The Sentinel Building: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:norbeach$sentinel-building-photo.jpg]]
'''<font face = arial light> <font color = maroon> <font size = 3>Unfinished History</font></font> </font>'''
 
[[Image:Cushman-April-3-1960-Sentinel-Bldg-P10965.jpg]]
 
'''The Sentinel Building at Kearny and Columbus, April 3, 1960. Note the red brick building to its right, which is the [[I-Hotel Eviction Eyewitness Account|International Hotel]].'''


'''View of The Trans-America Building (left) and the Sentinel Building, to the right of center.'''
[http://webapp1.dlib.indiana.edu/cushman/ ''Charles Cushman Collection: Indiana University Archives (P10965)'']


''Photo: Eddie Foronda''


[[Image:Sentinel-1906.jpg]]
[[Image:Sentinel-1906.jpg]]
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''Photo: J.B. Monaco''
''Photo: J.B. Monaco''


916 Kearny Street at Columbus. The Sentinel stands guard over a strategic location: the junction of downtown, Chinatown, Jackson Square, and North Beach. The spot was even more strategic before the 1906 earthquake, when the old City Hall was nearby. Perhaps that’s why [[Abe Ruef and the Union Labor Party| Abraham "Boss" Ruef]], the Graft King of turn-of-the-century San Francisco, chose to build one of the City's first skyscrapers here. The building was still under construction during the 1906 earthquake but somehow escaped damage. Ruef, however, suffered a different kind of damage the next year: He was jailed during the graft prosecutions of 1907. The building wasn't finished until The Boss was released from San Quentin in 1915.
 
[[Image:norbeach$sentinel-building-photo.jpg]]
 
'''View of The Trans-America Building (left) and the Sentinel Building, to the right of center.'''
 
''Photo: Eddie Foronda''
 
 
916 Kearny Street at Columbus. The Sentinel stands guard over a strategic location: the junction of downtown, Chinatown, Jackson Square, and North Beach. The spot was even more strategic before the 1906 earthquake, when the old City Hall was nearby. Perhaps that's why [[Abe Ruef and the Union Labor Party| Abraham "Boss" Ruef]], the Graft King of turn-of-the-century San Francisco, chose to build one of the City's first skyscrapers here. The building was still under construction during the 1906 earthquake but somehow escaped damage. Ruef, however, suffered a different kind of damage the next year: He was jailed during the graft prosecutions of 1907. The building wasn't finished until The Boss was released from San Quentin in 1915.


Francis Ford Coppola, Academy-Award-winning director of the Godfather trilogy, now owns the building, which houses the offices of his film company.
Francis Ford Coppola, Academy-Award-winning director of the Godfather trilogy, now owns the building, which houses the offices of his film company.

Latest revision as of 23:12, 23 July 2009

Unfinished History

Cushman-April-3-1960-Sentinel-Bldg-P10965.jpg

The Sentinel Building at Kearny and Columbus, April 3, 1960. Note the red brick building to its right, which is the International Hotel.

Charles Cushman Collection: Indiana University Archives (P10965)


Sentinel-1906.jpg

Sentinel Building under construction, in aftermath of 1906 earthquake and fire.

Photo: J.B. Monaco


Norbeach$sentinel-building-photo.jpg

View of The Trans-America Building (left) and the Sentinel Building, to the right of center.

Photo: Eddie Foronda


916 Kearny Street at Columbus. The Sentinel stands guard over a strategic location: the junction of downtown, Chinatown, Jackson Square, and North Beach. The spot was even more strategic before the 1906 earthquake, when the old City Hall was nearby. Perhaps that's why Abraham "Boss" Ruef, the Graft King of turn-of-the-century San Francisco, chose to build one of the City's first skyscrapers here. The building was still under construction during the 1906 earthquake but somehow escaped damage. Ruef, however, suffered a different kind of damage the next year: He was jailed during the graft prosecutions of 1907. The building wasn't finished until The Boss was released from San Quentin in 1915.

Francis Ford Coppola, Academy-Award-winning director of the Godfather trilogy, now owns the building, which houses the offices of his film company.

--Dr. Weirde


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