The Portola District: Difference between revisions

No edit summary
(added current photo of silver ave.)
(9 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Image:excelvis$silver-avenue-west-c-1924.jpg]]
'''<font face = Papyrus> <font color = maroon> <font size = 4>Historical Essay</font></font> </font>'''
 
''by Chris Ortiz''
 
[[Image:excelvis$silver-avenue-west-c-1924.jpg|720px]]


'''Silver Avenue looking westerly from Merrill St. towards Vienna, c. 1924'''
'''Silver Avenue looking westerly from Merrill St. towards Vienna, c. 1924'''


''Photo: Greg Gaar Collection, San Francisco, CA''
''Photo: Private Collection, San Francisco, CA''
 
[[Image:Silver and Merrill March 2020 792 p.jpg]]
 
'''On Silver Avenue at Merrill, looking west, March 2020.'''
 
''Photo: Ryan Kuang''
 
In 1869 the Homestead Association filed with the SF Department of Streets and Maps a plan which delineates the blocks and streets as they exist today in the Portola District except that Berlin has been changed to Brussels and College was renamed Colby. Yet in the early years of 1900 the Portola District remained largely agricultural with the few existing streets as yet unpaved. Cattle grazed on the hills. To the west side of Charter Oak Avenue, a street mostly lost under the 101 Freeway, were numerous greenhouses growing flowers. To the east extending to the bay (not as far east as today) were truck gardens. Along San Bruno Avenue were businesses whose owners often lived with their families above their stores. During the Gold Rush era, produce for Yerba Buena, as it was then known, came down by boat from Stockton and Sacramento. In the early 1900's trucking produce in from the Portola District to the former [[Produce Market|Produce Market]], where the Golden Gateway has been developed, probably made food a bit less expensive. The likely customers for the cut flowers from local greenhouses were the boarding houses, hotels, restaurants and well-to-do -residents.
 
[[Image:Silver-Ave-and-San-Bruno-Av-Nov-3-1910 U02853.jpg|720px]]
 
'''Silver Avenue and San Bruno Avenue, November 3, 1910.'''
 
''Photo: [http://sfmta.com/photo SFMTA Photo] U02853''  


In 1869 the Homestead Association filed with the SF Department of Streets and Maps a plan which delineates the blocks and streets as they exist today in the Portola District except that Berlin has been changed to Brussels and College was renamed Colby. Yet in the early years of 1900 the Portola District remained largely agricultural with the few existing streets as yet unpaved. Cattle grazed on the hills. To the west side of Charter Oak Avenue, a street mostly lost under the 101 Freeway, were numerous greenhouses growing flowers. To the east extending to the bay (not as far east as today) were truck gardens. Along San Bruno Avenue were businesses whose owners often lived with their families above their stores. During the Gold Rush era, produce for Yerba Buena, as it was then known, came down by boat from Stockton and Sacramento. In the early 1900's trucking produce in from the Portola District to the former [[Old Produce Market|Produce Market]], where the Golden Gateway has been developed, probably made food a bit less expensive. The likely customers for the cut flowers from local greenhouses were the boarding houses, hotels, restaurants and well-to-do -residents.


Today the Portola District, approximately one square mile tucked in the southeast section of The City, has a very high percentage of owner-occupied single-family homes, many schools and churches and a busy 9-block business strip along San Bruno Avenue. It is not a well-recognized neighborhood. It is not part of the Excelsior from which it is separated by the McLaren Ridge, nor the Bayview from which it is separated by Silver Terrace (a contiguous part of Portola until the construction of Bayshore Freeway). It is similar in size to Bernal Heights, which always gets recognized as a separate neighborhood. Maybe it is because Bernal sits on a height, while Portola is a valley originally defined by the Alemany trough (which covers lslais Creek), McLaren Ridge and Stony Hill. Its nicknames, long since discarded, were Little Jerusalem and The Flat.
Today the Portola District, approximately one square mile tucked in the southeast section of The City, has a very high percentage of owner-occupied single-family homes, many schools and churches and a busy 9-block business strip along San Bruno Avenue. It is not a well-recognized neighborhood. It is not part of the Excelsior from which it is separated by the McLaren Ridge, nor the Bayview from which it is separated by Silver Terrace (a contiguous part of Portola until the construction of Bayshore Freeway). It is similar in size to Bernal Heights, which always gets recognized as a separate neighborhood. Maybe it is because Bernal sits on a height, while Portola is a valley originally defined by the Alemany trough (which covers lslais Creek), McLaren Ridge and Stony Hill. Its nicknames, long since discarded, were Little Jerusalem and The Flat.
Line 22: Line 39:


''--by Chris Ortiz'', 731 Girard Street, San Francisco, California 94134.  
''--by Chris Ortiz'', 731 Girard Street, San Francisco, California 94134.  
[[Image:Magdalen-Asylum-from-Silver-Ave-Muybridge tf7s2010tr-FID4.jpg]]
'''Magdalen Asylum from Silver Avenue.'''
'''Photo late 19th century by Edweard Muybridge''




[[Alemany 1926| Prev. Document]]  [[Excelsior Picnic c 1890 |Next Document]]
[[Joseph Alemany| Prev. Document]]  [[Excelsior Picnic c 1890 |Next Document]]


[[category:Excelsior/Visitacion Valley]] [[category:Portola]] [[category:1900s]] [[category:Ecology]] [[category:Gold Rush]] [[category:1920s]]
[[category:Excelsior]] [[category:Portola]] [[category:1900s]] [[category:Ecology]] [[category:Gold Rush]] [[category:1920s]]

Revision as of 15:38, 10 March 2020

Historical Essay

by Chris Ortiz

Excelvis$silver-avenue-west-c-1924.jpg

Silver Avenue looking westerly from Merrill St. towards Vienna, c. 1924

Photo: Private Collection, San Francisco, CA

Silver and Merrill March 2020 792 p.jpg

On Silver Avenue at Merrill, looking west, March 2020.

Photo: Ryan Kuang

In 1869 the Homestead Association filed with the SF Department of Streets and Maps a plan which delineates the blocks and streets as they exist today in the Portola District except that Berlin has been changed to Brussels and College was renamed Colby. Yet in the early years of 1900 the Portola District remained largely agricultural with the few existing streets as yet unpaved. Cattle grazed on the hills. To the west side of Charter Oak Avenue, a street mostly lost under the 101 Freeway, were numerous greenhouses growing flowers. To the east extending to the bay (not as far east as today) were truck gardens. Along San Bruno Avenue were businesses whose owners often lived with their families above their stores. During the Gold Rush era, produce for Yerba Buena, as it was then known, came down by boat from Stockton and Sacramento. In the early 1900's trucking produce in from the Portola District to the former Produce Market, where the Golden Gateway has been developed, probably made food a bit less expensive. The likely customers for the cut flowers from local greenhouses were the boarding houses, hotels, restaurants and well-to-do -residents.

Silver-Ave-and-San-Bruno-Av-Nov-3-1910 U02853.jpg

Silver Avenue and San Bruno Avenue, November 3, 1910.

Photo: SFMTA Photo U02853


Today the Portola District, approximately one square mile tucked in the southeast section of The City, has a very high percentage of owner-occupied single-family homes, many schools and churches and a busy 9-block business strip along San Bruno Avenue. It is not a well-recognized neighborhood. It is not part of the Excelsior from which it is separated by the McLaren Ridge, nor the Bayview from which it is separated by Silver Terrace (a contiguous part of Portola until the construction of Bayshore Freeway). It is similar in size to Bernal Heights, which always gets recognized as a separate neighborhood. Maybe it is because Bernal sits on a height, while Portola is a valley originally defined by the Alemany trough (which covers lslais Creek), McLaren Ridge and Stony Hill. Its nicknames, long since discarded, were Little Jerusalem and The Flat.

Oral histories by residents born in 1907 and a few years later give some insight as to what the area was like as they were growing up:

  • McLaren Park was covered with brush, probably similar to most of San Bruno Mountain, before a tree-planting project by the Boy Scouts in 1927 brought cypress and eucalyptus.
  • lslais Creek emptied into the bay marshlands just past the old Clam House on Bayshore Boulevard. Mother sent him to buy freshly-dug clams there. The creek was the boundary line between Bernal Heights and Portola. Youth from these two neighborhoods would come there to settle disputes by throwing rocks at each other across the mudhole. Parents warned kids not to go there. A MUNI #25 street car traveled along San Bruno Avenue. The ride was rough over Islais Creek because the tracks were always sinking.
  • Classmates at Cogswell College said it was too far out in the country to come visit his Portola District home.
  • Pogie Rock was the name for a rock at Hunters Point. They could buy fresh Bay shrimp at Hunters Point.
  • There was a creek (probably Yosemite Cr.) next to his house near Mansell St.

--by Chris Ortiz, 731 Girard Street, San Francisco, California 94134.

Magdalen-Asylum-from-Silver-Ave-Muybridge tf7s2010tr-FID4.jpg

Magdalen Asylum from Silver Avenue.

'Photo late 19th century by Edweard Muybridge


Prev. Document  Next Document