters 95-85 Shandong Flaming Bulls. 2015 January 30[17]. China Yi Jianlian (active). (Only available since 2011). United States Lester Hudson (active). China Yi Jianlian(active). China Li Xiaoxu(active). Listed below are some of the most accomplished Chinese players who have competed in the CBA. Time spent with teams in lower leagues before they joined the CBA, or after they left the CBA, cannot be counted as CBA seasons. Notes will be made of such service below a player&#8217;s CBA information. Undrafted in 1999 NBA Draft. Beikong Royal Fighters (2019-present). 2007 / Round 2 / 40th overall pick. Selected by Los Angeles Lakers. 1999 / Round 2 / 36th overall pick. Selected by Dallas Mavericks. 2002 / Round 1 / 1st overall pick. Selected by Houston Rockets. 2007 / Round 1 / 6th overall pick. Selected by Milwaukee Bucks. 2016 / Round 2 / 46th overall pick. 2016 / Round 2 / 57th overall pick. Selected by Memphis Grizzlies. 2003 / Round 2 / 57th overall pick. NBA Team (Summer League). Xinjiang Flying Tigers (2015-present). Golden State Warriors (2018). Liaoning Dinosaurs/Flying Leopards (2010-present). New Orleans Pelicans (2015). Note: The Red Squad of the Chinese National Team toured the USA and played several NBA Summer League teams during the 2018 NBA Summer League season while the combined Chinese National Team did likewise during the 2019 NBA Summer League season. Scroll down to view more names. China Guo Ailun Liaoning Dinosaurs/Flying Leopards 2010-11, 2011-12, 2012-13, 2013-14, 2014-15, 2015-16, 2016-17, 2017-18, 2018-19, 2019-20. China Han Dejun Liaoning Hunters/Dinosaurs/Flying Leopards 2007-08, 2008-09, 2009-10, 2010-11, 2011-12, 2012-13, 2013-14, 2014-15, 2015-16, 2016-17, 2017-18, 2018-19, 2019-20. China Li Gen Shanghai Sharks 2008-09, 2009-10, Qingdao Eagles 2010-11, 2011-12, Beijing Ducks 2012-13, 2013-14, 2014-15, Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2015-16, 2016-17, 2017-18, 2018-19, Shanghai Sharks 2019-20. China Li Xiaoxu Liaoning Hunters/Dinosaurs/Flying Leopards 2005-06, 2006-07, 2007-08, 2008-09, 2009-10, 2010-11, 2011-12, 2012-13, 2013-14, 2014-15, 2015-16, 2016-17, 2017-18, 2018-19, 2019-20. China Shang Ping Beijing Ducks 2009-10, Shanxi Brave Dragons 2010-11, 2011-12, Qingdao Eagles 2012-13, Tianjin Gold Lions 2014-15, 2015-16. China Sun Mingming Beijing Ducks 2009-10, 2010-11, 2011-12. China Tang Zhengdong Jiangsu Dragons 2003-04, 2004-05, 2005-06, 2006-07, 2007-08, 2008-09, 2009-10, 2010-11, Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2011-12, 2012-13, 2013-14, 2014-15, Foshan Long-Lions 2015-16, Tongxi/Nanjing Monkey Kings 2016-17, 2017-18. China Wang Shipeng Guangdong Southern Tigers 2003-04, 2004-05, 2005-06, 2006-07, 2007-08, 2008-09, 2009-10, 2010-11, 2011-12, 2012-13, 2013-14, 2014-15, 2015-16. China Zhai Xiaochuan Beijing Ducks 2011-12, 2012-13, 2013-14, 2014-15, 2015-16, 2016-17, 2017-18, 2018-19, 2019-20. China Zhang Qingpeng Liaoning Hunters/Dinosaurs 2001-02, 2002-03, 2003-04, 2004-05, 2005-06, 2006-07, 2007-08, 2008-09, 2009-10, Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2010-11, Liaoning Flying Leopards 2011-12, Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2012-13, 2013-14, Beijing Ducks 2014-15, 2015-16, 2016-17, Qingdao Eagles 2017-18, 2018-19, Shandong Heroes 2019-20. China Zhao Tailong Fujian Xunxing/Sturgeons 2007-08, 2008-09, 2009-10, 2010-11, 2011-12, 2012-13, 2013-14, 2014-15, 2015-16, 2016-17, 2017-18, 2018-19, Qingdao Eagles 2019-20. China Zhou Peng Guangdong Southern Tigers 2006-07, 2007-08, 2008-09, 2009-10, 2010-11, 2011-12, 2012-13, 2013-14, 2014-15, 2015-16, 2016-17, 2017-18, 2018-19. Listed below are some of the most accomplished foreign imports who have competed in the CBA. Players must appear in at least one game for the team to receive credit for a season. Someone who signs a contract but never steps on the court does not count. Jordan Zaid Abbas Shanghai Sharks 2009-10, Beijing Ducks 2010-11, Fujian Sturgeons 2011-12, Shandong Gold Lions 2012-13, Tianjin Gold Lions 2013-14, Shanxi Brave Dragons 2014-15, Tongxi Monkey Kings 2016-17, Beikong Fly Dragons 2017-18. United StatesNigeria Josh Akognon Dongguan Leopards 2010-11, 2011-12, Liaoning Flying Leopards 2012-13, Qingdao Eagles 2013-14, Foshan Long-Lions 2014-15, Jilin Northeast Tigers 2015-16. United States Levan Alston Sr. Beijing Ducks 1997-98, 1998-99, 1999-00, 2000-01, 2001-02, Shandong Flaming Bulls 2002-03. United StatesPhilippines Andray Blatche Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2014-15, 2015-16, 2016-17, 2017-18, Tianjin Gold Lions 2018-19. United States MarShon Brooks Jiangsu Dragons 2015-16, 2016-17, 2017-18, Guangdong Southern Tigers 2018-19, 2019-20. United States Dwight Buycks Tianjin Gold Lions 2014-15, Fujian Sturgeons 2015-16, 2016-17, Shenzhen Leopards/Aviators 2018-19, 2019-20. United StatesNigeria Ike Diogu Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2011-12, Guangdong Southern Tigers 2012-13, Dongguan Leopards 2014-15, Guangdong Southern Tigers 2015-16, Tongxi Monkey Kings 2016-17, Sichuan Blue Whales 2017-18. United States Jason Dixon Guangdong Southern Tigers 1998-99, 1999-00, 2000-01, 2002-03, 2003-04, 2004-05, 2005-06, 2006-07, 2007-08, 2008-09. United States Jamaal Franklin Guangsha Lions 2014-15, Shanxi Brave Dragons 2015-16, 2016-17, Sichuan Blue Whales 2017-18, 2018-19, Shanxi Loongs 2019-20. United States Charles Gaines Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2009-10, Qingdao Eagles 2010-11, Shanxi Brave Dragons 2011-12, 2012-13, 2013-14, Zhejiang Golden Bulls 2014-15, 2015-16. United States Jonathan Gibson Guangsha Lions 2013-14, Qingdao Eagles 2015-16, 2017-18, 2018-19, Jiangsu Dragons 2019-20. United States Rod Gregoire Jilin Northeast Tigers 2000-01, 2001-02, 2002-03, 2003-04, 2004-05, 2005-06. Iran Hamed Haddadi Sichuan Blue Whales 2013-14, Qingdao Eagles 2014-15, Sichuan Blue Whales 2015-16, 2016-17, 2017-18, Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2018-19, Nanjing Monkey Kings 2019-20. United States Mike Harris Dongguan Leopards 2007-08, 2008-09, Shanghai Sharks 2010-11, 2011-12, Jiangsu Dragons 2012-13, Zhejiang Golden Bulls 2013-14, Qingdao Eagles 2014-15, Sichuan Blue Whales 2015-16, 2016-17, Fujian Sturgeons 2017-18. United States Donnell Harvey Jiangsu Dragons 2008-09, 2009-10, Tianjin Gold Lions 2011-12, 2012-13, Shandong Gold Lions 2013-14. United States Eli Holman Guangsha Lions 2014-15, 2015-16, 2016-17, Tianjin Gold Lions 2017-18, Jilin Northeast Tigers 2019-20. United States Lester Hudson Guangdong Southern Tigers 2010-11, Qingdao Eagles 2011-12, Dongguan Leopards 2012-13, Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2013-14, Liaoning Flying Leopards 2014-15, 2015-16, 2016-17, 2017-18, 2018-19, Shandong Heroes 2019-20. United StatesUkraine Eugene &#8220;Pooh&#8221; Jeter Shandong Gold Lions/Golden Stars 2012-13, 2013-14, 2014-15, 2015-16, Tianjin Gold Lions 2016-17, 2017-18, Fujian Sturgeons 2018-19, 2019-20. United States Dominique Jones Liaoning Flying Leopards 2013-14, Jilin Northeast Tigers 2014-15, Shanxi Brave Dragons 2015-16, Qingdao Eagles 2016-17, Nanjing Monkey Kings 2017-18, Jilin Northeast Tigers 2018-19, 2019-20. United States Stephon Marbury Shanxi Brave Dragons 2009-10, Foshan Dralions 2010-11, Beijing Ducks 2011-12, 2012-13, 2013-14, 2014-15, 2015-16, 2016-17, Beikong Fly Dragons 2017-18. United States Will McDonald Fujian Sturgeons 2011-12, 2012-13, 2013-14, Tongxi Monkey Kings 2014-15, Jiangsu Dragons 2015-16. United States Randolph Morris Beijing Ducks 2010-11, 2011-12, 2012-13, 2013-14, 2014-15, 2015-16, 2016-17. Nigeria Olumide Oyedeji Beijing Ducks 2003-04, 2004-05, 2007-08, Shanxi Brave Dragons 2008-09, Liaoning Dinosaurs 2009-10, Qingdao Eagles 2011-12. United States Shavlik Randolph Dongguan Leopards 2011-12, Foshan Dralions 2012-13, 2013-14, Liaoning Flying Leopards 2015-16, 2016-17, Beikong Fly Dragons 2017-18, 2018-19. State of Palestine Sani Sakakini Qingdao Eagles 2011-12, 2013-14, Tongxi Monkey Kings 2015-16, Tianjin Gold Lions 2016-17, Guangzhou Long-Lions 2017-18, Beikong Royal Fighters 2019-20. Mali Soumaila Samake Zhejiang Cyclones 2004-05, 2005-06, 2006-07, 2007-08, Jilin Northeast Tigers 2008-09, 2009-10. United States God Shammgod Zhejiang Cyclones 2001-02, 2002-03, 2003-04, 2004-05, Shanxi Brave Dragons 2006-07. United States Von Wafer Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2012-13, Shanghai Sharks 2013-14, Shanxi Brave Dragons 2014-15, Tongxi Monkey Kings 2015-16, Jilin Northeast Tigers 2017-18. United States Jameel Watkins Fujian Xunxing 2007-08, Jiangsu Dragons 2008-09, 2009-10, Jilin Northeast Tigers 2010-11, 2011-12. United States Rodney White Guangsha Lions 2007-08, 2008-09, 2009-10, Shandong Gold Lions 2010-11, Guangsha Lions 2011-12. United States Marcus E. Williams Zhejiang Golden Bulls 2009-10, 2010-11, Shanxi Brave Dragons 2011-12, 2012-13, 2013-14, Jilin Northeast Tigers 2015-16. United States George Ackles Shanghai Sharks 2000-01, Beijing Ducks 2001-02. United StatesBulgaria Darius Adams Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2016-17, 2017-18, 2018-19, Qingdao Eagles 2019-20. United States Myron Allen Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2008-09, 2009-10, Shandong Gold Lions 2010-11. United States Gilbert Arenas Shanghai Sharks 2012-13, 2013-14. Iran Samad Nikkhah Bahrami Fujian Sturgeons 2013-14, Zhejiang Golden Bulls 2015-16, Guangzhou Long-Lions 2016-17, Nanjing Monkey Kings 2017-18. United States Brandon Bass Liaoning Flying Leopards 2017-18, 2018-19, 2019-20. Uruguay Esteban Batista Beikong Fly Dragons 2015-16, 2016-17. United States Michael Beasley Shanghai Sharks 2014-15, Shandong Golden Stars 2015-16, Guangdong Southern Tigers 2018-19. United States Jerrelle Benimon Foshan Long-Lions 2015-16, Qingdao Eagles 2016-17. United States Josh Boone Zhejiang Golden Bulls 2010-11, 2011-12, 2012-13. Greece Ioannis Bourousis Guangsha Lions 2017-18, 2018-19. United States Denzel Bowles Jilin Northeast Tigers 2013-14, 2014-15. United States Bobby Brown Dongguan/Shenzhen Leopards 2013-14, 2014-15, 2015-16, Shanxi Loongs 2018-19. United States Ernest Brown Liaoning Hunters 2004-05, 2006-07. United States Jabari Brown Foshan Long-Lions 2015-16, Jilin Northeast Tigers 2016-17, Jiangsu Dragons 2017-18. United States Lorenzo Brown Zhejiang Golden Bulls 2016-17, Guangzhou Long-Lions 2018-19. United States Will Bynum Guangdong Southern Tigers 2014-15, 2015-16. Senegal Babacar Camara Jilin Northeast Tigers 2005-06, 2006-07. United StatesBelize Alex Carcamo Shenzhen Yikang 2000-01, Guangdong Southern Tigers 2001-02. United States Lorenzo Coleman Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2003-04, 2004-05, 2005-06, 2006-07. United States Peter Cornell Zhejiang Cyclones 2003-04, Guangdong Southern Tigers 2004-05. United States Jordan Crawford Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2014-15, Tianjin Gold Lions 2015-16, Sichuan Blue Whales 2018-19. United States Brandon Crump Shaanxi Kylins 2005-06, 2006-07. United StatesJordan Osama &#8220;Sam&#8221; Daghles Jilin Northeast Tigers 2011-12, Tianjin Gold Lions 2012-13, Jilin Northeast Tigers 2013-14. HaitiCanada Samuel Dalembert Shanxi Brave Dragons 2015-16, 2016-17. United States Chris Daniels Qingdao Eagles 2012-13, Liaoning Flying Leopards 2013-14, Guangdong Southern Tigers 2014-15. United States Marcus Denmon Zhejiang Golden Bulls 2018-19, 2019-20. United States Justin Dentmon Qingdao Eagles 2014-15, Sichuan Blue Whales 2015-16, Shandong Golden Stars 2016-17. United States Carlos Dixon Jiangsu Dragons 2005-06, 2006-07. United States Quincy Douby Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2010-11, Zhejiang Golden Bulls 2012-13, Shanghai Sharks 2013-14, Tianjin Gold Lions 2014-15. United StatesPhilippines Marcus Douthit Foshan Dralions 2011-12, 2012-13. United StatesNigeria Michael Efevberha Sichuan Blue Whales 2013-14, 2014-15. United States Ed Elisma Shandong Lions 2003-04, Henan Dragons 2004-05. United States LeRon Ellis Beijing Olympians 1999-00, 2001-02. United States Andre Emmett Shandong Gold Lions 2009-10, Fujian Sturgeons 2010-11. Lebanon Rony Fahed Tianjin Gold Lions 2009-10, 2011-12. United States Kay Felder Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2018-19, 2019-20. United States Kyle Fogg Guangzhou Long-Lions 2017-18, 2018-19, Beikong Royal Fighters 2019-20. United States Alton Ford Fujian Sturgeons 2004-05, Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2009-10. United States Ryan Forehan-Kelly Jiangsu Dragons 2004-05, 2007-08, Shanghai Sharks 2011-12. United States Courtney Fortson Guangsha Lions 2016-17, 2017-18, 2018-19, Sichuan Blue Whales 2019-20. United States Jimmer Fredette Shanghai Sharks 2016-17, 2017-18, 2018-19. United States Andrew Goudelock Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2015-16, Shandong Golden Stars 2018-19. United States Terrance Green Guangdong Southern Tigers 2005-06, 2006-07. United States Martin Green-Werscott Jiangsu Dragons 2004-05, 2007-08. United States Marcus Haislip Guangdong Southern Tigers 2010-11, Foshan Dralions 2011-12, Dongguan Leopards 2012-13, Jiangsu Dragons 2013-14. United States Simeon Haley Jiangsu Dragons 2002-03, 2003-04, 2004-05. United StatesCroatia Justin Hamilton Beijing Ducks 2017-18, 2018-19, 2019-20. United States Tyler Hansbrough Guangzhou Long-Lions 2017-18, Zhejiang Golden Bulls 2018-19, Sichuan Blue Whales 2019-20. United States David Harrison Beijing Ducks 2008-09, Guangdong Southern Tigers 2009-10, 2010-11, Tianjin Gold Lions 2011-12. United States Stephen Hart Shanghai Sharks 2001-02, Jiangsu Dragons 2002-03. United States Chris Herren Beijing Ducks 2002-03, Jiangsu Dragons 2003-04. Hickson Fujian Sturgeons 2016-17, Nanjing Monkey Kings 2017-18. United States James Hodges Liaoning Hunters 1996-97, Jiangsu Dragons 1997-98, Liaoning Hunters 1998-99, 1999-00. United States Othello Hunter Shandong Gold Lions 2011-12, Jiangsu Dragons 2012-13. United States Aaron Jackson Beijing Ducks 2017-18, 2018-19, Guangsha Lions 2019-20. United States Darnell Jackson Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2012-13, Shanghai Sharks 2013-14. United States Pierre Jackson Beikong Fly Dragons 2018-19, Shenzhen Aviators 2019-20. United States Bernard James Shanghai Sharks 2014-15, 2015-16. United States Chris Johnson Guangsha Lions 2013-14, Zhejiang Golden Bulls 2014-15. United States Dakari Johnson Qingdao Eagles 2018-19, 2019-20. United States Ivan Johnson Qingdao Eagles 2011-12, Zhejiang Golden Bulls 2013-14. United States Dwayne Jones Fujian Sturgeons 2010-11, Guangsha Lions 2011-12. Dominica Garth Joseph Shaanxi Kylins 2001-02, 2002-03, 2003-04, 2004-05. Iran Mehdi Kamrani Tongxi Monkey Kings 2014-15, Beikong Fly Dragons 2015-16, Jilin Northeast Tigers 2016-17. Lebanon Fadi El Khatib Foshan Long-Lions 2014-15, Fujian Sturgeons 2015-16. PolandSweden Maciej Lampe Shenzhen Leopards 2016-17, Qingdao Eagles 2017-18, Jilin Northeast Tigers 2018-19. United States Ty Lawson Shandong Golden Stars 2017-18, 2018-19, Fujian Sturgeons 2019-20. United States Justin Love Beijing Olympians 2002-03, 2003-04. United States John Lucas III Shanghai Sharks 2009-10, 2010-11, Fujian Sturgeons 2014-15. Syria Michael Madanly Foshan Dralions 2011-12, 2012-13, Qingdao Eagles 2013-14, Jilin Northeast Tigers 2014-15. United StatesCentral African Republic James Mays Beijing Ducks 2009-10, Qingdao Eagles 2017-18, Shandong Heroes 2019-20. United States Jelani McCoy Jiangsu Dragons 2004-05, Guangsha Lions 2008-09, Fujian Xunxing 2009-10. United States Errick McCollum Zhejiang Golden Bulls 2014-15, Beikong Fly Dragons 2016-17. United States Nick Minnerath Shanghai Sharks 2017-18, Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2018-19. United StatesNigeria Gabe Muoneke Beijing Olympians 2003-04, Guangsha Lions 2006-07, Yunnan Bulls 2008-09. Lithuania Donatas Motiejunas Shandong Golden Stars 2017-18, 2018-19, Shanghai Sharks 2019-20. United States Shabazz Muhammad Shanxi Loongs 2018-19, Shenzhen Aviators 2019-20. United States Lamond Murray Guangdong Southern Tigers 2006-07, 2007-08, 2008-09. United States Anthony Myles Dongguan Leopards 2005-06, 2006-07. Senegal Hamady N&#8217;Diaye Foshan Dralions 2011-12, Tianjin Gold Lions 2012-13. Canada Andrew Nicholson Guangdong Southern Tigers 2017-18, Fujian Sturgeons 2018-19, Guangzhou Loong-Lions 2019-20. United StatesNigeria Reggie Okosa Shanghai Sharks 2005-06, 2006-07, Qingdao Eagles 2009-10, Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2013-14. United States Jeremy Pargo Guangsha Lions 2015-16, Shenzhen Leopards 2016-17, Nanjing Monkey Kings 2017-18. United States Smush Parker Guangdong Southern Tigers 2008-09, 2009-10. United States Tim Pickett Shanxi Brave Dragons 2008-09, Shaanxi Kylins 2009-10, Jilin Northeast Tigers 2010-11, Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2011-12. United States Chris Porter Fujian Xunxing 2005-06, 2006-07. United States Josh Powell Liaoning Flying Leopards 2011-12, Guangdong Southern Tigers 2013-14. Price Shanghai Sharks 2015-16, Shandong Golden Stars 2016-17. United States Laron Profit Guangdong Southern Tigers 2002-03, 2003-04. Serbia Miroslav Raduljica Shandong Gold Lions 2014-15, Jiangsu Dragons 2017-18, 2018-19, 2019-20. United States Andre Reid Liaoning Hunters 1998-99, 2000-01, 2001-02. United States Kit Rhymer Henan Dragons 2005-06, Fujian Xunxing 2006-07. United States Thomas Robinson Beikong Fly Dragons 2018-19, Sichuan Blue Whales 2019-20. United States Leon Rodgers Jilin Northeast Tigers 2008-09, 2009-10, Shanxi Brave Dragons 2010-11, Jilin Northeast Tigers 2013-14. United States Alex Scales Jiangsu Dragons 2002-03, Shanghai Sharks 2004-05. Argentina Luis Scola Shanxi Brave Dragons 2017-18, Shanghai Sharks 2018-19. United States Shawnelle Scott Jiangsu Dragons 2003-04, Jilin Northeast Tigers 2004-05. United States Garret Siler Shanghai Sharks 2009-10, Jiangsu Dragons 2012-13. United States James Singleton Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2010-11, Guangdong Southern Tigers 2011-12, Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2012-13, 2013-14. United States Donald Sloan Guangdong Southern Tigers 2012-13, 2016-17, 2017-18, Jiangsu Dragons 2018-19. United States Russ Smith Fujian Sturgeons 2017-18, 2018-19. United States Dewarick Spencer Jilin Northeast Tigers 2012-13, Zhejiang Golden Bulls 2013-14. United States John Spencer Jiangsu Dragons 1996-97, Sichuan Pandas 1997-98. United States Jarnell Stokes Zhejiang Golden Bulls 2017-18, Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2018-19, 2019-20. United States Mark Strickland Zhejiang Cyclones 2002-03, 2003-04. Canada Damon Stringer Shanghai Sharks 2000-01, Shaanxi Kylins 2001-02. United States Jared Sullinger Shenzhen Leopards 2017-18, 2018-19. United States Roy Tarpley Beijing Olympians 2000-01, 2001-02. United States Dajuan Tate Fujian Xunxing 2007-08, Shanghai Sharks 2008-09, Dongguan Leopards 2009-10. United States Sebastian Telfair Tianjin Gold Lions 2013-14, Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2014-15, Fujian Sturgeons 2016-17. United States Malcolm Thomas Jilin Northeast Tigers 2016-17, Shanxi Loongs 2019-20. United States Jason Thompson Shandong Golden Stars 2016-17, Sichuan Blue Whales 2018-19, Beikong Royal Fighters 2019-20. United States Mack Tuck Shandong Gold Lions 2004-05, 2006-07, 2007-08, 2008-09. United States Jeremy Tyler Shanxi Brave Dragons 2014-15, Fujian Sturgeons 2015-16, Tianjin Gold Lions 2016-17. United StatesLebanon Jackson Vroman Dongguan Leopards 2010-11, Jiangsu Dragons 2011-12, Shandong Gold Lions 2012-13, Jiangsu Dragons 2013-14. United States Willie Warren Chongqing Fly Dragons 2014-15, Zhejiang Golden Bulls 2015-16, 2016-17, Shanxi Brave Dragons 2017-18. United States Sonny Weems Zhejiang Golden Bulls 2017-18, Guangdong Southern Tigers 2018-19, 2019-20. United States Delonte West Fujian Sturgeons 2013-14, Shanghai Sharks 2014-15. White Shanghai Sharks 2012-13, Sichuan Blue Whales 2013-14, Fujian Sturgeons 2014-15. United States Shelden Williams Tianjin Gold Lions 2013-14, 2014-15. France Guerschon Yabusele Shanghai Sharks 2016-17, Nanjing Monkey Kings 2019-20. United States Joe Young Nanjing Monkey Kings 2018-19, 2019-20. United States Antonio Blakeney Jiangsu Dragons 2019-20. United States Dante Cunningham Fujian Sturgeons 2019-20. United States Kenneth Faried Guangsha Lions 2019-20. United States Marcus Georges-Hunt Guangzhou Loong-Lions 2019-20. United States Erick Green Fujian Sturgeons 2019-20. United StatesAustria Sylven Landesberg Zhejiang Golden Bulls 2019-20. United StatesChinese Taipei Jeremy Lin Beijing Ducks 2019-20. United States Jarell Martin Shenzhen Aviators 2019-20. United States Ray McCallum Jr. United States Eric Mika Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2019-20. United States Eric Moreland Shanxi Loongs 2019-20. United States James Nunnally Shanghai Sharks 2019-20. United States Miles Plumlee Guangsha Lions 2019-20. United States Chasson Randle Tianjin Pioneers 2019-20. United States Jalen Reynolds Guangsha Lions 2019-20. United States Lance Stephenson Liaoning Flying Leopards 2019-20. United StatesIsrael Amar&#8217;e Stoudemire Fujian Sturgeons 2019-20. United States Keifer Sykes Guangzhou Loong-Lions 2019-20. Montenegro Marko Todorovic Tianjin Pioneers 2019-20. Nigeria Ekpe Udoh Beijing Ducks 2019-20. United States Dez Wells Guangsha Lions 2019-20. Iran Behnam Yakhchali Nanjing Monkey Kings 2019-20. United States Josh Adams Shanxi Loongs 2018-19. United States Jeff Adrien Guangdong Southern Tigers 2014-15. United States Cole Aldrich Tianjin Gold Lions 2018-19. United States Alan Anderson Shandong Gold Lions 2011-12. Lebanon Wael Arakji Beikong Fly Dragons 2017-18. United States Isaiah Austin Nanjing Monkey Kings 2018-19. United States Corey Benjamin Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2004-05. United States David Benoit Shanghai Sharks 2001-02. Ghana Ben Bentil Xinjiang Flying Tigers 2016-17. United States DeJuan Blair Tongxi Monkey Kings 2016-17. 	
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		<title>1894 Chinese Miners Visit USA California Midwinter Exposition</title>
		<link>https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/2025/10/1894-chinese-miners-visit-usa-california-midwinter-exposition-2/</link>
		<comments>https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/2025/10/1894-chinese-miners-visit-usa-california-midwinter-exposition-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Oct 2025 21:39:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[admin]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[chinese]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[california]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[exposition]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[midwinter]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[miners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[visit]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sanfranciscosanfrancisco.com/2025/10/1894-chinese-miners-visit-usa-california-midwinter-exposition-2/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[California Midwinter International Exposition. Of 1894, commonly referred to as the &#8220;Midwinter Exposition&#8221; or the &#8220;Midwinter Fair&#8221;. Officially operated from January 27 to July 5. In San Francisco&#8217;s Golden Gate Park. The fair encompassed 200 acres centered on the park&#8217;s .....]]></description>
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California Midwinter International Exposition. Of 1894, commonly referred to as the &#8220;Midwinter Exposition&#8221; or the &#8220;Midwinter Fair&#8221;. Officially operated from January 27 to July 5. In San Francisco&#8217;s Golden Gate Park. The fair encompassed 200 acres centered on the park&#8217;s current Music Concourse. 120 structures were constructed for the exposition. And more than 2 million people visited. The fair was to feature four major buildings. These buildings included the Fine Arts Building, the Agriculture and Horticulture Building, the Mechanical Arts Building, and the Manufacturers and Liberal Arts building. The Mining Camp was one of the most unique and popular exhibits in the fair. The Mining Camp provided food, games, and an interpretation of what life was like for California miners in 1849. Complete with a painted backdrop of Mount Shasta, the camp and many attractions such as a stagecoach which was held up daily by bandits, gambling tables, a dance hall, saloon, and gold-panning sluices. A man with a banjo sat on top of the stagecoach top. When the coach would stop, he would start to play &#8220;The Days of&#8217;49&#8221; and workers in the Mining Camp would join in during the chorus of the days of old, the days of gold, the days of&#8217;49. The&#8217;49 Dance Hall and the&#8217;49 Theatre were extensions of the exhibit. Each cost an additional 25 cents to enter. The Camp even had its own newspaper called the Weekly Midwinter Appeal which was edited by Sam Davis. The dance hall was one of the most popular attraction within the Mining Camp. One reason for the popularity and appeal of the dance hall is the charming Spanish dancers. Exhibits like the dance hall allowed men to indulge in their fantasies. Check out my other listings now for more Chinese antiques! Dear valued customers, I regularly list Chinese antiques &#8211; coins, banknotes, medals, important documents, engravings, carvings, boxes, cases, frames, postcards, photos, stereoviews, fans, hats, ranks, badges, finials, embroideries, bonds, books, pocket watches, silver items etc etc. Track Page Views With. Auctiva&#8217;s FREE Counter.  <br/>
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