 So just start off some of the names. This is dog patch area. That's actually a space we lived in someone from the old warehouse. Al is here, Al Fleming. Here's the old warehouse we lived in back here this corrugated metal building with a it had an overpass over the road actually even what we lived in there for several years and what we first got there is just raw space. But here's some of the names for Petro Hill in history. Goat Hill, I'm sure you heard that one. Irish Hill, Dutchman's Flat, Russian Hill, they call it Petro Hill, Russian Hill for a while. Scotch Hill, Dog Patch, Butchertown, Poppy Hill, Southern Heights, Central Waterfront, Southeast San Francisco. But the original name given to it when it was owned by Mexico, when Mexico owned all the land, was Petrero Nuevo. And that was when the land grants divided up the areas and this land was given to the Deharo family of which we have Deharo Street. And then of course gold, everybody came here, and then ship building. This area is an incredible, incredibly rich ship building. So there's warehouse that overpass going over the street. I didn't realize it at time, but these areas, Flat Dog Patch area, two of these towns, one town was just like half a block from here. It was called Dutchman's Flat. It developed at 18th and Tennessee Street and at 22nd in Tennessee. Then the other was Irish Hill. So I've just included my pictures here, but after we go through these, I've included some old photos, archival photos, that show some of these places. There's no pictures of Dutchman's Flat, just of Irish Hill. But when we lived down there, it was just, it was kind of the end of the railroad era. There were still tracks, still trains at night. But it was a real working-class neighborhood and kind of rough. But obviously you could park. Check it out. There's not a single car in the street. You know, this is 1979 or so and I don't necessarily know that this was a weekend. So, you know, there's warehouse cross-street which was reactive, but there was lots of parking, lots of room and the development of this area was just really because it was a huge industrial, industrial build-up area. It was all built up for the war, right? First in, especially the Second World War. And again, this is over 16th Street. Or 17th, I mean, sorry, 17th near Kansas and no cars at all. I'd go out a lot of times on a weekend, early morning to try to get areas that were more deserted. But now this is really, this building's gone and it's totally a it's like a show place, more like a show place down there now. It's looking down Missouri Street towards downtown San Francisco. That's what the skyline was like in the late 70s. You know, the tallest thing is Bank America and the, you can see the Pyramid building, but Skyline's changed a little bit. This is a empty lot of Deharo Street going up towards a Petra Hill neighborhood house looking East towards East Bay and There's a lot of empty lots like this when I was living up there. How many people remember we're around San Francisco and remember Petra Hill or got around a bit? Three, four, but about half. Yeah, it's changed so much. Any little lot like this is filled in now. Two houses were put in this space. I had a hard time finding it on Google Maps. So I had to go back up there and yeah, they put two houses in there. It's kind of unrecognizable. So you could walk into a lot of these lots and have really great views of places and It's all filled in and this is the Petra Hill neighborhood house up at Deharo where Southern Heights meets right there and The woman in the center there with the yellow hat on that's Inola Maxwell. She has a real active very influential person around the neighborhood and her daughter became one of the supervisors Sophie Sophia Sophie Sophie Maxwell. Thank you and a Petra Hill house Harkins back to I don't know. I'm not gonna go and give you a bunch of dates here and stuff all this information is in the alongside the narratives but After the earthquake happened a lot of people moved to Petra Hill, right? It was a stable land There were a few Russians living around there. Most of the Irish were down on the flats but people found out that this hill was stable and so a whole a lot of people moved there afterwards in a big sect of Molokani, I think they're called these Molokan people from Russia because of religious persecution, etc they moved here and they were the people that built the neighborhood house through it was through the Presbyterian Church and a Molokani they Hired Architect Julia Morgan. She's the architect of the neighborhood house and so it became a central place for immigrants to learn trades basically like Typing things of that nature and it was a cultural center, but it served the community for decades now Yes, it's doing good and they always run into financial problems But their director right now is he's really a dynamite guy. He's been interviewed and some stuff And he really knows the history and the culture of the neighborhood and really impressive St. Teresa's Church Again, this is a church that was down in the flats to start with Down at 20th and 3rd Street, and then they had a small building and most of their lot of their parishioners Had moved to the Hill so they eventually built the Hill house excuse me the church up on the Hill They also had a school on Pennsylvania Street that I'll show you some of the historical pictures later When they built the freeway it caused all kinds of damage to the school and eventually they had to abandon the school But there's a whole history of this church moving about five or six different places and eventually ended up at Missouri and 20th this is looking East from 19th there's a it's a dead end Street because during about turn of the century Santa Fe Railroad and and other people they cut into the Hill. They took this tremendous amount of the East side of Petro Hill and they used this to fill in areas For industrial use and also they totally filled in Mission Bay right originally Mission Bay went went back quite a ways You know down by the ballpark where the ballpark is now But from cutting off the top of different Hills the Irish Hill was totally cut down If you're down there today, there's a little 50 foot tall Hill It was a hundred and fifty feet in the old days and it just occupied that whole intersection at 20th in Illinois Street But there used to be a street just beyond this called Iowa Street. It's gone totally gone. It was totally cut into and now you have a few dead end streets and of course the 280 freeway is there. I mean the original The original excavation took a lot of the Hill, but when they built a 280 freeway they took even more of the Hill and Slovenian Hall again Europeans moving to Petro Hill and establishing a cultural center that's you know serve a community for Over a hundred years now and Bethlehem by Bethlehem shipyards originally it was a In this area that was developed this was a Petro point And this whole area had been shipbuilding even since the gold rush down where the ballpark is now South Beach There's all kinds of shipbuilding down there and it extended into where Petro point is down here so it always been shipbuilding for a hundred years and then the Union ironworks came in and they developed a More extensive shipyard really efficient They built the first metal clad the first metal ship on the on the the Pacific Rim was built at Union ironworks, which eventually became Bethlehem. What happened was there was all kinds of economic problems with Industry and Charles Schwab bought the shipyard in like 19 two or eight or something like that and Developed and into Bethlehem he owned Bethlehem shipyards, but during the war. It's just amazing the production came out here 20,000 people were employed down here three shifts a day, of course and We can go over some of the statistics later, but it was just amazing Amazing output actually let me just read just a little bit. They could they built one destroyer I think it took them 24 days from start to finish to build a whole ship. It's just a you know, it's war effort and it's just It was do or die, right basically Where's that part? pure 70s Contributions were crucial to the military power of the United States in World War one Bethlehem Bay Area shipyards were among the largest Producers of ships during the war specializing in destroyers and submarines during World War two approximately 19,000 men and women were employed at paternal point working three shifts a day seven days a week at the height of the war effort productivity was tremendous the destroyer escort Friedeburg was built in 24 days Start to finish and during the war Bethlehem's Petro shipyard produced 72 vessels 52 for combat. So it was just an incredible Pace right and the activity it was going on over there when I lived my place was about Three blocks away and at night. They were still working down or built in barges and things like that and it was a real symphony of Noise and just all kinds of you know clanging and banging and whistles and riveting and sanding guys yelling and you know, and then there's Trains going around a neighborhood at night bumping off cars all times at a night a whole place shakes So it was still really active blue collar But you know, it's really changed whereas now this is going to be a park, right pure 70 They're going to keep some of the cranes in there. They've dismantled some but now it's going to be a huge park, which you know much better than just housing I think so this is inside the shipyard was Bethlehem and Mission Rock Resort was right next to this is Bethlehem ship shipyard in distance If any of you ever went down to Mission Rock Resort, that was a fun place About 1970 it it started just a you know hamburger hot dog beer place, but you'd be sitting there and guys are coming in boats and There's just okay, you know one time one guy came in they were hitting something in the boat with an ore What the hell they had a shark they'd caught or kill it So you'd be out there Mission Rock Resort and it was it was a real blue collar place man. It wasn't hoity-toity like A place eventually turned into some club oyster bar or something, but those were the days That's the stuff I miss somebody trying to knock a shark out and Peer 50 down there. I'm sure you've gone by this is really close to the ballpark And it's all called also called Mission Rock Terminal or what it was this Mission Rock I'm sure you've heard of the Mission Rock. It was a small really tiny little island. It was just outside of Mission Bay about 200 yards offshore from You know they filled in a bunch of the land in there, but about 200 miles 200 yards offshore, so they eventually they Whole history of this thing it was used as terminal and stuff But eventually they built the pier all the way out to cover the rock So it's a 20 20-acre pier now, but it that's right on top of Mission Rock I never knew where Mission Rock was when I lived over there. It's only from look at these maps if I figured it out And the Caltrain coming in every morning under the 280 freeway zoom in downtown But you could afford to live over there then I'm gonna find the warehouse spot. I saw an ad in the Chronicle Went over a warehouse spot. Yeah, okay 77. Hey, cool. You got to build your own place great and Our rents will be paid 500 a month for 3000 square foot 18-foot ceilings and All utilities included This is Greyhounds old garage Greyhound bus garage and You can see you can just barely see the little Symbol up at the top with the Greyhound symbol there now. It's CCA CCA and we'll set CCAC CCA So it's a new college Yeah areas very change the railway tracks are all torn out of course There's a balcony overlooking in 280 freeway This place to live be hard to sleep and all this stuff is really common feed stuff You know small industries Place down at the end there is a it was a coat hanger company Beverly coat hanger company made coat hangers You see the railroad tracks go between the buildings and the buildings triangular A lot of building around town that are triangular. This is a corner of Connecticut and 17th and It's called the Connecticut Central here But originally this was a really old lunch counter and originally a saloon. That was built around 1908 I have some picture at the end of it called Salvatis and It talked about the description of it that you know mission Bay was really close to here and when it was heavy rainfall the The building would actually flood and stuff. It was that close to mission Bay and all the runoff There was a lot of places in the city that during the rainy seasons got wiped out the willows here in the mission in the mission and other places This is the photo on the announcement Little Victorian and this huge natural gas tank next door there was about five or Seven natural gas tanks and big oil storage ganks tanks PG&E had power plant over by the bay and there's big tanks to feed that and all kinds of Really explosive things. I'd like to live next to that, you know, we just wouldn't tolerate it today But you know, this was a place that was cheap to live and you know a lot of us I remember going through the warehouse. We were doing plumbing under the floor and there's all kinds of who knows acid Vestus whatever the stuff we were working in. We were silly. We didn't wear masks and stuff, but Most people didn't want to live in a place like this We're like, hey cool, you know cheap area and a lot of space for money and Can make a lot of noise and great, but I'd still be a little worried Light in a match next to that thing This is the lefty old dual bridge, which you know lefty old dual was a picture for the Seals SF seals I guess that got 30s and This drawbridge originally there was a small bridge that Southern Pacific had built over the this was Mission Creek actually Mission Creek Flows out into China Basin here. So it was originally the creek Coming from the mission But this is the beginning of this really important terminus From the land there South Beach and the main land of the city In the 1800s they built a long bridge Way out what became Third Street, you know just land filled that area and build up a trestle and So way out Third Street, you can go away out there. It was called long bridge originally to serve as a horse-drawn streetcar But that opened up the Petro area when that went in I think 1867 they started the streetcar service out there But this is still in this bridge was replaced in 32 with this more durable huge bridge that locomotives could go over to service Pull freight in and out and also Streetcars et cetera, but this bridge is still there. It's pretty impressive thing and in the boats too, you know, this is where the The ballparks just to the left here, right, but they used to have these banana boats would come into here They they become a right in the China Basin there and offload You know The Longshoremen would be carrying the big things of bananas off of there There's all kinds of photos of this in the China Basin building. Of course, that was a big Offloading spot. There's big all kinds of railroad cars outside of there. Nothing like today but really important Transportation hub there and originally that was all shipbuilding down the South Beach was all shipbuilding This area has changed tremendously. It's a real positive Outcome this was originally housing For what was intended 1937 under FDR money intended for For poverty release relief for for the Horrible economic situation So 37 the money came in they started building these barrack like houses, but then in 41 You just got into a war and all this turned into industrial workers housing So on the south west side here that all this housing. These are just the foundations left from these old housing projects that run the west side and the South side and then the east side of Petro Hill So what was originally to you know, just be housing for people turned into industrial housing for all these workers and after that left and I read it 40% were black workers that were came from the south for jobs and then By the then by the 1960s it became 80% black because a lot of the whites They could get loans easier and now, you know, that's that's why it ends up That black folks got ended up Living in these places and now the city's trying to get rid of the last projects that are over there on that They're called the annex. It's on the south east side so we'll see what happens with that folks are really mad and they do not want to leave but You know all this stuff is you know housing development Petro Hill look at the changes that are happening over there boy, everything's filled in These places have tremendous views But the positive part this street in the background is all fixed up originally that was all just dirt street that got fixed and this the neighbors they really fought to keep this open space and They were able to do it eventually and so the houses are not built there It's just place people love is walk their dog or some little open space to look out Towards the West there. I Have some more photos later on of the development of that. That's Carolina Street The split it's a little there's a lot of these saloons bars down in dogpatch, you know the Workers they'd be in in the morning drinking drinking hard Going out and unloading Trucks or whatever getting the goods But there's a lot of little saloons obviously guys sitting out there really Wiped out around 11 a.m. On a bench Baker and Hamilton I'm sure you've seen this building down there. It's at 7th near Townsend This was an incredibly huge warehouse and really important It was there before the earthquake and when the earthquake happened in a fire went down 27th Street, it didn't jump the street so it burned everything on the east side and this warehouse was left And it was really important because it's filled with the all kinds of hardware and it became a real service point for Supplying hardware and goods for for the city that had lost a lot of the goods and services And it's on the historic Register the landmark landmark status with the street and back there Now it's all paved. I think there's kind of a little cafe like looking thing in there. It's just all different than when it was working Loading dock Baker and Hamilton there's a sign on one of the other photos 1849 they started up by Sutter's Mill and eventually merged with another hardware company and Built this huge location There's the back side says 1849 up on top there and that sign But there's a lot of streets like this down in Mission Bay and and even parts of Petro Hill where you know unpaved just really rough a lot of railroad crossings and stuff and worked fine Don't have to drive a Porsche this is the Petro Hill rec center up on top and It's real Sanctuary for kids to have a place to go play ball and stuff and you might notice This painting up on top and number 32 That's OJ Simpson OJ Simpson grew up a few blocks away from there and into projects and so the person did a mural they put up The emulating pictures of important people and OJ was one of them Well according to the guy Who the director of Petro Hill neighborhood house OJ didn't do much for the neighborhood? I mean he did come back one time and Visited but basically he was gone. So anyway The portrait still there but The director to neighborhood house says the only reason it's still there and hasn't been defaced It's because it's so high that nobody can reach it That's what he says. There is another portrait down by that Connecticut connection Restaurant that people did to face the OJ image in there But there's a very important place for the neighborhood Just a central place, you know ball fields in the back basketball courts, etc. So that's where OJ worked out man Right there Yeah, and yeah Kind of wonder about that too. Yeah, Petro Hill didn't get the nicest rec center, right? But whatever it's it was up operational But it is just an old quonset hut SF gravel. That's what we used to get our sheetrock and you'll taste The building's still there. I'm surprised. It's still there that little little sliver Not the signs, of course, and there's two more buildings in back. We're all filled in Waltz diner. I love these little Lunch counters and places. There's a lot of these little places down by the railroad tracks Just little places where the workers could go grab a hamburger or something and The train went right in back of there. There's a 7th Street right across from Baker and Hamilton And so when the train went by the whole place would shake. You know, it was great I just have a fondness. I mean Redd's Java house is really the only place left, right like this part of SP's train yards down there They're 25th in Illinois in the PG&E power plant But, you know, not a lot of activity at that point Here's another one of those lunch counters, Frank's Place It's now the Parkside right across from The park on 17th Street There's old boxcars and old old vehicles This car would sit there for weeks. No one would I'm surprised nobody stole it or Damaged it. There was a lot, you know, just Time for different Time for different And another that's the other That same tank that we were looking at earlier by the Victorian But just from a different angle and some of the projects up on the hill And by that whole area though is They've just built so much over there at the side of that hill. There's a huge project going on and Yeah, they want to tear it down to projects when as soon as they can This was the old Petrero theater It started as a silent movie theater and then It was just the Petrero theater to start with and then when Salon came in it changed to the new Petrero theater and eventually Was all in Fallen down. It was all kind of in this disrepair and it became a Practice place for the grateful dead for a while And then it became a church as it is here now. It's a I say who was at the gergy foundation was Renting they own it and they just sold it to someone Lady standing in a our doorway here looking out And this is another area that had projects originally that were turned Torn down and now this is developed into townhouses and a little neighborhood. It's all filled in tremendous views the bottom of the hill was uh now it's a Performance spot right a lot of bands play there, but originally it was just a bar Just a bar that again six a.m. It place was busy Guys getting ready to go to work And there was a paper recycling Warehouse down there. It was really wild at night We'd love to stop in there and look in the door and see them pushing paper around so lots of light industry and Residents residential living right next to each other down there These are kids uh Samoan kids practicing rehearsing for a Dance are going to do at the in the basement up at the patrol hill neighborhood house Yeah, really fortunate to get this picture kids are great But you know the cultural the neighborhood house just been a really great great place for decades at the community center Here's the 20th street bridge over 280 and we're looking at Bethlehem shipyards Uh This is a spree decor park right the park that's down there now and again, uh, southern pacific and Other entities had scraped away at the hill, but when they put the freeway in they just took a whole lot more off and Like 40 houses who are damaged on pennsylvania street after they built the retaining walls the houses started cracking and Sliding so they were warned as the old uh patrol hill library It was Look a little downtrodden there with the broken glass, but they just didn't have the budget They've revamped it. It looks really great now But it's served a community for also a hundred years different locations This spot is totally different. There's a six-story condo there now It's 7th street right near cca near 7th and 16th and It's looking west from a spot right near a spot called dump truck park where a dump truck had knocked down an overpass and Took a long time to get things sorted out, but eventually a park was established on each side of the freeway as Kind of a trade-off but the incident Happened and then became a little park land on each side Looking through one of those empty lots again to harrow street A lot of houses like this in the old days kind of run down a little bit, but you know Everything wasn't all spiffed up in san francisco and look at a roof Definitely going to get some water through that thing, but you know, it's just people It just wasn't as spiffed up and all everything has to be so High-tech and perfect You can afford to live there Wolf's lunch. I'm sure you've seen this place down at 16th it's Cca is right back here. It's actually a triangular building Here's the backside of it. I feel a little tight fit in that bathroom And PG knee this is warm water cove they're Cooling waters a Exhaust into the bay there. So it attracts fish. So it's a real popular fishing spot These cottages had a hard time finding ease again because So many things have changed there and other fences have been built and trees have grown But a little cute little spots a little little porch and There's a theater up top that brick building on the left And then you got some writing on the back of that other building from a grocery store or something this little hints of What was there before? This is a Near near 18th The Peturo theater is at brick building. So I can't remember the name of the street. It's uh A goat hill pizza would be that next street up 18th. So we're just one block west of that Yeah, and a big big metal fabricator Fabricating business conlon and roberts down to 16th street And again says 1848 or 49 up there. That's when they first started Their operations in california and this building has been totally destroyed condos up there now the old anchor steam brewery was originally a coffee roastery that The company bought in 67 but unfortunately An anchor steam beer was started in 1898 and It was and it was in private ownership for many years the Maytag family Fritz Maytag ran it for 2045 years and recently sold and then it was sold again to the What is it? Sapporo, right? Sapporo owns anchor steam now Sorry to say but the building's still there and it's still making good good product this is the top of A tunnel collapse happened in 62. You can see the tracks come from downtown And this tunnel collapsed because there was a railway a rail railway fire And they did burnt for three days and eventually the tunnel collapsed. I can't believe they let the same burn for three days But 25 houses were lost in this thing So I have a couple of black and whites of that later if we have time their Cool old industrial building that's now It's an antique antique store Near the show place this old public school down in Tennessee street This is around that one of those areas that was originally the old Settlements, right one of the old settlements eventually 22nd Tennessee, but It's being refashioned here. There's some kids in a dog playing out there. This is at Minnesota and 18th It was a grocery warehouse that the trucks would pull in there at night like 2 3 a.m And just sit all night and idle and then in the morning before before the sun came up that forklifts were out there Unload the unloading all the goods And then little corner stores Owners they'd line up in their station waggers and cars and stuff and vans and they'd pick up their grocery orders This is like before Costco, right? This is a corner grocery stores would pick up all their wholesale groceries here So after Costco opened what? 93 this place went out of business soon after but Back old cottages down there their 22nd Tennessee is Very close to the goat hill pizza again up there at top of the hill They're 18th queen and victorian another stucco covered house Community gardens. This is over by that dump truck park This looks exactly the same. It's one of the only spots. I went back to it. Oh my god. I stood in that spot It looks exactly the same. Thank you Something they haven't put a condo in Because it's a community park and stuff community gardens and the community has kept it somehow And another one of these big natural gas tanks. This one was down on army streets Cesar Chavez Southern Heights area that all those housing projects were so that one's been taken away also looking down at 280 freeway and So there's more storage tanks down towards hunters point area and it's rare to have this much Forage and The pictures around here, but I found this spot. I can't find a spot again. I guess a lot of the stuff's gone New warehouse the old projects southeast side Here's that building you were talking about sherry, right? courtesy Yeah, they ripped out all the tracks that they somehow they've built a building in that little sliver that was open there And the train used to go right by my window You're in the the auto record one? Yeah Surprise the whole thing shakes. Yeah. No, there's a lot of that But yeah, they shoehorned a building right into that open area This is looking down Indiana street looking south From the 18th street bridge But that's what it was. I mean how many cars are in park there, you know, there's nothing There's one car coming right? Yeah Chevy one car coming it's like now And this is looking out from my loft From where when we lived in the warehouse over there and towards Bethlehem sort of like two blocks away But at night boy, it was allowed your Bangin and clang going out. You can see the welding going on. It was great all the sparks and grinding and And you know whistles it was great. I really liked it And looking towards downtown Changed quite a lot So What time do we have because I don't want to I probably took a long five to three, okay Let me just show you a couple of these because I want to end in like five ten minutes because I don't want to Let me just show you a couple like there's that long bridge, right? Saying there's mission bay There's the mission creek going into mission bay Here's that patrero point where bethlehem steel is down there But they filled all that in right they filled that whole thing in And that's the long bridge Originally they built that bridge on the water so that they could have the transit system Go out to patrero and develop that neighborhood But yeah, that's all been filled in and that eventually became third street That bridge and here's where bethlehem eventually got Built and that's irish hill That all got mowed down that all got cut down and dumped into the bay This is actually a old Moy bridge photo And there's irish hill again. There's there's bethlehem. I think this building's still there. I think that's 20th street I think that building's still there But the irish hill see it was 150 feet tall it was huge Huge they tore all that down dumped it in there's 50 feet Little 50-foot hill. It's pretty small and circumference left But it's all irish and it's supposed to be really tough These stories are just amazing what what what happened there. So here's what's left of it this little hill You can still see that and here's that other district that was close to there another Dutchman's flat right in our area Here's the inside of the warehouse. We just built our places With what we could find those are old forklifts skids issues wood And here's how it looked when I first moved in there that where that park is that was all just a bunch of tires across the street There was a building that burnt down. There's a bunch of wood out there That was really, you know, just really undesirable looking but not to realtors Then they developed the park, of course That the 19th street the road cut where they started tearing down Iowa street. They totally tore that side of the hill down this is uh southern pacific whenever tearing down parts of the East side of patro hill So they could have the the caltrain line Wasn't caltrain them but they could have their railroad line going down to the peninsula And then they took all that dirt and rock and dumped it into Mission Bay and other landfill areas Yeah Yeah, all kinds of marshland and lagoons. It was supposedly the best duck hunting in the state what I read But there's some of the landfill the original shoreline is in the red there and this around Bethlehem But that's what they filled in Some more all kinds of shipbuilding that's south beach. That's what south beach used to look like all those skids going down And you know, I had quite a hill too leveled And union ironworks, which was the precursor of Bethlehem. This was the first shipyard that was built there in the 1800s It was real streamlined. It was real modernized. It's unbelievable how modern it was for the times And rope company, uh, there's all these other industries went in rope company You know, they needed huge rope for ships and all that nautical business and uh other companies uh rolling metal forage Down on third street you had all kinds of industrial places that Fed the shipyard right made got the metal or got the metal formed the right way to get to the shipyard to put on the ships This is the first Iron ship made in the pacific rim came out of Bethlehem. I mean Union ironworks down here, which was uh, I can't remember the name right now And also shipped it went to this Spanish-american war, is that right Spanish? Yeah, Spanish-american war The olympia, which dewy dewy ship, right? Was built there too So there's always statistics about how many ships were built there We've all gone over some of that the the number that was built during the second world war. It was just phenomenal And some of the workers there And the last project one of the last big projects that did down there was the building of the bark tubes I think uh 72 of these huge, uh You know these tubes that were eventually put down to make the bart tube to To the east bay was built at Bethlehem Here's the pier the mission rock Terminal down there that was built On top of the rocks is a mission bay and the rocks sat out there just beyond The bay But after all got filled in it was very close to the shoreline. There's the rock itself, right? It stuck up just a bit, but they leveled all that up real real soon And filled in some of the land of course with a bunch of streets you've never heard of all kinds of different names and then They they cut down the top of the rock and they built a grain terminal out there Originally ships would dump their ballast out there, but then they they pulled a terminal there And then the company that was operating it For many years. They just use it to offload stuff They wanted to do something the navy wanted to do something. I got into this 40 year long court battle The state of california thought they owned it the navy thought they owned it this company thought they owned it Finally the navy won And they just burned all the buildings down And three years later There it is after the buildings are burnt down and then they built The terminal and there's the rock the rocks under there So I never knew where it was. Where the heck is mission rock? So there it is and here's The connecticut central at connecticut and 17th and there's the old building that was supposedly uh solvades was uh It was originally a saloon in 1908 and the wood was supposedly taken from an earthquake uh A building it was built really fast after earthquake They scavenged the woods from that supposedly built this thing But it was the mission bay was like a block away the water was a block away originally It's when they opened the bridge back in 32 this is the new bridge right there was a little one originally a drawbridge and they built this heavy duty one That could take big locomotives and trolleys and traffic and this is still the bridge we have Getting the long bridge covering all this spot So just show you this housing projects and then Oh, here's carolina street right that split see the split street up there and we got a water tower on top of the hill my photo and then Historically that street was all dirt You know be a little scary when it's really rain or what it's really wet But it was all dirt and eventually and a wooden that's a wooden support for that water tower, right? One that's 32. I think and this is like 38 Then they surfaced the street and separated it Got maybe a little nicer water tower and here's a It's all like the trees are growing in and we have a a metal water tower now And now the water tower is gone, but you can see how this area what was uh originally projects and then Neighborhood kind of fought to keep this open space now. They have it. It's really a nice little area. That's all green so Won't we end there instead of taking it more because it's three o'clock Thank you any Any dire questions off top of your head