Archive for the ‘Other Organizations’ Category

Secret Room Unearths San Francisco School District Memorabilia

Friday, May 17th, 2013
SF Board of Education Invoices

SF Board of Education invoice ledgers contain purchasing records from 1909 - 1917

Purchasing records from the San Francisco Board of Education dating from 1909 to 1917 were recently uncovered after being carefully hidden for over thirty years in a San Bruno residence. Five ledgers measuring about 18 by 12 inches were saved from destruction in the late 1970s by a history- conscious employee of the San Francisco Unified School District and reposited in a secret room beneath his home.

The ledgers were originally shown to me in the early 1980s by the father of a high school friend of mine named Theresa Hall. Theresa’s father had saved them from the trash in the course of his work as a mover for the school district.

At the time, my father owned a stationery store and I thought that the ledgers, still something we sold at the time, would make a great window display. But Theresa’s dad was very protective of his collection, going so far as to tell his daughter to “never let David have the ledgers.”

Fast-forward thirty-plus years.

Theresa’s father dies suddenly, and she faces the monumental task of emptying his storage rooms. Our collector had worked for the San Francisco Unified School District starting in the late 1970s, a time when things were changing in the city. His job took him to various locations, and when he came across discarded materials that he liked, he would bring them home and squirrel them away. He didn’t want things he felt had meaning to be lost. The result was a San Bruno basement full of papers, photos, and furniture.

Theresa called me about the ledgers, which no one which no one had seen since her father had shown them to me decades before. “They must be here somewhere,” she said. “He would not have given them away.”

We didn’t actually know what the large ledgers contained, but in curiosity, we searched, room after room, pile after pile, cabinet after cabinet, box after box, and came up empty. Yes, there were old school clocks, oak student chairs, a 1930 class panorama of the San Francisco Janitors Engineers School (which has been donated to the San Francisco History Center at the San Francisco Public Library), but we couldn’t find the ledgers.

Then Theresa’s mother said, “Well, you know, there is a secret room.” [Here's where a movie cues suspense music: "Dum, dum, dum!"]

Invoice of the 1909 vaccinations of 1250 San Francisco school children

Theresa’s father had been an artist, and a collector, and some might say a hoarder of sorts. He had an eye toward historyand maybe just a touch of paranoia. Of course he had a secret room.

After pulling away boxes and furniture, we exposed the basement’s back wall by removing stained glass artwork and hanging clothes. Once we had everything clear, we discovered the “wall,” complete with 2×4 studs, was actually a door that swung outward on hinges. Within, another door opened the opposite direction.

Inside, we saw more of what we had gone through earlier: stacks of boxes, rolls of carpet, scrap wood. Emptying the room took some time, but along the way we came across two remarkable artifacts, one with a distinctly west side focus: a large silk banner for the Laguna Honda School’s Parent Teacher Association, circa 1915, and another banner for Garfield Primary School on Telegraph Hill, which was presented to the school in 1912 by the Native Sons and Native Daughters of the Golden West.

Garfield Primary School Banner 1912

Finally, at the back of the secret room, we found what we were originally looking for, the ledgers, wrapped in plastic for protection and stacked on top of a 1920 Western Electric portable audiometer (a large walnut box that looks as if it might be filled with pirate booty.)

“We found the treasure!”

And a treasure they are. The five large ledgers document from 1909 to 1917 the bills paid by the then Board of Education to individual suppliers of goods.

Actual itemized invoices are pasted in, detailing school supplies, construction material for the building of Polytechnic High School, groceries, books, coal, fuel oil, water consumption, teamster bills, car fare for employees, and a host of other costs, including the 1909 vaccination of 1,250 school children by the College of Physicians and Surgeons at a cost of 10c per child.

What happens next to the treasure trove? The San Francisco History Center at the San Francisco Public Library already has a lot of the school district’s historical records, and seems a likely new home.

Window washing for Lowell High School 1913

Also likely is that these books and assorted artifacts, hidden for years, would have been lost forever if it were not for one man and his secret room.

The Seductiveness of Paper

Thursday, July 26th, 2012

When I read Raymond H. Clary’s two fine books entitled “The Making of Golden Gate Park,” (the first covering up to 1906, the second to 1950), I couldn’t help but seethe along with Mr. Clary over the continuing depredations to what San Francisco used to call “its most precious possession.” Dreaded philanthropists have always plagued the park with “gifts” in the form of buildings and monuments and museums and clubhouses (and now artificial turf soccer fields), replacing as much quiet nature as they can. Clary fantasized about having the power to remove every structure: “If one could do that, there would still be a woodland park. But if one were to remove every tree, shrub, blade of grass and body of water, it would be a desolate place, even with the highly touted ‘culture centers’ that now disgrace Golden Gate Park.” (This was in 1987. Thankfully, Mr. Clary didn’t have to see the new de Young Museum go up.)

San Francisco Bulletins from the 1890s

San Francisco Bulletins from the 1890s

When I read Nicholson Baker’s book “Double Fold” in 2001, a similarly righteous anger and energy spark inside me. Mr. Baker, a novelist, detailed in the book how libraries “modernized” (and saved shelf space) by microfilming and then destroying original copies of books and historical newspapers. The colorful artwork of the New York World’s Sunday supplements were reduced to fuzzy black and gray on microfilm reels, while the originals were pulped or sold to be cut up by dealers of “What the front page was on your birthday” curios. David Gates, in a New York Times review, had similar feelings as me in reading the book: “I’d repeatedly scrawled ‘Whew!,’ ‘Yikes!’ and ‘Jesus!’ in the margins, sometimes two and three times a page.” Baker went so far as to purchase tons of bound newspapers when the British Library put them up for sale, having to rent a warehouse in New Hampshire for $26,000 a month to store them. (Finally, Duke University took them off his hands.)

Cover of "The World on Sunday" by Nicholson Baker and Margaret Brentano

Cover of "The World on Sunday" by Nicholson Baker and Margaret Brentano



So when I was at the San Francisco History Expo in March of this year I was jarred and delighted to see my good friends Ron Filion and Pamela Storm had on display a bound set of the San Francisco Call from the 1890s. The couple told me they had not just the one bound book of old newsprint—which was an impressive thirty inches long by twenty-three inches wide by two inches deep—but twenty-two equally massive volumes back at home, salvaged from a culling at the San Francisco Public Library years before.

San Francisco Call, September 1899

San Francisco Call, September 1899


There’s great wonder in seeing original versions of these old newspapers, having the tactile experience of feeling and seeing paper, of being able to easily turn and riffle through an edition, scan quickly over a page to pick out items, drink in the color washes on Sunday art pages. I found an 1899 article I had used in writing my book on Carville-by-the-Sea, but instead of the murky shades that I had viewed on microfilm—almost unidentifiable as illustrations—now I could see real photographs and pick out specific houses.

Carville photograph from 1899 SF Call article

Carville photograph from 1899 SF Call article


Ron and Pamela, who have over the years created one of the region’s great genealogy sites at sfgenealogy.com, obviously felt the same way about these old marvels as I did. Seeing my enthusiasm, they asked if the Western Neighborhoods Project would be interested in being the new caretakers of these ephemeral beauties. The collection took up a lot of space in their home, and both were willing to let it go to new guardians.

Nicholson Baker had been one of my heroes, and if he could take on several thousand volumes, we could take twenty-three. As I try to write grant applications, plan the next member walk, update our Facebook page, and transition our nonprofit’s government-assigned DUNS number to a new online system (don’t ask), the dusty tomes tempt me daily to immerse myself in the news of San Francisco from the nineteenth century. It requires clearing off a lot of desk space to open one pulpy volume of the Call or the San Francisco Bulletin (which has fewer graphics, but is much more manageable in size.)

They do take up a lot of room, fill the air with dust when browsed, need extremely delicate handling (book repair classes in my future?), and are perhaps fairly useless as other copies are digitized in full resolution for the Web (browse and search the Call up to the 1910s on the Library of Congress site). But they are such a great delight.

Our great thanks to Ron and Pamela for their generosity, and to everyone else out there who still loves paper.

Bringing the Jet Set Back to Larsen Park

Wednesday, May 16th, 2012

We always kept alert in the back seat. A drive to Stonestown or Serramonte or down to the Peninsula for some family holiday event would mean a glimpse of the jet standing in the grass of Larsen Park. My brother and I would beg our parents to stop, just for a little bit, so we could go climb on it, through it, pretend to be pilots or “bad guys” crawling along the wings.

From the 1950s to the early 1990s, three different retired Navy jets served as playground equipment. In 1993, the last, an F-8 Crusader, graffitti-covered and leaking lead, was removed for restoration at the Pacific Coast Air Museum (a continuing effort).

San Francisco Chronicle writer Peter Hartlaub has recently done a very nice piece on the jets.

Now after 20 jet-less years at Larsen Park, a small community group is working to bring a new jet for the climbing pleasure of future generations of Parkside kids (and those traveling through who convince their parents to pull over).

Getting a real Navy jet, and making it playground-safe, is impractical in these more complicated days, so a new structure in the form of a jet with netting fanning out behind like exhaust has been designed. (I declare it pretty cool.) Grants are being found, money still needs to be raised, but Supervisor Carmen Chu and her staff are working hard to get this done.

Join me at a informational meeting Tuesday, May 22, 2012 from 6:00pm to 7:30pm at the Wawona Clubhouse, 901 Wawona Street at 20th Avenue. We’ll hear more about the plan, see the sketches, and maybe I will bring some old photos of the previous planes (anyone have some to share?).

How We Figured Out What Was There

Friday, December 16th, 2011

At the Western Neighborhoods Project, we often get inquiries about specific houses or buildings or intersections on the west side of the city. Sometimes we have pictures or articles on our site, but more often we turn to the same references over and over.

This week someone sent us the following:

hi just a curious question here. what was located where blockbuster/walgreen’s/domino’s/ross is on geary street — between 16th and 17th? i go by there all the time, and it really looks out of place! what was there before? when did that “strip mall” go up? I thought maybe you might have some insight. I’ve looked at all the old photos of that area, but none seem to catch that exact block. anyway, just curious! thanks mike

Here’s where we looked and what we found:

The San Francisco Assessor’s Office tells us that the building went up in 1966 through the SFParcel Viewer (which will soon be replaced by San Francisco Property Information Map) A caveat: Pre-1906 buildings will often not have an accurate date.

SFParcel Viewer: http://gispub02.sfgov.org/website/sfparcel/INDEX.htm

San Francisco Property Information Map: http://ec2-50-17-237-182.compute-1.amazonaws.com/PIM/

Then we checked the Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps available (with a library card) at the San Francisco Public Library’s eLibrary system, where we found this: apartment buildings taking up the entire end of the lot.

Apartment buildings on Geary

Sanborn Maps California:  http://ezproxy.sfpl.org/login?url=http://sanborn.umi.com

Then we consulted the 1938 Aerial views of San Francisco, another great collection by the SF Public Library, digitized and hosted by the David Rumsey Map Collection.

1938 San Francisco Aerial Views

Geary Blvd and 17th 1938

Then it was on to the Jesse Brown Cook Collection from the Bancroft Library through the Online Archive of California (Jesse Cook was a police officer and later SF Police Chief who took thousands of photo of city streets from 1895 to 1936). There we found a view of our apartments from the street.

East on Geary St. from 17th Ave. March 1928

East on Geary St. from 17th Ave. March 1928 Jesse B Cook Collection, Bancroft Library

We’ll usually check both of our own maps to see if anything comes up there.
All WNP Articles and Images: http://www.outsidelands.org/maps

1951 West Side Assessor’s Department Images: http://www.outsidelands.org/maps/photo_locations.php

And that’s it! We answered Mike’s questions with just a few minutes of online research. We’re sure there’s more to the story of the Geary Boulevard mall (some of us remember it as “Value Giant” and “Giant Value!”), but hopefully we’ve gotten him on his way. Maybe he’ll even decide to join as a member..?

Nefarious San Francisco Tales

Monday, November 14th, 2011

We just added the Crooks Tour blog to our list of resource links (which looks like it could use some updating), and recently there have been some intriguing tales of west side criminality. The Frank Egan murder case in Ingleside Terraces and the violent death of an 1870s transgendered frog-catcher from Ocean View have been recent fascinating entries.