African Americans in
San Francisco, California, composed just under 6% of the city's total population as of 2019
U.S. Census Bureau estimates, down from 13.4% in 1970. There are about 55,000 people of full or partial black ancestry living within the city.[1][2] The community began with workers and entrepreneurs of the
California Gold Rush in the 19th century, and in the early-to-mid 20th century, grew to include migrant workers with origins in the
Southern United States, who worked as
railroad workers or service people at shipyards. In the mid-20th century, the African American community in the
Fillmore District earned the neighborhood the nickname the "
Harlem of the West," referring to
New York City's Harlem neighborhood, which is associated with African American culture.[3]
Among the United States' biggest 14 cities, San Francisco is near the bottom in the percentage of Black residents, along with
San Jose, which is about four percent Black.[1]
People of African descent first appeared in California from
Mexico due to the
Spanish Conquest.[4][5] Influential people of African ancestry were among the earliest California settlers and landowners.[6]
During the 1849–1855
California Gold Rush, African Americans came to the San Francisco-area along with others from all over the world. Some came as enslaved people and worked the gold mines, others came as free entrepreneurs seeking to create a better life. Slavery was forbidden in California, when it entered the
Union as a free state in 1850, but Black residents still faced discriminatory laws in education and employment and did not have the right to vote or testify against whites.[10] In response, they created political organizations like the SF. Executive Committee and the Franchise League.[11] Until the
Fugitive Slave Act expired in 1855, they also risked being captured and sold into slavery unless they could prove they had lived in the state since before 1849.[12]
The third of three statewide
Colored Conventions was held in San Francisco in 1857, which resulted in the creation of California's first Black newspaper, the Mirror of the Times.[13] Other post Gold Rush black newspapers included the
Pacific Appeal and the
Elevator, edited by
Phillip Alexander Bell. By 1860, there were 1,176 African-Americans living in San Francisco, or 2% of the city's population, most of them middle class.[14] The San Francisco Athenaeum and Literary Society, established in 1853, which included a saloon and an 800 book library, was a gathering place for African-Americans at that time.[15][16]
The new community established the first black Baptist church west of the Rockies in 1852, originally called the First Colored Baptist Church of San Francisco, and now known as the
Third Baptist Church, a city-designated landmark on McAllister Street. Other African American churches founded in 1852 in San Francisco included
Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church (Bethel AME Church), and
African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church (AME Zion Church).[17][18][19]
Despite discrimination in employment, by 1862, African-Americans in San Francisco owned $300,000 in assets, mostly real estate. $100,000 of this was owned by two people:
Mary Ellen Pleasant ($30,000) and a partner of hers, Richard Barber ($70,000).[20]
By the 1870s, the Gold Rush boom was over; 60% of African-American men and 97% of women were working in the service industry, as waiters, draymen, porters, maids, ship cooks, stewards.[21] The rise of discriminatory white labor unions in the late 19th century, compounded by increased immigration from Europe and Asia, made it harder for black residents to find jobs. In 1885, the
Palace Hotel replaced their entire black staff with white union workers.[22]
20th century
From 1921 until 1972, the
Madame C.J. Walker Home for Girls and Women was in operation in
Upper Fillmore (Lower Pacific Heights), a charitable, community and social services organization for single African American woman new to San Francisco, who were not eligible to use the
YWCA.[23][24][25]
Around the 1920s during the end of the
Barbary Coast-era,
Terrific Street was an entertainment district in San Francisco and it was home to numerous
black and tan clubs (interracial clubs that highlighted African American culture), where Black musicians and entrepreneurs contributed to San Francisco's rollicking nightlife scene.[26] Former-
Pullman Porters, Lew Purccell and Sam King owned the black and tan "So Different Club" and "Purcell's", where pianist Sid Pirotti played in a ragtime ensemble.[27][28]Jelly Roll Morton opened the Jupiter club on Columbus Avenue in 1917, also a black and tan club.[29]
During the
Second Great Migration of the 20th century, the San Francisco Bay Area was a destination for African Americans coming out of the
South. The city's Black population rose considerably during
World War II, when the War Manpower Commission recruited African Americans from the South to work the recently acquired Naval Docks in
Hunters Point of San Francisco. Word soon spread that African Americans could find work in San Francisco, with many of them moving to the newly constructed war housing in Hunter's Point.
By the end of World War II, the center for Black life, music and entertainment had moved to the Fillmore District, earning it the title of "Harlem of the West."[30] A small, but existent community of African Americans were present in the Fillmore District after the
1906 San Francisco earthquake, but it wasn't until World War II when the Fillmore District and
San Francisco as a whole began to have a large African-American population. Between the years of 1940 and 1950 the African American population of
San Francisco grew from 4,836 to 43,460.[31] going from 0.5% to 4.5% of the city's total population.[31] A vast majority of these African Americans went on to occupy the Fillmore District. This large migration of African Americans was due to three major factors. The first was that the
Japanese internment in 1942 left a large number of unoccupied homes and businesses within the Fillmore. The second was that the shipbuilding industry and wartime economy created by
WWII brought a large number of wartime jobs into the city.[32] The third was that many African Americans left the south in the
Great Migration in order to escape the
Jim Crow laws which existed there.[31][32]
After the war, the African American population contributed significantly to the growing
jazz culture in the Fillmore, with clubs, such as
Jimbo's Bop City and the New Orleans Swing Club (ca 1950–1965),[33] flourishing there.
Billie Holiday,
Dizzy Gillespie,
Miles Davis,
Kenny Dorham, and
Dexter Gordon were entertainers who performed in the Fillmore during its heyday.[34] In addition, the trend of African American migration to the city and the district continued at a fast pace until it reached a peak of about 13 percent in the 1970s.[31][35]
The Church for the Fellowship of All Peoples was opened in 1948 by Howard Thurman, becoming the first racially integrated interfaith church in the United States.[36]
The influx of African Americans during and after
WWII created a large amount of racial tensions. Many African Americans were forced to live in certain neighborhoods of the city and were denied employment by various businesses.[32] San Francisco's housing discrimination against its Black residents received media attention when
San Francisco Giants' baseball legend
Willie Mays' attempt to buy a home in
St. Francis Wood in 1957 was refused because of his race.[37] In the early 1960s, blacks and whites demonstrated against discriminatory hiring practices at San Francisco's department stores, hotels, drive-ins, grocery stores, banks and car dealerships.[38] The
Civil Rights Movement succeeded in making significant legal gains for African Americans and many other ethnic groups.[39] However, there are still significant social tensions which exist today.
From its high point in the 1970s, San Francisco's Black population has dwindled for a variety of reasons, including the city's high cost of living,
urban renewal which tore down black neighborhoods,
gentrification,
redlining, and Black exodus from high crime areas to the suburbs.[40][41]
The city's African American community has had a mixed-opinion relationship with the
San Francisco Police Department and law enforcement in the Bay Area. Instances of
race riots,
police brutality and mass incarceration have been a concern for many African-American leaders, pastors, and civilians. In 2013, a San Francisco Chronicle article's statistics showed that 56% of the
San Francisco County Jail's inmates are Black, which is 9-10 times higher than the city's African American residence percentage, which was 6-7% during this time period. Those who were considered to be in need of specialized mental health help, rose from 56% in 2008, to 71% in 2013, which accounted for inmates of all races.[42] People who were Black and
Hispanic American made up a higher proportion of officer-involved fatalities in the Bay Area, which African Americans making up 27% of the 110 deaths from January 2015 to July 2018. This is roughly four times higher than the Bay Area's 7-8% Black community.[43]
On September 27, 1966, a
riot broke out in the proximity of the housing projects of Griffith and Oakdale Avenue in the Hunters Point neighborhood when Matthew Johnson, a 16-year-old Black boy suspected of stealing a car, was shot and killed by White SFPD officer Alvin Johnson. Three warning shots were fired towards the car Johnson was driving, and a fourth shot struck Matthew's back. The riots lasted for four days, and 359 arrests were made, and 51 people were injured as a result of the unrest. Riots occurred in the Bayview/Hunter's Point neighborhood, where
Molotov cocktails and rocks were thrown at police and civilians, as well as the Fillmore District, and
Mission High School. After reports of gunfire from the Bayview Community Center, police fired into the center, where several hundred adults and children had gathered, resulting in seven injuries. The
National Guard and
California Highway Patrol were deployed by Governor
Pat Brown during the violence until October 1, when the riots became less destructive. On October 20, 1966, Alvin Johnson was declared by the San Francisco County District Attorney's office to have committed a
justifiable homicide, and did not face charges as a result.[44]
The
Black Panthers started two months afterwards, in Oakland in 1966.[45] They also had a presence in San Francisco, with an office in the Fillmore District and community programs throughout black neighborhoods of the city. They advocated
open carry armed citizen patrols to protect against police brutality and put forth the idea of community policing based on San Francisco districts.[46]
In 1968, the Officers for Justice association was formed, spearheaded by Black police officer
Prentice Earl Sanders. In 1973 the group filed a class-action discrimination lawsuit in federal court against the San Francisco Police Department, the city, and County of San Francisco, and the Civil Service Commission for their failure to recruit and hire minorities. Sanders later became the city's first Black chief of police.[47]
The
Peoples Temple in San Francisco, founded by
Jim Jones, was headquartered in San Francisco during the early to mid-1970s. The temple, which would later be involved in a
mass suicide and murder in
Guyana in 1977, recruited and appealed to many working-class African-Americans throughout the U.S.[48]
Also during the 1970s, a series of black-on-white murders labeled the
Zebra Killings caused police to treat every black man in San Francisco as a suspect, issuing a "Z-card" to anyone who was "cleared" of being a suspect. The murders were eventually determined to have been committed by members of a splinter group of the Nation of Islam.[49]
On December 2, 2015, five SFPD officers shot and killed 26-year-old African American Mario Woods on Keith Street in Bayview. Woods, a suspect in a stabbing and wounding of a man, was confronted by officers on a sidewalk and was armed with a kitchen knife. The shooting, recorded by at least two bystanders, showed Woods being shot with a
beanbag gun four times in the chest and hips, and then slowly approaching an officer who stepped into Woods' path before Woods is fired upon. The shooting led to protests in the city.[50] An autopsy indicated that Woods had 20 gunshot wounds, in the head, back, abdomen, buttocks, legs and hands, and was under the influence of
meth and
marijuana. Mario Woods Day was declared an unofficial holiday in the city on July 22, Woods' birthday.[51]
On November 23, 2020, for the first time in San Francisco history, a police officer was charged with an on-duty killing. Chris Samayoa, who was on the force for four days at the time of the incident, shot and killed Keita O'Neal, 42, an assault and car theft suspect, in Bayview-Hunters Point, on December 1, 2017. O'Neal allegedly assaulted a female
California State Lottery employee, and then stole a vehicle owned by the lottery company. Samayoa, who had ended his job with the department, was charged with manslaughter and assault by a police officer and with a semi-automatic firearm in connection with the case. O'Neal was allegedly unarmed during the incident, and was walking away from Samayoa.[52] This is the second time in 2020 that a police officer in the San Francisco Bay Area was charged with an on-duty death; on April 18, 2020,
San Leandro Police Officer Jason Fletcher
Tasered 32-year-old African American Steven DeMarco Taylor twice in a San Leandro
Walmart, and then shot him once in the chest while a backup officer had just arrived several seconds prior to the shot being fired. The incident was caught on
body cameras; Taylor was suspected of stealing items in the store or causing a disturbance, and started swinging or handling a metal baseball bat. Taylor was still armed with the bat, but did not advance towards Fletcher as he was being Tasered and then shot. On September 2, 2020, Fletcher was charged with
voluntary manslaughter and was arraigned on September 15.[53]
Crime in Black community
San Francisco and the general Bay Area's Black community has dealt with street and prison gangs, drug-related crime and other crimes over the decades.[citation needed]
The gang
Westmob, associated with Oakdale Mob and Sunnydale housing project gangs from the southeast area of the city, was involved in a gang war with Hunters Point-based Big Block from 1999 to the 2000s. Its current status of activity is unknown.[54] and is linked to
rap and drugs. They claim territory from West Point to Middle Point in San Francisco's notoriously dangerous
Hunters Point projects.[55]
In 2004, Westmob member David Hill, then 21, fatally shot SFPD Officer Isaac Espinoza, 29, and wounded his partner with an
AK-47, on a Bayview street. In 2007, he was found guilty of the crime and sentenced to
life without parole.[56]
In April 2009, two Westmob members were involved in a West Point Road shooting of a man they suspected was a snitch of a case involving Westmob members. The bullets missed the intended victim, and almost struck his 5-year-old brother. Two weeks later, the two gunmen shot the intended victim nine times in front of his home as he was cutting his younger brother's hair. He survived. In 2013, both gunmen, who were 23 and 25 during this year, were convicted of two counts of attempted murder, and were facing life sentences.[57]
In January 2015, four young Black men (ages 19 to 22) were shot to death while sitting in a car at Laguna and Page Street in the area of Fillmore District/
Hayes Valley. An arrest of a 27-year-old man was made in July 2016. The motive remains to be debated or undetermined, although the suspect was charged with gang enhancements. He had alleged ties with the
Black Guerilla Family.[58][59]
In 2019, although African Americans only made up 5% of San Francisco's population, 22% of aggravated assault victims, and 17% of sexual assault victims were Black.[60]
Politics
Cecil F. Poole in 1961 became the first African American to serve as a United States Attorney. He was also the first African American to serve as a Judge of the Northern District of California and the second African American to serve as a Judge of the Ninth Circuit.[61]Terry Francois became the first African American on San Francisco's Board of Supervisor's in 1964. The 41st
Mayor of San Francisco,
Willie Brown, a
Texas native who came to San Francisco to attend
San Francisco State University, served two terms from January 8, 1996, to January 8, 2004, being the first Black person to hold that office. After the death of
Ed Lee, the city's first
Asian American mayor, on December 12, 2017, San Francisco-born
London Breed took his place as the city's acting mayor. She was officially sworn as an official mayor on July 11, 2018, being San Francisco's first female African-American mayor.
Culture
Aside from their extensive contributions to San Francisco's musical history, African Americans have also added to the city's cultural life in literature, art, education, theater and media.[citation needed]
Marcus Books was founded in 1960 as one of the country's first Black bookstores and became the oldest African American bookstore in the United States. It closed its San Francisco location in 2014 but has an office in Oakland and plans to reopen again at the African American Art and Culture Complex.[62][63]
The
Lorraine Hansberry Theater, founded in 1981, produces classics of African American theater as well as new plays.[66]Pomo Afro Homos was a theater group created in the 1990s to give voice to Black Gay Male voices.[67]
Radio station
KPOO, started in 1973, became the only black-controlled independent public radio station west of the Mississippi, and was the first to launch a show focusing on
rap music in 1979.[68] In the 1990s, the radio station
KMEL was also influential in broadcasting the new sounds of San Francisco and
Oakland Hip Hop artists.[69]
The ongoing San Francisco Black Film Festival was created in 1998 to share the work of local as well as global filmmakers.[70] Films of the 21st century that have focused on San Francisco's Black community include The Last Black Man in San Francisco, and Straight Outta Hunter's Point.[71]
The African American Art and Culture Complex on Fulton Street in the Fillmore District hosts workshops, art events and the city's
Juneteenth Festival. Created in the 1970s, it is now home to ten separate black arts organizations, including the African American Historical and Cultural Society, founded in 1955,[73] and the
African-American Shakespeare Company, founded in 1994.[63]
Howard Thurman (1899–1981), author, philosopher, theologian, mystic, educator, and civil rights leader
Cecil F. Poole (1914–1997), first African American to serve as a
United States Attorney (outside of the United States Virgin Islands), the first African American to serve as a Judge of the Northern District of California and the second African American to serve as a Judge of the Ninth Circuit.[84]
Hayward Ellis King (1928–1990), visual artist and curator, he was the first Black artist to serve as both director and curator of a major San Francisco Bay Area art gallery.[111]
^Silva and Watts, Harlem of The West, Heyday Books, February 3, 2020
^
abcdLai, Clement. "The Racial Triangulation Of Space: The Case Of Urban Renewal In San Francisco's Fillmore District."Annals Of The Association Of American Geographers 102.1 (2012): 151-170. SocINDEX with Full Text. Web. October 24, 2016.
^
abcMiller, Paul T. The Postwar Struggle for Civil Rights: African Americans in San Francisco, 1945-1975. New York: Routledge, 2010. Print.
^one time donation (April 24, 2018).
"Jimbo's Bop City". FoundSF. Retrieved July 9, 2018.
^Harris, April L. "Fillmore District, San Francisco | The Black Past: Remembered and Reclaimed." Fillmore District, San Francisco. BlackPast, 2007. Web. 3 Nov. 2016.
^Purnell and Theoharia, The Strange Careers of the Jim Crow North: Segregation and Struggle outside of the South, New York University Press, 2019, p. 229
^Chakraborty, Sudeepto (July 3, 2020).
"Ella Hill Hutch". Changemakers: Biographies of African Americans in San Francisco Who Made a Difference. Retrieved February 15, 2022.
^CHAKRABORTY, SUDEEPTO (July 2020).
"CHIEF PRENTICE EARL SANDERS". Changemakers: Biographies of African Americans In San Francisco Who Made a Difference. Retrieved February 15, 2022.
Daniels, Douglas Henry (1990). Pioneer urbanites : a social and cultural history of Black San Francisco. Berkeley: University of California Press.
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