Office Work at PG&E 1965: Difference between revisions

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'''<font face = Papyrus> <font color = maroon> <font size = 4>I Was There . . .</font></font> </font>'''
'''<font face = Papyrus> <font color = maroon> <font size = 4>I Was There . . .</font></font> </font>'''


''by Helene Worthen, 2021''
''by Helena Worthen, 2021''


[[Image:Market near 1st Aug 1967 wnp25.2963.jpg|800px]]
[[Image:Market near 1st Aug 1967 wnp25.2963.jpg|800px]]

Latest revision as of 19:30, 14 September 2021

I Was There . . .

by Helena Worthen, 2021

Market near 1st Aug 1967 wnp25.2963.jpg

PG&E building at left in this August 1967 photo east on Market from First Street.

Photo: OpenSFHistory.org wnp25.2963

I had many jobs in my first year in San Francisco,1965. Jobs for college girls who could type were easy to get. In the morning, if I heard "What a Day for a Daydream" on the radio, I wouldn't go to work, and if I lost my job I'd get another. Whatever it was they paid me, it was enough. Rent was $90 a month for a garden apartment on Steiner Street near Alta Plaza.

Market and Fremont 1969 wnp32.2788.jpg

Market and Fremont streets in 1969, with the PG&E Building looming behind. BART construction has torn up the surface of the street, and the Greyhound terminal at Fremont and Market was soon moved to 7th and Mission.

Photo: OpenSFHistory.org

One job was for PG&E on Beale and Market. I think we were on the fourth floor. It was a room full of young men and women sitting at long tables. In front of each of us was a cardboard box full of signed contracts paper clipped (I think) to small maps. The maps showed the path that electricity wires would take across some property in California, and the contracts were agreements from the property owners to allow the easement. My boxes were about land up in the Gold Country. We coded the coordinates of the path through the map onto an index card which would then go to the keypunch people somewhere else.

What struck me as silly at the time was how many property owners asked questions about whether electricity could leak out from the wires and start a fire. They apparently were reassured before they signed.