No edit summary |
(habitat tour and PC) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''<font face = Papyrus> <font color = maroon> <font size = 4>Historical Essay</font></font> </font>''' | |||
''by Renee Renaud, Richmond Review, June 1990'' | |||
[[Image:richmond$fulton-line-construction-1909.jpg]] | [[Image:richmond$fulton-line-construction-1909.jpg]] | ||
Line 15: | Line 19: | ||
The only flaw in this romantic derivation of our District's name is the little-known fact that this area has not been--officially-- the Richmond District since 1917. A subsequent ordinance of the S.F. Board of Supervisors changed the District's name to the Park Presidio District. | The only flaw in this romantic derivation of our District's name is the little-known fact that this area has not been--officially-- the Richmond District since 1917. A subsequent ordinance of the S.F. Board of Supervisors changed the District's name to the Park Presidio District. | ||
[[Image:Habitat-tour-button.jpg]] [[Portola Observation Pt 1937|-->Open Space Habitat tour continues]] | |||
[[First Muni-December 1912 |Prev. Document]] [[Richmond Historical Photos |Next Document]] | [[First Muni-December 1912 |Prev. Document]] [[Richmond Historical Photos |Next Document]] | ||
[[category:Richmond]] [[category:1880s]] [[category:1890s]] [[category:1900s]] [[category:1910s]] | [[category:Richmond]] [[category:1880s]] [[category:1890s]] [[category:1900s]] [[category:1910s]] |
Historical Essay
by Renee Renaud, Richmond Review, June 1990
Crew pushing the Fulton line to the sea, 1909
Photo: Greg Gaar Collection, San Francisco, CA
The Richmond District was officially given its name in November 1890. The San Francisco Board of Supervisors adopted ordinance #2309, which legally designated all the territory from First Avenue (now Arguello) to the ocean and from Fulton Street to Fort Presidio as the Richmond District...
The area has been referred to for many years as the "Outside Lands" or, on one map, as "The Great Sand Waste." Needless to say this was not pleasing to its local boosters. In 1889, about the time the improvement club was trying to decide on a more dignified name for the district, one of its members , George Turner Marsh, was building a beautiful home on the southeast corner of 12th Avenue and Clement... He planned to call it Richmond House in memory of his native home in Richmond Australia, a suburb of Melbourne in the state of Victoria.
When various names for the new district came up for discussion, one of Marsh's friend, George R. Fletcher, asked, "What is the matter with calling it 'Richmond," and, there being nothing the matter, the suggestion was motioned and seconded.
Marsh's birthplace of Richmond, Australia got its name when his ancestors emigrated there from the town of Richmond, England, and named their new homeland after the old. Richmond, England originally was named after a lovely castle, called Richmond, located on the nearby river Thames. The castle had been built by England's first Tudor king, Henry VII. It could be said, therefore, that San Francisco's Richmond District was named, indirectly, after a castle in England.
The only flaw in this romantic derivation of our District's name is the little-known fact that this area has not been--officially-- the Richmond District since 1917. A subsequent ordinance of the S.F. Board of Supervisors changed the District's name to the Park Presidio District.