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'''<font face = | '''<font face = Papyrus> <font color = maroon> <font size = 4>Historical Essay</font></font> </font>''' | ||
''by Abigail Johnston / Potrero Hill Archives Project'' | |||
[[Image:Port-Walk-Then72.jpg|720px|thumb]] | |||
'''Port walk along then China Basin, now known as McCovey Cove, c. 1930s.''' | |||
''Photo: Potrero Hill Archives Project'' | |||
[[Image:Port-walk-2010-w-raised-3rd-st-bridge 8681.jpg]] | |||
'''Similar view, July 4, 2010, with the 3rd Street Bridge raised.''' | |||
''Photo: Chris Carlsson'' | |||
Before Giants fans strolled the Portwalk adjacent to AT&T Park, stevedores and switch locomotives plied the same stretch of pier to move cargo between freighters moored in the China Basin channel and the warehouse located where the ballpark stands today. Pavement set with plaques commemorating the feats of Giants stars has replaced the train tracks, and the stadium’s right field wall mimics the warehouse’s arched windows. On game days, in what is now known as McCovey Cove, ferries deliver fans to the park and kayakers vie for splash hits where a drydock, perhaps on its way to being scrapped, temporarily floated. | |||
Beyond the Third Street Bridge in both photos hunkers the China Basin Building, built in 1925 by Del Monte Cannery. By 1974, the building had been painted a rich blue. That same year, it was a distribution point of a massive food giveaway conducted by the Hearst family in response to [[SLA Demands "Gesture of Good Faith"|ransom demands of the Symbionese Liberation Army]], the kidnappers of newspaper heiress Patty Hearst. Today the building houses corporate offices, and life science and technology firms that value its proximity to UCSF’s new Mission Bay campus. That a ballpark could be built at a site so key to the economic vitality of an earlier San Francisco reminds us of just how [[A Waterfront Planned: The 1990s and the New Millennium|outmoded The Port had become]] by the late 20th century, left in the wake of the container ship. | |||
[[Image:soma1$cove-before-ballpark.jpg]] | [[Image:soma1$cove-before-ballpark.jpg]] |
Historical Essay
by Abigail Johnston / Potrero Hill Archives Project
Port walk along then China Basin, now known as McCovey Cove, c. 1930s.
Photo: Potrero Hill Archives Project
Similar view, July 4, 2010, with the 3rd Street Bridge raised.
Photo: Chris Carlsson
Before Giants fans strolled the Portwalk adjacent to AT&T Park, stevedores and switch locomotives plied the same stretch of pier to move cargo between freighters moored in the China Basin channel and the warehouse located where the ballpark stands today. Pavement set with plaques commemorating the feats of Giants stars has replaced the train tracks, and the stadium’s right field wall mimics the warehouse’s arched windows. On game days, in what is now known as McCovey Cove, ferries deliver fans to the park and kayakers vie for splash hits where a drydock, perhaps on its way to being scrapped, temporarily floated.
Beyond the Third Street Bridge in both photos hunkers the China Basin Building, built in 1925 by Del Monte Cannery. By 1974, the building had been painted a rich blue. That same year, it was a distribution point of a massive food giveaway conducted by the Hearst family in response to ransom demands of the Symbionese Liberation Army, the kidnappers of newspaper heiress Patty Hearst. Today the building houses corporate offices, and life science and technology firms that value its proximity to UCSF’s new Mission Bay campus. That a ballpark could be built at a site so key to the economic vitality of an earlier San Francisco reminds us of just how outmoded The Port had become by the late 20th century, left in the wake of the container ship.
The mouth of Mission Creek, now "McCovey Cove," before the ballpark was built and replaced these warehouses.
Photo: Chris Carlsson
The ballpark also displaced tugboat docking. The mouth of Mission Creek was christened "McCovey Cove" after the legendary Giants first baseman, and to market the home runs expected to "splash down" in it.
Photo: Chris Carlsson