THE RAILROAD COMES TO SF?: Difference between revisions

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'''Southern Pacific Depot at 3rd and Townsend, China Basin and [[3rd St Bridge 1990s |3rd St. (Lefty O'Doul) Bridge]] in left background, c. 1933'''   
'''Southern Pacific Depot at 3rd and Townsend, China Basin and [[3rd St Bridge 1990s |3rd St. (Lefty O'Doul) Bridge]] in left background, c. 1933'''   
''Photo: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library''
[[Image:soma1$soma-view-1927.jpg]]
'''Looking south from the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Building on New Montgomery, c. 1927. Arrow points to Southern Pacific Depot at 3rd and Townsend.'''


''Photo: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library''
''Photo: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library''

Revision as of 09:46, 19 September 2012

Historical Essay

by Chris Carlsson

Soma1$old-sp-depot-c-1933.jpg

Southern Pacific Depot at 3rd and Townsend, China Basin and 3rd St. (Lefty O'Doul) Bridge in left background, c. 1933

Photo: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library

Soma1$soma-view-1927.jpg

Looking south from the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Building on New Montgomery, c. 1927. Arrow points to Southern Pacific Depot at 3rd and Townsend.

Photo: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library

SP Depot 1924 AAD-6008.jpg

Southern Pacific Depot, 1924.

Photo: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library

SP Depot May 7 1941 AAD-6020.jpg

SP Depot, May 7, 1941.

Photo: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library

SP Depot 3rd and Townsend 1941 AAD-5991.jpg

SP Depot, 1941.

Photo: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library

When the transcontinental railroad was completed, and the Big Four (Stanford, Crocker, Hopkins and Huntington) transformed themselves from Sacramento merchants into the controlling interests of the Central Pacific Railroad, San Francisco's elite groped for a way to regain the advantage. Various ideas to build a railroad bridge from the cross-country railroad's terminus in Oakland were floated, but never came to pass. Central Pacific asked San Francisco for a million-dollar subsidy to bring the railroad from the south bay into SF via Mission Bay, but the city's voters turned this plan down narrowly at the polls.

Governor Haight was elected as California's executive in 1867, largely due to wide public anger at the efforts of the railroads to grab the land under Mission Bay on outrageous terms. When the Tidelands Bill of 1868 was finally passed, the Central Pacific, Southern Pacific, and Western Pacific railroads were granted a total of 150 acres of Mission Bay land, providing that they built a railroad terminus. This terminal was completed in the early 1870s.

As Mission Bay was gradually filled and the port of San Francisco continued to grow with more and more commerce passing through, railroads were built right up to the docks. By 1896 one of the U.S.'s most efficient systems of beltline railroads was operating between every wharf along SF's waterfront and the numerous railroad warehouses and the terminus built in Mission Bay.

The new terminus of the waterfront SF MUNI light rail line at 4th and King, adjacent to the CalTrain Peninsula Commuter Rail depot, provides a huge public subsidy to the speculative goals in Mission Bay, not the least of which is the new SF Giants Ballpark whose right field wall borders the mouth of Mission Creek.

SP Depot Aug 1 1973 AAD-6027.jpg

The old Spanish-revival style Southern Pacific Depot served San Francisco for many decades, still standing in this August 1, 1973 photo.

Photo: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library


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