Portal:San Francisco Bay Area/Years/Archive

This page displays all the articles which appear in the "previous years" section of the San Francisco Bay Area portal. Instructions on how to add new articles to this list are here. This list is duplicated at Timeline of the San Francisco Bay Area, as it makes a pretty nice article. that one has some of the editing flourishes removed to make it more appropriate as an article, rather than a portal element.


2019 edit

2019

Add older items from the Current page here as 2019 progresses. this page now shows as a randomly chosen years page with the months of events (eg Jan/Feb/Mar, etc) that have dropped off the Current page. the oldest events that are then currently in the "current" panel will be trimmed off, and placed here as the year progresses.

2018 edit

2018
 
Cannabis performance art, 2016, San Francisco
 
Women's March, 2018
 
San Francisco interim Mayor Mark Farrell
 
London Breed
 
Ron Dellums

2017 edit

2017
 
Kevin Starr
 
Trump inauguration protest SF Jan 20 2017
 
"Bridge Together Golden Gate"
 
San Bruno explosion and fires, at night
 
Protesters at San Francisco International Airport, 2017
 
Representative Mike Honda speaks at a San Francisco protest of Executive_Order_13769 in February 2017
 
Series of Storms Battering California Tracked by NASA's AIRS Instrument
 
Third Street, San Francisco
 
Anderson Lake dam and spillway
 
Warm Springs BART station on opening day
 
The United States of America, Arthur Szyk (1945)
 
Robert Taylor in 2008
 
Customers waiting to purchase the Tesla 3 in Walnut Creek, California
 
Satellite image of smoke from California wildfires
 
If not now, when?
 
Acting San Francisco Mayor London Breed

2016 edit

2016
 
Paul Kantner (1975)
 
The Berkeley Art Museum
 
Lady Gaga and the Blue Angels at Super Bowl 50
 
Andrew Grove
 
Wreck of the USS Conestoga
 
garlic fries at Gordon Biersch Brewing Company, originally based in San Jose
 
Stephen Curry
 
Renee Davidson Courthouse
 
SFMOMA, with expansion
 
Typical styrofoam pollution
 
Stock value of Niantic during release of Pokémon GO
 
Vinod Khosla
 
Millennium Tower, San Francisco
 
European grapevine moth
 
Colin Kaepernick
 
Dustin Moskovitz
 
Loma Fire
 
Nora Campos
 
nNew control tower at SFO
 
Kearny Street, San Francisco
 
Protesters against Donald Trump, San Francisco
 
Oakland "Ghost Ship" warehouse fire
 
Uber self driving car (October 2016)

2015 edit

2015
 
23andMe logo
 
Golden Gate Bridge median
 
Ford Research and Innovation logo
 
UCSF Mission Bay construction
 
Left to right: Ames scientists Michel Nuevo, Christopher Materese and Scott Sandford reproduce uracil, cytosine, and thymine, three key components of our hereditary material, in the laboratory
 
Cordell Bank and Farallones topography
 
SFPD insignia
 
USS Independence in the San Francisco Bay
 
Stephen Curry in 2015
 
Next Thing Co. logo
 
Wragg Fire
 
Tesla Model X
 
Condor Club
 
Ian Murdock (2008)

2014 edit

2014
 
Mission Bay fire
 
Amelia Rose Earhart
 
Levi's Stadium, from Great America
 
Robin Williams
 


 
Larry Ellison at Oracle Openworld
 
W. E. Moerner
 
SFBG logo
 
 
Tim Cook
 
Libby Schaaf
 
White Coral off the Sonoma County coast
 
The San Francisco Twins
 
SS City of Rio de Janeiro
A time-lapse animation from NASA's Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite showing the formation of the storm from December 1–3, 2014 (the small system to the far left of the main storm over California).

2013 edit

2013
 
Oracle Team USA, 2013 America's Cup
 
Warren Hall, days prior to demolition
 
SFJAZZ Center
 
Aerial view of construction of the Tom Lantos Tunnels

 • The 2013 America's Cup (Oracle Team USA yacht pictured) is held in San Francisco Bay
 • Asiana Airlines Flight 214 crashes while landing at San Francisco International Airport
 • An unofficial death certificate is issued for Jahi McMath by the Alameda County coroner
 • Andy Lopez is shot and killed by a Sonoma County sheriff's deputy
 • Warren Hall (pictured), at California State University, East Bay, is demolished by implosion
 • Graton Resort & Casino opens in Rohnert Park
 • The Russell City Energy Center goes online in Hayward
 • SFJAZZ Center (pictured) opens in San Francisco
 • The new eastern span of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge opens
 • Solar Impulse begins a cross-US flight, taking off from Moffett Field in Mountain View
 • The Tom Lantos Tunnels (pictured), at Devil's Slide near Pacifica, open
 • Gilead Sciences' drug Sovaldi, for the treatment of hepatitis C, is approved by the FDA
 • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory physicist Carl Haber is awarded a MacArthur "Genius Grant"
 • San Francisco Bay is designated a Ramsar Wetland of International Importance
 • Cancer patient Miles Scott becomes Batkid for a day in San Francisco, turning it into Gotham City, with Mayor Ed Lee and others participating in the Make-A-Wish project



2012 edit

2012
 
Matt Cain
 
Novato meteorite trajectory
 
Chevron Refinery Fire

2011 edit

2011
 

2010 edit

2010
 
Damage from San Bruno pipeline explosion
 
Jean Quan
 
Tesla Factory interior

2009 edit

2009
 
 

2008 edit

2008
 
Mervyn's former headquarters, Hayward)
 
The fire at about 7 a.m. on October 13, 2008

2007 edit

2007
 
Mayor Gavin Newsom
 
Elephant seals at Año Nuevo during the mating season in early February

2006 edit

2006
 
Exhibit at the 2006 Maker Faire
 

2005 edit

2005
 
 

2004 edit

2004
 
The line of same-sex couples applying for marriage licenses, stretching for blocks around San Francisco's City Hall in February 2004

2003 edit

2003
 
Tesla headquarters

2002 edit

2002
 
View of the bridge looking east
 

2001 edit

2001
 
2006 snowfall
 

2000 edit

2000
 
Eastine Cowner, a former waitress, works on a ship under construction at Richmond, California

1999 edit

1999
 
Brown in 1996

1998 edit

1998
 
Mayor Ron Gonzales
 
Elihu M. Harris Office Building

1997 edit

1997
 
Herb Caen

1996 edit

1996

1995 edit

1995
 
damage from the Mount Vision fire
 
Craig Newmark, the founder of Craigslist, in 2006

1994 edit

1994
 
I. Magnin building in San Francisco (now Macy's)

1993 edit

1993

1992 edit

1992
 
Barbara Boxer

1991 edit

1991
 
Remains of houses destroyed by the fire

 • The Oakland and Berkeley Hills are hit by a firestorm (damage pictured, left)
 • Frank Jordan is elected mayor of San Francisco
 • Groundbreaking ceremonies take place at the AIDS Memorial Grove in San Francisco (logo pictured, right)
 • San Francisco pornography and striptease club pioneer Jim Mitchell kills his brother and business partner Artie in Marin County
 • Apple Computer introduces the PowerBook line of subnotebook personal computers

1990 edit

1990
 

1989 edit

1989
 
Collapse of the Cypress Street Viaduct
 
Kezar Stadium

1988 edit

1988
 

1987 edit

1987
 
Santa Clara VTA logo

1986 edit

1986
 
924 Gilman
 
Nude woman at Baker Beach, evoking Burning Man

1985 edit

1985
 
Abandoned lighthouse-keeper building, Año Nuevo Island
 

 • A plane heading for Buchanan Field Airport loses control and crashes into the roof of Macys, killing the pilot and two passengers, and seriously injuring 84 Christmas shoppers at the Sun Valley Mall in Concord
 • Año Nuevo State Park is established at Año Nuevo Island (pictured, left) and points in San Mateo County
 • Emeryville Crescent State Marine Reserve (pictured, right) is established
 • NeXT is founded in Redwood City by Apple Computer co-founder Steve Jobs, after being forced out of Apple
 • The San Francisco 49ers win the Super Bowl for the second time

1984 edit

1984
 
Geraldine Ferraro, with Bob Matsui, Norman Mineta and Tom Hsieh
 
NUMMI Plant
 

1983 edit

1983
 
SF Mayor Dianne Feinstein

1982 edit

1982
 
E-Trade San Francisco financial center
 
Symantec headquarters in Mountain View (2013)
 
Fremont Assembly

1981 edit

1981
 
winery directional sign, Sonoma Valley
 
Napa Valley winery historic marker

 • The first World Games are held in Santa Clara
 • Erhard Seminars Training in San Francisco dissolved
 • The Sonoma Valley AVA (winery directional sign pictured, left) is established
 • The Napa Valley AVA (historic marker pictured, right) is established
 • The Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary is established in coastal waters off the Golden Gate
 • Arthur Leonard Schawlow at Stanford University, along with Nicolaas Bloembergen and Kai Siegbahn, share the Nobel Prize in Physics for their work with lasers

1980 edit

1980
 
Davies Symphony Hall
 
Czesław Miłosz

1979 edit

1979
 
Rioters at SF City Hall
 
SF Mayor Dianne Feinstein

1978 edit

1978
 
Leo Ryan
 
SF Chronicle headline of the assassinations of Moscone and Milk

1977 edit

1977
 
Dianne Feinstein
 
Harvey Milk

 • The San Francisco Board of Supervisors election places Dianne Feinstein (pictured, left), Harvey Milk (pictured, far right) and Dan White on the board
 • Oracle Corporation is founded in Santa Clara
 • Victoria's Secret opens its first store at the Stanford Shopping Center in Palo Alto
 • Members of the Joe Boys gang open fire at the Golden Dragon Restaurant in Chinatown, in an assault on rival gang Wah Ching, leaving 5 people dead and 11 others injured, none of whom are gang members.
 • Apple Computer introduces the Apple II

1976 edit

1976
 
Apple Computer's first logo
 
Chateau Montelena 1973

 • Five unsolved murders of young women are committed in San Mateo County
 • Apple Inc. (pictured, left) is founded in Cupertino by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, and Ronald Wayne
 • Napa Valley wineries Stag's Leap Wine Cellars and Chateau Montelena (pictured, right) place best in the red and white wine categories respectively, against their traditionally first ranked French competitors, in the wine tasting that becomes known as the Judgment of Paris
 • China Camp State Park is established in San Rafael
 • Fairfield-based candy company Herman Goelitz sells their first Jelly Bellies
 • Cyra McFadden's The Serial's first installments are published in the Pacific Sun alternative newsweekly
 • Dennis Richmond becomes the lead anchor at KTVU news in Oakland, an early African American news anchor in a major US television market
 • KPIX television in San Francisco debuts a locally-produced magazine program called Evening: The MTWTF Show

1975 edit

1975

1974 edit

1974
 
Patty Hearst with gun

1973 edit

1973
 
Travis Air Force Base

1972 edit

1972
 
Playland in San Francisco
 
Early model BART car
 
Gay Firefighters float at Gay Pride 1983

1971 edit

1971
 
Lupines at Annadel State Park
 
Tao House, Eugene O'Neill National Historic Site
 
Chez Panisse

1970 edit

1970
 
Berkeley Art Museum

1969 edit

1969
 
Sentinel Building, American Zoetrope HQ
 
Children experimenting with vapor, Exploratorium
 
Logo for The Gap
 
San Jose Museum of Art
 
People's Park, Berkeley

 • The Altamont Free Concert is held at the Altamont Speedway between Tracy and Livermore
 • Advanced Micro Devices is founded in Sunnyvale
 • American Zoetrope (headquarters at the Sentinal Building pictured) is founded in San Francisco by Francis Ford Coppola
 • The Exploratorium (interior pictured) is founded in San Francisco
 • Clothing retailer The Gap (early logo pictured) is founded in San Francisco
 • The Oakland Museum of California is established
 • The San Jose Museum of Art (pictured) is established
 • A "People's Park" (pictured) is created by community activists on University of California, Berkeley property, off Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley
 • The Bank of America Center building in San Francisco is completed
 • The Occupation of Alcatraz by Native American activists begins
 • Earth Day is first proposed by John McConnell at a UNESCO conference in San Francisco
 • An unidentified person sends letters to the Vallejo Times Herald, the San Francisco Chronicle, and The San Francisco Examiner, taking credit for two fatal shooting incidents, then sends a fourth letter to the Examiner with the salutation "Dear Editor This is the Zodiac speaking."

1968 edit

1968
 
Computer mouse, based on Englebart's demo
 
Lawrence Hall of Science

1967 edit

 1967 
 
Human Be-In poster reprinted for the San Francisco Oracle
 
CCR in 1968
 
Rolling Stone logo
 
Carlos Santana in 1973

 • The San Mateo–Hayward Bridge opens to traffic
 • The Mantra-Rock Dance concert takes place at the Avalon Ballroom in San Francisco
 • The Human Be-In (poster artwork from magazine cover depicted, left) occurs at San Francisco's Golden Gate Park, a prelude to the Summer of Love
 • The University of California, Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism is established
 • Creedence Clearwater Revival (pictured, right) is formed in El Cerrito
 • Rolling Stone magazine (current logo pictured, right) begins publishing in San Francisco
 • Santana is formed in San Francisco by Carlos Santana (pictured, right)
 • The Summer of Love comes to San Francisco

1966 edit

1966
 
Railing pillar w/female figure, Asian Art Museum
 
SCA participants
 
Zun in shape of rhinoceros, China, 1100s–1050 BCE
 
Satellite photograph of the Oakland Coliseum
 
The original Peet's Coffee, Berkeley

 • The Love Pageant Rally is held, on the day LSD becomes illegal, in Golden Gate Park, by the creators of the San Francisco Oracle
 • The Society for Creative Anachronism (pictured) forms in Berkeley, with a parade down Telegraph Avenue
 • George Paul Miller is re-elected to California's 8th congressional district
 • The Asian Art Museum of San Francisco (artifacts pictured) opens as a wing of the M. H. de Young Memorial Museum in Golden Gate Park
 • High-end clothier Wilkes Bashford opens in Union Square, San Francisco
 • The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense is formed in Oakland by Huey Newton and Bobby Seale
 • Moby Grape is formed in San Francisco by Skip Spence and Matthew Katz
 • The Oakland Coliseum (pictured) opens
 • Peet's Coffee & Tea (pictured) is founded in Berkeley
 • The Print Mint begins publishing and distributing posters and underground comics in Berkeley
 • The San Francisco Bay Guardian weekly alternative newspaper is founded in San Francisco
 • The American Conservatory Theater moves to San Francisco

1965 edit

1965
 
Grateful Dead
 
Jefferson Airplane

1964 edit

1964
 
Don Edwards
 
Oakland Temple

1963 edit

1963
 
Contemporary BAM/PFA building

1962 edit

1962
 
Marine World show, 1970
 
Stanford Linear Accelerator

1961 edit

1961
 
Aerial photograph of Chabot College

1960 edit

1960
 
The "Blue Cube"
 
SSU sign

1959 edit

1959
 
Embarcadero Freeway
 
Montgomery Block, 1862
 
Henry Coe skyline

1958 edit

1958
 
SF Giants logo

1957 edit

1957
 
Commemorative plaque to the Fairchild team

1956 edit

1956
 
Caffe Trieste interior
 
Half Moon Bay State Beach

1955 edit

1955
 
Ginsberg signature
 
Cupertino flag

1954 edit

1954
 
The Redwood Grove Trail (old-growth loop) in Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park

1953 edit

1953
 
City Lights

1952 edit

1952
 
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

1951 edit

1951
 
 
Yoshida signs San Francisco Peace Treaty

 • The Treaty of San Francisco, between Japan and part of the Allied Powers, is officially signed by 48 nations at the War Memorial Opera House in San Francisco (signing pictured, right)
 • Stanford Industrial Park in Palo Alto is completed
 • A Trader Vic's opens in San Francisco
 • Nuclear scientist Glenn T. Seaborg (pictured, left) at the University of California, Berkeley shares the Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Edwin McMillan for "discoveries in the chemistry of the transuranium elements."

1950 edit

1950
 
Contemporary performance at Children's Fairyland

1949 edit

1949
 
Mervyns logo
 
ADF regions (Western ADF in pink)

1948 edit

1948
 
San Francisco Boy's Chorus
 
Vesuvio Cafe

1947 edit

1947
 
UC Berkeley logo

1946 edit

1946
 
Alcatraz shelling damage
 
SRI International building
 
Southwest Airways plane

1945 edit

1945
 
Samuel Penfield Taylor gravesite

1944 edit

1944
 
Fred Korematsu
 
Port Chicago disaster aftermath

1943 edit

1943
 
Travis Air Force Base
 
Edwin Hawkins Singers

 • The Fairfield-Suisun Army Air Base (pictured, right), near Fairfield, in Solano County, is officially activated
 • Golden Gate Park superintendent John McLaren dies
 • Edwin Hawkins is born in Oakland (Edwin Hawkins Singers pictured, left)

1942 edit

1942
 
Japanese American girl, waiting for transport

1941 edit

1941
 
San Francisco recruiting office

1940 edit

1940
 
601 California Street, San Francisco

1939 edit

1939
 
Poster from the Golden Gate International Exhibition
 
HP Garage
 
Top of the Mark

 • The Golden Gate International Exposition (poster pictured, left) opens at newly created Treasure Island
 • The Neptune Beach amusement park closes in Alameda
 • Hewlett-Packard is founded in a garage (pictured) in Palo Alto
 • Blue Shield of California is founded in San Francisco by the California Medical Association
 • Consumers' Cooperative of Berkeley opens, having formed from the Berkeley Buyers' Club, which was associated with the End Poverty in California movement
 • The Top of the Mark rooftop bar (pictured) is established at the top of the Mark Hopkins Hotel on Nob Hill in San Francisco
 • Nuclear scientist Ernest Lawrence at the University of California, Berkeley wins the Nobel Prize for Physics for his invention of the cyclotron

1938 edit

1938
 
49 Mile Scenic Drive sign
 
The beach at Lake Anza

 • The 49-Mile Scenic Drive (road sign pictured, left) is created in San Francisco for the Golden Gate International Exposition by the San Francisco Down Town Association
 • Lake Anza (pictured, right) is created in Tilden Park in the Berkeley Hills

1937 edit

1937
 
Berkeley Rose Garden
 
Opening day of the Golden Gate Bridge
 
Hanna-Honeycomb House
 
San Francisco Mint

 • The Berkeley Rose Garden (pictured, right), built with funds from the Civil Works Administration, opens to the public
 • The Golden Gate Bridge (opening day pictured, left) opens to the public
 • The Hanna–Honeycomb House (pictured, right), built by Frank Lloyd Wright at Stanford University, is completed
 • The new San Francisco Mint (pictured, right) is completed
 • Stanford Memorial Auditorium is completed
 • Golden Gate National Cemetery in San Bruno is dedicated
 • The Malloch Building in San Francisco is completed

1936 edit

1936
 
Commemorative coin

1935 edit

1935
 
Woman with a Hat, from the SFMOMA collection
 
Former capitol building, Benicia
 
1941 trolleybus model

 • The San Francisco Museum of Art opens at the War Memorial Veterans Building on Van Ness Avenue in the Civic Center (Woman with a Hat by Matisse, from the museum collection, pictured, left)
 • Benjamin Franklin Davis, grandson of the man who helped develop Levi's jeans, opens his eponymous clothing store in San Francisco
 • Benicia Capitol State Historic Park opens at the site of California’s third capital building (pictured, right), where the California State Legislature convened from February 3, 1853 to February 24, 1854
 • San Francisco Junior College is established
 • Lucky Stores is founded in Alameda County
 • Trolleybuses (pictured, right) begin operating in San Francisco

1934 edit

1934
 
Trader Vic's menu
 
Warden's notebook page on Robert Stroud
 
Billy club used at the strike in Seattle

1933 edit

1933
 
Interior mural at Coit Tower
 
The Alley, today

1932 edit

1932
 
War Memorial Opera House

1931 edit

1931
 
Mount Diablo

1930 edit

1930
 
Berkeley Public Library building, downtown Berkeley

1929 edit

1929
 
The Berkeley City Club building

1928 edit

1928
 
Fox Oakland Theatre

1927 edit

1927
 
Moss Beach Distillery today

1926 edit

1926
 
Big Dipper at Playland
 
Mural detail from the Mark Hopkins

1925 edit

 
Fleischhacker Pool, defunct (1979)
 
Replica of original Kezar Stadium entrance

 • The heated, saltwater Fleishhacker Pool in San Francisco opens (pictured, left)
 • The original Kezar Stadium in San Francisco opens (replica arch pictured, right)
 • San Carlos is incorporated in San Mateo County
 • The California Arts and Crafts Ainsley House is built in Campbell

1924 edit

1924
 
Legion of Honor

1923 edit

1923
 
Original poster for La bohème
 
The Berkeley Fire
 
Memorial Stadium in 1930

 • A large fire in Berkeley (pictured, right) consumes some 640 structures, before being extinguished by cool, humid afternoon air coming through the Golden Gate across the bay
 • Atherton is incorporated in San Mateo County
 • California Memorial Stadium (pictured, right) opens in Berkeley, as the home field for the California Golden Bears football team of the University of California, Berkeley
 • The East Bay Municipal Utility District is formed to provide water and sewage treatment services to the East Bay
 • The San Francisco Opera Ballet gives its first performance, of La bohème (pictured, left), with Queena Mario and Giovanni Martinelli, conducted by founder Gaetano Merola, at the San Francisco Civic Auditorium

1922 edit

1922
 
Huntington Hotel

1921 edit

1921
 
Stanford Stadium in 1921
 
USS Conestoga

1920 edit

1920
 
Democratic Convention guest pass

1919 edit

1919
 
Early vintages from Wine Country

1918 edit

1918
 
Twin Peaks Tunnell

1917 edit

1917
 
Italian style Cotto Salame

1916 edit

1916
 
Jack London in 1914

1915 edit

1915
 
Palace of Fine Arts
 
City Hall in 1921
 
Pavilion with the Tower of Jewels, left

 • The new Beaux-Arts style San Francisco City Hall (pictured, right) opens at the Civic Center, San Francisco
 • The Panama–Pacific International Exposition is held in San Francisco, to celebrate the completion of the Panama Canal. It features the Palace of Fine Arts (pictured, left), the Tower of Jewels (pictured, right), and The San Francisco Civic Auditorium. Laura Ingalls Wilder writes about the exposition during her visit to the city that year.

1914 edit

1914
 
Sather Tower
 
Temple Sinai

 • Sather Tower (pictured, left), a campanile at the University of California, Berkeley is completed
 • Temple Sinai (pictured, right) in Oakland is completed
 • The Baby Hospital Association (organized September 1912), and the Baby Hospital Association of Alameda County (organized September 1913), establish The Children's Hospital of the East Bay in Oakland

1913 edit

1913
 
Hearst Castle detail, with faience tiles from California Faience
  • Chauncey Thomas opens The Tile Shop on San Pablo Avenue in Berkeley to make and sell faience tiles (Hearst Castle tower, decorated with tiles from California Faience, pictured)
  • Dewing Park in Contra Costa County is renamed Saranap after the local inter-urban commuter rail system developer's mother, Sara Napthaly
  • John Swett, former Superintendent of the San Francisco Public Schools, and "Father of the California public school", dies

1912 edit

1912
 
Sam Wo (closed, 2013)
 
Newspaper account of the first race in 1912

 • The Bay to Breakers (news headline on race pictured, right) is run in San Francisco for the first time
 • Chinese restaurant Sam Wo (pictured, left. translation: "Three Harmonies Porridge and Noodles") in San Francisco's Chinatown opens
 • Sunnyvale in Santa Clara County is incorporated
 • The California Society of Etchers is founded in San Francisco
 • Essanay Studios opens the Essanay-West studio in Niles, at the foot of Niles Canyon

1911 edit

1911
 
Henry Hadley

1910 edit

1910
 
current Berkeley Farms logo

1909 edit

1909
 
1909 race program
 
Albany Hill in Albany

 • The first Portola Road Race (pictured, left) is run through Melrose in Oakland, San Leandro and Hayward, with at least 250,000 attending
 • Albany (Albany Hill pictured, right) is incorporated in Alameda County
 • Fort Ross State Historic Park is established in Sonoma County to protect Fort Ross, founded in 1812 as the southernmost point in the Russian colonization of the Americas
 • The C. H. Brown Theater opens in the Mission District, San Francisco
 • Samuel Merritt College is founded in Oakland as a hospital school of nursing
 • San Francisco Law School is founded
 • The neighborhood of Thousand Oaks, a refugee camp from the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake adjacent to Albany and Berkeley, is first subdivided

1908 edit

1908
 
Redwood canopy undergrowth, Muir Woods

1907 edit

1907
 
San Francisco Mayor Eugene Schmitz

1906 edit

 1906 
 
Burnham's plan for San Francisco
 
The City in flames

 • On April 17, Daniel Burnham delivers plans (pictured, left) for the redesign of San Francisco
 • The next day, a massive earthquake hits San Francisco, starting fires which burn much of the city to the ground. 3,000 people die during the disaster.


1905 edit

1905
 
The "Big Four" graft prosecutors (left to right) Frances J. Heney, William J. Burns, Fremont Older and Rudolph Spreckels.
 
Original Bank of Pinole building

1904 edit

1904
 
Flood Building

1903 edit

1903
 
Stanford Memorial Church

1902 edit

1902
 
Hotel Majestic

1901 edit

1901
 
Phoebe Hearst

1900 edit

1900
 
Political cartoon during the plague years

1899 edit

1899
 
Architectural detail from the SF Teacher's College period

1898 edit

1898
 
Wong Kim Ark
 
Early Ferry building stereoscope, prior to the 1906 earthquake
 
Neptune Society Columbarium
 
Baldwin Hotel

 • United States v. Wong Kim Ark is decided in favor of Wong Kim Ark (pictured, left), who is thus considered a U.S. citizen
 • The San Francisco Ferry Building (pictured, right), designed by A. Page Brown, opens
 • A columbarium (pictured, right) is built at Odd Fellows Cemetery in San Francisco by Bernard J. S. Cahill, to complement an earlier columbarium built by him
 • The Baldwin Hotel (pictured, right) in San Francisco, built in 1876, burns down
 • Francis K. Shattuck dies after being knocked down by a man exiting from a train that Shattuck was attempting to board on the eponymous Shattuck Avenue

1897 edit

1897
 
Penicillin chemical structure, a Cutter labs product

1896 edit

1896
 
Sutro Baths
 
James D. Phelan

1895 edit

1895
 
M. H. de Young and the San Francisco Chronicle in 1885

1894 edit

1894
 
Adolph Sutro

1893 edit

1893
 
Stanford Law School founder Benjamin Harrison

1892 edit

1892
 
Le Petit Trianon

1891 edit

1891
 
Roe Island Light
 
Stanford Quadrangle, ca 1896

1890 edit

1890
 
Oakland Harbor Light

1889 edit

1889
 
James Flood Mansion, headquarters of the Pacific-Union Club
 
Plaque at St. Paul's Episcopal Church

1888 edit

1888
 
Collision of the SS City of Chester and the RMS Oceanic

1887 edit

1887
 
Statue of John McLaren at Golden Gate Park

1886 edit

1886
 
Plaque at original site of Student's Observatory

1885 edit

1885
 
Exterior of V. Sattui Winery in St. Helena

1884 edit

1884
 
Charles Norton Felton

1883 edit

1883
 
Victorian house at Concannon

1882 edit

1882
 
Original building at Cresta Blanca Winery

1881 edit

1881
 
Early MJB Coffee building

1880 edit

1880
 
Emperor Norton in full regalia

1879 edit

1879
 
Conservatory of Flowers in 1879

1878 edit

1878
 
Construction at the Conservatory of Flowers
 
Mark Hopkins mansion

1877 edit

1877
 
Frank M. Pixley, founder & editor of The Argonaut

1876 edit

1876
 
Baldwin Hotel and Theatre

1875 edit

1875
 
Beringer Brothers historic building
 
Russet Burbank potatoes

1874 edit

1874
 
Old San Francisco Mint
 
East Brother Island Lighthouse

1873 edit

1873
 
Early cable cars
 
South Hall, UC Berkeley

 • The Clay Street Hill Railroad, the first in the San Francisco cable car system (pictured, left), begins operations
 • South Hall (pictured, right) is built in Berkeley, thus becoming the new location of the University of California, Berkeley, formerly located in Oakland

1872 edit

1872
 
Owl plaque at Bohemian Club
 
Hearst Gym, UC Berkeley

1871 edit

1871
 
Daily Californian kiosk

1870 edit

1870
 
Aerial photo of San Francisco showing Golden Gate Park

1869 edit

1869
 
Meek Mansion
 
Hermes Avitor Jr. replica

1868 edit

1868
 
University of California logo
 
Damage from the Great San Francisco Earthquake, in Haywards area
 
1884 Convent of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart

 • An earthquake estimated at 6.8–7.0 on the Richter scale hits the Bay Area, with an epicenter in the East Bay. It causes significant damage throughout the region, and comes to be known as the "Great San Francisco Earthquake". (damage in the Haywards area pictured, right)
 • The Convent of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart (pictured, right) in Oakland is established by members of the Sisters of the Holy Names from Canada
 • The University of California (logo pictured, left) is established in Berkeley, along with the first campus in the system, the University of California, Berkeley
 • Santa Rosa in Sonoma County is incorporated
 • Vallejo in Solano County is incorporated
 • Bret Harte begins publishing the Overland Monthly in San Francisco
 • The Guittard Chocolate Company is founded in San Francisco

1867 edit

1867
 
San Mateo County History Museum, formerly the San Mateo County Courthouse

1866 edit

 
Interior of a rolling mill, 1855
 
Founder's Rock

1865 edit

1865
 
SF Chronicle logo

1864 edit

1864
 
Fairmont Hospital entrance
 
Bank of California

1863 edit

1863
 
Jeanty at Jack's
 
Mountain View Cemetery

1862 edit

1862
 
Jacob Schram
 
William "Cocktail" Boothby

 • Schramsberg Vineyards is established in Napa Valley by Jacob Schram (pictured, left)
 • The state capitol is moved from Sacramento to San Francisco, due to Flooding of the Central Valley
 • Minns Evening Normal School in San Francisco is taken over by the state and moved to San Jose as the California State Normal School
 • William Boothby (pictured, right) is born in San Francisco

1861 edit

1861
 
Iconic Gump's Buddha

1860 edit

1860
 
Nahl brothers in SF

1859 edit

1859
 
Alcatraz Citadel, 1908

1858 edit

1858
 
Dragon

1857 edit

1857
 
St. Mary's hospital after the 1906 earthquake
 
"Champagne Corking", by Eadweard Muybridge

1856 edit

1856
 
Map of San Mateo County, 1878
 
Église Notre Dame Des Victoires

1855 edit

1855
 
St Ignatius Church

1854 edit

1854
 
Mare Island Naval Shipyard, 1866
 
Union Ironworks shipyard, Alameda, ca 1918

 • Mare Island Naval Shipyard (pictured, left), the first United States Navy base established on the Pacific Ocean, is established in Vallejo, Solano County
 • The Mechanics' Institute Library and Chess Room is founded in San Francisco
 • The city of Alameda is incorporated in Alameda County (Alameda Works Shipyard pictured, right)

1853 edit

1853
 
Monarch the bear at the Academy of Sciences
 
Levi Strauss

 • The California Academy of Natural Sciences (modern display pictured, left) is founded in San Francisco
 • Levi Strauss & Co. is established when Levi Strauss (pictured, right) arrives from Buttenheim, Bavaria, in San Francisco to open a west coast branch of his brothers' New York dry goods business
 • Alameda County is incorporated

1852 edit

1852
 
Ghirardelli ad, 1864
 
Wells Fargo stagecoach
 
Santa Clara in 1910
 
Oakland train depot, 1867

 • After opening a number of businesses in Peru and California, Italian chocolatier Domenico Ghirardelli imports 200 pounds of cocoa beans and establishes D. Ghirardelli & Co in San Francisco (1864 advertisement pictured, left)
 • Henry Wells and William G. Fargo establish Wells, Fargo & Company in San Francisco, a joint-stock association with an initial capitalization of $300,000, to provide express and banking services (iconic stagecoach pictured, right)
 • The city of Santa Clara is incorporated in Santa Clara County (1910 postcard pictured, right)
 • Oakland is incorporated in Alameda County (1867 painting shown, right)
 • Francis K. Shattuck, George Blake, and two partners they met in the gold fields, William Hillegass and James Leonard, lay claim to four adjoining 160-acre (0.65 km2) strips of land north of Oakland

1851 edit

1851
 
Ida B. Wells High School
 
1851 hanging by the Vigilance Committee

 • The San Francisco Unified School District is established, as the first public school district in California (historic Ida B. Wells High School building pictured, right)
 • The San Francisco Committee of Vigilance is formed in response to rampant crime and corruption in the municipal government (1851 hanging pictured, left)
 • Congregation Emanu-El is chartered in San Francisco

1850 edit

  1850  
 
John W. Geary
 
First Street, San Jose, ca. 1868-1885
 
Capitol building, Benicia

1849 edit

1849
 
1983 Tadich Grill menu
 
Decorative sourdough bread at Boudin Bakery
 
Union Iron Works

 • A small coffee stand (1983 menu pictured, left) opens on Clay Street in San Francisco
 • Boudin Bakery is established in San Francisco, producing San Francisco sourdough (loaves pictured, right)
 • The Alta California begins publishing in San Francisco
 • Bayard Taylor visits San Francisco and the Gold Country, writing about the Gold Rush
 • The Niantic whaling ship is stranded by its crew on the shore of San Francisco, who desert it to join the Gold Rush
 • Irish immigrants Peter and James Donahue found Union Iron Works (pictured) in South of Market, San Francisco
 • San Francisco's population is 25,000, an increase by 2,400% from 1848's 1,000

1848 edit

  1848  
 
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
 
Ad for sea transport to the Gold Rush

 • James W. Marshall finds several flakes of gold at a lumber mill he owned in partnership John Sutter, at the bank of the South Fork of the American River, news of which quickly travels around the world (advertisement for transportation to the Gold Rush pictured, right)
 • The California Star and the Californian both cease publication in San Francisco due to losing all their staff to the California Gold Rush
 • The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (pictured, left) ends the Mexican–American War, and cedes the territory of California (including the San Francisco Bay Area) to the United States from   Mexico  
 • San Francisco's population is 1,000

1847 edit

1847
 
Sam Brannan

1846 edit

  1846  
 
Bear Flag

History prior to 1846 edit

History prior to 1846
 
San Andreas Fault
 
San Andreas Fault in the Bay Area
 
Mission San Jose (Ohlone) people
 
Drake's landing
 
Reconstructed Fort Ross chapel
 
William Richardson
  1. ^ Mondalek, Alexandra (November 5, 2015). "This Is the Richest City in America". Money.com. Archived from the original on June 6, 2022.