98 episodes

Stories unearthed from the history of San Francisco, the "city that knows how".

San Francisco History Podcast – Sparkletack Richard Miller

    • Society & Culture
    • 4.8 • 62 Ratings

Stories unearthed from the history of San Francisco, the "city that knows how".

    San Francisco Timecapsule: 05.18.09

    San Francisco Timecapsule: 05.18.09

    THIS WEEK'S PODCAST TRANSCRIPT: 1922: Flappers in the newspapers


    May 19, 1922
    Flappers

    Right off the bat I have to admit the fact that -- to paraphrase Olympia Dukakis in Moonstruck -- what I don't know about San Francisco in the 1920s is a lot.

    I did know that all sorts of great Prohibition and gangster stuff must have gone on, though, so I started leafing through a couple of 1922 editions of the Chronicle looking for stories.

    And was immediately distracted by the flappers.

    You know, flappers.

    Louise Brooks, Josephine Baker, Zelda Fitzgerald ...

    • 10 min
    San Francisco Timecapsule: 05.11.09

    San Francisco Timecapsule: 05.11.09

    THIS WEEK'S PODCAST TRANSCRIPT:1879: Stoddard, Stevenson, and Rincon Hill

    Sometime in 1879:
    The house on Rincon Hill

    Last week I read to you from In the Footprints of the Padres, Charles Warren Stoddard's 1902 reminiscences about the early days of San Francisco.

    That piece recounted a boyhood adventure, but this book is full of California stories from the latter years of the 19th century; some deservedly obscure, but some that ring pretty loud bells.

    Todays' short text is a great example of the latter, one that dovetails beautifully with two other San Francisco stories, both of which I've talked about at Sparkletack: the story of the Second Street Cut and the visit of Robert Louis Stevenson.

    The now all-grown-up Stoddard had returned to San Francisco after the Polynesian peregrinations that would inspire his best-known work, and Stevenson had just arrived from Scotland in hot pursuit of the woman he loved.

    The two authors hit it off, and -- as you'll hear at the end of today's Timecapsule -- it's to Stoddard and the house on Rincon Hill that we owe Stevenson's eventual fascination with the South Seas.


    South Park and Rincon Hill!

    Do the native sons of the golden West ever recall those names and think what dignity they once conferred upon the favored few who basked in the sunshine of their prosperity?

    South Park, with its line of omnibuses running across the city to North Beach; its long, narrow oval, filled with dusty foliage and offering a very weak apology for a park; its two rows of houses with, a formal air, all looking very much alike, and all evidently feeling their importance. There were young people's "parties" in those days, and the height of felicity was to be invited to them.

    As a height o'ertops a hollow, so Rincon Hill looked down upon South Park. There was more elbow-room on the breezy height; not that the height was so high or so broad, but it was breezy; and there was room for the breeze to blow over gardens that spread about the detached houses their wealth of color and perfume.

    How are the mighty fallen! The Hill, of course, had the farthest to fall. South Parkites merely moved out: they went to another and a better place. There was a decline in respectability and the rent-roll, and no one thinks of South Park now, -- at least no one speaks of it above a whisper.

    • 1 sec
    San Francisco Timecapsule: 05.04.09

    San Francisco Timecapsule: 05.04.09

    THIS WEEK'S PODCAST TRANSCRIPT:1854: A future poet's boyhood outing

    Spring 1854
    Charles Warren Stoddard

    In 1854, the down-on-their-luck Stoddard family set off from New York City to try their luck in that brand new metropolis of the West: San Francisco.

    Charles Warren Stoddard was just 11 years old, and San Francisco -- still in the throes of the Gold Rush, a vital, chaotic, cosmopolitan stew pot -- was the most exciting place a little boy could dream of.

    Charles would grow up to play a crucial part in San Francisco's burgeoning literary scene. He was just a teenager when his first poems were published in the Golden Era, and his talent and sweet personality were such that he developed long-lasting friendships with the other usual-suspect San Francisco bohemians, Ambrose Bierce, Ina Coolbrith, Bret Harte, and Samuel Clemens.

    Stoddard is probably best remembered for the mildly homo-erotic short stories inspired by his extensive travels in the South Seas, but in 1902 he published a kind of memoir entitled In the Footprints of the Padres. As the old song goes, it recalls "the days of old, the days of gold, the days of '49" from a very personal point of view.

    The reviewers of the New York Times praised the work for Stoddard's "vivid and poetic charm", but I have to admit that I'm mainly in it for his memories.

    In this piece, Charles and his little gang of pals are about to embark on a day-long ramble along the north-eastern edge of the city. Let's roll the clock back to 1854, and with Charles' help, put ourselves into the shoes of an 11-year-old boy anticipating the freedom of a sunny spring Saturday.

    • 14 min
    San Francisco Timecapsule: 04.20.09

    San Francisco Timecapsule: 04.20.09

    THIS WEEK'S PODCAST TRANSCRIPT:1906: Hotaling's Whiskey is spared by the Great Fire and Earthquake

    April 20th, 1906
    The deliverance of Hotaling's Whiskey

    As of Friday the 20th, San Francisco was still on fire. The Great Earthquake had happened two days earlier, but the Fire (or fires) that devastated the city were still well underway.

    The eastern quarter of the city -- nearly five square miles -- would be almost completely destroyed. But after the smoke cleared, a few precious blocks would emerged unscathed. Among these survivors would be the two blocks bounded by Montgomery, Jackson, Battery and Washington Streets.

    Oceans of ink have been spilled in documenting the incredible individual heroism and unfathomable professional incompetence displayed in fighting those fires. One of the best books on the subject is "The Great Earthquake and Firestorms of 1906" by Philip Fradkin, from which I've swiped much of today's timecapsule.

    This is the story of a single building, but one of vital importance to the delicate Western palette: AP Hotaling & Co.’s warehouse at 451 Jackson Street -- the largest depository of whiskey on the West Coast.

    Day One: the first escape
    Hotaling's warehouse was threatened on the very first day of the fires, Wednesday, April 18th. This particular blaze was one of the many inspired by rampant and ill-advised dynamiting, in this case by an allegedly drunken John Bermingham, not coincidentally the president of the California Powder Works.

    Encouraged by the blast, the fire roared towards the whiskey-packed warehouse. Its cornices began to smoulder, but a quick-acting fireman bravely clambered to the top and hacked them off.

    This was Hotaling's first escape.

    • 7 min
    San Francisco Timecapsule: 04.13.09

    San Francisco Timecapsule: 04.13.09

    THIS WEEK'S PODCAST TRANSCRIPT:1958: The Giants play the Dodgers in the first major league baseball game on the West Coast

    April 15, 1958
    Major League Baseball in San Francisco!

    Exactly fifty-one years ago today, two New York City transplants faced each other for the first time on the fertile soil of the West Coast.

    Decades of storied rivalry already under their respective belts, these two legendary New York baseball clubs -- the New York Giants and the Brooklyn Dodgers -- were trapped in aging, unsuitable parks. Giants owner Horace Stoneham had been considering a move to Minnesota until Dodger owner Walter O'Malley -- whose plans for a new Brooklyn park were being blocked -- set his sights on the demographic paradise of Los Angeles.

    The National League wouldn't allow just one team to make such a drastic geographic move, so O'Malley talked Stoneham into taking a look at San Francisco. To the eternal regret and dismay of their New York fans, following the 1957 season, both teams pulled up stakes and headed for the welcoming arms of California.

    • 9 min
    San Francisco Timecapsule: 04.06.09

    San Francisco Timecapsule: 04.06.09

    A weekly glance back at the weird and wonderful happenings that have made San Francisco, San Francisco.

    April 9, 1871: A hoodlum king's power is broken, 138 years ago this week -- and all because he hated the sound of music.

    • 7 min

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5
62 Ratings

62 Ratings

chan! ,

Best out there

Fun to listen to and really informative. Tons of info about San Francisco I thought I knew and never did. A must listen for SF residents old and new. Sad there's no new ones!!

Oliviacg ,

So fantastic!

As a new resident of SF, I LOVE listening to this podcast while I walk to work through the rich historic streets, and listen to such an excellent in-depth profound podcast. Richard Miller has done some incredible research and I am so grateful that he shares his love and knowledge of this wonderful city in such a fun, tangible and creative way. Love it!

Bioj_me ,

Awesome!!

Great podcast!!

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