Friday, December 25, 2015

San Francisco evening scenes - December 2015

While this was potentially just going to honor two of the grandest Baroque-style buildings in San Francisco, it also features a handful of other scenes. Besides the joy of the architectural sites herein, I also note a 2014 memorial honoring soldiers, which can be seen as both very anti-war and very respectful of veterans, with further comments below.....

As a gateway, partly to relatively clearer photos:), we might first pass under the south pier of the Golden Gate Bridge, as a friend of mine and I did last night (Dec. 24)....
A little earlier, though, on Wednesday, Dec. 23, one of the highlights of an impromptu driving tour from another family friend satisfied my curiosity as to a Baroque vision of loveliness I had seen earlier that day. While my two "day" views of what had been a mystery are in the postscript below, here is a little bit of the nighttime glory of St. Ignatius Church, as it rises in conjunction with the University of San Francisco....
[from McAllister and Parker looking southeast]

[both views above are taken from the front of St. Ignatius on Fulton Street]

Shortly after that "Jesuit Baroque", my friend pointed out the (French Baroque) and colorfully lighted City Hall, visible from (20?) blocks away, and then in greater glory up close....

[from McAllister and Polk looking southeast]

The Beaux-Arts inspired Civic Center continues the festive air with performance spaces, such as the Davies Hall for the San Francisco Symphony....
while my friend pointed out something more thoughtful which I would have missed, and just as it calls (all of us?) to more effort, reading these next two photos would take a few seconds more as well.

As she took a break from her driver/guide functions, waiting in her car, I read the kind of poem you might not usually see on war memorials, this one for a monument dedicated on October 10 of last year.

I will insert the poem, by Archibald MacLeish (1892-1982), in my appendix, but basically, it is one which can be seen as very anti-war yet also as respecting all veterans, partly because it notes the work we have to do once they have done theirs.

Its key line is the longest one in the version carved here [see endnote 1], most of which I photographed in two parts. If you read the left side and then read the right portion here, you should get its idea, but again, I hope you will see my postscript for its full text.




This evening, after walking up the wonderfully steep Filbert Street and then steps beyond it to the top of Telegraph Hill - perhaps better known as the Coit Tower park - I had the pleasure of a sunset view to the west, featuring the Russian Hill area to the left and, less prominently below, the piers of the Golden Gate Bridge to the right, the left one and some adjacent cables somewhat visible below, and the right one perhaps very dimly noticeable.... 
As it became darker, I looked again at Coit Tower, opened in 1933 very close to the overlook....
Once I came down from its hilltop and went down Grant Avenue through Chinatown, it was great to see families and others out at the Union Square skating rink next to a symbol which can certainly sum up this write-up....

Endnotes

1. While the second last line in the "Young...Soldiers" version I have inserted reads....

"They say, We leave you our deaths: give them their meaning: give them an end to the war and a true peace: give them a victory that ends the war and a peace afterwards: give them their meaning." .....

This line ends with  the first use of "give them their meaning" on the memorial itself. 



Sources, an acknowledgement and a daytime postcript

Coit Tower - I've noted 1933 as its opening year from a 1983 50th anniversary plaque which I read tonight at the front of the tower.

MacLeish, Archibald - Sources here include https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poet/archibald-macleish and http://www.poetryfoundation.org/bio/archibald-macleish


St. Ignatius Church was debuted in 1914, as per http://stignatiussf.org/about-us/church-history-tour/
and is also discussed at http://hoodline.com/2015/01/what-is-saint-ignatius-church-1421371182
which, again coincidentally with this writing, notes that the previous St. Ignatius Church was where Davies Symphony Hall is today.

Thanks again to the family friend who took me on a whirlwind ride of a few areas in the northern tier of San Francisco this past Wednesday night, Dec. 23, in which she showed me the awe-inspiring topography of Pacific Heights, the USF campus area including St. Ignatius Church from the outside, the famous "painted ladies" houses on Steiner Street near Grove, Hayes Valley, the Civic Center, the Japantown cultural and commercial center and a few other areas and landmarks.

While she and I had not stayed in close touch prior to this trip, maybe the next "scene" (consumed in the evening at least:)) when we went out to dinner, can speak to the affection between her family and mine....
["Mango Sticky Pudding" at Sweet Lime, a Thai Restaurant at 2100 Sutter St., San Francisco]

I would add my daytime discovery this past Wednesday of St. Ignatius Church from perhaps a mile away, and an urge to see its "Baroque wonderland" up close; here, my pictures are respectively from California and Jordan and then from in front of 11 S. Jordan, with the church in the center of both images....



San Francisco City Hall was completed in December 1915 (coincidentally at this time:)), as per an undated Historic American Buildings Survey report at
https://cdn.loc.gov/master/pnp/habshaer/ca/ca0600/ca0633/data/ca0633data.pdf

A further reference to the City Hall is found at https://books.google.com/books?id=opvy1zGI2EcC&pg=PA264&lpg=PA264&dq=San+Francisco+City+Hall+Baroque&source=bl&ots=POSRsa11vB&sig=D4Wz9onePrqoh-vkAXZxOna8Kow&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiNgvW-_ffJAhUI8GMKHQxaBCs4ChDoAQg8MAE#v=onepage&q=San%20Francisco%20City%20Hall%20Baroque&f=false, while the completion date there is given as 1916.

San Francisco War Memorial and Performing Arts Center veterans monument - this very recent landmark, known officially as the "Passage of Remembrance", is noted at http://www.sfwmpac.org/veterans-memorial and http://sf.curbed.com/archives/2014/10/10/eight_decades_in_the_making_veterans_memorial_opens_today.php



War Memorial poem - text

[I have not confirmed the wording below is exactly the same as the Civic Center's memorial version, but they are at least very similar to each other.]


THE YOUNG DEAD SOLDIERS DO NOT SPEAK
Nevertheless they are heard in the still houses: who has not heard them?

They have a silence that speaks for them at night and when the clock counts.


They say, We were young. We have died. Remember us.


They say, We have done what we could but until it is finished it is not done.


They say, We have given our lives but until it is finished no one can know what our lives gave.


They say, Our deaths are not ours: they are yours: they will mean what you make them.


They say, Whether our lives and our deaths were for peace and a new hope or for nothing we cannot say: it is you who must say this.


They say, We leave you our deaths: give them their meaning: give them an end to the war and a true peace: give them a victory that ends the war and a peace afterwards: give them their meaning.


We were young, they say. We have died. Remember us.


[source: https://www.loc.gov/teachers/lyrical/poems/docs/young_trans.pdf]




Dates of my photos

City Hall, St. Ignatius Church, Davies Symphony Hall, the war memorial just west of City Hall and that "Sweet Lime" dessert....Weds., Dec. 23, 2015

Coit Tower, the view from its overlook and the Union Square Christmas tree....tonight (Fri., Dec. 25, 2015)


Separately, those "painted ladies" should be visible in many places, I'd bet, including here, if again with the semi-laborious cut and paste step.....
https://www.google.com/maps/place/Painted+Ladies/@37.775964,-122.433261,3a,75y,90t/data=!3m8!1e2!3m6!1s2578664!2e1!3e10!6s%2F%2Flh4.googleusercontent.com%2Fproxy%2FOEC2Ck_2AZrvFfoonvYq2wfAc8tvnlb7cv7NQfHj_M1-wzONV3uIRP8tCyHroD5oWi3KHizSgd9W-lNAyqPigHNbxwIy%3Dw203-h152!7i2816!8i2112!4m2!3m1!1s0x0:0x8421d0c06f9e59c5!6m1!1e1

Coming back as before to the "Bridge Area" if very briefly now....

Here, as with the end of 2014, I wanted to keep alive communications on the "Bridge area", at and around Cleveland's abandoned Sidaway Avenue Suspension Bridge.

Shortly, I hope to add a blog covering a story of social and historic preservation as well, but for now, will just note its likely subject - the Garden Valley Neighborhood House - the front of which was built in 1924, and which is located at 71st and Kinsman Avenues....
GVNH in March, 2012

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

San Francisco - first impressions

This past Tuesday (Dec. 22) I arrived for a visit to San Francisco, certainly one of those cities I would go to frequently if time and money afforded. In this writing, I will offer a few sites and thoughts from my first night here. Since 22 is my lucky number, I was fortunate to come, no. 1, and to come on a "22nd"....

As I got ready to leave the airport....
for "the city" [meaning the City and County of San Francisco:)] - as I understand some people say here, the hills of suburban housing nearby, seen dimly below....
seemed to be a likely preview of the famous hill town I was about to see. I think I'll still love one of my favorite hilly cities - Pittsburgh - after this visit, but am glad to check out the fabled beauty I saw here 31 years ago on my last visit.

From the airport, I was about to take the "red line" north through Daly City (noted below and seen near the left center of the map here), to the Powell Street Station downtown....
As I rode on the train, I tried without success to get a picture of the hilly communities along the way, so wish to acknowledge a blog I just found for its pictures of one such hill in Daly City; see that hill, so to speak, in the second picture in the article "Forgotten Hills: La Portezuela" at http://urbanlifesigns.blogspot.com/2013/03/forgotten-hills-la-portezuela.html].

After a good ride on the train, with the horse I rode in on seen here at the Powell Street Station after I got off....

I felt this "west coast mini-New York City" vibe in the station concourse, if, granted, it was much newer than many similar subway spaces in New York....
and then I got a taste of what in San Francisco is sometimes called "Edwardian" style, and which I'm sure some people call "grandeur", with this view of the Flood Building, seen to the right, and "One Powell" to the left....
Before moving on to the wonderful heritage of the Flood Building, which I learned about in its lobby, I would love to research One Powell, but would only say that its sense of early 20th-century business power is joined today by the shelter its currently-closed entrance provides for the homeless, if again vaguely seen here....
The Flood Building, on a brief look at its lobby displays, three of which are seen here, brings together at least the subjects of Gold Rush dreams, disaster survival, film noir and family pride, and, with its standing at such a key corner, probably other themes as well.

It was named by its builder, James L. Flood, a son of James C. Flood (1826-1899), who came to San Francisco at the age of 23 (sounds like a good time to come based on history:)).


Its "Colusa Stone" and other features largely survived the earthquake and fire of 1906, with a recounting of that event in commentary here....

and the building seen here from Market Street along its southern end just after that disaster.....
Over time, its occupants included author Dashiell Hammett, who wrote "The Maltese Falcon" while working there for the Pinkerton Detective Agency. One of the memorials to this literary life in the landmark's lobby is a replica of the sculpture used in the movie of the book.....
The sculpture and other elements of the lobby's exhibit came about at least partly to celebrate a major renovation of the building in the early 90's, when the project coordinator was James "Jimmy" Flood, a grandson of the builder.

After I left the Flood Building, I spent a little time on the Powell Street side of "One Powell", just steps away from the starting point and terminus of the Powell Street cable car; if you look at the lower left side below, you will see a diagonal double line which marks a centerpiece of its charmingly small turntable in this pre-Christmas view from Powell towards Market....

Immediately to the right of this scene, I talked briefly with two of the many low-income people who live in nearby shelters, often faceless parts (for me as well) of the stresses between classes where, unfortunately, SF may be a leader in terms of its gentrification, a more powerful process here than in perhaps any other American city, due very much to the prosperity of Silicon Valley employees not far away, a number of them driving up the cost of housing through their city purchases.

I met Ricky Teague....

a poet originally from Oakland who said he lived nearby in an "SRO" (single-room occupancy) hotel and was out to sell copies of a 2001 book of poems, which he offered to me for $10 and then for $7, while I politely declined....
Shortly thereafter, I met Tony Perez....
who also lived in an SRO, and was selling the edition seen here of a homeless advocacy newspaper - "Street Sheet"....
He spoke to me of being born in Buffalo and coming to California as a 6-year old in 1976, when his family packed up a U-Haul truck which they took cross-country, first landing in Santa Cruz, then Santa Clara, and then ultimately with Tony coming to San Francisco. I did not delve into why they left Buffalo or what transpired in Tony's life to lead him to homelessness, but after his friendly "where's my cheesesteak?" (somewhat common when people hear you live in Philadelphia) we talked briefly.

Around 6:30, I walked past more of the holiday shopping world, and near a few of the many large and small hotels - ranging from deluxe to semi-divey? - in an area close to both Union Square and the heart of downtown, and then came to my reservation destination - the downtown SF lodging location of "Hostelling International" at 312 Mason just north of O'Farrell....

In short, I have had a good time here at 312 Mason based on my first night, and had a great morning of breakfast, conversation and the logistics of small sleeping and other spaces (more later there?), inside of more hotel heritage, as 312 Mason has housed a few short-term hotel spaces, including but not limited to.... the "Hotel Gloster" in 1909 [note the coincidental December date at the upper left of this postcard]....
and the Hotel Virginia in the late 1930's, hyper-advertised here in the left center around the time of an "expo" in SF in 1939....



This blog was completed thanks to a 1.3 billion grant and through the facilities of the Cup and Cake Cafe at Geary and Jordan....
whose location can be cut and pasted below, but seems to almost be exactly halfway between the famous "greeneries" of the Presidio and Golden Gate Park....
https://www.google.com/maps/place/Cup+%26+Cake+Cafe/@37.7817153,-122.4568566,15z/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x0:0xb503096ca5d1c279

Back for more writing soon hopefully....





Thursday, August 6, 2015

San Antonio - a patron city if not a patron saint...

[Please see "Sources Consulted" for further information on several subjects below.]

Over seven months ago, as 2014 turned into 2015, I went to South Texas for the first time in my life, and specifically San Antonio. Given that timing, hopefully my present tenses below are still accurate, but in any event....

Knowing abstractly that it meant much more than its most famous landmark, I was very impressed with San Antonio. In an echo of previous blogs, starting with my first one on Hartford, I am sure there is so much more which I can discover on a future visit, whether in its most cliched and powerful monument...
The Alamo, seen on Tuesday, Dec. 30, 2014 in wet weather which Texas needed if tourists may not

or in the city's most famous pathway, seen here on a first enchanted evening there...
the River Walk, or "Paseo del Rio", seen looking east from near North St. Mary's Street Monday night, Dec. 29, 2014


...in a place where I just barely got a sense of routine life, as in this bus stop right above its River Walk....
looking south on North St. Mary's towards Commerce St., Sat morning, Jan. 3, 2015

...or its people, with one real one right here, a San Antonian named Ray Zapata, part of a hard-working crew at the hotel where I stayed....
as well as his being a celebrity in every hotel room on the small screen....
and, if a resident of the city of San Antonio, a likely part of a huge Hispanic majority there - 63.2% - in the 2010 census.

I would guess that that statistic is one of the reasons for the rise of  the city's recently popular mayor, Julian Castro, who has gone on to serve as the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development in Washington and may become our first Hispanic vice-president or president. Both Castro and post-Castro, the city seems to have offered a lot of beauty and excitement as well as poverty, barriers at times to urban liveliness, and likely growing pains as it continues to rise in the ranks of the biggest cities in the United States.

I was there with other family members, partly to see a relative who had just started a new job in the city, and we stayed in the Drury Inn, located in a former 1920's office building right next to the River Walk, so it was easy to get to know that San Antonio icon. Before coming to the city, I had thought I might not see much of the Walk, being a contrarian when I travel, but for family solidarity, the ease of using it for wandering and just generally falling in love with it, it was a key aspect of my days there. The River Walk seemed like a very popular entertainer (fill in your choice), where people like me might say we won't go along with the herd, but, with such a naturally appealing offering, you can't help but be engaged in it.

The Walk is the result of decades of development and set-backs, based in large part on the turn-of-the-20th-century "City Beautiful" movement. Other factors which brought it to fruition include floods which helped to make the San Antonio River an unsightly ditch at times, and, after a number of years where the Walk was actually fairly unsafe after World War II, becoming a fixture in the city after its international expo "Hemisfair '68", with my guess that it ironically would have removed a lot of aging and potential charm at its grounds, especially for its Tower of the Americas....
looking west from the Institute of Texan Cultures on Fri., Jan 2, 2015

....even as it increased the incentive to "charm up" the city's small-scale heritage along the Walk and elsewhere.

While the walk has been expanded since the 1960's, it maintains significant elements of its pre-World War II fabric, such as this bridge (seen in the night view above)....
looking east towards Navarro Street Bridge over the Walk, Sat., Jan. 3, 2015

dedicated to the guiding spirit behind the Walk - San Antonio-born architect Robert Harvey Harold Hugman (1902-80) as well as a product of the prolific Depression-era Work Projects Administration, as noted in this plaque at the south end of the bridge....
and the overall effort of nearly 100 years now is incredible.

Perhaps the only critique I could offer on this pathway is that there are many stretches, as here a little north of the city's center...
looking south under the Lexington Avenue Bridge, Thurs., Jan 1, 2015

where a railing sure would be nice (!), but it is possible that the pathway's planners deliberately want you to use it with care whether you walk, run, etc.

While I did not cover the whole River Walk network, it does show its rough edges at times, whether in run-down building elevations perhaps waiting for a future investment wave, as in the rusty (fire?) stairways visible on the right side of the building here....
looking south from the Drury Inn dining area, Sat., Jan. 3, 2015

clear urban design failures, as in this parking garage, whose one redeeming feature may be that it curves with the waterway....
looking southeast from south of the Pecan Street Bridge, Thurs., Jan. 1, 2015

...and, if seemingly projecting a standpoint of "pristinity", sterility and classism, it is one of a number of congregating points for the city's large homeless population, while from a more liberal standpoint, they are, from the two dozen or more who I saw, peaceful, friendly and, along with the raggedness of a few adjacent buildings, part of a realness and relative democracy to this corridor.

Well above the Walk and sometimes right next to it, there is a skyline of great height and beauty for the early 20th century, which I had known just a tiny bit about before my visit, focusing mainly on a tower often known as the first air-conditioned office building in the world, the 1921 Milam Building, seen here in a view from the Walk....
looking northwest near the Travis Street Bridge, Thurs., Jan. 1, 2015

Granting it is a major historic landmark in technology, an (irrevocable?) pioneer of a new world lifestyle (and the namesake of perhaps the greatest hero of Texas independence who almost no one has ever heard of - see "Sources consulted")) - what came in my towering San Antonio experience after the Milam is remindful of being introduced to the first sister in a family, finding her reasonably attractive, and then, as the next si(s)blings come walking through the door - man, I did not know how hot this family was! [Very sexist, now Julian will never choose me as his running mate, but as I was saying....]

From the moment I set eyes on her, I fell in love with the Emily Morgan Hotel, which dramatically culminates the East Houston street experience, at least downtown....
looking east on East Houston from east of Presa, Weds., Dec. 31, 2014

reveals a little more of her shapeliness and delicacy close-up....
looking east with the main city post office at the left edge here, Dec. 31, 2014

and coyly appears behind an old live oak at the park around the Alamo just south of it....
looking north near the Alamo, Tues., Dec. 30, 2014

Before the guys get too excited though (man, this is really politically incorrect), here is an astounding one for the ladies, the manly Tower Life Building, one of the first sites of 2015 for me as I turned away from fireworks shortly after midnight....
and in a commanding view as part of it seems to culminate North St. Mary's Street....
looking south near Travis, Thurs., Jan. 1, 2015

Another very appealing high-rise and perhaps one of the sexiest older hospital buildings ever, is the Nix Medical Center. Yes to Nix!!

Here is the side for patients who are stocky but carry it well....
looking south on Navarro from Houston, Sat., Jan. 3, 2015

and here is the south elevation, inviting fitness buffs on the River Walk who aspire to its slimness....
looking north from the River Walk to the west side of the Nix Medical Center's south elevation, Sat., Jan. 3, 2015

Finally, it was interesting to see the following view from north of downtown, where you get an unimpeded "old skyline" view, something far from guaranteed in cities where taller and (sometimes less graceful) office buildings have replaced or at least visually blocked out the pre-World War II ones....
looking south on Broadway from above 9th Street, with the three older skyscrapers from left to right being Tower Life, Nix Medical Center and the Alamo National Bank Building (now the Drury Plaza Hotel). [Tues., Dec. 30, 2014]

The joy I took from these high-rises was actually not consummated in the sense that I did not see if the lobbies in question matched the beauty of the building elevations, except for the small but at times elegant lobby of Nix, with one of its elevators seen here....
Nix Medical Center lobby, second elevator door from the right, Sat., Jan. 3, 2015

....and in case you did not know this was a MEDICAL office tower, an appropriate "Medieval Medical"? symbolization upon it....
segment of the left panel of above elevator door

God willing, I will see the inside of Tower Life, the Alamo Building (which I am told is special), and the Emily Morgan Hotel on a future visit.

The wealth of oil, in part, which produced these towers had its basis in the city's post-Civil War growth as a center for cattle, railroads, flour milling and other fields, which led in a residential sense to perhaps the city's greatest "historic" neighborhood - the King William District, about a mile south of the Alamo.

The "King William" section is glorious in its many wooden houses, some - for lack of photos - a little like larger and wider "shotguns", a few painted in beautiful pastels - and, at the end of a brief ride there - a residential version of New Years' "fireworks" (after real ones two days earlier) - in the late-19th-century homes of King William Street, including the 1876 Steves Mansion....
Villa Finale, also of 1876....
and, an anomaly which suggested the street was still desirable in the inter-war era....
325 King William Street (Fri., Jan. 2, 2015, as with the two photos just above)

[Please see "Sources Consulted" for information on all three of these properties.]


Wealthy patrons here and elsewhere, one can assume, have created a fine museum scene in the city over the years, which I began to see along with family members, and including - between us if not always shared together....

 - the fascinating history of Texas ethnic groups in the gapingly unpresentable box housing the Institute of Texan Cultures....
Fri., Jan. 2, 2015

....part of the impressive "plant" of the Witte Museum, directed especially to kids from its beautiful setting in Brackenridge Park on the north side of town....
 The Witte's "Body Adventure Pavilion",  Friday, Jan. 2, 2015

....the collections of the San Antonio Museum of Art - which I understand from my brother Paul was in a former brewery and has  several strengths including pre-Columbian and Asian art, and.... 

....quite likely the big star for our group, for its great post-1800 art and beautiful surroundings - the McNay Art Museum, with its central courtyard seen here....
looking west into the McNay courtyard, Tues., Dec. 30, 2014
[with the far end including part of the 1927-30 mansion of art collector Marion McNay and her husband Dr. Donald Atkinson, where the museum started in 1954]

The great Impressionist and other treasures of the McNay, the Witte and its surrounding Brackenridge Park....
top: the 1926 Joske Pavilion, a mission-style (stone leopard beauty:)!)
bottom: the Joske Pavilion and a partly visible 1890 iron bridge crossing the San Antonio River beyond it; both seen on Fri., Jan. 2, 2015

...and several other sites, are very much worth a ride up Broadway Street  - visible earlier in the "old skyline" view - but a key stretch of this major street, for maybe a mile just above downtown, is dull and largely dead, as here....
looking north on Broadway near 8th Street, Sat., Jan. 3, 2015

followed briefly by a huge freeway interchange which is of course active, but deadening as well, separating what is and what could be to the south from what has sprouted across the freeway - the sometimes hopping (no pun intended?) and definitely growing Pearl Brewery development whose small dome and smokestack are dimly seen here near the right center....
looking northwest from the west side of Broadway north of Roy Smith Road, Thurs., Jan. 1, 2015


and to the left in this photo....
looking north from Roy Smith St. near Avenue B, Sat., Jan. 3, 2015

The Pearl cluster, as it might be called, is evolving as a lively neighborhood of ex-industrial landmarks, including the brewhouse of the one-time Pearl Brewery, with its tower seen near the center of this view....
looking southwest on Karnes from Emma Koehler, Thurs., Jan. 1, 2015

a former stable beautiful in its brickwork and roundness....
looking northeast on Karnes to Emma Koehler, Thurs., Jan. 1, 2015

apartment buildings and restaurants which are largely in spare but attractive modern buildings, including "Green", a great place seen here....
where your "votes" for the restaurant's all-vegetarian lifestyle, likely to be positive ones, join those of more famous people....
perhaps for the fried mushrooms....
[all "Green" photos here taken on Thurs., Jan. 1, 2015]

or other choices.

Whether you eat or drink to San Antonio, perhaps saying aaah! for the so-called "big enchilada" of its "Mexican Modernist" main library...
from North St. Mary's looking north, Thurs., Jan. 1, 2015

take in its present...
looking east on East Houston St. from near the River Walk, Sat., Jan. 3, 2015

or its past...
looking east on Houston from near the R.Walk (in the 1930's, I'm guessing); seen at "Green" Restaurant, Fri., Jan. 2, 2015

I hope your time is as full of enjoyment and the fireworks of urban revelation as mine was....
looking southeast from the roof of the Drury Inn Hotel, shortly after midnight, Jan. 1, 2015, with the Tower of the Americas dimly visible in the left center


Sources consulted

[Some of this may seem dry but hopefully not in regards to the stories of "Emily Morgan", the Pearl Brewery's Emma Koehler and two other Emmas, etc.:). 

I hope that in the near future any urls can be hyper-linked and "clickable", but at this point, as with my previous blog citations, you would still need to cut and paste most of them.]

Alamo National Bank Building - This was built in 1929 and reopened as the Drury Plaza Hotel in 2007, as per "Drury Plaza Hotel A Downtown Jewel From Rick Drury and Drury Southwest, at" http://downtownsanantonio.org/main/news/u25.  

Drury Inn and Suites (hotel in which I stayed with members of my family) -- "Drury Inn and Suites / San Antonio Riverwalk" (article on its history and renovation), at https://www.druryhotels.com/content/historicalrenovation0005.aspx, which states that it was finished initially in 1921 as the "City Public Service Building" and, sometime after three floors were added in 1927, it became known as the Petroleum Commerce Building. This article also notes that the building was the "first major office building in downtown San Antonio that devoted an architecturally-treated façade to the river"....

---- "Drury Inn has designs on Petroleum Commerce Building", San Antonio Business Journal, Sept. 21, 1997, at http://www.bizjournals.com/sanantonio/stories/1997/09/22/story8.html?page=all


Emily Morgan Hotel - building history - This was formerly the Medical Arts Building, from its opening in 1924 until 1976, and was converted into the Emily Morgan Hotel in 1984, according to http://www.emilymorganhotel.com/building-history.

Dates are a little different in a pdf for "The Texas Star Trail / A Downtown [SA] Walking Tour", which suggests that the building's opening took place in 1926 and its hotel conversion in 1985. [https://www.saconservation.org/Portals/0/HistoricalTours/texasstartrail.pdf]

The "emilymorgan" writing just above says that the hotel name comes from the story of a "servant girl" who "wooed the Mexican General Santa Anna during the Battle of San Jacinto". 

There, her name is stated as Emily West, and elsewhere it is alternately noted that as an indentured servant, she would take the surname of her master - James Morgan [for example, at http://www.tamu.edu/faculty/ccbn/dewitt/adp/archives/yellowrose/yelrose.html ("In Search 
of the "Yellow Rose of Texas") OR that she was "erroneously called Emily Morgan by those who presumed her a slave of James Morgan". [http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fwe41 {"West, Emily D."}].

Both of these sources suggest that she could be the basis for the legendary song "The Yellow Rose of Texas".




Hemisfair '68 - Sources including "S.A. Back in the Day: HemisFair '68", at http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/local/history-culture/slideshow/S-A-Back-in-the-Day-HemisFair-68-59427.php, which in 50 photos shows a number of fair aspects and partly struck me for its positive pictures regarding the Tower of the Americas along with a few negative ones connected with power failures at the Tower on two occasions during the six-month fair.

Joske Pavilion - "Doorway Into the Past..../Joske Pavilion", November 4, 2013, at http://doorwayintothepast.blogspot.com/2013/11/joske-pavilion.html; "Native: Joske Pavilion", a brief blog of July 1, 2009 on the website of Rene Balderas, who I have just "met" tonight" (March 9, 2015) and who notes of the Pavilion "Not only the gem of Brackenridge Park but probably my favorite building in San Antonio by anybody!" [http://www.renejbalderas.com/2009/07/citizen-joske-pavilion.html; Rene Balderas appears to live in the SA area and work as an architecture professor, while his school is not stated, as per https://www.blogger.com/profile/00736658670397984386.]


King William Street (325...) - This "Arte Moderne" house was built in 1940, as per a photo gallery, "Christmastime on King William Street", at http://www.pbase.com/lynnh/image/91030583, within  a photo site titled "Historic Texas / Events and Places that celebrate my state's rich history".

McNay Art Museum. "McNay Moments: From Mansion to Museum: The Metamorphosis of Mrs. McNay’s Home". http://www.mcnayart.org/blog/mcnay-moments-from-mansion-to-museum-the-metamorphosis-of-mrs.-mcnays-home


Milam, Ben (1788-1835). Ben Milam is dwarfed in collective Texas memory by Davy Crockett, Sam Houston and others, but his brave and soon-fatal entry into "San Antonio de Bejar" (as it was known in December, 1835) was key in spurring the ultimately successful revolution for Texas's independence from Mexico.

"The Forgotten Hero, Ben Milam", at http://www.texasescapes.com/CFEckhardt/Ben-Milam.htm, includes statements on his grand obscurity such as one which says he is the "only major participant in the Texas Revolution who is never mentioned at all" in "the most comprehensive...novel ever written about Texas, James Michener’s TEXAS".

"MILAM, BENJAMIN RUSH" entry in a digital encyclopedia of the Texas State Historical Association at https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fmi03 - AS with a number of other sources, this notes Milam's most famous words, "Who will go with old Ben Milam into San Antonio?" inspiring 300 freedom fighters to join him after most members of the army against Mexican rule had decided not to go into the town.


Nix Medical Building - built in 1930, as per http://www.nixhealth.com/home/about-us/mission-and-history?headerbar= which notes of its namesake that, [w]ith few resources available, Joseph M. Nix developed an adventurous concept of a multi-million dollar structure that would house a hospital, physician offices and a parking garage" and "this "medical mall" was the first of its kind in the United States".



Pearl Brewery Brewhouse - A magnificent 1881 structure, which will open shortly as the Hotel Emma within the Kimpton Hotel chain. The "Emma" behind it, who was the wife of Pearl Brewery founder Otto Koehler, became a rare (and very successful) female executive after the murder of her husband by an alleged lover in 1914, as per "The Girl with the Pearl Beering", at http://www.sanantoniomag.com/SAM/January-2011/The-Girl-with-the-Pearl-Beering/.

In March, I briefly read more on this tragedy and a related and occasionally sordid tale of intrigue, libido and more at "Pearl Brewery story is saga of 3 Emmas", a reference to both lovers being known, like Ms. Koehler, as "Emma [See "http://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/columnists/native-texan/article/Pearl-Brewery-rest-of-a-juicy-story-5923317.php, where, if the story disappears - in connection with the Houston Chronicle seeking paying readers:) - you may be able to retrieve if again by googling its title.]

[As per http://www.thehotelemma.com.php53-13.dfw1-1.websitetestlink.com/reservations/, the Hotel Emma should open in October. - 8/5/15]




River Walk -- "SAN ANTONIO RIVER WALK [PASEO DEL RIO]", at http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/hps02 [a project of the Texas State Historical Association]

Population statistics for San Antonio -- "State & County QuickFacts" for the city of San Antonio at http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/48/4865000.html.


San Antonio - economic history -- "San Antonio History Facts and Timeline" at http://www.world-guides.com/north-america/usa/texas/san-antonio/san_antonio_history.html; 

"After the Civil War, San Antonio prospered as a cattle, distribution, mercantile, and military center serving the border region and the Southwest" from: https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/hds02; "After the [Civil] war, San Antonio prospered as a center of the cattle culture. Anglo Americans learned the Spanish and Mexican techniques of herding cattle on horseback, creating a new generation of cowboys." [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_San_Antonio]; The city was the southern hub and supplier of the cattle trail drives. An important wool market developed with the importation of merino sheep to the adjacent Hill Country. With the coming of the Galveston, Harrisburg and San Antonio Railway in 1877, San Antonio, formerly without a transportation system, entered a new era of economic growth. -- in "TEXAS LEGENDS
San Antonio - A Mecca For History Buffs", at http://www.legendsofamerica.com/tx-sanantonio.html

Tower Life Building.  A listing for it within the wonderful site emporis.com, at http://www.emporis.com/building/towerlifebuilding-sanantonio-tx-usa, notes that it was finished in 1929 and was ...
  • San Antonio's tallest building for 59 years until completion of the  Marriott Rivercenter in 1988 [and] [a]lso San Antonio's tallest office building for 60 years until the completion of the Weston Centre in 1989.
The Emporis site was a reminder that one of its previous names was the "Transit Tower", and I believe it was love at first site for me when I saw a picture of it under that name in my (teens? but years ago) in a National Geographic Magazine of around (1940?).


Steves Mansion - The Steves Homestead/House Museum was built for Edward Steves, noted as the founder of the Steves Lumber Company within a brief passage on the mansion at a "Society Properties" segment for its owner, the San Antonio Conservation Society. [See https://www.saconservation.org/OurHistory/PropertiesPurchased/SocietyProperties/tabid/153/ArticleID/32/ArtMID/526/Steves-Homestead---House-Museum-.aspx.]


Villa Finale - According to http://villafinale.org/About.html, this eye-catching museum house, while built for hardware merchant Russel C. Norton in 1876, clearly achieved its Italianate appearance with retardataire timing - in 1904, and it is the only Texas property overseen by the National Trust for Historic Preservation; the Trust "protects and promotes" 27 total historic sites, as per http://www.preservationnation.org/travel-and-sites/sites/.

Work Projects Administration. - This rated as a "look-up" because when I saw the plaque on the River Walk bridge seen above, I thought it might be mistaken, as, like many people, I knew the "WPA" as the Works Progress Administration, but have learned that from 1939-43, it was known as the Work Projects Administration:). See
and