SAN FRANCISCO proper occupies just 48 hilly square miles at the
tip of a slender peninsula, almost perfectly centered along the
California coast. Arguably the most beautiful, certainly the most
liberal city in the US, it remains true to itself: a funky,
individualistic, surprisingly small city whose people pride themselves
on being the cultured counterparts to their cousins in LA the last
bastion of civilization on the lunatic fringe of America. It's a compact
and approachable place, where downtown streets rise on impossible
gradients to reveal stunning views of the city, the bay and beyond, and
blanket fogs roll in unexpectedly to envelop the city in mist. This is
not the California of mono-tonous blue skies and slothful warmth the
temperatures rarely exceed the seventies, and even during summer can
drop much lower.
The original inhabitants of this area, the Ohlone Indians ,
were all but wiped out within a few years of the establishment in 1776
of the e Mission Dolores , the sixth in the chain of Spanish
Catholic missions that ran the length of California. Two years after the
Americans replaced the Mexicans in 1846, the discovery of gold in the
Sierra foothills precipitated the rip-roaring Gold Rush . Within
a year fifty thousand pioneers had traveled west, and east from China,
turning San Francisco from a muddy village and wasteland of sand dunes
into a thriving supply center and transit town. By the time the
transcontinental railroad was completed in 1869, San Francisco was a
lawless, rowdy boomtown of bordellos and drinking dens, something the
moneyed elite who hit it big on the much more dependable silver Comstock
Load worked hard to mend, constructing wide boulevards, parks, a cable
car system and elaborate Victorian redwood mansions.
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In the midst of the city's golden age, however, a massive
earthquake , followed by three days of fire, wiped out most of the
town in 1906. Rebuilding began immediately, resulting in a city more
magnificent than before; in the decades that followed, writers like
Dashiell Hammett and Jack London lived and worked here. Many of the
city's landmarks, including Coit Tower and both the Golden Gate and Bay
bridges, were built in the 1920s and 1930s. By World War II San
Francisco had been eclipsed by Los Angeles as the main west coast city,
but it achieved a new cultural eminence with the emergence of the Beats
in the Fifties and the hippies in the Sixties, when the fusion of music,
protest, rebellion and, of course, drugs that characterized 1967's
"Summer of Love" took over the Haight-Ashbury district.
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In a conservative America, San Francisco's reputation as a liberal
oasis continues to grow, attracting waves of resettlers from all over
the US. It is estimated that over half the city's population originates
from somewhere else. It is a city in a constant state of evolution, fast
gentrifying itself into one of the most high-end towns on earth thanks,
in part, to the disposable incomes pumped into its coffers from its
sizeable singles and gay contingents. Gay capital of the world, San
Francisco has also been the scene of the dot.com revolution's rise and
fall. The resultant wealth at one time made housing prices skyrocket
often at the expense of the city's middle and lower classes but the
closure of hundreds of start-up IT companies has brought real-estate
prices back down to (almost) reasonable levels. Despite the city's
current economic ebbs and flows, your impression of the city likely
won't be altered it remains one of the most proudly distinct places to
be found anywhere.