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Mission District, San Francisco

Coordinates:37°46′N122°25′W / 37.76°N 122.42°W /37.76; -122.42
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(Redirected fromMission District)
Neighborhood in San Francisco
For District of Mission, seeMission, British Columbia.

Neighborhood in San Francisco, California, United States
Mission District
The Mission
The neighborhood's namesake, Mission San Francisco de Asis
The neighborhood's namesake,Mission San Francisco de Asis
Mission District is located in San Francisco
Mission District
Mission District
Location within Central San Francisco
Coordinates:37°46′N122°25′W / 37.76°N 122.42°W /37.76; -122.42
Country United States
StateCalifornia
City and countySan Francisco
Government
 • SupervisorJackie Fielder (D)
 • AssemblymemberMatt Haney (D)[1]
 • State senatorScott Wiener (D)[1]
 • U. S. rep.Nancy Pelosi (D)[2]
Area
 • Land1.481 sq mi (3.84 km2)
Population
 (2019)[3]
 • Total
44,541
 • Density30,072/sq mi (11,611/km2)
Time zoneUTC−08:00 (Pacific)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−07:00 (PDT)
ZIP Codes
94103, 94110
Area codes415/628

TheMission District (Spanish:Distrito de la Misión),[4] commonly known as theMission (Spanish:La Misión),[5] is a neighborhood inSan Francisco, California. One of the oldest neighborhoods in San Francisco, the Mission District's name is derived fromMission San Francisco de Asís, built in 1776 by the Spanish.[6] The Mission is historically one of the most notable centers of the city'sChicano/Mexican-American community.

Location and climate

[edit]
The historicSunshine School.

The Mission District is located in east-central San Francisco. It is bordered to the east byU.S. Route 101, which forms the boundary between the eastern portion of the district, known as "Inner Mission", and its eastern neighbor,Potrero Hill. Sanchez Street separates the neighborhood fromEureka Valley (containing the sub-district known as "the Castro") to the north west andNoe Valley to the south west. The part of the neighborhood fromValencia Street to Sanchez Street, north of 20th Street, is known as the "Mission Dolores" neighborhood. South of 20th Street towards 22nd Street, and between Valencia and Dolores Streets is a distinct neighborhood known as Liberty Hill.[7]Cesar Chavez Street (formerly Army Street) is the southern border; across Cesar Chavez Street is theBernal Heights neighborhood. North of the Mission District is theSouth of Market neighborhood, bordered roughly by Duboce Avenue and the elevated highway of theCentral Freeway which runs above 13th Street.

The principal thoroughfare of the Mission District isMission Street. South of the Mission District, along Mission Street, are theExcelsior andCrocker-Amazon neighborhoods, sometimes referred to as the "Outer Mission" (not to be confused with the actualOuter Mission neighborhood). The Mission District is mostly located inBoard of Supervisors district 9, with parts in districts 8 and 10.

The Mission is often warmer and sunnier than other parts of San Francisco. Themicroclimates of San Francisco create a system by which each neighborhood can have different weather at any given time, although this phenomenon tends to be less pronounced during the winter months. The Mission's geographical location insulates it from the fog and wind from the west. This climatic phenomenon becomes apparent to visitors who walk downhill from 24th Street in the west fromNoe Valley (where clouds fromTwin Peaks in the west tend to accumulate on foggy days) towards Mission Street in the east, partly because Noe Valley is on higher ground whereas the Inner Mission is at a lower elevation.[8]

The Mission includes four recognized sub-districts.[9] The northeastern quadrant, adjacent toPotrero Hill is known as a center for high tech startup businesses including some chic bars and restaurants. The northwest quadrant along Dolores Street is famous for Victorian mansions and the popularDolores Park at 18th Street. Two main commercial zones, known as the Valencia corridor (Valencia St, from about 15th to 22nd) and the 24th Street corridor known asCalle 24[10][11] in the south central part of the Mission District are both very popular destinations for their restaurants, bars, galleries and street life.

History

[edit]

Native peoples and Spanish colonization

[edit]

Prior to the arrival of Spanish missionaries, the area which now includes the Mission District was inhabited by theOhlone people who populated much of the San Francisco bay area. TheYelamu Indians inhabited the region for over 2,000 years. Spanish missionaries arrived in the area during the late 18th century. They found these people living in two villages onMission Creek. It was here that a Spanish priest named FatherFrancisco Palóu foundedMission San Francisco de Asís on June 29, 1776. The Mission was moved from the shore ofLaguna Dolores to its current location in 1783.[12] Franciscan friars are reported to have used Ohlone slave labor to complete the Mission in 1791.[13] This period marked the beginning of the end of the Yelamu culture. The Indian population at Mission Dolores dropped from 400 to 50 between 1833 and 1841.

San Francisco's southern expansion

[edit]
Pioneer Race Course, 1853. The grandstands shown were located just south of 24th and Shotwell streets.

Ranchos owned bySpanish-Mexican families such as the Valenciano, Guerrero, Dolores, Bernal,Noé andDe Haro continued in the area, separated from the town ofYerba Buena, later renamed San Francisco (centered aroundPortsmouth Square) by a two-mile wooden plank road (later paved and renamed Mission Street).

The lands around the nearly abandoned mission church became a focal point of raffish attractions[14] including bull and bear fighting, horse racing, baseball and dueling. A famous beer parlor resort known as The Willows was located along Mission Creek just south of 18th Street between Mission and San Carlos streets.[15] From 1865 to 1891, a large conservatory and zoo known asWoodward's Gardens covered two city blocks bounded by Mission, Valencia, 13th and 15th streets.[16] In the decades after theGold Rush, the town of San Francisco quickly expanded, and the Mission lands were developed and subdivided into housing plots for working-class immigrants, largely German, Irish, and Italian,[14] and also for industrial uses.

As the city grew in the decades following the Gold Rush, the Mission District became home to the first professional baseball stadium in California, opened in 1868 and known asRecreation Grounds, seating 17,000 people, which was located at Folsom and 25th streets; a portion of the grounds remain as present dayGarfield Square.[17] Also, in the 20th century, the Mission District was home to two other baseball stadiums:Recreation Park, located at 14th and Valencia, andSeals Stadium, located at 16th and Bryant, with both these stadiums being used by the baseball team named after the Mission District known as theMission Reds and theSan Francisco Seals.

Irish immigrants moved into the Mission in the late 19th century. The Irish made their mark not only by working for the city government but by helping build the Catholic schools in the Mission District.

Earthquake and population shifts

[edit]
Main article:1906 San Francisco earthquake
Corner of Beale and Mission Streets, San Francisco,c. 1863

During California's early statehood period, in the 19th and early 20th centuries, large numbers ofIrish andGerman immigrant workers moved into the area. Around 1900, the Mission District was still one of San Francisco's least densely populated areas, with most of the inhabitants being white families from the working class and lower middle class who lived in single-family houses and two-family flats.[18] Development and settlement intensified after the1906 earthquake, as many displaced businesses and residents moved into the area, making Mission Street a major commercial thoroughfare.

In 1901, the city of San Francisco changed laws and forbade burials in the city, which helped form the nearby city ofColma.[19] During the1906 San Francisco earthquake, a single working water hydrant (the so-called 'Golden Fire Hydrant') saved the Mission District from being burned down by massive fires sparked by the earthquake.[20] In the 1910s, the roads into Colma were not well maintained and it was a common practice to use the street cars to move bodies.[21] Valencia Street became a location of many mortuaries and funeral homes during this time due to the quick access to Colma by street car.[21]

In 1926, thePolish community of San Francisco converted a church at 22nd and Shotwell streets and opened its doors as the Polish Club of San Francisco; it is referred to today as the "Dom Polski", or Polish Home. The Irish American community made its mark on the area during this time, with notable residents such asetymologistPeter Tamony calling the Mission home.

During the 1940s to 1960s, a large number ofMexican immigrants moved into the area—displaced from an earlier "Mexican Barrio" located onRincon Hill, demolished in order to create the western landing of theBay Bridge—initiatingwhite flight and giving the Mission a heavily Latino character for which it continues to be known today. Central American immigration starting in the 1960s has contributed to a Central American presence outnumbering those of Mexican descent.[22]

1970s–1990s

[edit]
The Women's Building. Streetmurals and paintings of Latin American culture by local artists are a common feature and attraction.
thematic map of San Francisco in 2000, highlighting the district's concentration of Hispanic or Latino residents

In the 1960s and 1970s, the Chicano/Latino population in the western part of the Mission (including the Valencia Corridor) declined somewhat and more middle-class young people moved in, including gay and lesbian people (alongside the existing LGBTQ Latino population).[18] One political movement during the early 70s emerged in the community as seven young Latino men known asLos Siete de la Raza from the Mission District were being charged for the 1969 murder of a San Francisco police officer.[23] The community got together as these young men were standing up to what was being said about them and were determined to be heard. The people around the Mission District knew these seven young individuals as change-makers; they were actively trying to get more people from the Mission District to go to college,[24] they also worked with organizations that helped make the community better for Latino people which included a free bilingual services through Centro de Salud, which ultimately led other local hospitals to do the same. They were also involved in a free breakfast program, a community newspaper, and its main program, the "Los Siete" Defense Committee.[25]

From the mid-1970s through the 1980s, the Valencia Street corridor included one of the most concentrated and visible lesbian neighborhoods in the United States.[18]The Women's Building, Osento Bathhouse, Old Wives Tales bookstore, Artemis Cafe,Amelia's andThe Lexington Club were part of that community.[26][27][28]

In the late 1970s and early 1980s the Valencia Street corridor had a livelypunk nightlife featuring the bandsThe Offs,The Avengers, theDead Kennedys,Flipper, and several clubs including The Offensive,The Deaf Club,Valencia Tool & Die andThe Farm. The former fire station on 16th Street, called the Compound, sported what was commonly referred to as "the punk mall", an establishment that catered to punk style and culture. On South Van Ness,Target Video andDamage magazine were located in a three-story warehouse. The former Hamms brewery was converted to a punk living/rehearsal building, popularly known as The Vats. The neighborhood was dubbed "the New Bohemia" by theSan Francisco Chronicle in 1995.[29]

In the 1980s and 1990s, the neighborhood received a higher influx of immigrants and refugees from Central America, South America, the Middle East and even the Philippines and former Yugoslavia, fleeing civil wars and political instability at the time. These immigrants brought in many Central American banks and companies which would set up branches, offices, and regional headquarters on Mission Street.

1990s–present

[edit]

From the late 1990s through the 2010s, and especially during thedot-com boom,young urban professionals moved into the area. It is widely believed that their movement initiatedgentrification, raising rent and housing prices.[30] A number of Latino American middle-class families as well as artists moved to the Outer Mission area, or out of the city entirely to the suburbs ofEast Bay andSouth Bay area. Despite rising rent and housing prices, many Mexican and Central American immigrants continue to reside in the Mission, although the neighborhood's high rents and home prices have led to the Latino population dropping by 20% over the decade until 2011.[31] However, in 2008 the Mission still had a reputation of being artist-friendly.[32]

In 2000, the Mission District's Latino population was at 60%. By 2015 it had dropped to 48%; a city-funded research study that year predicted a decline to 31 percent by 2025.[33] However, the Mission remains the cultural nexus and epicenter of San Francisco's Mexican/Chicano, and to a lesser extent, the Bay Area'sNicaraguan,Salvadoran andGuatemalan community. While Mexican, Salvadoran, and other Latin American businesses are pervasive throughout the neighborhood, residences are not evenly distributed. Of the neighborhood's Chicano/Latino residents, most live on the eastern and southern sides. The western and northern sides of the neighborhood are more affluent and white.[34] As of 2017, the northern part of the Mission, together with the nearby Tenderloin, is home to aMayan-speaking community, consisting of immigrants who have been arriving since the 1990s from Mexico'sYucatán region.[35] Their presence is reflected in the Mayan-language name ofIn Chan Kaajal Park, opened in 2017 north of 17th Street between Folsom and Shotwell streets.[35]

Landmarks and features

[edit]
Alta California mission,Mission San Francisco de Asís, the namesake of the neighborhood, and the oldest building in the city located in the far western end of the neighborhood on Dolores Street
Roxie Theater, 16th and Valencia streets
Mission District's annualDay of the Dead celebration, Garfield Square
Dolores Park is a popular recreation area.

Mission Dolores, the eponymous former mission located at the far western border of the neighborhood on Dolores Street, continues to operate as a museum and as a California Historical Landmark, while the newerbasilica built and opened next to it in 1918 continues to have an active congregation.

Dolores Park (Mission Dolores Park) is the largest park in the neighborhood, and one of the most popular parks in the city. Dolores Park is near Mission Dolores. Across from Dolores Park isMission High School, built in 1927 in theMediterranean Revival style.

TheSan Francisco Armory is a castle-like building located at 14th and Mission that was built as an armory for the U.S. Army and California National Guard. It served as the headquarters of the250th Coast Artillery from 1923 through 1944, and of the 49th Infantry, also known as the 49ers, during the Cold War.

Food

[edit]

The Mission District is also famous and influential for its restaurants. Dozens of street vendors andtaquerías are located throughout the neighborhood, showcasing a localized styling ofMexican,Salvadoran,Guatemalan, andNicaraguan restaurants.[36] The neighborhood is also home to theMission burrito, a San Francisco original. In the last couple decades a number of Mission restaurants have gained national attention, most notably the five restaurants that have receivedMichelin stars for 2017: Commonwealth, Lazy Bear, Aster, Californios, and Al's Place.[37] A large number of other restaurants are also popular, including: Mission Chinese Food, Western Donut, Bar Tartine, La Taqueria, Papalote, Foreign Cinema on Mission Street, and Delfina on 18th.[38][39]La Mejor Bakery, a San Francisco legacy business, is located in the Mission.[40]

Art scene

[edit]

Numerous Latino artistic and cultural institutions are based in the Mission. These organizations were founded during the social and cultural renaissance of the late 1960s and early 1970s. Latino community artists and activists of the time organized to create community-based arts organizations that were reflective of the Latino aesthetic and cultural traditions. TheMission Cultural Center for Latino Arts, established by Latino artists and activists, is an art space that was founded in 1976 in a space that was formerly a furniture store. The local bilingual newspaperEl Tecolote was founded in 1970. The Mission'sGalería de la Raza, founded by local artists active inel Movimiento (the Chicano civil rights movement), is a nationally recognized arts organization, also founded during this time of cultural and social renaissance in the Mission, in 1971. Late May, the city's annualCarnaval festival and parade marches down Mission Street. Inspired by the festival inRio de Janeiro, it is held in late May instead of the traditional late February to take advantage of better weather. The first Carnaval in San Francisco happened in 1978, with less than 100 people dancing in a parade that went aroundPrecita Park.Alejandro Murguía (born 1949) is an American poet, short story writer, editor and filmmaker who was named San Francisco Poet Laureate in 2012. He is known for his writings about the Mission District where he has been a long-time resident.

Due to the existing cultural attractions, formerly less expensive housing and commercial space, and the high density of restaurants and drinking establishments, the Mission is a magnet for young people. An independent arts community also arose and, since the 1990s, the area has been home to theMission School art movement. Many studios, galleries, performance spaces, and public art projects are located in the Mission, including 1890 Bryant St Studios,Southern Exposure, Art Explosion Studios, City Art Collective Gallery,Artists' Television Access,Savernack Street, and the oldest, alternative, not-for-profit art space in the city of San Francisco,Intersection for the Arts. There are more than 500 Mission artists listed on Mission Artists United site put together by Mission artists. TheRoxie Theater, the oldest continuously operating movie theater in San Francisco, is host to repertory and independent films as well as local film festivals. Poets, musicians, emcees, and other artists sometimes gather on the southwest corner of the 16th and Mission intersection to perform.[41]Dance Mission Theater is a nonprofit performance venue and dance school in the neighborhood as well.[42]

Murals

[edit]

Throughout the Mission walls and fences are decorated withmurals many of which celebrate the neighborhood's Latino heritage and mythology. Some of the more significant mural installations are located on the24th Street corridor,Balmy Alley, andClarion Alley.[43][44] Many of these murals have been painted or supported by the Precita Eyes muralist organization.

Music scene

[edit]

Someone called my name
You know, I turned around to see
It was midnight in the Mission
and the bells were not for me

There's some satisfaction
in the San Francisco rain
No matter what comes down
the Mission always looks the same

Come again
Walking along in the Mission in the rain

Jerry Garcia/Robert Hunter, Mission in the Rain (1976)[45]

The Mission is rich in musical groups and performances.Mariachi bands play in restaurants throughout the district, especially in the restaurants congregated around Valencia and Mission in the northeast portion of the district.Carlos Santana spent his teenage years in the Mission, graduating fromMission High School in 1965. He often returned to the neighborhood, including for a live concert with his bandSantana that was recorded in 1969,[46] and for theKQED documentary "The Mission" filmed in 1994.[47]

The locally inspired song "Mission in the Rain" byRobert Hunter andJerry Garcia appeared on Garcia's solo albumReflections, and was played by theGrateful Dead five times in concert in 1976.[48]

Classical music is heard in the concert hall of theCommunity Music Center on Capp Street.[49]

The area is also home toAfrolicious, andDub Mission, a formerly weeklyreggae/dub party started in 1996, and over the years has brought many reggae and dub musicians to perform there.

The Mission District also has aHip-hop/Rap music scene. Other prominent musicians and musical personalities includealternative rock bands and musiciansLuscious Jackson,Faith No More,The Looters,Primus,Chuck Prophet & The Mission Express,Beck, andJawbreaker.

Visual artists

[edit]

Some well-known artists associated with the Mission District include:

Arts organizations

[edit]

Festivals, parades and fairs

[edit]
Carnaval dancers, 24th Street
  • Carnaval – The major event of the year occurring eachMemorial Day weekend is the Mission'sCarnaval celebration.[66]
  • 24th Street Fair – In March of each year a street fair is held along the 24th Street corridor.
  • San Francisco Food Fair – Annually, for several years recently, food trucks and vendor booths have sold food to tens of thousands of people along Folsom Street adjacent to La Cochina on the third weekend in September.[67]
  • Cesar Chavez Holiday Parade – The second weekend of April is marked by a parade and celebration along 24th Street in honor of Cesar Chavez.[68]
  • Transgender and Dyke Marches – On the Fridays and Saturdays of the fourth weekend of June there are major celebrations of the transgender and dyke communities located at Dolores Park, followed by a march in the evenings along 18th and Valencia streets.[69][70]
  • Sunday Streets – Twice each year, typically in May and October, Valencia, Harrison and 24th Streets are closed to automobile traffic and opened to pedestrians and bicyclists on Sunday as part of the Sunday Streets program.[71]
  • Day of the Dead – Each year on November 2, a memorial procession and celebration of the dead (Dia de los Muertos) occurs on Harrison and 24th Street with a gathering of memorials in Garfield Square.[72][73]
  • First Friday – Monthly on the evening of the first Friday, a food and art crawl including a procession of low rider car clubs and samba dancers occurs along 24th Street from Potrero to Mission Streets.[74]
  • Open Studios – On the first weekend of October, theArtSpan organization arranges a district-wide exhibit of Mission District artists studios.[75]
  • Hunky Jesus Contest – Until 2014, annually on Easter Sunday theSisters of Perpetual Indulgence held an Easter Sunday celebration including a Hunky Jesus Contest in Dolores Park. In 2014, Hunky Jesus moved to Golden Gate Park due to construction at Dolores Park.[76][77]
  • Rock Make Street Festival – Annually for four years the Rock Make organization sponsors a music and arts festival in September on Treat and 18th Streets in the Mission.[78]
  • LitCrawl – Annually on the third Saturday of October as part of the LitQuake, a literature festival, hundreds of book and poetry readings are held at bars and bookstores throughout the Mission.[79]
  • Party on Block 18 – Bi-annual summer benefit for The Woman's Building and other local non-profits. The day-long street party is located on 18th Street between Dolores and Guerrero Streets.[80][81]
  • Clarion Alley Block Party – Eleven years annually, a block party on the Clarion mural alley, fourth weekend in October.[82]
  • Remembering 1906 – Annually since the 1960s there has been a gathering at the corner of Church and 20th streets to ceremonially repaint theGolden Fire Hydrant. It helped protect the Mission District as it was one of the only working fire hydrants in the city during the fires following the 1906 earthquake.[83]

Media

[edit]

The Mission District is covered by three free bilingual newspapers.El Tecolote is biweekly and has online articles.[84]Mission Local is predominantly an online news site but does publish a semiannual printed paper.[85] El Reportero is a weekly newspaper that also has an online site.[86]

Transit

[edit]

The neighborhood is served by theBART rail system with stations on Mission Street at16th Street and24th Street, byMuni bus numbers 9, 9R, 12, 14, 14R, 22, 27, 33, 48, 49, 67, and along the western edge by theJ ChurchMuni Metro line, which runs down Church Street andSan Jose Avenue.

Gentrification

[edit]

The Mission District is a historictransit hub for the Chicano and the Latino community, especially on the 16th Street BART Plaza.[87] An atmosphere like a public market with live music and food trucks, it is also a commuting point for public transportation, which primarily serves low-income working-class people. The majority of the residents in the Mission District are of minority and low-income families and use this useful and open hub for gatherings and doing local businesses such as food trucks.[87] However, because of theDot-Com Boom that occurred in the 1990s and the rise of technology and social media, major technology companies such as Google and Facebook have moved their offices to such places asSilicon Valley, in the South Bay, that have now become the hot spot for tech companies.[88] The Mission has felt the downstream effects of this demographic shift acutely. The intense surge in demand for housing and low supply of available housing has placed upward pressure on rents in transit hubs like the Mission, leading togentrification and the displacement of families and small businesses. However, many residents protested and engaged in activism. They created a group called the "Plaza 16 Coalition" in response to the gentrification and the new zoning law, the "Eastern Neighborhoods Plan".[89] They advocate for affordable housing, opposing market-rate developments and the luxury developments.

Education

[edit]
[icon]
This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding to it.(May 2020)

San Francisco Unified School District operates public schools. Schools in the Mission District include:

  • John O'Connell High School[90]
  • Buena Vista Horace MannK-8 Community School[91]
  • Bryant Elementary School[92]
  • César Chávez Elementary School[93]
  • Leonard R. Flynn Elementary School[94]
  • Marshall Elementary School[95]
  • George R. Moscone Elementary School - As of 2020[update] it had 350 students.[96]
  • Zaida T. Rodriguez Early Education School[97]
  • Hilltop Special Service Center (special school for grades 7–12)[98]

TheRoman Catholic Archdiocese of San Francisco operates St. Peter's Catholic School, which opened in 1878. Previously its students were Irish or Italian American, but by 2014 95% of the student body was Latino and about two thirds were categorized as economically disadvantaged. Enrollment was once around 600 but by 2014 was around 300 due togentrification. Its yearly per-student cost was $5,800 while yearly tuition, the lowest in the archdiocese, was $3,800.[99]

See also

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
  • Hooper, Bernadette (2006).San Francisco's Mission District. Arcadia Publishing.ISBN 0-7385-4657-7.
  • Mirabal, Nancy Raquel, "Geographies of Displacement: Latinas/os, Oral History, and the Politics of Gentrification in San Francisco's Mission District",Public Historian, 31 (May 2009), 7–31.
  • Heins, Marjorie "Strictly Ghetto Property: The Story of Los Siete de La Raza" Ramparts Press; first edition (1972)

References

[edit]
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  2. ^"California's 11th Congressional District - Representatives & District Map". Civic Impulse, LLC.
  3. ^ab"Mission District (The Mission) neighborhood in San Francisco, California (CA), 94103, 94110 subdivision profile". RetrievedApril 11, 2010.
  4. ^"Quiénes Somos".Mission Local.
  5. ^Telemundo Área de la Bahía -Investigan tiroteo en La Misión de San Francisco
  6. ^Daily Alta California newspaper, Oct 7, 1854, page 1 column 4
  7. ^Liberty Hill Neighborhood AssociationArchived September 19, 2011, at theWayback Machine. Libertyhillsf.org.
  8. ^San Francisco Planning Department (2005)."Inner Mission North 1853–1943 Context Statement, 2005"(PDF).Cultural Resources Survey. pp. 9, 10, 40. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on August 4, 2006. RetrievedNovember 27, 2006.
  9. ^SFGate."Bay Area Neighborhoods". RetrievedJanuary 24, 2014.
  10. ^Lagos, Marisa (April 22, 2014)."A mission for the Mission: Preserve Latino legacy for future".SF Gate. Hearst Newspapers. RetrievedJuly 13, 2014.
  11. ^"Calle 24 Latino Cultural District".SF Heritage. RetrievedJuly 13, 2014.
  12. ^Alejandrino, Simon Velasquez (Summer 2000)."Gentrification in San Francisco's Mission District: Indicators and Policy Recommendations"(PDF).Chapter 3: An Overview of the Mission District; History. Mission Economic Development Association. p. 16. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on November 12, 2006. RetrievedNovember 27, 2006.
  13. ^Nolte, Carl (January 29, 2004)."Centuries-old murals revealed in Mission Dolores Indians' hidden paintings open window into S.F.'s sacred past".San Francisco Chronicle. p. A-1. RetrievedNovember 27, 2006.
  14. ^abVia magazine, April 2003. Viamagazine.com (July 23, 2010).
  15. ^"The Willows & 18th St. Ravine in 3D and 1860s Mission Amusements". Burrito Justice. March 10, 2011.
  16. ^Craig, Christopher."Woodward's Gardens".Encyclopedia of San Francisco. Archived fromthe original on January 20, 2013.
  17. ^"The Mission Has Always Been The Home of Baseball", Burrito Justice, February 17, 2010.
  18. ^abcGraves, Donna J.; Watson, Shayne E. (October 2015)."LGBTQ Historic Context Statement". City and County of San Francisco Planning Department. pp. 10, 173.Archived from the original on October 2, 2018. RetrievedOctober 1, 2018.
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  20. ^The golden legacy of San Francisco's little hydrant that could Laura French, May 31, 2021, FireRescue1
  21. ^abWells, Madeline (October 14, 2021)."'Sworn to secrecy': Ex-employees say The Chapel's ghost was real".SFGATE. RetrievedOctober 14, 2021.
  22. ^Sandoval, Thomas.""All Those Who Care About the Mission, Stand Up With Me!," in the anthology "Ten Years That Shook the City: San Francisco 1968-78"". City Lights Foundation. RetrievedMarch 27, 2025.
  23. ^"LOS SIETE DE LA RAZA - FoundSF".www.foundsf.org. RetrievedApril 14, 2023.
  24. ^Heins, Marjorie (March 1971)."Ramparts- Los Siete de la Raza"(PDF).
  25. ^Carlsson, Chris (2020).Hidden San Francisco: A Guide to Lost Landscapes, Unsung Heroes and Radical Histories. Pluto Press.doi:10.2307/j.ctvx077t5.ISBN 978-0-7453-4094-4.JSTOR j.ctvx077t5.
  26. ^"Map of Lesbian Valencia Street".Researchgate. Gay Lesbian Bisexual Historical Society. RetrievedOctober 6, 2022.
  27. ^"Valencia Street As A Lesbian Corridor: Living Memories".Shaping San Francisco. RetrievedOctober 6, 2022.
  28. ^Brahinsky, Rachel (October 6, 2020).A People's Guide to the San Francisco Bay Area. University of California Press. p. 160.ISBN 9780520288379.
  29. ^Bauer, Michael (April 30, 1995)."Arty Cafe Turns Into a Tapas Bar - Remodeled Picaro in the Mission District".San Francisco Chronicle. RetrievedJune 11, 2016.Fifteen years ago Matilde Gomez was 25 and wanted a place to hang out in around the Roxie theater in the Mission District, so she opened Cafe Picaro right across the street. With few cafes in the area, it became the gathering place for the new bohemia, a collection of artists, poets and people on the political fringes.
  30. ^Roberts, Chris (December 18, 2011)."Iconic Mission district transforming into a true melting pot".SF Examiner. Archived fromthe original on August 14, 2012. RetrievedDecember 19, 2011.These commingling cultural contrasts are at least part of what makes the Mission one of The City's most popular and fascinating places.
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