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'''<font face = arial light> <font color = maroon> <font size = 3>Unfinished History</font></font> </font>'''
[[Image:rulclas1$bank-of-italy-1915.jpg]]
[[Image:rulclas1$bank-of-italy-1915.jpg]]


'''Bank of Italy branch on Market Street, c. 1915, later to become Bank of America.'''
'''Bank of Italy branch on Market Street, c. 1915, later to become Bank of America.'''


The story behind the deliberate recasting of San Francisco's population provides a window on a process that allows the wealthy few to make decisions reshaping the lives of the many. Worried by the restive workers in their big city factories, industrialists were seeking ways to disperse production and reduce their vulnerability to “outside disrupting influences” (as a banker in a 1948 Commonwealth Club debate warned). They formed organizations to carry on planning in their own interests.
''Photo: San Francisco History Center, SF Public Library''


The Bay Area Council, for example, was founded in 1946 as a planning and advocacy organization by the region's top corporations to promote regional government and planning. Thanks to BAC planning and lobbying we have [[BART: Bechtel's Baby BART]]. Leading BAC members Bechtel Engineering and Kaiser Industries can thank BART for the millions they reaped from the design and construction contracts on the multi-billion BART system (still being expanded). Twenty-three of the 27 Bay Area Fortune 500 companies had top executives on the BAC: Southern Pacific, PG&E, Lockheed, Hewlett-Packard, Crown Zellerbach, Utah International, Standard Oil of California, as well as four major banks, two newspapers, Stanford University and UC Berkeley.
The story behind the deliberate recasting of San Francisco's population provides a window on a process that allows the wealthy few to make decisions reshaping the lives of the many. Worried by the restive workers in their big city factories, industrialists were seeking ways to disperse production and reduce their vulnerability to "outside disrupting influences" (as a banker in a 1948 Commonwealth Club debate warned). They formed organizations to carry on planning in their own interests.
 
The [[The Bay Area Council: A Business Lobby of BART Contractors|Bay Area Council]], for example, was founded in 1946 as a planning and advocacy organization by the region's top corporations to promote regional government and planning. Thanks to BAC planning and lobbying we have [[BART: Bechtel's Baby |BART]]. Leading BAC members Bechtel Engineering and Kaiser Industries can thank BART for the millions they reaped from the design and construction contracts on the multi-billion BART system (still being expanded). Twenty-three of the 27 Bay Area Fortune 500 companies had top executives on the BAC: Southern Pacific, PG&E, Lockheed, Hewlett-Packard, Crown Zellerbach, Utah International, Standard Oil of California, as well as four major banks, two newspapers, Stanford University and UC Berkeley.


''-- Chris Carlsson''
''-- Chris Carlsson''


Contributors to this page include:
''San Francisco Public Library,San Francisco,CA - Publisher or Photographer ''


Carlsson,Chris - Writer
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[[category:Power and Money]] [[category:1940s]] [[category:1950s]] [[category:1960s]] [[category:1970s]] [[category:corporations]] [[category:downtown]]

Latest revision as of 16:36, 4 November 2013

Unfinished History

Rulclas1$bank-of-italy-1915.jpg

Bank of Italy branch on Market Street, c. 1915, later to become Bank of America.

Photo: San Francisco History Center, SF Public Library

The story behind the deliberate recasting of San Francisco's population provides a window on a process that allows the wealthy few to make decisions reshaping the lives of the many. Worried by the restive workers in their big city factories, industrialists were seeking ways to disperse production and reduce their vulnerability to "outside disrupting influences" (as a banker in a 1948 Commonwealth Club debate warned). They formed organizations to carry on planning in their own interests.

The Bay Area Council, for example, was founded in 1946 as a planning and advocacy organization by the region's top corporations to promote regional government and planning. Thanks to BAC planning and lobbying we have BART. Leading BAC members Bechtel Engineering and Kaiser Industries can thank BART for the millions they reaped from the design and construction contracts on the multi-billion BART system (still being expanded). Twenty-three of the 27 Bay Area Fortune 500 companies had top executives on the BAC: Southern Pacific, PG&E, Lockheed, Hewlett-Packard, Crown Zellerbach, Utah International, Standard Oil of California, as well as four major banks, two newspapers, Stanford University and UC Berkeley.

-- Chris Carlsson


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