No, this is not a post about me at the recent AOSA Conference amidst the twenty, thirty and forty year olds. There's something else afoot here.
It’s a new month and there seems to be an intriguing shift in the winds always circling in my mind. Without any conscious decision on my part, many of the recent posts have been about commerce, neighborhoods, local involvement. Preparing for a new role hosting an annual Inner Sunset Neighborhood Trolley Ride, I decided to bone up on local history in the seven or so blocks that make up my local shopping district.
When I first moved to San Francisco in 1973, I lived in and around the Haight for my first nine years or so, not so far away from where I am now. But because I spent so much time wandering around Golden Gate Park, I often stepped out of the park at 9th and Lincoln and walked through this charming little business district. So when I moved close to 2nd and Irving, just three blocks from the start of the stores around 5th and Irving, I already was quite familiar with the neighborhood and often frequented the various stores.
I’ve been trying to recall what all those stores used to be, with the help of my wife and a treasured 1985 newspaper clipping she found tucked into one of her journals. Between us both, we came up with 25 different places we used to frequent in the “gone but not forgotten” category. Restaurants, cafes, bakeries, markets, bookstores, record stores, a 5 & 10 Cent Store, a stationary store, a remarkable video store and more.
Then we came up with another 15 or so places that are still open and I decided to make a project of finding out more about them. So today I walked out, little notebook in hand, and popped into store after store to ask them what they knew about their place’s history—when it was founded, who came before, whatever they knew if their place had been renamed when a new owner took over, etc. Everyone without exception was eager to talk and share what they knew.
And what did I discover? Places still here that began in the 1960’s included Pierre’s Auto Repair, Donut World, the Post Office and a bizarre little place called Oriental Art Treasures with mostly little pins that cost between $4 and $9 that I always expected was some kind of front for something suspicious or illegal. The woman I spoke to seemed old enough to be the original owner.
In the 1970’s came the Yellow Submarine sandwich shop, Pasquale’s Pizza and the On the Run shoe store. The 80’s included the Beanery coffee shop, an animal hospital, a bar called The Wishing Well that later (2004) became The Fireside and possibly Art’s CafĂ© (to be confirmed—it was closed today).
I suspect that the Bank of America on the corner of 9th and Irving and the Reliable Rexal Drugstore harked back to the 70’s or earlier, but B of A just closed last year and the drug store just last month! So these are the businesses still open and running.
But the piece de resistance was a bar I have passed thousands of times and never once stepped inside. In some ways, it’s not a big surprise as I’m not an ongoing patron of bars. Except during sports playoffs and I do remember thinking about going there when my go-to Yancey’s was too crowded. But somehow never did. I was always charmed by the name, “The Little Shamrock,” especially as it recalled my good friend Mary Shamrock. But in 50 years of wandering around the neighborhood, I never went in once.
Until today. And I discovered that in the competition for the oldest and most venerable business establishment in my neighborhood, I was astonished to discover that this bar was founded in (drum roll here!)— 1893!!!!! It’s 132 years old!!! And in all that time, there have only been THREE OWNERS!!! I wandered around looking at the memorabilia on the walls and talking with Kate, the animated bartender. How did I miss this?
At their 105th celebration, they had a poster that read:
Join us as we celebrate taking your money and destroying your marriages and getting you so goddamn drunk you couldn’t quite make it to work the next day—while we profited— for 105 years!
Well, that’s an honest confession!
So there you have it, a mysterious coming together of things I’ve always cared about— character, community, humor, longevity, service, history. Put together in a different package than usual for me. It certainly keeps things interesting!