Baker and Hamilton: Difference between revisions

(categories)
No edit summary
Line 5: Line 5:
''Photo: Chris Carlsson''
''Photo: Chris Carlsson''


'''Baker & Hamilton started in a tent near the "Mormon Island" claim above Fort Sutter east of Sacramento in 1849, supplying "miners' hardware": picks, shovels, knives, saws, hammers, axes and nails... By 1860 B&H had a thriving block-long store in Sacramento, and in 1867 they opened their first store in San Francisco, down on Front Street. After merging with Pacific Hardware & Steel Co. in 1918, they moved into 700 7th Street at the corner of the evolving Mission Bay area. '''
Baker & Hamilton started in a tent near the "Mormon Island" claim above Fort Sutter east of Sacramento in 1849, supplying "miners' hardware": picks, shovels, knives, saws, hammers, axes and nails... By 1860 B&H had a thriving block-long store in Sacramento, and in 1867 they opened their first store in San Francisco, down on Front Street. After merging with Pacific Hardware & Steel Co. in 1918, they moved into 700 7th Street at the corner of the evolving Mission Bay area.  


[[Image:soma1$oriental-warehouse-mid-1990s.jpg]]
[[Image:soma1$oriental-warehouse-mid-1990s.jpg]]

Revision as of 01:40, 14 August 2008

Soma1$baker-and-hamilton-warehouse.jpg

This is the 1905 Baker & Hamilton warehouse at 7th and Townsend, now renovated and used as office space.

Photo: Chris Carlsson

Baker & Hamilton started in a tent near the "Mormon Island" claim above Fort Sutter east of Sacramento in 1849, supplying "miners' hardware": picks, shovels, knives, saws, hammers, axes and nails... By 1860 B&H had a thriving block-long store in Sacramento, and in 1867 they opened their first store in San Francisco, down on Front Street. After merging with Pacific Hardware & Steel Co. in 1918, they moved into 700 7th Street at the corner of the evolving Mission Bay area.

Soma1$oriental-warehouse-mid-1990s.jpg

Old warehouses are being renovated throughout San Francisco. This is the old 1865 Oriental Warehouse near 2nd and Brannan, in the midst of rehabilitation in the 1990s.

Photo: David Green

Prev. Document Next Document