Recently,
I came across yet another newspaper article critical of San Francisco. It
almost seems part of a coordinated campaign to disparage that city by the sea.
The writer complained about the homeless population there (no doubt a tough
situation) and the high cost of living (Tech intrusion will do that). But then
the writer exposed his hand by smudging those ‘liberals’ and ‘NIMBY’ folks who
he felt were at the root of this evil.
Funny
how some old attitudes just keep coming back again and again. I guess it’s not
surprising when you consider San Francisco’s DNA and the social and cultural
changes constantly taking place there.
This
liberal bastion of individuality has been under attack from more conservative
forces for centuries. It began in the mid-to-late Eighteen Hundreds with the
gold rush and the open town atmosphere San Francisco embraced back then. Well
before the turn of the century, lurid stories were coming out of the ‘Barberry
Coast.’ It only accelerated with stories of sexual freedom for men and women
there in the Forties. The Fifties brought the Beatniks and then the hippies in
the early Sixties. Many of America’s social and cultural changes had their
origin in those fog-covered hills surrounded by the sea.
My
experience living in San Francisco wasn’t normal by any standard. I was given
free room and board with a great view of the ocean. I made a decent salary just
to practice my journalism skills by day and bought a Vespa motor scooter to explore
the city by night. I had a part time job at an Art Theater and took in the
latest foreign films every weekend. There were scooter trips up and down the coast
and into the Back Bay area. It was eight
months of my own little Camelot. Not a bad deal until a transfer sent me to a
summer in hell.
In
1964 the city was slowly shedding its turn-of-the century collection of rundown
dive bars and flea bag hotels for more modern digs. New hotels were sprouting
up along Market Street down-town and there was talk of developing some of the
dilapidated warehouses stacked up along the old vacant docks.
Just
outside the entrance to the Presidio there was a three-two bar. Its patrons
consisted of off duty servicemen, local drunks, guys trolling for a pickup and
middle-aged women competing for the same clients. Welcome to San Francisco in
the Sixties. Seven and Seven was my favorite drink when I was pretending to be
all grown up.
The
Haight Ashbury neighborhood had always been a working class neighborhood of
Italians and Poles. Now younger folks were moving in, attracted by the cheap
rents and huge Victorian homes where they could sublet rooms to their friends
and acquaintances. I went there several times because ‘that was where the
action was.’ I didn’t see much action, not that I would have recognized it at
the time anyway.
Market
Street was where one went for fine apparel and Fisherman’s wharf actually had
working boats lining the docks. North Beach was still haven to Beats, drunks
and druggies. But more upscale trendy bars were slowly inching into their
territory. I found the area to be a tourist trap with over-priced drinks and
very strange, almost scary, Broadway-type characters straight out of a Damon
Runyon novel.
The
Larkin Theater provided me with a weekly collection of new foreign films and
watching the patrons who liked them. Two girls, their names long since
forgotten, worked the ticket cage and provided comic relief with their high
school trauma, drama and west coast teenage angst.
The
Palace of Fine Arts was under reconstruction and the Art Museum by the Sea
remained stuck in its turn of the century furnishings and décor. One of my many
escapes from the city was Golden Gate Park and the Marina District which hugged
the coastline. The ocean wasn’t far away.
Half
Moon Bay was a Saturday morning scooter right away and Daly City a boring
collection of ticky-tacky housing just like in the song.
But
the real treat was Sausalito just across the bay. At that time it was still a
bastion of creative types who wanted to escape the confines of the city. It was
deliriously new, breathtakingly beautiful, full of wonderful temptations and
totally out of reach for a youngster just in from the Midwest.
But,
oh, how my imagination did soar.
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