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'''<font face = | '''<font face = Papyrus> <font color = maroon> <font size = 4>Historical Essay</font></font> </font>''' | ||
''by Chris Carlsson'' | |||
[[Image:outofsf$china-clipper.jpg]] | [[Image:outofsf$china-clipper.jpg]] | ||
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''Photo: Private Collection, San Francisco, CA'' | ''Photo: Private Collection, San Francisco, CA'' | ||
San Francisco | In 1915, San Franciscans were thrilled and then horrified by the aerial acrobatics of Lincoln Beachey as he did stunts over the bay as part of the [[PPIE: A Festival of Empire Wrapped in Technological Hubris|Panama-Pacific International Exposition]]—until plunging to his death during a failed trick. Just west of the Exposition grounds was the city’s first airfield, a military post on Crissy Field in the Presidio. | ||
[[Image:Crissy-field-1920s.jpg]] | |||
'''Crissy Field in the 1920s.''' | |||
''Photo: Private Collection, San Francisco, CA'' | |||
Commercial air traffic was still a couple of decades away. For a brief time it was projected that Treasure Island, built originally for the [[Treasure Island Fair: Golden Gate International Exposition|Golden Gate International Exposition in 1939-40]], would be converted to an airport after the World’s Fair. [[The China Clipper|The ''China Clipper'']] was based on newly built [[TI 1938|Treasure Island]] in 1939. But when WWII interceded, Treasure Island became a naval base with navy taking over the original terminal building and the hangars. | |||
Plans were floated in the 1920s to build an airfield in India Basin over the [[Islais Creek Remembered|Islais Creek marshes]]. Eventually, the city of San Francisco purchased the tidelands at the eastern edge of the Darius Ogden Mills estate (which was eventually subdivided and became the town of Millbrae) in San Mateo county, and there opened the airport as [[Mills Field|Mills Field]] in the late 1920s. On June 9, 1931, the name was changed to San Francisco airport and was soon added to the purview of the City’s Public Utilities Commission. | |||
[[Image:Mills Field 1928 pub 2011.032.0077 0.jpg]] | |||
'''Mills Field, 1928.''' | |||
''Photo: courtesy San Francisco Airport Museums'' | |||
[[Image:Mills Field Municipal Airport of San Francisco pub 2011.032.0028 0.jpg]] | |||
'''Mills Field Municipal Airport of San Francisco, c. 1929.''' | |||
''Photo: courtesy San Francisco Airport Museums'' | |||
In the early 1930s, 350 acres of tidelands was “reclaimed” and by 1935, the airport had extended its runway C from 1,900 feet to 3,000 feet. | |||
[[Image:San Francisco Airport 1935 pub 2011.032.0172 0.jpg]] | |||
'''San Francisco Airport, 1935.''' | |||
''Photo: courtesy San Francisco Airport Museums'' | |||
The airport construction also created a basin for the amphibious planes that were still a common part of early air travel. Pan American chose the San Francisco Airport as its location to do the first regularly scheduled trans-oceanic air service. The flight took off from the San Francisco airport and 59 hours later, after four stops, it landed in Manila, Philippines. The plane was so heavy that when it took off from the airport it had to fly under the cables of the East Bay Bridge that had not been completed yet. The plane, China Clipper, became instantly famous and set off a rage of new toys, beer and food all with the name China Clipper. | |||
[[Image:San Francisco Airport 1939 9000 foot seawall defined a seaplane harbor and 315 acre extension of airfield pub 2009.104.037 0.jpg]] | |||
'''San Francisco Airport, 1939. A 9000-foot seawall defined the new seaplane harbor and provided a 315 acre extension of the airport.''' | |||
''Photo: courtesy San Francisco Airport Museums'' | |||
After WWII, the rechristened San Francisco International Airport (SFO) began its inexorable expansion, with a new terminal building, a new control tower, and expanded runways all taking shape. | |||
[[Image:San Francisco Airport curbside entrance 1948 pub 2011.032.0213 0.jpg]] | |||
'''San Francisco Airport curbside entrance, 1948.''' | |||
''Photo: courtesy San Francisco Airport Museums'' | |||
[[Image:Lobby and ticket counters at San Francisco Airport 1948 pub 2011.032.0210 0.jpg]] | |||
'''Lobby and ticket counter at SF Airport, 1948.''' | |||
''Photo: courtesy San Francisco Airport Museums'' | |||
[[Image:Passenger lobby at San Francisco International Airport 1954 pub 2011.032.0406 0.jpg]] | |||
'''Passenger lobby at San Francisco International Airport, 1954.''' | |||
''Photo: courtesy San Francisco Airport Museums'' | |||
In the late 1990s during the first Dotcom tech boom, SFO became the nation’s 9th busiest airport. SFO found itself confronted with chronic delays, which were blamed on the old mid-century runways, no longer separated enough to accommodate a higher flow of airline traffic. Mayor Willie Brown, the consummate deal-maker, embarked on a campaign to build new runways into San Francisco Bay in order to allow expansion of the airport. But strong opposition by Supervisor Aaron Peskin and a panoply of local environmental groups, plus the Bay Conservation and Development Commission, ultimately derailed the plans. Air traffic has fallen considerably since those booming times, and SFO now ranks 21st in airport business. Oakland and San Jose airports have also taken up some of the pressure on SFO. | |||
In the early 2000s the city-owned facility completed its most recent expansion, adding a dedicated International Terminal, as well as building a 6-mile automated shuttle train system, and running an extension of the BART train system directly to the airport. | |||
San Francisco International Airport is a bastion of union labor in the Bay Area. Nearly everyone working there belongs to one of over a dozen unions associated with the airline business, from machinists and pilots to flight attendants and custodial workers at the airport. Still, in 1981 the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO) went on strike at the beginning of the Reagan Administration, and threw up a picket line at SFO. They were all fired by the government which sought to make an example of them to intimidate organized labor more generally. Their union was destroyed after a few months and a lack of solidarity from other airport unions. | |||
After the 9/11 terror attacks in New York and Washington DC a radically ramped up security system was put in at SFO as at all airports nationwide. It was no longer enough to pass through the metal detectors that had existed for years. Now a whole theater of police state “security” had to be performed, from taking off shoes, hats, belts, and jackets, to removing everything from pockets, prohibiting all containers of liquid, and so on, all while standing in long, slow-moving lines. (Since 2017 the government has begun offering frequent travelers a way to get pre-checked and avoid some of the worst of the humiliating and pointless Transportation Security Administration rituals.) The absurd system of color-coded warnings implemented by the ominously named “Department of Homeland Security” quickly became a meaningless joke. Repeated breaches of the security system at most airports underscores the reality that the whole system is designed to teach-and-test docility and obedience to the average traveler and has very little to do with anything that might be called “public safety.” | |||
In January 2017, the incoming Trump administration promulgated draconian new rules to prevent immigration by Muslims, even banning green-card holders and people already holding valid visas and en route to U.S. airports. Thousands of people quickly besieged airports around the country, including SFO. For several days prior to a federal court judge reversing the ban (something that would happen twice more in the year), thousands of Bay Area residents marched, sang, chanted, and occupied the lobby of the International Terminal in a stirring rebuke to the xenophobia and racism that had taken over the government. | |||
[[Image:SFO.JPG]] | [[Image:SFO.JPG]] |
Historical Essay
by Chris Carlsson
China Clipper at Treasure island in 1939.
Photo: Private Collection, San Francisco, CA
In 1915, San Franciscans were thrilled and then horrified by the aerial acrobatics of Lincoln Beachey as he did stunts over the bay as part of the Panama-Pacific International Exposition—until plunging to his death during a failed trick. Just west of the Exposition grounds was the city’s first airfield, a military post on Crissy Field in the Presidio.
Crissy Field in the 1920s.
Photo: Private Collection, San Francisco, CA
Commercial air traffic was still a couple of decades away. For a brief time it was projected that Treasure Island, built originally for the Golden Gate International Exposition in 1939-40, would be converted to an airport after the World’s Fair. The China Clipper was based on newly built Treasure Island in 1939. But when WWII interceded, Treasure Island became a naval base with navy taking over the original terminal building and the hangars.
Plans were floated in the 1920s to build an airfield in India Basin over the Islais Creek marshes. Eventually, the city of San Francisco purchased the tidelands at the eastern edge of the Darius Ogden Mills estate (which was eventually subdivided and became the town of Millbrae) in San Mateo county, and there opened the airport as Mills Field in the late 1920s. On June 9, 1931, the name was changed to San Francisco airport and was soon added to the purview of the City’s Public Utilities Commission.
Mills Field, 1928.
Photo: courtesy San Francisco Airport Museums
Mills Field Municipal Airport of San Francisco, c. 1929.
Photo: courtesy San Francisco Airport Museums
In the early 1930s, 350 acres of tidelands was “reclaimed” and by 1935, the airport had extended its runway C from 1,900 feet to 3,000 feet.
San Francisco Airport, 1935.
Photo: courtesy San Francisco Airport Museums
The airport construction also created a basin for the amphibious planes that were still a common part of early air travel. Pan American chose the San Francisco Airport as its location to do the first regularly scheduled trans-oceanic air service. The flight took off from the San Francisco airport and 59 hours later, after four stops, it landed in Manila, Philippines. The plane was so heavy that when it took off from the airport it had to fly under the cables of the East Bay Bridge that had not been completed yet. The plane, China Clipper, became instantly famous and set off a rage of new toys, beer and food all with the name China Clipper.
San Francisco Airport, 1939. A 9000-foot seawall defined the new seaplane harbor and provided a 315 acre extension of the airport.
Photo: courtesy San Francisco Airport Museums
After WWII, the rechristened San Francisco International Airport (SFO) began its inexorable expansion, with a new terminal building, a new control tower, and expanded runways all taking shape.
San Francisco Airport curbside entrance, 1948.
Photo: courtesy San Francisco Airport Museums
Lobby and ticket counter at SF Airport, 1948.
Photo: courtesy San Francisco Airport Museums
Passenger lobby at San Francisco International Airport, 1954.
Photo: courtesy San Francisco Airport Museums
In the late 1990s during the first Dotcom tech boom, SFO became the nation’s 9th busiest airport. SFO found itself confronted with chronic delays, which were blamed on the old mid-century runways, no longer separated enough to accommodate a higher flow of airline traffic. Mayor Willie Brown, the consummate deal-maker, embarked on a campaign to build new runways into San Francisco Bay in order to allow expansion of the airport. But strong opposition by Supervisor Aaron Peskin and a panoply of local environmental groups, plus the Bay Conservation and Development Commission, ultimately derailed the plans. Air traffic has fallen considerably since those booming times, and SFO now ranks 21st in airport business. Oakland and San Jose airports have also taken up some of the pressure on SFO.
In the early 2000s the city-owned facility completed its most recent expansion, adding a dedicated International Terminal, as well as building a 6-mile automated shuttle train system, and running an extension of the BART train system directly to the airport.
San Francisco International Airport is a bastion of union labor in the Bay Area. Nearly everyone working there belongs to one of over a dozen unions associated with the airline business, from machinists and pilots to flight attendants and custodial workers at the airport. Still, in 1981 the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO) went on strike at the beginning of the Reagan Administration, and threw up a picket line at SFO. They were all fired by the government which sought to make an example of them to intimidate organized labor more generally. Their union was destroyed after a few months and a lack of solidarity from other airport unions.
After the 9/11 terror attacks in New York and Washington DC a radically ramped up security system was put in at SFO as at all airports nationwide. It was no longer enough to pass through the metal detectors that had existed for years. Now a whole theater of police state “security” had to be performed, from taking off shoes, hats, belts, and jackets, to removing everything from pockets, prohibiting all containers of liquid, and so on, all while standing in long, slow-moving lines. (Since 2017 the government has begun offering frequent travelers a way to get pre-checked and avoid some of the worst of the humiliating and pointless Transportation Security Administration rituals.) The absurd system of color-coded warnings implemented by the ominously named “Department of Homeland Security” quickly became a meaningless joke. Repeated breaches of the security system at most airports underscores the reality that the whole system is designed to teach-and-test docility and obedience to the average traveler and has very little to do with anything that might be called “public safety.”
In January 2017, the incoming Trump administration promulgated draconian new rules to prevent immigration by Muslims, even banning green-card holders and people already holding valid visas and en route to U.S. airports. Thousands of people quickly besieged airports around the country, including SFO. For several days prior to a federal court judge reversing the ban (something that would happen twice more in the year), thousands of Bay Area residents marched, sang, chanted, and occupied the lobby of the International Terminal in a stirring rebuke to the xenophobia and racism that had taken over the government.
SF International Airport 2009.
Photo: LisaRuth Elliott
Mills Field, before it was renamed San Francisco International Airport, c. 1930s
Photo: Shaping San Francisco
Mills Field, 1927.
Photo: Shaping San Francisco
PSA stewardesses in the 1970s during the height of sexist advertising campaigns of the era, before the gender integration of the field and the renaming of the job "flight attendant.."
Image via Kim Lee, Facebook