Redstone Building

The Redstone Building, also known as the Redstone Labor Temple (and formerly called "The San Francisco Labor Temple"), was constructed and operated by the San Francisco Labor Council Hall Associates. Initial planning started in 1910, with most construction work done during 1914. Its primary tenant was the San Francisco Labor Council, including 22 labor union offices as well as meeting halls. The building was a hub of union organizing and work activities and a "primary center for the city's historic labor community for over half a century."[2]

The Redstone Building
The San Francisco Labor Temple known today as the Redstone Building
Location within San Francisco County
Redstone Building (California)
Redstone Building (the United States)
General information
StatusComplete
Typeoffices and community center
Location2926-48 16th Street
San Francisco
Coordinates37°45′55.34″N 122°25′5.66″W
Construction started1914
Completed1915
Opening1915
Renovated1939 (addition)
CostUSD $150,000
OwnerDavid Luchessi
Technical details
Structural systemSteel-reinforced brick facade
Floor count3
Floor area50,000 square feet (4,600 m2)
Lifts/elevators1
Design and construction
ArchitectMatthew O'Brien
Main contractorNew Wing – Moore & Roberts
Designated2004[1]
Reference no.238

The Redstone building played a significant role in the 1917 United Railroads Streetcar Strike[3] as well as the San Francisco maritime strike[4] that led to the 1934 San Francisco General Strike[5][6] for better working conditions for all workers.[7] The Redstone has been designated San Francisco's 238th landmark.[8]

Context and history

The Redstone is located at 2940 16th Street between South Van Ness, formerly Howard Street, and Capp. The building is situated on the very edge of what used to be an industrial zone, with large industrial facilities like the U.S. Steel facility, now a MUNI facility. The city also built a large armory two blocks away as part of the city's politically divisive labor history.

The North Mission District was a working-class neighborhood from around 1870 up until the 1960s. The neighborhood continues to have a large number of ornate Victorian houses nearby. The North Mission was built and mostly populated by Irish Americans, but also included a Greek community as well. Early neighbors included Woodward Gardens and an Insane asylum on Howard and 15th.

The Redstone building is within a few blocks of the Mission San Francisco de Asís, the Victoria Theater, Rainbow Grocery Cooperative, which was originally the Mack Truck company, that was then replaced by a regional St Vincent DePaul center, and Roxie Theaters in the Mission District. What is currently a Walgreens store used to be a boxing arena.

San Francisco Labor Temple

Cornerstone

The San Francisco Labor Temple was dedicated on September 7, 1914 by former San Francisco mayor and head of the local Building Trades Council P.H. McCarthy. The cornerstone was set by A.J Gallagaher. The San Francisco Labor Council held a grand opening for the Labor Temple on February 27, 1915. The SF Labor Council newspaper, the Labor Clarion, described the building on the front page of its newspaper on February 26, 1915. The article described the building interior and gave details such as the $150,000 construction cost. The building included 22 office spaces, a number of large halls, and the 70-by-62-foot (21 by 19 m) main auditorium. The building would have its own medical and dental clinic. One of the first steel frame buildings erected in San Francisco,[9] the building is steel reinforced with a brick facade on two sides and masonry on the other. A new wing to the building was added in 1939 at a cost of $92,000.

The Labor Temple was the longtime home of the many important city unions including the Labor Council, the Clarion newspaper and the Union Labor Party which had early success in electing two different Mayors of San Francisco. The building also helped take part in Tom Mooney's defense campaign as well as many strikes and political campaigns.

A May 1916 Union Directory had 54 unions using the building for their meetings. The bakers and bakery wagon drivers, the bindery women, blacksmiths, butchers, carriage and wagon workers, cigar makers, coopers, horseshoers, ice and milk wagon drivers, janitors, sail makers, and tailors all met at the Labor Temple.

1934 General Strike

The most significant historical event at the Labor Temple took place in July 1934 when the longshoremen and maritime workers led San Francisco workers in the momentous General Strike that changed the labor movement forever. The waterfront workers lived on the fringes of society in conditions that, even for those times, were abominable. The longshoremen had to pay for their jobs on the dock; the seafarers were little more than slaves on the ships. They wanted no more than any worker wants: dignity on the job and off, justice, a living wage. They were willing to strike because their conditions were so bad, they had almost nothing to lose.

The longshoremen and seamen had been out on strike for about three months without much success, few other unions had joined them in sympathy, but the strikers hung on. The shipping companies were determined to bring the strikers to their knees and stop the strike. They had hired armed guards as well as San Francisco police to do their dirty work. For several days there had been fighting on Rincon Hill. On July 5, just outside the strike kitchen at 113 Steuart, an unnamed policeman fired into a crowd of longshoremen and their sympathizers, shooting several of them. Two died. The deaths of Howard Sperry and Nick Bordoise stunned the public. This infamous day in San Francisco labor history became known as “Bloody Thursday” and galvanized the rest of the unions to support the struggle.

The next day (July 6) was the regular Friday night session of the San Francisco Labor Council. The Council members packed the auditorium in the Labor Temple; hundreds more spectators jammed the halls and overflowed onto 16th Street. A growing demand for a general strike was on the minds of the rank and file members. Fourteen unions had already taken action supporting a general strike and others were planning action. Harry Bridges was in attendance and asked for immediate action on an International Longshoreman's Association (ILA) resolution underscoring its position that the question of union hiring halls “cannot possibly be submitted to arbitration.” The resolution was approved without dissent as was a second resolution condemning Governor Merriam for calling out the state militia. This resolution urged a peace based on ‘simple justice and not military force.” At this meeting the S.F. Labor Council set up a Strike Strategy Committee to, in the words of the ILA Strike Bulletin, “make plans of a strike that will stop every industry in the city.” The bulletin noted, too, that the council had endorsed the ILA's refusal to arbitrate the closed shop. Bridges declared, “This is no longer the ILA’s fight alone. Thursday’s bloody rioting has crystallized labor’s attention on the conditions under which the ILA works and labor is demanding concerted action. The Labor Council is definitely behind the marine strike.”

On July 9, a funeral procession bearing the bodies of the two slain unionists walked down Market Street. Estimates range from 15,000 to 50,000 in the procession. Thousands more lined the sidewalks. Fearing that sight of police on the streets would incite workers further, City Hall agreed that the strikers would be in charge of crowd control. There was no talking, no sound except a quiet funeral dirge, and the tramp of feet, but the air was electric with that sound. Their deaths – and that march – forged the solidarity that became the West Coast General Strike. The march ended at 17th and Valencia at the mortuary, just two blocks away from the Labor Temple. No doubt many mourners walked over to the Temple afterward to be together. To try to make some sense of what was happening. To decide what to do next.

Although a number of unions, including the Teamsters, had already decided to strike by July 12, the Labor Council's Strike Committee had not yet formally acted. It was in the auditorium of the Labor Temple where the vote was taken that sent the 175 unions of the SF Labor Council out on strike in support of the Longshoremen and Seafarers. The new General Strike Committee had already written up the motion. You would recognize many of the names on that strike committee: Jack Shelly, A. Noriega, Mike Casey, and of course, Harry Bridges. The strike vote meeting was held on Saturday, July 14, with the strike to commence on Monday, July 16, at 8 am. The S.F. Chronicle of July 15 reported the strike decision inside the Labor Temple in a colorful description: “Amid scenes of wildest conditions, with hundreds of delegates shouting and scores of others in a condition approaching hysteria, labor made the most momentous decision in many years. Throngs mulled about the Labor Temple at Sixteenth and Capp streets during four hours…” Finally, a hod carrier by the name of Joe Murphy made the motion.

The historic San Francisco General Strike went on for four days, ending July 19, 1934. The strike was a success, opening the way to end the longshoremen's and maritime workers’ strikes but extending beyond their demands to change the relationship between worker and boss forever. The maritime workers won the most contested issue, hiring halls with a union selected job dispatcher. Longshoremen won a six-hour day and 30-hour workweek while seamen won an eight-hour day. The solidarity with their brothers on the docks shown by the General Strike in San Francisco was heard around America in the midst of the Great Depression. Labor historian David Selvin called it a “new day” when workers acted from a new awareness of common grievances and common purpose, a newly recognized class identity that inspired workers nationwide.

1950s

The building was a major social gathering area for the North Mission with two banquet halls in the basement and its first floor Assembly Hall that included pool tables. Fees from its pool tables and licensed slot machines helped cover the cost of running the building, which had 21 employees in 1955. The Hall Association was forced to close the Assembly hall's slot machine operations in the early 1950s due to a national crackdown on gambling and unions. Working people started abandoning the Mission for the suburbs, causing a general decline of the building and the neighborhood. The San Francisco Labor Council considered selling the building as early as 1955 but decided to renovate instead.[10] The Labor Council took out a $275,000 loan to bring the building up to code, including a new front entrance. The basement was turned into a number of smaller office spaces, while the Assembly Hall and the Auditorium next door were combined into a single space for larger meetings. There were damages to the exterior from the 1957 San Francisco earthquake that struck the city, the largest since the 1906 earthquake.

The 1950s brought with it the McCarthy era and a renewed Red Scare focusing on unions as well as Hollywood. It culminated in the HUAC hearings and blacklists.

Transition into a community center

On April 5, 1966 Dow Wilson,[11] the secretary of the Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators and Paperhangers' San Francisco Local 4 was killed around the corner from the building in a corruption dispute. His murder led to the building being sold to Peter Blasko for $228,000. The sale helped SFLC pay off their outstanding loan. They continued to lease space as did other unions after the murder of Wilson. Blasko later sold the property to the M.K Blake Estate which held the building until 1989. By this time the building had become a community center.

The Mission District which used to be predominantly Irish and working class had been shifting towards a predominantly Latino community. By the early 1980s the building would be leased to mostly Latino organizations with a couple labor organizations, the local chapter of the American Federation of Teachers, which represented teachers at San Francisco City College and ABSCME Local 1650 CUCE.

Theater Rhinoceros: 1981–2009

Theatre Rhinoceros or The Rhino, was established in 1977 to produce original LGBT[12] live theater to explore "the ordinary and extraordinary aspects of our queer community"[12] moved into the Redstone in 1981. The Rhino was the first gay theatre to receive funding from the National Endowment for the Arts[13] and is the "world’s oldest and longest-running queer theatre"[14] and was the Redstone's 2nd oldest and largest tenant[15] producing "an unparalleled amount of original work"[16] shown in The Rhino's two theaters. The Rhino's marquee and box office were at the Redstone's north entrance. After 5 years of major rent increases Rhino left the building on June 30, 2009.

Earthquake

After the 1988 death of Henry Hawke, who had been doing the maintenance and co-manager, M.K. Blake Estate sold the building to David Kimmel. Just as the sale was completed, the October 1989 earthquake struck the city, damaging an old add-on closet on the north wing of the building. The damaged section as well as an old water tower were removed. Kimmel who also had properties in downtown Santa Cruz went into bankruptcy due to damages to all of his properties. Brad Ahekian, attempted to reorganize Kimmel's properties but failed and abandoned the property in July 1992. The building went into court-ordered receivership that was held by Brighton Pacific. It was then picked up in September 1992 by David Luchessi, an investor of Kimmel's.

The Lab

On March 1, 1996, The Lab began its move into the Redstone Building from its original location at 1805 and 1807 Divisadero Street, where, since 1984 it had run a black-box theater, art gallery and working facilities for artists: SoundLab, DesignLab, PrintLab and PhotoLab. The new Redstone space was too costly, so a floor-to-ceiling wall was built that reduced the overall space by 1/3. It is the same 3,000 sq ft footprint The Lab occupies today. Early projects include the mural project, sound-proofing, and The Lab's signature visual, sound, music and performance programming.

Murals

The Clarion Alley Mural Project (CAMP), named after their first mural project on Clarion Alley (between 17th and 18th Streets near Mission Street) and The LAB announced the mural project to the tenants on April 19, 1996 after getting tentative support from the Redstone Building Manager. The LAB was awarded a grant from the Mayor's Office to cover artist fees and expenses for the mural project, and for the design and installation of a handicapped lift, to allow access to the entertainment venues The Lab and Theater Rhinoceros.

CAMP members spent several months researching the history of the building at San Francisco State University's Labor Archives. They followed this up with surveys to all of the Redstone Building tenants, followed by several meetings, including the first one with tenants on June 19, 1996. Working color sketches were supposed to be presented to tenants on September 3, 1996, but delayed until October 25, 1996. The sketches were then taken to the Building owner who gave permission to begin painting the murals. The initial phase of the CAMP project was made up of nine artists: Carolyn Castano, John Fadeff, Susan Greene (a Redstone tenant), Barry McGee, Ruby Neri, Sebastiani Pastor, Rigo '96, Lilly Rodriguez, Chuck Sperry and Project Director Aaron Noble. The project outreach coordinator was Mary Newson with the Lab's Laura Brun coordinating the administration of the city grant, which was part of the original $1.8 million Mission Armory Foundation money that was broken up by Mayor Brown and given to arts groups across the city.

On January 25, 1997 the Redstone Labor Temple Mural Project was dedicated by San Francisco mayor Willie L. Brown, Jr.[9]

Original Sperry mural depicting labor organizer Harry Bridges (seated and holding document) and the 1934 Strike Agreement at San Francisco's historic Redstone Building

The lobby and first floor of the Redstone's walls are covered by the CAMP murals, covering the building's labor, Filipino, Latino and gay history[17] that "reflect the building’s history and many uses"[9] and are "commemorating key labor actions like the (1934) strike and picket by the Chinese Garment Workers Union and the formation of the Bindery Women's Union."[18]

Six of the completed Red Stone Building murals depict the activities of the labor unions in the building (from 1914 to 1966). Chuck Sperry recreated the scene of a Labor Council planning meeting for the landmark 1934 General Strike, while Aaron Noble's piece illustrates two important moments in the City's labor history—when the corrupt union official Ben Rasnick was thrown out of the Red Stone Building by Dow Wilson; and, later, when Wilson was murdered by shotgun fire on April 5, 1966.

Other labor-themed murals in the building are Isis Rodriguez's illustration of the Bindery Women's Local 125, which occupied the building in the early 1920s; Sebastiana Pastor's depicting the organization of the Chinese Ladies Garment Workers Union Local 341 in 1938; Ruby Neri (with Alicia McCarthy)'s personal work (in ball-point pen) on the theme of sign painting—an oblique tribute to Sign Painters' Local 510, which sanctioned the project; and Susan Greene's rendering of the Service Employees International Union's hotel and department store strike of 1941.

The remaining six murals reflect later uses of the building. Two are historical: John Fadeff's piece evokes construction of the building's foundation, and Carolyn Castaño's depicts ballroom dancing in the former Filipino-American social club. Others reflect the building's current uses: an abstract piece by stencil artist Scott Williams for the entrance of the LAB, invoking a technological urban landscape; Barry McGee's illustration of immigrants floating to a new land; Rigo '97's "3/4 Water," celebrating the environmental organizations in the building; and Matt Day's small piece dedicated to the building's many alternative media organizations. Later, a mural honoring long-time building tenant Theater Rhinoceros was added to the project.

There is also a mural on the second-floor produced by the former Women's Luna Sea Theater Company.

The project was coordinated by the interdisciplinary artists group known as The LAB which produces art shows and events year round in the former labor temple's auditorium.

Redstone Tenants Association

The tenants of the Redstone started organizing and formed the Redstone Tenants Association (RTA) in 1999 to coordinate organizing around possibly buying the building and making general improvements to the large property as part of a general concern about gentrification of the neighborhood resulting in evictions and rising rents.[19] San Francisco was experiencing a hot rental market with the dot-com boom that created high-paying technical jobs and, in the process, displaced both commercial and residential renters with evictions and skyrocketing rents. With the help of the Mission Economic Development Association (MEDA) the tenants obtained a grant to do their own economic analysis of the building with the intent to make a formal bid for purchase. A variety of entities were approached with the hope of finding a non-profit owner. The Redstone Tenants Association is now known as the Redstone Labor Temple Association and has 510(c)(3) status.

San Francisco Designated Landmark

The first grant the RTA obtained was for $2,000 from the National Trust for Historic Preservation, which was used to start the process of obtaining historic landmark status for the building. The landmarking took from 2001 to 2004 to complete. The city formalized the building's historic status on July 14, 2004, assigning it number 238.[2] It is the second labor-related historic landmark in San Francisco. Exactly three years to the date of gaining historic landmark status, the annual "Labor Fest" did the first mural tour of the building and surrounding neighborhood.

On July 31, 2004 the Redstone celebrated the landmark status that had been bestowed by the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. The event included a proclamation from the Board as well as Walter Johnson, head of the SF Labor Council, who presented the plaque to the Redstone Building manager and Betty Traynor, RTA organizer. The event included musicians, poetry and historic information about the building, along with union members whose organizations once inhabited the former union hall.[20][21]

GLBT Historical Society

The Redstone Building was the location of the first public archives and office of the Gay and Lesbian Historical Society (now known as the GLBT Historical Society), an internationally recognized museum, archives and research center for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender history. Founded in 1985, the organization was housed in a private home until 1990, when it moved into a basement space in the Redstone Building.[22][23] After five years, the society moved out of the building and has subsequently been housed in larger spaces on Market Street and Mission Street in San Francisco.[22][23]

Twenty-first Century

As of the year 1999, the current building had nearly 50,000 square feet (4,600 m2) of tenant space housing over forty tenants and four theaters, including Theatre Rhinoceros, the oldest gay theater in the U.S. and the Redstone's largest tenant.[15]

Today, its tenants include three theater ensembles: gay Theatre Rhinoceros, feminist Luna Sea, and the Latino El Teatro de la Esperanza. Other causes are evidenced by the groups' names: the Mission Area Federal Credit Union, the Filipino-American Employment and Training Center, the Industrial Workers of the World, the Homeless Children's Network, the Coalition on Homelessness, Hard Hat Magazine, the Eviction Defense Network, California Prison Focus, and on and on. "We call it a microcosm of the Mission and The City," said Elisabeth Beaird, the administrative director of The Lab, a visual and performance art gallery. "Almost every group is represented: Latino, activist causes, the arts, gays."[15]

The building lost Woman's Luna Sea Project in 2005, Spirit Menders in July 2007, Mission Agenda in 2006, Cine Accion in 2006, Homes Not Borders in 2006, IndyBay in 2006, the Homeless Children's Network in August 2007, and the Mission Area Federal Credit Union in October 2007. Theater Rhino, the building's oldest and largest tenant, was forced to leave on June 30, 2009 due to large rent increases over the preceding years. The rest of the building's tenants have also experienced large rent increases in that time period. Following a protest, a new round of increases was blocked in the spring of 2009.

Tenants

The following groups currently are or used to be tenants at the building at 2940 16th Street in San Francisco.

Unions

  • AFSCME Local 1650 CUCE
  • American Federation of Teachers #2121
  • Asbestos Workers #16
  • Automobiile, Truck and Car Painters #1073
  • Bakers #24 1947–1952 (1)
  • Beer Wagon(Brewery) Drivers #888 1947–1960
  • Bill Posters International Union
  • Bindery Women's Union Local 125[24]
  • Bindery Local #31–125 (Men's local merged with women's in 1917)
  • Blacksmith's #1168 1947–1960
  • Boilermakers 1954
  • Boot and Shoe Repairers
  • Bottlers #896 1947–1960
  • Brewers, Maltsters and Yeasters #893 1947–1960
  • Brewery Drivers # 888
  • Bricklayers Local #7
  • Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators and Paperhangers' San Francisco Local 4
  • Bus Wagon Drivers 1947–1952
  • Butchers #508 1947
  • Candy Workers #158 1947–1960
  • Carmen Division #1380 1960
  • Carpenters local # 2167 or (2164?)
  • Cement Masons #580
  • Chinese Garment Workers Local 341
  • Cleaners #3010
  • Cleaners & Dyers #7 1947–1952
  • Construction & Labors Union #261
  • Coppersmith's #438 1947–1960
  • Drydock and Marine Waysmen #3116 1947–1953
  • Electrical workers #1245
  • Fish Cannery Workers 1947-9
  • Firemen & Oilmen 1949
  • Garment Workers #131 1947–1960
  • Hard Hat Construction Magazine 1999
  • Industrial Workers of the World local 23 1996–2006
  • International Longshoremen Association 1954
  • Iron Workers local #377
  • Labor Clarion 1915–1947
  • Labor Committee on Intolerance 1950–1960
  • Labor Video Project
  • Laundry Workers #26 1947–1952
  • Leather Workers #31 1947–1954
  • Machinists #68 1947–1952
  • Metal Polishers #128 1947–1960
  • Metal Production Workers 1948–1951
  • Metal Trades Council (Pacific Coast District) 1947–1954
  • Milk Wagon Drivers #226 1947–1960
  • Miscellaneous Culinary Employees #110
  • Molders #164 (1)
  • National Writers Union
  • Office Employees #3 1951-2
  • Office Employees #36 1950-1
  • Painters Union Local #4
  • Painters #8 District Council
  • Painters #19
  • Pattern Makers Association 1947–1954
  • Production Machinists 1947–1954
  • Professional Embalmers #9049
  • Railway Carmen #750 1947
  • Retail Delivery Drivers #278 1947–1954
  • Roofers #40
  • Rural Delivery Workers 1947
  • San Francisco Labor Council 1915–1968
  • SF Labor Temple Hall Association 1915–1968
  • SFLC Strategy Committee 1947
  • Sanitary Truck Drivers #350 1947–1960
  • SEIU local Department Store Workers
  • Shipyard Laborers 1947 (1)
  • Ship Painters #961 1947–1954
  • Signpainters Local 510
  • Sprinkler Fitters #483
  • Sweat Magazine
  • Taxicab Workers #8294
  • The Organizer
  • Tool & Diemakers 1948
  • Union Agency of California
  • Union Key Tax Service of the Bay Area
  • Union Label Section 1947-1960
  • Union Labor Party 1947–1960
  • United Furniture Workers #262 1960
  • United Garment Workers #131 1947–1960
  • United Taxicab Workers 1999–present
  • Upholsters #28 1947–1954
  • Waitress workers local
  • Web pressmen #4
  • Wharehouse men #12 1950-3

Non-Union organizations

  • 415 Records
  • 4SD (computer consulting)
  • 500 Years Coalition (First Nation's anniversary)
  • Abalone Alliance
  • Academic Research Information System (ARIS)
  • Agit Spin Productions
  • Alcoholics Annonymous
  • Alpha Graphics
  • Arriba Juntos
  • Balone Print Coop
  • Bay Area Girls Network
  • Bay Area Physicians for Human Rights (AIDS)
  • BAVAC
  • Bay View/Hunters Point Neighborhood Assoc. (handicapped)
  • William Becker
  • Big Mountain Support Group
  • BikeAid
  • Bilingual Cine-Television (BCT) 1974–1978
  • Bolerium Books
  • Cafe Gaudi
  • California Prison Focus
  • CARES: Catholic Charities Project
  • Catholic Charities (immigration program)
  • Center for Human Development
  • Chile Lindo
  • Chile Resource Center & Clearinghouse
  • Chris Daly for Supervisor Campaign
  • Collision Course
  • Comprehensive Communications
  • Dan's Travel Agency
  • Donor Network
  • Don't Waste California
  • EL-LA
  • Eviction Defense Network
  • Family Resource Development Agency
  • Film Arts Foundation
  • Fil-Am Employ & Training Center
  • Fine Line Construction
  • FPITS international
  • Regine Forbis
  • Gay & Lesbian Historical Society (now known as the GLBT Historical Society)
  • Global Exchange
  • Gray Panthers
  • Green Cab
  • Green Party SF local
  • Grupo Maya
  • Haight Ashbury Switchboard
  • Health Fair Project
  • Homeless Children's Network
  • Homes Not Borders
  • Indybay (Indymedia)
  • International Indian Treaty Council
  • Jackie Inc.
  • Dr. Lastrei (sp)
  • Latin American Resource & Clearinghouse
  • Jack Lei DDS
  • Jobs with Peace
  • June 21 city celebrations
  • LIP magazine
  • Luna Sea (women's theater collective)
  • MAS Media
  • Mission Agenda
  • Mission Area Federal Credit Union
  • Mission Health Clinic Teen Project
  • Mission Community Legal Defense
  • Mission Foot Lab
  • Mobile Assistance Patrol
  • Neighbor to Neighbor
  • New World University
  • North/South Communications
  • October 22 Coalition
  • Open Forum (Collective discussion group)
  • Outlook (Gay Newspaper)
  • Outsider Enterprises
  • Pacific Petitions
  • Peru Support Committee
  • Philippine Resource Center
  • Phreda Clinic
  • Poor Magazine
  • Miquel Quiroz
  • San Francisco Clinic Consortium
  • San Francisco Coalition for Living Wages
  • San Francisco Sane/Freeze
  • San Francisco Sex Information
  • John Sheppard Esq.
  • Site Design Online
  • Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence
  • Smoke Shop
  • Tony Garcia
  • Socialist Review
  • Spirit Menders
  • Spring Leather
  • Temple Shave (barber shop: 2944 16th)
  • Bob Edelstein
  • Irving Terrel
  • Joves
  • Temp Workers Net
  • Unified School District Adult Education
  • Video Activist Network
  • Western Regional Advocacy Project (WRAP)
  • Whispered Media
  • W.O.M.A.N. Inc
  • Women for Nuclear Disarmament (WAND)
  • Women's health collective
  • World Can't Wait
  • Doctor Yeh (acupuncture)
  • Youth Credit Union Project (YCUP)
  • Mobilization for Aids

Artists and Arts Organizations

  • Art & Revolution
  • Bad Dog Jewelry
  • April Berger
  • Film Arts Foundation
  • Scott Hewicker
  • Circuit Network
  • Cine Accion
  • Club Kommotion
  • Rick Gerharter
  • Susan Greene
  • Iraya Robles/Gary Gregerson
  • Kulintang Arts
  • Making Waves
  • MoJo Theater
  • Molly Hankwitz
  • Cliff Hengst
  • Mark Huestis
  • Jocelyn & Amy
  • Luna Sea (women's theater collective)
  • Laura Modigliani
  • Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence
  • Teatro De La Esperanza
  • Teatro Ng Tanan Theater
  • Ben Terrall
  • Tilapia Film LLC
  • Theater Rhinosceros
  • The LAB
  • Benji Whalen
  • Whispered Media
  • Megan Wilson
  • Jon Winters
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gollark: https://osmarks.tk/assets/js/page.js is the main achievement system code.
gollark: The source is unobfuscated/minified, if almost entirely uncommented.
gollark: Anyway, enjoy reverse-engineering it?
gollark: ...

See also

References

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  2. "San Francisco Landmarks: Landmark 238". NoeHill. Retrieved 2007-08-01.
  3. "United Railroads Streetcar Strike 1917". Shaping San Francisco. Archived from the original on 2007-07-13. Retrieved 2007-08-01.
  4. Windborne, Jamie (July 16, 2007). "July Community Calendar". Mission Dispatch. Retrieved 2007-08-01.
  5. "A Timeline of San Francisco History – 1900–1950". zpub.com. Retrieved 2007-08-01.
  6. "Police Battle Stevedore Mob, Arrest Many". San Francisco News reprinted by San Francisco Museum. July 3, 1934. Retrieved 2007-08-01.
  7. Martí, Fernando (July 16, 2007). "Aquí Estamos y No Nos Vamos! 230 Years of Resistencia en la Misión". Comite de Vivienda San Pedro. Archived from the original on 2007-09-28. Retrieved 2007-08-01.
  8. "San Francisco Landmarks list". San Francisco Preservation Society. 2003. Retrieved 2007-08-01.
  9. Noble, Aaron (10 June 2007). "Redstone Labor Temple Mural Project". Creative Work Fund. p. 13. Archived from the original on 2007-04-08. Retrieved 2007-08-01.
  10. Labor Temple Put Up for Sale: San Francisco Labor: March 30, 1956 – Weekly newsletter of the San Francisco Labor Council
  11. "Labor: Painters in Blood". TIME.com. 20 May 1966.
  12. "San Francisco Professional Queer Theater: About Rhino – History". Theatre Rhinoceros. July 2005. Retrieved 2007-08-05.
  13. "2002 Grant Awards: Creativity – Theater". National Endowment for the Arts. 2002. Archived from the original on 2013-02-20. Retrieved 2007-08-05.
  14. DeWitt, W. (August 2004). "More Queer This Year". Out Now. Archived from the original on March 7, 2005. Retrieved 2007-08-05.
  15. Costantinou, Marianne (November 29, 1999). "Specter of eviction in the Mission: Small businesses lose to dot-com gentrification". San Francisco Examiner. Retrieved 2007-08-01.
  16. Adrian, Amber (Fall 2002). "25 Years of the Lavender Rhino". TheatreBayArea.org. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-08-05.
  17. Mosher, Mike (October 1998). "Neighborhood Art Traffic Signals: Johanna Poethig's "Freeway Prophecy" Mural". Bad Subjects. Retrieved 2007-08-01.
  18. Vogel, Richard D. (October 1998). "LaborFest 2007: A Moveable Feast". Monthly Review. Archived from the original on 2007-09-29. Retrieved 2007-08-01.
  19. Kahn, Kelley (June 17, 2003). "A Tale of Three Cities, San Francisco, CA Focus on The Mission District". PBS. Retrieved 2007-08-01.
  20. Mandelenis, Rita (June 29, 2004). "LaborFest 2004 Offers Films, Events Throughout July". El Tecolote. Archived from the original on September 27, 2007. Retrieved 2007-08-01.
  21. "Architectural and Aesthetic Landmarks". City and County of San Francisco. Archived from the original on 2006-11-26. Retrieved 2007-08-01.
  22. Wakimoto, Diana Kiyo (2012). Queer Community Archives in California Since 1950 (Brisbane, Australia: Queensland University of Technology; Ph.D. dissertation in information systems), chapter 5, "'There Really Is a Sense That This Is Our Space': The History of the GLBT Historical Society." Retrieved 2012-08-18.
  23. GLBT Historical Society (2005-09-29). "GLBT Historical Society 20th anniversary gala" [program brochure] (San Francisco: GLBT Historical Society).
  24. http://texts.cdlib.org:8088/xtf/data/13030/qm/tf4p3003qm/tf4p3003qm.xml

Further reading

  • Gray Brechin, Imperial San Francisco: Urban Power, Earthly Ruin, University of California Press, Berkeley, 1999.
  • James Brook, Chris Carlsson and Nancy Peters, eds., Reclaiming San Francisco: History, Politics, Culture, City Lights Books, San Francisco, 198
  • Manuel Castells, The City and the Grassroots: A Cross-cultural Theory of Urban Social Movements, University of California Press, Berkeley, 1983.
  • Richard DeLeon, Left Coast City: Progressive Politics in San Francisco, 1975–1991, University Press of Kansas, 1992
  • Antonio Díaz, “Race & Space: Dot-Colonization and Dislocation in La Misión,” in Shades of Power, 2000.
  • Cassi Feldman, “Defending the Barrio,” San Francisco Bay Guardian, 2000.
  • Brian Godfrey, Neighborhoods in Transition: The Making of San Francisco's Ethnic and Nonconformist Communities, University of California Press, Berkeley, 1988.
  • Chester Hartman, City for Sale: The Transformation of San Francisco, University of California Press, Berkeley, 2002.
  • Beatriz Johnston Hernandez, “The Invaders,” El Andar, 2000.
  • Anthony Lee, Painting on the Left: Diego Rivera, Radical Politics, and San Francisco's Public Murals, University of California Press, Berkeley, 1999
  • Mission Housing Development Corporation, A Plan for the Inner Mission, 1974.
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