Shipyards in Decay: Difference between revisions

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'''A strike begins at the Union Iron Works at the foot of Potrero Hill in 1917. Unskilled workers at the Union Iron Works went on strike in 1917 in solidarity with their counter-parts at Iron works in Oakland. They were seeking an 8 hour day and basic wage increases.'''
'''A strike begins at the Union Iron Works at the foot of Potrero Hill in 1917. Unskilled workers at the Union Iron Works went on strike in 1917 in solidarity with their counter-parts at Iron works in Oakland. They were seeking an 8 hour day and basic wage increases.'''
[http://www.pier70sf.org/index.htm Historic Pier 70]


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Revision as of 22:11, 30 August 2008

Pothill$union-iron-1997-plant.jpg

photo: David Green

Pothill$union-iron-1997-office.jpg

Former office building of the Union Iron Works, 1997

photo: Chris Carlsson

By 1996 the once thriving Union Iron Works had changed hands several times, most recently occupied by Todd Shipyards, a firm that abandoned the facility after only a few years of occupancy in the early 1980s.

Today the buildings are hollow shells, and the shipyards have become obsolete relics of a bygone era. Plans come and go to revive San Francisco's port and shipping industries, but the old buildings at 20th and Illinois are the same as they were during the 1917 strike.

--Chris Carlsson, 1996

File:Pothill$1917-union-iron-strikers.jpg

Striking workers mill about outside office building of the Union Iron Works in 1917.

image: courtesy of Prelinger Archive

{{#ev:archive|ssfSTRK1917|320}}

A strike begins at the Union Iron Works at the foot of Potrero Hill in 1917. Unskilled workers at the Union Iron Works went on strike in 1917 in solidarity with their counter-parts at Iron works in Oakland. They were seeking an 8 hour day and basic wage increases.

Historic Pier 70

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