Revision [11855]
This is an old revision of NewRound made by FalconNomad on 2010-01-06 18:03:13.
Some things that I've dug up:
Timelines
From: Working Americans, 1880-1999
1880–1881
- The U.S. population was 50 million; 65 percent of the people lived in the country
- 539,000 Singer sewing machines were sold, up from 250,000 in 1875
- The United States boasted 100 millionaires
- A&P grocery stores operated 95 stores from Boston to Milwaukee
- The plush Del Monte Hotel in Monterey, California, opened
- The country claimed 93,000 miles of railroad
- Halftone photographic illustrations appeared in newspapers for the first time
- Midwest farmers burned their corn for fuel; prices were too low to warrant shipping
- President James A. Garfield was assassinated
- The Diamond Match Company was created
- Marquette University was founded in Milwaukee
- Barnum & Bailey's Circus was created through the merger of two companies
- Chicago meatpacker Gustavus F. Swift perfected the refrigeration car to take Chicagodressed meat to the East Coast markets
- Josephine Cockrane of Illinois invented the first mechanical dishwasher
- For the first time, a U.S. Constitutional amendment to grant full suffrage to women was introduced in Congress; it was introduced every year until its passage in 1920
- Economic unrest swept California, including its Chinese laborers, who numbered 75,000 and represented nine percent of the population
- Thanks to high tariffs, the U.S. Treasury was running an annual surplus of $145 million
- The U.S. had 2,400 magazines and daily newspapers, plus 7,500 weekly newspapers
- The typewriter and the telephone were both novelties at the 1876 Centennial in Philadelphia; by 1880, approximately 50,000 telephones existed nationwide, a number that would triple to 1.5 million by the turn of the twentieth century
- The camera was increasing in importance as an instrument of communications among all people; George Eastman's famous slogan was "You Push the Button, We Do the Rest" helped make Kodak a part of many American homes
- Most magazines carried little advertising in 1880; Harper's Monthly refused all advertising but those of its publisher until 1882
- Only 367 hospitals had been founded nationwide in 1880
1882–1883
- An internal combustion engine powered by gasoline was invented by German engineer Gottlieb Daimler
- In Chicago, electric cable cars were installed, travelling 20 blocks and averaging a speed of less than two miles per hour
- Only two percent of New York homes had water connections
- The Andrew Jergens Company was founded to produce soaps, cosmetics and lotions
- Canadian Club whiskey was introduced by the Hiram Walker Distillery
- Van Camp Packing Company produced six million cans of pork and beans for shipment to Europe and U.S. markets
- Brooklyn Bridge opened
- Ladies' Home Journal began publication, with Cyrus H. K. Curtis as its publisher
- Thomas Edison invented the radio tube
- The first malted milk was produced in Racine, Wisconsin
- The first peapodder machine was installed in Owasco, New York, replacing 600 cannery workers
- The American Baseball Association was established
- The United States banned Chinese immigration for 10 years
- The three-mile limit for territorial waters was agreed upon at the Hague Convention
- Robert Lewis Stevenson's Treasure Island was first published
- Boxer John L. Sullivan defeated Paddy Ryan to win the heavyweight boxing crown
- The first skyscraper was built in Chicago, topping out at 10 stories
- Robert Koch described a method of preventative inoculation against anthrax
1883–1884
- The Brooklyn Bridge opened to traffic in New York
- The Northern Pacific Railroad line was completed
- The Ladies' Home Journal began publication; Cyrus H.K. Curtis was the publisher
- Thomas Edison invented the radio tube
- The nation's first skyscraper was built in Chicago, totaling 10 stories
- Nationwide 367 hospitals have been established
- U.S. frontiersman W.F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody organized his touring "Wild West Show"
- The first malted milk was produced in Racine, Wisconsin
- The first successful pea-podder machine was installed in Owasco, New York, replacing 600 cannery workers
- American author and feminist Lillie Devereaux Blake published Women's Place Today
- The Linotype typesetting machine was patented by Ottmar Mergenthaler, revolutionizing newspaper composing rooms
- More than 80 percent of the petroleum from the United States was marketed by John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil Trust
- The Waterman pen was invented by New York insurance agent Lewis Edson Waterman
- Montgomery Ward's mail order catalogue offered 10,000 items
1888–1889
- The gramophone was invented
- Benjamin Harrison was elected president of the United States
- The alternating-current electric motor was developed
- Anti-Chinese riots erupted in Seattle
- National Geographic Magazine began publication
- The first typewriter stencil was introduced
- Parker Pen Company was started in Janesville, Wisconsin
- Tobacco merchant Washington B. Duke produced 744 million cigarettes
- The Ponce de Leon Hotel was opened in St. Augustine, Florida
- The Oklahoma Territory lands, formerly reserved for Indians, were opened to white settlers
- Safety Bicycle was introduced; more than one million would be sold in the next four years
- Electric lights were installed in the White House
- Aunt Jemima pancake flour was invented at St. Joseph, Missouri
- Calumet baking powder was created in Chicago
- "Jack the Ripper" murdered six women in London
- George Eastman perfected the "Kodak" box camera
- J.P. Dunlop invented the pneumatic tire
- Heinrich Hertz and Oliver Lodge independently identified radio waves as belonging to the same family as light waves
1890
- Jane Addams set up Hull House in Chicago, the first of many settlement houses to aid the poor
- Two hundred Sioux were killed by soldiers at Wounded Knee, South Dakota
- Lightweight aluminum cooking pans, which were easier to care for than iron pots, were invented in Ohio
- Two-thirds of the nation's 62.9 million people still lived in rural areas; 32.7 percent were immigrants or the children of at least one immigrant parent
- American women began wearing knickerbockers instead of skirts while riding bicycles
- All members of a women's baseball club were arrested following a game against the Danville, Illinois Browns before 2,000 fans on Sunday, June 8; they were fined a total of $100 for disturbing the peace by playing baseball on Sunday in violation of the local "Blue Laws"
- New York World reporter Nellie Bly (Elizabeth Cochran Seaman) became the first woman to travel around the world; she did it in just 72 days
- Fay Fuller climbed the 14,410-foot Mt. Rainier in Washington
- The San Francisco Examiner reporter Winifred Sweet Black became the first woman to report on a prize fight
- The Daughters of the American Revolution was founded
- The first commercial dry cell battery was invented
- Three percent of Americans, age 18 to 21, attended college
- Elizabeth Cady Stanton became the president of the National Woman Suffrage Association
- The first full-service advertising agency was established in New York City
- Ceresota flour was introduced by the Northwest Consolidated Milling Company
- Alice Sanger became the first female staffer for the U.S. White House
- The United Mine Workers of America was founded
- Because of the demand for domestic servants, more women than men were emigrating from Ireland to America
- Thousands of Kansas farmers were bankrupted by tight money conditions
- Yosemite Park was created by an Act of Congress
- Idaho was admitted as the forty-third state, and Wyoming as the forty-fourth
- The census showed that 53.5 percent of the farms in the United States comprised fewer than 100 acres
- Dr. Ida Gray became the first African-American woman dentist in the United States
1890–1891
- Two-thirds of the nation's 62.9 million people still lived in rural areas, while 32.7 percent were immigrants or the children of at least one immigrant parent
- Ceresota flour was introduced by the Northwest Consolidated Milling Company
- Literary Digest began publication
- The population of Los Angeles reached 50,000, up 40,000 in 10 years
- The 1890 census showed that 53.5 percent of the farms in the United States comprised fewer than 100 acres
- As the demand for domestic servants grew in urban areas, women dramatically outnumbered the men emigrating from Ireland to the United States
- The Tampa Bay Hotel was completed at a cost of $3 million
- The first commercial dry cell battery was invented
- Only three percent of Americans, aged 18 to 21, attended college
- The nation's first full-service advertising agency was established in Florida
- "American Express Travelers Cheques" was copyrighted
- Thousands of Kansas farmers were bankrupted by the tight money conditions
- Restrictive "Jim Crow" laws were being enacted throughout the South
- The first electric oven for commercial sale was introduced in St. Paul, Minnesota
- America claimed 4,000 millionaires
1892
- To meet the needs of the automotive industry, an improved carburetor was invented
- Violence erupted during a steelworker's strike at Carnegie-Phipps Mill in Homestead, Pennsylvania
- The General Electric Company was created through a merger of Edison General Electric Company and Thomson-Houston Electric Company
- The $1 Ingersoll pocketwatch was introduced
- Chicago's first elevated railway went into operation to begin the famous Loop
- The first U.S. motorcar was produced in Springfield, Massachusetts, by Duryea Brothers
- The Hamilton Watch Company was founded
- The United States boasted 4,000 millionaires
- New York's 13-story Waldorf Hotel was under construction
- The first successful gasoline tractor was produced by a farmer in Waterloo, Iowa
- Thousands of Kansas farmers were bankrupted by tight money conditions
- The first full-service advertising agency was established in New York City
- "Gentleman Jim" Corbett defeated John L. Sullivan for the heavyweight boxing title
- William Ewart Gladstone became prime minister of Great Britain, Prince Ito was made premier of Japan, and Grover Cleveland was elected president of the United States
- America's first automatic telephone switchboard was introduced
1892–1893
- American industry was benefiting from the 1890 decision by Congress to increase tariffs on foreign goods from 38 to 50 percent, making U.S. manufactured items less expensive
- New York City boss Richard Croker's fortune was estimated to be $8 million, not including his own railway car and a $2.5 million stud farm
- An improved carburetor for automobiles was invented
- The first successful gasoline tractor was produced by a farmer in Waterloo, Iowa
- Chicago's first elevated railway went into operation, forming the famous Loop
- The $1 Ingersoll pocket watch was introduced, bringing affordable timepieces to the masses
- The General Electric Company was created through a merger
- Violence erupted at the steelworkers' strike of the Carnegie-Phipps Mill at Homestead, Pennsylvania
- President Benjamin Harrison extended for 10 years the Chinese Exclusion Act, which suspended Chinese immigration to the United States
- The United States population included 4,000 millionaires
- The name Sears, Roebuck & Company came into use
- Pineapples were canned for the first time
- Diesel patented his internal combustion engine
- The Census Bureau announced that for the first time in America's history, a frontier line was no longer discernible; all unsettled areas had been invaded
- The first automatic telephone switchboard was activated
- Cream of Wheat was introduced by Diamond Mill of Grand Forks, North Dakota
- New York's 13-story Waldorf Hotel was opened
- The first Ford motorcar was road tested
- The Philadelphia and Reading Railroad went into receivership
- Wrigley's Spearmint and Juicy Fruit chewing gum were introduced by William Wrigley, Jr.
1894
- Approximately 12,000 New York City tailors struck to protest the existence of sweatshops
- The first Sunday newspaper color comic section was published in the New York World
- Antique-collecting became popular, supported by numerous genealogy-minded societies
- A well-meaning group of Anglophiles called the America Acclimatization Society began importing English birds mentioned in Shakespeare, including nightingales, thrushes and starlings, for release in America
- Overproduction forced farm prices to fall; wheat that sold for $1.05 a bushel in 1870 now sold for $0.49 a bushel
- The first Greek newspaper in America was published as the New York Atlantis
- New York Governor Roswell P. Flower signed the nation's first dog-licensing law; the license fee was $2.00
- Hockey's first Stanley Cup championship game was played between the Montreal Amateur Athletic Association and the Ottawa Capitals
- Thomas Edison publicly demonstrated the kinetoscope, a peephole viewer in which developed film moved continuously under a magnifying glass
- Workers at the Pullman Palace Car Company in Illinois went on strike to protest a wage reduction; President Grover Cleveland ordered federal troops onto the trains to insure the delivery of mail
- Labor Day was established as a holiday for federal employees
- Congress established the Bureau of Immigration
- Congress passed a bill imposing a 2 percent tax on incomes over $4,000, which was ruled unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court
- The United States Government began keeping records on the weather
- Astronomer Percival Lowell built a private observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, and began his observations of Mars
- The Regents of the University of Michigan declared that "Henceforth in the selection of professors and instructors and other assistants in instruction in the University, no discrimination will be made in selection between men and women"
- French Baron Pierre de Coubertin proposed an international Olympics competition to be held every four years in a different nation to encourage international peace and cooperation
- The Edison Kinetoscopic Record of a Sneeze was released in movie theaters
1896
- "Yellow journalism" was named after the color comic figure featuring the Yellow Kid that ran in the Hearst New York Journal and the Pulitzer New York World
- Theodore Herzl called for a Jewish homeland in Palestine
- Legendary lawman Wyatt Earp refereed a heavyweight title fight between Bob Fitzsimmons and Tom Sharkey
- F. W. Rueckheim & Brother of Chicago received a trademark for the candy treat "Cracker Jack"
- The United States Army took over the operation of Yellowstone National Park
- The Anchor Brewing Company was founded in San Francisco
- An advertisement appeared in Horseless Age, the first automotive trade journal, for the Duryea Motor Wagon Company
- Swedish chemist Svante Arrhennius explained the "greenhouse effect," predicting that the planet would gradually become warmer
- American physician Franz Pfaff discovered that the oily residue in poison oak was responsible for the painful rash
- Utah was admitted to the Union as the forty-fifth state
- Dr. Henry Louis Smith at Davidson, North Carolina, produced the first x-ray photo in the United States to reveal a bullet in a dead man's hand
- Civil War photographer Matthew B. Brady died in the charity ward of a New York hospital at age 73
- U.S. Marines landed in Nicaragua to protect U.S. citizens in the wake of a revolution
- The first modern Olympic Games, with eight nations participating, formally opened in Athens, Greece, after a lapse of 1,500 years
- The Vitascope system for projecting movies onto a screen was demonstrated in New York City
- The United States Supreme Court ruled 7 to 1 in Plessy v. Ferguson and endorsed the concept of "separate but equal" racial segregation
- The Dow Jones Industrial Average was first published by Charles H. Dow using an index of 12 industrial companies
- William Jennings Bryan propelled himself to presidential candidacy when he stood before the Democratic Convention and made his famous "Cross of Gold" speech
- Booker T. Washington became the first African American to receive an honorary degree from Howard University
1896–1897
- The bicycle industry reported sales of $60 million; the average bike sold for $100
- The earliest trading stamps, issued by S&H Green Stamps, were distributed for the first time
- Michelob beer was introduced
- The Klondike gold rush in Bonanza Creek, Canada, began
- The Boston Cooking School Cook Book was published, advocating the use of precise measurements to produce identical results
- Radioactivity was discovered in uranium
- William Ramsay discovered helium
- Five annual Nobel prizes were established in the fields of physics, physiology and medicine, chemistry, literature, and peace
- Bituminous coal miners staged a 12-week walkout
- Continental Casualty Company was founded
- Dow Chemical Company was incorporated
- Radio transmission over long distances was achieved by Gugielmo Marconi
- Winton Motor Carriage Company was organized
- The New York City Health Board began enforcing a law regulating women in mercantile establishments
- Mail Pouch tobacco was introduced
- Ronald Ross discovered the malaria bacillus
- Wheat prices rose to $1.09 per bushel
- Jell-O was introduced by Pearl B. Wait
- Boston's H.P. Hill used glass bottles to distribute milk
1897
- Mail Pouch tobacco was introduced
- Thorstein Veblen developed the key concepts that would appear in his book, Theory of the Leisure Class, summed up by the statement: "conspicuous consumption of valuable goods is a means of reputability to the gentlemen of leisure"
- Continental Casualty Company was founded
- Radical Emma Goldman, advocate of free love, birth control, homosexual rights and "freedom for both sexes," was arrested
- The Royal Automobile Club was founded in London
- John Davison Rockefeller, worth nearly $200 million, stopped going to his office at Standard Oil and began playing golf and giving away his wealth
- The Presbyterian Assembly condemned the growing bicycling fad for enticing parishioners away from church
- Motorcar production reached nearly 1,000 vehicles
- Nearly 150 Yiddish periodicals were being published, many of which advocated radical labor reform, Zionism, and even anarchism, to obtain reform
- Wheat prices rose to $1.09 per bushel
- Republican William McKinley was sworn into office as America's 25th president; manager businessman Mark Hanna had raised $7 million for McKinley's campaign, compared with the $300,000 raised by opponent William Jennings Bryan
- Prospectors streamed to the Klondike in search of gold
- Boston's H.P. Hill used glass bottles to distribute milk
- Jell-O was introduced by Pearl B. Wait
- The Winton Motor Carriage Company was organized
- Dow Chemical Company was incorporated
1898
- Toothpaste in collapsible metal tubes was now available, thanks to the work of Connecticut dentist Lucius Sheffield
- The creation in 1892 of the crown bottle cap was hailed as being responsible for extending the shelf life of beer
- America boasted more than 300 bicycle manufacturing companies
- Uneeda Biscuit Company was created
- J.P. Stevens & Company was founded in New York
- The production of motorcars reach 1,000 annually
- The racist "grandfather clause" marched across the South, ushering in widespread use of Jim Crow laws and restricting most blacks from voting
- Pepsi-Cola was introduced in New Bern, North Carolina, by pharmacist Caleb Bradham
- Bricklayers were paid $3.41 per day and worked a 48-hour week; marble cutters made $4.22 per day
- The consolidation of Greater New York City was created through the merger of Brooklyn and Manhattan
- Henry James published "The Turn of the Screw"
- The Travelers Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut, issued the first automobile insurance policy which cost $11.25 to purchase $5,000 in liability coverage
- The Supreme Court ruled that a child born in the United States to Chinese immigrants was a U.S. citizen, and therefore could not be deported under the Chinese Exclusion Act
- Postcards were first authorized by the Post Office
- The song "Happy Birthday to You," composed by sisters Mildred and Patty Hill, was coming into common use
- The battleship Maine was destroyed in Havana harbor, Cuba, killing 260 of its crew, triggering the Spanish-American, War
- Admiral George Dewey's fleet attacked Spain's holdings in Manila Bay, the Philippines conquering the nation for America
- Wesson Oil was introduced
- The trolley replaced horse-drawn cars in Boston
- The New York Times dropped its price from three cents to one cent a copy, tripling circulation
- The boll weevil began its destructive spread through the cotton fields of the South
- Cellophane was invented by Charles F. Cross and Edward J. Bevan
- The Union Carbide Company was formed
- H.G. Wells published the classic "War of the Worlds," about an invasion of Earth by Martians
- The northern California Mount Tamalpais and Muir Woods railroad was featured in the first documentary film made in the San Francisco Bay Area
- Buddy Bolden, cornetist and New Orleans brass band leader, was an early practitioner of what would later be called jazz
- Giraud Foster used the money earned from the invention of closure snaps for clothing to build a $2.5 million estate on 400 acres in Lee, Massachusetts
- America's first forestry school was founded in the Pisgah National Forest in North Carolina
- A telephone excise tax was created to help finance the Spanish-American War
1898-1899
- The "grandfather" clause marched across the South, restricting most Blacks from voting, and ushering in discriminatory "Jim Crow" laws
- Union Carbide Company was founded
- Motorcar production reached 1,000 per year
- Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company was founded
- The New York Times dropped its price from $0.03 to $0.01; circulation tripled
- Pepsi-Cola was introduced by a New Bern, North Carolina, pharmacist
- Uneeda Biscuits was created
- J.P. Stevens & Company was founded in New York
- The trolley replaced horse cars in Boston
- Wesson Oil was developed
- United Mine Workers of America was founded
- The boll weevil began spreading across cotton-growing Southern states
- Virginia continued to experience an influx of Scots-Irish farmers
- The first shots of the Spanish-American War were fired
- The Louisiana "grandfather clause" restricted most blacks from voting
- The Union Carbide Company was founded
- Motorcar production reached 1,000 vehicles per year in 1898; production topped 2,500 in 1899
- Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company was founded
- The New York Times dropped its price from $0.03 daily to $0.01; as a result, circulation tripled
- Pepsi-Cola was introduced by pharmacist Caleb D. "Doc" Bradham in New Bern, North Carolina
- Uneeda Biscuits was created
- J. P. Stevens & Company was founded in New York
- Shiga Kiyoshi, a Japanese bacteriologist, discovered the Shigella bacillus, responsible for dysentery and named after him
- Trolley cars replaced horse cars in Boston
- Wesson Oil was developed
- The United Mine Workers of America was founded
- The first concrete grain elevator was erected near Minneapolis
- A very destructive insect, the boll weevil, began spreading across cotton-growing Southern states
San Francisco: Historical Overview
Encyclopedia of the American West
The city of San Francisco is located on a great bay, sixty miles long and up to fourteen miles wide, connected to the Pacific Ocean through the Golden Gate, a narrow opening in the high hills that line most of the northern California coast. The bay has given the city most of its economic reason for existence, as well as its dramatic vistas of sky, land, and water.
The people living in the bay area when the first Europeans arrived were called Costeños (people living along the coast) by the Spanish and Costanoans by early anthropologists. More recently, they have been known as the Ohlone. They lived in small villages and subsisted by hunting, fishing, and gathering.
Spanish explorers first took note of the bay in 1769, and an expedition, in 1776, established a military post (the Presidio) and a mission (San Francisco de Asis--usually called Mission Dolores), but neither thrived. In 1835, a pueblo or village was established and named Yerba Buena ("good herbs") after lush growths of wild mint. Many who settled there were English-speaking entrepreneurs, eager to sell goods to the ships that arrived in the bay and to trade with Bay Area ranchos. When the United States went to war with Mexico in 1846, a naval task force was immediately dispatched to claim the Bay Area. Early in 1847, Washington Bartlett, the naval officer in charge, changed the pueblo's name from Yerba Buena to San Francisco.
In March 1848, the population of San Francisco stood around eight hundred. Then discovery of gold in the interior provoked a massive influx of fortune-seekers. All transportation routes to California were difficult and dangerous, especially the overland route. Most immigrants came by sea and landed at San Francisco, crowding its bay with ships and transforming it into an "instant city." By mid-1849, the city's population had boomed to five thousand, and many residents lived in hastily built shanties and tents. By 1860, the city counted fifty thousand people and had acquired a more substantial appearance.
With the rapid growth of the 1850s came social, economic, and political instability. Many fortune-hunters passed through the city quickly and rushed off to the gold fields. Others hoped to prosper as merchants, but the city's mercantile economy repeatedly boomed and burst due to uncertainties in supply and demand. Some successful merchants moved into banking, thus laying the foundation for the city's financial preeminence. Charters in 1850 and 1851 specified the city's formal institutions of government, and a third charter in 1856 consolidated city and county governments. The city's merchants demonstrated their impatience with such formalities by forming in 1851 and 1856 Committees of Vigilance, which operated outside the law to banish or execute those whom they deemed inimical to the city's orderly development.
Economic developments in the 1850s and 1860s marked San Francisco's emergence as financial and commercial center of the West, as well as the region's preeminent port. The transcontinental telegraph in 1861 and the railroad in 1869 provided reliable connections to the East. As Western mining increasingly required large amounts of capital and technologically advanced equipment, San Francisco banks--in particular the Bank of California, led by William Chapman Ralston--quickly came to dominate much of Western mining, especially the phenomenally rich silver mines of Nevada. The city's foundries produced some of the world's most advanced mining equipment. When large-scale agricultural developments in California's Central Valley demanded extensive capital and elaborate equipment, San Francisco entrepreneurs again led the way. San Francisco's economic leadership was ensured by the time the Central Pacific Railroad (later Southern Pacific Railroad) moved its headquarters there from Sacramento in 1873.
Throughout the late nineteenth century, San Francisco reigned as the metropolis of the West. Corporations with headquarters in the city dominated the economic life of much of the Pacific Coast, the intermountain West, Alaska, and Hawaii. From throughout the West, commerce flowed through the Bay Area--minerals from Western mines, wheat and other agricultural produce from California's Central Valley, timber from the Northwest, salmon from Alaska, sugar from Hawaii. Successful Western entrepreneurs often built luxurious homes in San Francisco, especially on Nob Hill. The Pacific Stock Exchange (founded in 1875), Customs House, and Mint all confirmed the city's prominence. Perhaps the best-known symbol of the city's position as the glittering queen of the West was the Palace Hotel, built in the mid-1870s and modeled after the most modern European luxury hotels. By 1900, San Francisco was the eighth largest city in the nation and also one of the most ethnically diverse, home to large numbers of immigrants from Ireland, Germany, Italy, Great Britain, Scandinavia, and China.
For nearly twenty years after the vigilante actions of 1856, a succession of merchants occupied the mayor's office and dominated the Board of Supervisors, as San Francisco called its city council. From 1877 to 1879, however, a depressed economy contributed to the rise of Denis Kearney and his Workingmen's Party of California (WPC). Kearney appealed to Euro-American workers and blamed their misfortunes on the machinations of great capitalists and especially their use of Chinese immigrant laborers, who, Kearney asserted, drove down wage levels for white workers. Such scapegoating was not new to California labor and politics, and anti-Asian agitation formed a staple in most labor and political activity for the next half-century.
The WPC rapidly waned, and the Democratic party--led by Christopher Augustine Buckley, a blind saloonkeeper--dominated city government throughout the 1880s. Charged with corruption, Buckley lost power after 1890. Reformers fought for control of city politics, notably Adolph Sutro, elected to the mayor's office as a Populist in 1894, and James Duval Phelan, a Democrat who won the mayoralty in 1896 and promoted a new, progressive city charter. In 1901, organized labor flexed its political muscle to elect, as mayor, Eugene Schmitz, nominee of the Union Labor Party (ULP), but charges of corruption brought the downfall in 1906 of Schmitz and Abraham (Abe) Ruef, his close advisor. In 1911, James Rolph became mayor; a leader in business and civic affairs, he stabilized city politics as he repeatedly won reelection.
Before Rolph came to power, however, the city of San Francisco faced one of its greatest challenges. On April 18, 1906, the city was jolted awake by a powerful earthquake, equivalent to 8.3 on the Richter scale. Fires quickly erupted throughout the city. Hundreds of people died, and thousands of buildings were destroyed, including nearly all of the city's center. The city rebuilt quickly, prompted by business leaders' anxieties that the disaster might erode the city's financial and commercial leadership. In 1915, the city celebrated both the opening of the Panama Canal and its own reconstruction by hosting the Panama-Pacific International Exposition. Despite such efforts, the city's economic prominence inevitably declined as other Western cities matured.
Phelan's reform charter of 1900 had committed the city to acquire ownership of its public utilities, and city politics before the 1930s witnessed repeated efforts to implement those provisions. A city-owned streetcar line, the Municipal Railway, was initiated in 1909, to compete with privately owned lines and was gradually extended. Creation of a city reservoir in the Hetch Hetchy Valley led to the city's acquisition of the company that supplied its water. Several efforts to attain public ownership of the electrical system failed. A new charter in 1932 omitted the public-ownership provision, but high profits on the Municipal Railway during World War II permitted it to purchase all remaining privately owned lines. During the 1930s, the city championed the building of two great bridges, the Golden Gate Bridge north to Marin County and the Bay Bridge to Oakland and the East Bay.
Throughout the first half of the twentieth century, tensions between unions and employers ran high. From 1900 to 1919, the city was one of the most unionized in the nation, but in the 1920s, an antiunion drive by the Industrial Association of San Francisco reduced union power and membership. Encouraged by New Deal policies, unions revived in the early 1930s. In 1934, a strike by longshoremen and seafaring unions spawned a brief general strike in San Francisco after police killed two strike supporters. By the late 1930s, San Francisco was again one of the nation's most unionized cities.
During World War II, the Bay Area emerged as the world's leading shipbuilding region. Fed by migrants from across the nation, including many African Americans from the South, the Bay Area's population boomed. After the war, business leaders formulated plans intended to guarantee the city's role as center of the regional economy--including creation of the Bay Area Rapid Transit system, a high-speed rail network centered on downtown San Francisco, and expansion of the financial district through extensive high-rise construction. From the late 1950s through the late 1980s, city politics was usually dominated by a coalition of liberals, unions, and advocates of high-rise development, especially during the mayoralties of Joseph Alioto (from 1968 to 1976) and Dianne Feinstein (from 1978 to 1988). Eventually neighborhood and environmental groups coalesced in 1986 to approve Proposition M, a "slow-growth" initiative that created the nation's most stringent limits on development.
By the 1950s and 1960s, the city had acquired a reputation for toleration of social diversity that attracted both cultural dissidents, notably Beatniks in the 1950s and hippies in the 1960s, and gays and lesbians from at least the 1950s onward. By the 1970s, the city's gay and lesbian communities had become one of the largest in the nation and had begun to make their mark on city politics. Changes in national immigration laws in the 1960s led to increased immigration from Latin America and eastern Asia.
-- Cherny, Robert W.
Source Citation: "San Francisco: Historical Overview." Encyclopedia of the American West. 4 vols. Macmillan Reference USA, 1996. Reproduced in History Resource Center. Farmington Hills, MI: Gale. http://galenet.galegroup.com.access-proxy.sno-isle.org/servlet/HistRC/
The San Francisco Bay Area
Encyclopedia of American Cultural and Intellectual History
The public culture of San Francisco has been marked above all by ethnic and religious diversity and by robust social movements and political reform efforts. Reformers since the gold rush era have worked to make San Francisco public life open to all residents without respect for race, color, or creed. To a greater extent than in other American cities, the public culture and the intellectual life of San Francisco have been continuously infused by energies associated with this boisterous struggle over the question of who belonged in the city's mainstream and who should be kept on the margins. For this reason, the city of San Francisco and the Bay Area have earned an international reputation for liberalism and toleration.
Gold Rush Emporium, 1848-1890
The Spanish established the first European settlement on the peninsula where the San Francisco Bay meets the Pacific Ocean in 1776, when members of an expedition dispatched from Mexico City established a presidio and a mission. The Ohlone, or Costanoan, people living in the area at the time numbered about five hundred. The first municipal survey was done in 1835, when the settlement was called the village of Yerba Buena, and the village became part of a coastal trading network that brought Yankee Americans, English, and other Europeans--some from South America--to the Pacific coast.
The American flag was raised at the Yerba Buena Plaza in July 1846, symbolizing the transfer of the settlement from Mexico to the United States. The change of name from Yerba Buena to San Francisco occurred in January 1847. One year later, gold was discovered near Sacramento on land owned by John A. Sutter, a Swiss immigrant. Because of the virtual flood of gold seekers passing through the port of San Francisco, the city population soared from one thousand to twenty-five thousand between January 1848 and December 1849, and the city joined the front ranks of urban America.
Fortune seekers from all over the world turned San Francisco into a major city during the decades after the gold rush. By 1890 San Francisco's population had increased to 299,000, and the city became the dominant urban settlement of the western United States and the eighth largest in the United States. Mansions and hotels rivaling those in New York City marked the business district and Nob Hill. The first grand opera, Vincenzo Bellini's La Sonnambula, was performed at the Adelphi Theatre in 1851, launching San Francisco on its long career as the opera capital of the West. The San Francisco Art Association began its work in 1871, and the Palace Hotel, the largest grand hotel in the nation, opened in 1875.
During this period, the population was well over 90 percent European American, and it remained so until the mid-twentieth century. In addition, Chinese, Japanese, and Filipino immigrants, along with Central Americans and South Americans, made their way to San Francisco. (African Americans did not comprise more than a fraction of 1 percent of the population until the years of World War II.) Chinatown, until late in the twentieth century the nation's largest, originally provided services to Chinese employed in the gold mines and expanded after unemployed Chinese construction workers moved to the crowded streets adjacent to the old Plaza after the completion of the transcontinental railroad in 1869.
San Francisco experienced something of a literary golden age during the 1860s. Bret Harte, the first editor of the Overland Monthly, chronicled the lore of the mining camps and the bawdy humor of city saloons to armchair adventurers all over the country. Mark Twain lived and worked in the city for two years in the mid-1860s as a journalist for the Morning Call, Golden Era, and Alta California. Twain wrote "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County" while in San Francisco, and its publication in a New York newspaper made him a national celebrity.
By the early 1870s Irish and German immigrants and migrants, from New York especially, a large proportion of whom were Roman Catholic and a sizable minority Jewish, had established themselves in the top echelons of San Francisco business, society, and culture. With the notable exception of the 1856 Committee of Vigilance, which for nearly a decade dampened Irish Catholic participation in local politics as a result of the nativist dimensions of its activities, Catholics and Jews enjoyed relative freedom from public displays of prejudice and discrimination. The Chinese population, on the other hand, experienced both routine and riotous racist attacks. This was particularly the case during the hard times of the middle to late 1870s.
From its earliest days, however, San Francisco had a notable population of European Americans inspired by a belief in democracy and equality for all, who, along with African American and Asian residents, challenged racism and white supremacy. The distance from "back east," the young male character of the population, and the emphasis on achievement rather than group identity as the basis of status and prestige all played a part in this. So did the explicit dedication of large numbers of residents to making liberty a practical reality rather than a theory. In addition, trade unionists built the foundations for the city's labor movements; socialists and anarchists campaigned for proletarian revolution and the overthrow of the state. Women campaigned for the vote, gained a foothold in the paid workforce, and demanded equality in the union movement, the professions, and the arts. In fact, San Francisco women organized the first state organization in the United States dedicated to the furtherance of woman suffrage in the summer of 1869.
Complexities, ironies, and limitations abounded in the city's social movements and political reforms in the middle and the late nineteenth century. For example, San Francisco's most powerful politician in the mid-1850s, Senator David C. Broderick, devoted himself to building an Irish Catholic political machine as well as to fighting for the abolition of slavery. At the same time, however, during that tumultuous decade before the Civil War, thousands of San Franciscans joined the raucous vigilante movement. Ostensibly a campaign to purify the city's politics, vigilantism also targeted Irish Catholic politicians such as Broderick.
San Franciscans also debated the rights of African Americans as the nation moved inexorably toward civil war. White supremacy advocates unsuccessfully tried to exclude free African Americans from the state, and they did prohibit nonwhites from testifying in court. African American activists in the Franchise League (1852) and the Colored Convention (1855), with the support of white allies in the state legislature, succeeded in exempting blacks from the testimony law during the Civil War. African Americans won the right to vote after the ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution in 1870, and after 1872 Chinese and Native Americans could testify in court on their own behalf.
During the Civil War two African American women, Emma Turner and Charlotte Brown, successfully sued for damages when they were put off streetcars, but segregated service continued. African Americans and Chinese residents fought, with mixed results, against segregated schools. A San Francisco challenge led to a state "separate but equal" doctrine twenty-two years before the more famous Plessy v. Ferguson Supreme Court decision of 1896, but in 1875 the city allowed black and white school integration. However, when the Tape v. Hurley decision in 1885 affirmed the right of a Chinese girl named Mamie Tape to attend city public schools, the city established a separate "Oriental" school.
During the 1870s the Workingmen's Party of California, led by Denis Kearney, accused several Nob Hill millionaires of using their Central Pacific Railroad to impose monopoly capitalism on California. According to critics, the railroad sought to squelch all competitors in land and sea transportation. Kearney also condemned San Francisco's Chinese workers (who were barred from citizenship) for allegedly taking jobs away from white Americans. Kearney and his followers contributed to the agitation that led to passage of the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882.
The journalist and reformer Henry George wrote Progress and Poverty (1879) after deciding that eradicating the economic inequality he witnessed as a Bay Area journalist required radical measures. He advocated a single tax on land that would discourage land speculation and sever the perverse correlation whereby progress and population growth led to poverty. Trade unionists organized a San Francisco branch of the Knights of Labor, and socialists influenced by Karl Marx's First International founded the International Workingmen's Association in 1882. One of the leaders of the Knights was Kate Kennedy, an advocate for woman suffrage and a leader of the successful campaign for equal pay for the city's women teachers. The Art Association (1871) and the Bohemian Club (1872) entertained the Irish poet and dramatist Oscar Wilde when he visited the city in 1882. The Sailors' Union of the Pacific, destined to be among the largest unions on the West Coast, organized in 1891, and in 1893 the San Francisco Labor Council, forerunner of today's institution of the same name, was founded.
By the end of the century, the San Francisco Bay area contained a volatile and unstable mix of conservative and radical impulses. The conservatism stemmed from the large and influential numbers of businesses and family-oriented Irish Catholic, German, Jewish, and Asian residents. The radicalism derived from the degree to which the region's gold rush experience, with its tradition-flouting and adventure-oriented individualism, continued to attract young and experimental individuals looking for alternatives and hoping to begin life anew in a place associated with exoticism and excitement.
-- Issel, William
Source Citation: "The San Francisco Bay Area." Encyclopedia of American Cultural and Intellectual History. 3 vols. Charles Scribner's Sons, 2001. Reproduced in History Resource Center. Farmington Hills, MI: Gale. http://galenet.galegroup.com.access-proxy.sno-isle.org/servlet/HistRC/
San Francisco
Encyclopedia of the United States in the Nineteenth Century
A dilapidated collection of military, religious, and commercial buildings housed several dozen residents on the windswept peninsular site at the entrance to the San Francisco Bay when the nineteenth century began. By the Mexican War (1846-1848) the settlement housed a motley collection of adventurers and entrepreneurs lured by profits from trade and commerce. The California gold rush brought the world's fortune seekers to the trading village, and during the thirty years between 1849 and 1879 the city played emporium and factory town to the gold and silver miners, railroaders, real estate developers, and farmers of the Pacific Coast region. People and profits poured into the city during those years, providing San Francisco the talent and the capital that allowed it to blossom into a cosmopolitan metropolis during the 1880s. By 1900 San Francisco dominated the Pacific Coast as the region's chief economic and cultural metropolis.
War and Gold
The gold rush transformed what had been a tiny trading village into a major city. While the influx of gold seekers provided the crucial spark for this transformation, nature contributed the necessary ingredients by creating the bay and a protected port. Military necessity and religion also contributed, for when the Spanish first arrived in the 1770s, soldiers fortified the entrance to the bay with a presidio, and Franciscan priests built Mission Dolores (1776).
By the 1830s Mexicans had replaced the Spanish as rulers, and the bay had become an important stopping point for ships plying the Pacific. Yerba Buena cove, which eventually was filled in, became the favored anchorage, and a small village grew up, named for the cove and dominated by English and American merchants. During the Mexican War, U.S. naval forces occupied Yerba Buena, and in 1847 local merchants persuaded the naval officer in charge of the port to change the name of the village to San Francisco. A year later James Marshall discovered gold at Sutter's Mill near Sacramento, and thousands thronged to California to make their fortunes. Given the rudimentary state of land transportation, most of the hopeful miners and nearly all of their supplies came by sea and disembarked in San Francisco.
By the summer of 1849 Yerba Buena cove was clogged with ships, some deserted by their gold- seeking crews. Within a year the village of 800 became a city of 8,000. In 1852 the first census counted 35,000 people, and by 1860 San Francisco ranked fifteenth among U.S. cities with 56,802 residents. In 1900 the city ranked number nine among the nation's cities with a population of 342,782 people.
Society and Economy
Besides its large number of residents, the city's economic power contributed to its development into a commercial metropolis on the Pacific Coast during the late nineteenth century. More than 20 percent of the total population of California, Oregon, and Washington lived in San Francisco during the last forty years of the century. The city controlled local trade with Bay Area counties, as well as coastal trade from Panama to Alaska. San Francisco manufacturers produced two-thirds of the region's goods, five railroad lines radiated from the city to its hinterland, and five ferry lines connected the city to other Bay Area communities. The city had more factories and workers, capital and value of products than all of the other twenty-four cities west of the Mississippi River combined. In 1875 the Palace Hotel, then the largest and most luxurious hotel in the nation, opened on Market Street, a short walk from the bustling waterfront, the commercial heart of the city. Ninety-nine percent of all imports to the Pacific Coast states and 83 percent of all exports passed over the city docks. By the beginning of the twentieth century San Francisco's corporate boardrooms held sway over the economy of the West, from salmon canneries in Alaska, to sugar plantations in Hawaii, logging in Washington State, the Coronado Hotel in San Diego, and mines throughout the western part of the nation.
San Francisco's diverse population and its cultural amenities earned the city a reputation for cosmopolitanism. With an opera house and numerous legitimate theaters, French restaurants, world-class hotels, and a Barbary Coast entertainment district, where anything and everything could be purchased, San Francisco ranked among the most famous international seaports of the second half of the nineteenth century. Chinatown became a tourist destination by the 1880s. Residents of foreign birth made up well over half of the population and at times more than 70 percent. The Irish arrived during the gold rush and remained numerically dominant throughout the century. Germans, including Protestants, Catholics, and Jews, made up the next largest group. Scandinavians and Italians were comparative latecomers, arriving in significant numbers only toward the end of the century. Most San Franciscans were white, especially after the 1890s, when the Chinese population declined from 8 percent of the total to just above 4 percent. Only a minuscule number of African Americans lived in the city.
Politics
San Francisco's politics reflected national trends with a few exceptions related to its gold rush experience, location, and population. Vigilantism erupted in 1851 and 1856, and former vigilantes dominated city government through the Civil War years. In the late 1870s the Workingmen's Party clamored for government controls on railroad monopolists and for exclusion of the Chinese workers first employed by the Central Pacific Railway and later by the city's factory owners. In 1869 San Francisco women organized the nation's first statewide organization dedicated to the cause of woman suffrage. Radical trade unionists established a branch of Karl Marx's First International, the International Workingmen's Association, in 1882. Ten years later John Muir and a handful of outdoor enthusiasts organized the Sierra Club, devoted to the preservation of the natural environment. By 1898, as the United States assembled its new overseas empire, San Francisco's leaders declared their metropolis to be America's Imperial City, the Paris of the Pacific.
-- Issel, William
Source Citation: "San Francisco." Encyclopedia of the United States in the Nineteenth Century. 3 vols. Charles Scribner's Sons, 2001. Reproduced in History Resource Center. Farmington Hills, MI: Gale. http://galenet.galegroup.com.access-proxy.sno-isle.org/servlet/HistRC/