Haight and Baker: Difference between revisions

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[[category:Haight-Ashbury Architectural Tour]] [[category:Haight-Ashbury]] [[category:1890s]] [[category:1900s]]  [[category:architecture]] [[category:Japanese]] [[category:Jewish]] [[category:Irish]]
[[category:Haight-Ashbury Architectural Tour]] [[category:Haight-Ashbury]] [[category:1890s]] [[category:1900s]]  [[category:architecture]] [[category:Japanese]] [[category:Jewish]] [[category:Irish]] [[category:1906]]

Revision as of 15:18, 13 October 2014

Primary Source

Chas Dickson residence, 1891.

Photo: Bancroft Library


Dickson Residence (white building at right) of Haight and Baker, 1912.

Photo: San Francisco History Center, SF Public Library


Haight and Baker, 2010.

Photo: Michael Greene

TURN LEFT (EAST) ON HAIGHT. There are several interesting buildings on this block. Perhaps the most spectacular is now gone. On the northwest corner of Haight and Baker, [now condominiums, but in 1980 when this tour was written, a gas station] was the Dickson residence, a lavish Italianate structure with a commanding third floor observatory. Dickson was the local manager for an East Coast insurance company. He and his family moved here in 1888. The Dickson's neighbors across the street (1080 Haight Street) were the Spencers. Spencer was a surgeon and son of a prominent local couple. The thirty room mansion provided ample quarters for his small family.

Refugees make their way along Baker Street in 1906, seen here looking south (uphill) from apx. Fell Street to Buena Vista Park which abuts Haight Street.

Photo: Shaping San Francisco

1080 Haight Street, 2008.

Photo: Chris Carlsson

The building at 1081 Haight is architecturally significant. "Flatiron" buildings (so named because of their resemblance to the household appliance) are common in commercial architecture on "gore" corners, but are rare in residential property. This is the only exclusively residential flatiron in San Francisco.

Haight and Buena Vista East, c. 1940s

Photo: Private Collection, San Francisco, CA

Flatiron building, 2008.

Photo: Chris Carlsson

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