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  HUNTERS POINT SHIPYARD: Indigenous History.

HUNTERS POINT SHIPYARD: Indigenous History.

 

Indigenous-history -Muwekma Ohlone Indians at Mission Dolores

The Ohlone people are Native American people who lived on the aboriginal lands between San Francisco and Monterey Bay for over 10,000 years. Lithograph by Louis Choris, Coiffures de danse des habitants de California, from Voyage Pittoresque autour du Monde, 1822. Autry Museum, Los Angeles; 92.6.2

Ohlone_Indian_HousingV2

Their traditional way of life was relatively stable until the arrival of the Spanish missionaries in 1769. A few Ohlone people survived colonization. Today, they are represented by several tribes that are actively involved in restoration and preservation of their lands, culture, language. Ohlone Indian tule huts (or housing) by Ann Thiermann.com

 

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Mission San Francisco de Asis (also known as Mission Dolores) was founded in 1776 and constructed by Native American labor. Severe living and working conditions and European diseases reduced the Native population at the mission by over 75% by the early 1800s. Danse des habitantes de Californie a la mission de San Francisco [ca. 1815], by Louis Andrevitch Choris, courtesy of The Bancroft Library, UC Berkeley

 

 

Ohlone Canoes


OHLONE CANOES: Native Americans in the Area.

 
indian-canoe-image - Painting by Louis Andrevitch Choris, courtesy of The Bancroft Library, UC Berkeley v2

 

Tule (pronounced “too-lee”) canoes are made from tule reeds (Schoenoplectus acutus). They are a bulrush, which flourishes in California wetlands. Gathering the reeds and weaving the tule into canoes is a skilled tradition that goes back many centuries. Painting by Louis Andrevitch Choris, 1822, courtesy of The Bancroft Library, UC Berkeley.

san-jose-ohlone-ceremonial-dance

The Bayview-Hunters Point area was a favored fishing ground for the Ramaytush Ohlone of the San Francisco Peninsula. Ohlone Ceremonial Dance by Georg von Langsdorff, 1806. Courtesy of Pentacle Press.

subliminal-canoe by Jessica Bodner

Tule canoes were used by the Ohlone people to traverse marshes, inlets, lakes and bays, and used for fishing, and gathering of mollusks and shellfish. Artist Jessica Bodner, a Bayview resident, built the traditional Ohlone canoes displayed in Hilltop Park as a memorial tribute to celebrate and honor the Ohlone culture.

 

 

The Shipyard is established.

HUNTERS POINT SHIPYARD: The Shipyard is Established

 
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Chinese Fisherman in San Francisco Bay, circa 1875, San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park Research Center, SAFR 13841.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chinese_shrimp_worker

1910: Chinese Fishermen established a lucrative fishery. A community of Chinese fishermen who called Hunters Point home since the late 1800s joined together to form a large-scale shrimp fishery—a testament to the Chinese contribution to San Francisco’s productive waterfront industries. Photo courtesy of a Private Collector / OpenSFHistory, wnp4.1290.

 

 

 

 

 

2. sfsy_1900_unioniron-drawing_torn-edges

In 1866, about 30 acres (including submerged land) were granted for the construction of a modern dry dock. The area’s impermeable serpentine bedrock was an ideal location for a “graving” or stationary dry dock for the booming ship repair industry. The California Dry Dock Company opened Hunters Point Dry Docks in 1867. Artist’s Conception of Proposed Improvements for Hunters Point when acquired by Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp. LTD. circa 1910, National Archives at San Francisco, ARC# 296813.

 

 

 

 

 

6. A third dry dock

1916: A third dry dock is built at the Shipyard, capable of holding the world’s largest warships and passenger steamers. Construction progress photograph, Hunters Point Dry Dock, San Francisco, CA, circa 1868, National Archives at San Francisco, ARC# 296809.

 

Commercial Dry Dock Historic District

The Hunters Point Commercial Dry Dock Historic District is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Photo courtesy of Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, LC-D4-20934.

 
  The Navy takes over

HUNTERS POINT SHIPYARD: The Navy Takes Over.

 
33. Adrien Voisin

1938: The Shipyard area houses its first artist. Painter and sculptor Adrien Voisin purchased the old Albion Brewing Company castle and converted it into a private residence and studio. The building, now a private residence, still stands at 881 Innes Street. Courtesy of Vintage Roadside.

 

 

 

chinese-fishing-camp

As World War II escalated, the Navy took ownership of the Union Iron Works from Bethlehem Steel in 1939, naming it the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard. Shortly thereafter, San Francisco’s Department of Health burned down the six remaining Chinese shrimping camps, citing unsanitary conditions, and the War Powers Act of 1941 authorized the acquisition of land for military or naval purposes. Within weeks, the Navy condemned and purchased over 535 acres. Photo courtesy of National Archives, photo no. 22-FA-145.

 

 

 

 

34. PA 20- 19-N-81339

Initially, 86 homes and 23 businesses were displaced by the Navy’s actions, and many more were displaced before the end of the war. By 1945, the Shipyard had grown to 979 acres of filled and unfilled tidal lands, six dry docks ranging from 420’ to 1,092’ in length, two hundred buildings, five miles of berthing space, and 17 miles of railroad tracks. The acquisition of Hunters Point by the U.S. Navy was the most significant event in the history of the district. Photo USS President Hayes (APA-20), circa 1945. Courtesy of National Archives (19-N-81339).

32vNH 95051 USS Converse - National Archives (USN 1172925)

USS Converse (DD-509) circa 1944, NH 95051 courtesy of the Naval History & Heritage Command.

   
 

 

War efforts

HUNTERS POINT SHIPYARD: War Efforts at the Shipyard

 
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Just 11 days after the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, Hunters Point established itself as a leader in ship repair and maintenance during the war effort. Photo by Paul Dorsey, courtesy of National Archives, photo no. 80-G-377613.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 blue-collar workers from around the country

The Navy’s development of Hunters Point, and growth of related private industries, yielded a massive influx of blue-collar workers from around the country. This population explosion, which is tied to the second Great Migration of African Americans from the South, transformed Bayview-Hunters Point almost overnight. Photo by Emmanuel Joseph, courtesy of Labor Archives and Research Center, San Francisco State University, People’s World Photograph Collection.

 

 

 

15. HPS aerial-photo

It is estimated that by August 1945, Black people comprised over one-third of the total 18,235 workforce at the Shipyard, many of whom settled in the Bayview neighborhood. To meet housing demands, the National Housing Authority, in cooperation with the Navy and the San Francisco Housing Authority, built more than 12,000 new homes in and around the Bayview-Hunters Point neighborhood. Photo courtesy of Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, HAER CAL, 38-SANFRA,195A—6.

 

  Gantry Crane

GANTRY CRANE Shipyard Icon.

 

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The Gantry Crane was built in 1947 by US Steel’s American Bridge Company. The crane is the tallest structure at the Shipyard – extending 160' above the water and 405' wide. Photo courtesy Naval History & Heritage Command.

Crane was used to lift massive gun-turrets on warships

The crane was used to lift massive gun-turrets on warships, each weighing up to 1 million pounds! This crane helped repair the warships quickly, and send them back to battle.

 

GIGANTRY

This “GIGANTRY” play structure (2015) was modeled after the Shipyard’s iconic Gantry Crane. Artist Matthew Passmore is principal and co-founder of Rebar, a San Francisco based art and design studio.

  Post-War Cultural Revolution

HUNTERS POINT SHIPYARD: Post-War Cultural Revolution

 
35. uprising

In 1966, after being largely neglected for almost two decades, the residents of Bayview-Hunters Point took to the streets in what became known as the “Hunters Point Uprising.” Photo by Jean-Antony du Lac, courtesy of San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library.

 

 

 

standoff between residents and the California National Guard

The 128-hour demonstration involved a standoff between residents and the California National Guard, and is considered the most significant event in San Francisco’s civil rights struggle. The civic uprising helped facilitate a $150 million grant for Bayview-Hunters Point community to use at its discretion. Photo by Jean-Antony du Lac, courtesy of San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library.

 

 

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The residents elected to build 3,000 new homes and transform the former Butchertown area into the India Basin Industrial Park. The rejuvenation created more than 4,000 jobs, many of which are filled by residents of the Bayview-Hunters Point. Leading the community’s growth and rejuvenation were “The Big Five”: Elouise Westbrook, Julia Commer, Rosalie Williams, Bertha Freeman and Osceola Washington. Photo from the Shaping San Francisco collection, as seen on Foundsf.org

 
  Private Tenants Move Into the Shipyard

HUNTERS POINT SHIPYARD: Private Tenants Move Into the Shipyard

 
23. Hunters_Point_NS_with_three_carriers_1971

The U.S. Navy closed operations at the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard in 1974, with over 5,000 workers laid off or reassigned. For 35 years, this single economic industry both built and devastated the Hunters Point neighborhood. The Shipyard opened the facilities to lease by private tenants, including food business training and a commercial ship repair company. Though still referred to as Hunters Point Shipyard, the area began to cultivate a new identity as a crucible for artistic production. Photo by Lt. A. Legare, courtesy of National Archives, photo no. 6393070.

 

 

 

 

Jacques_Terzian

1976: After the Navy opens up the Shipyard to private ventures, sculptor Jacques Terzian subleted a warehouse and transformed it into an artist’s studio. He invited friends and colleagues to open their own studios nearby. Photo of Jacques Terzian by Judy Reed.

 

 

 

 

 

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1983: The artists organized to form The Point, which grew to become the largest artist colony in the United States. Today, The Point Community includes over 300 artists.

 

 

 

 

 

Scott Madison-Eclectic

1984: Scott Madison, a local restaurateur, opened Eclectic Cookery in the shipyard’s former Marine Corps barracks. The Cookery provided time-shared kitchen facilities to new food businesses. Over the next three decades, the space served as a launch pad for hundreds of San Francisco’s beloved food establishments. Photo of Commercial Kitchen 2022.

   
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HUNTERS POINT SHIPYARD: The Beginning of a New Era

 
landmark example of community ownership of urban development

The Navy decommissioned the base and shipyard facilities in 1991, as part of a post-Cold War realignment and disposal program. This is the advent of a new and transformative age for the district. In 1995 the City of San Francisco ratified the Bayview-Hunters Point Area Plan. This is a landmark example of community ownership of urban development and revitalization, based on the Citizen Advisory Committee’s guidelines and the years of citizen input that influenced them.

29. Redevelopment Plan

The San Francisco Redevelopment Agency published the Hunters Point Shipyard Redevelopment Plan, guided by the Bayview-Hunters Point Project Area Committee, in 1997. The City of San Francisco adopted the Bayview-Hunters Point Redevelopment Plan in early 2000.

 

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The City committed to invest in local education, transportation, public open spaces, hiking and biking trails, community facilities, and energy efficiency. By 2004, the Navy transferred the first parcel of land on the former shipyard site to the City of San Francisco, a major milestone for the Bayview-Hunters Point community. In the summer of 2013 groundbreaking began to construct the first homes at the Shipyard.