Fillmore filipinos

The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

Historical Essay

by James Sobredo & Fred Basconcillo

Filipin1$filipino-man.jpg

Filipino man poses with a car in this image (c. 1940s)
Photo: Pacifico Mortel

The Fillmore District has long been known as a Japanese American community and later an African American community. For a several years, however, the Fillmore was once also home to the largest Filipino community in San Francisco. At its height in the 1940s, over 1,000 Filipinos and their families live in the Fillmore/Western Addition.

When people think of the Filipino community in San Francisco, they generally remember the community along Kearny Street with its numerous Filipino restaurants, lunch counters, barbershops, and fraternal organization clubhouses. This community, which was called "Manilatown" by its residents, existed from the 1920s to the 1950s and was home to a few hundred Filipinos. They were mostly single males who worked as migrant laborers in the California farms and Alaska salmon canneries. "Manilatown" was mostly a bachelor society, however, and married Filipinos along with their families lived in another and lesser known community: the Fillmore or Western Addition District.

Japanese Americans were the previous residents of the Fillmore, but at the outbreak of World War II, racially discriminatory government policies forced the evacuation and internment of Japanese residents. Their homes, which they were forced to sell at lower prices, were purchased by Filipinos and African Americans who became the next residents of the Fillmore. Filipinos and African American were attracted to the Bay Area by shipbuilding jobs in the Hunters Point Naval Shipyards and lower housing prices in the Fillmore.

At its height, there were over 230 Filipino families in the Fillmore. Most of the families worked in the Naval Shipyards, which in World War II meant both parents were working. During the War years, women were able to find jobs in the Naval Shipyards as welders and fitters.

In 1948 when San Francisco passed laws eliminating racially discriminatory housing practices, Filipinos were able to move out of the Fillmore into the Bayview District and eventually to Daly City. Today Daly City, with a large Filipino community and a Filipino-American mayor, is known as the "Manilatown" in the San Francisco Bay area.


Filipin1$fillmore-dist.jpg

Filipinos in the Fillmore District
Photo: Pacifico Mortel

Prev. Document Next Document