0 favorites     2 comments    213 visits

Location

Lat, Lng:  
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address:  unknown

 View on map

See also...


Keywords

ship
California
San Francisco
SF1214


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
Attribution + non Commercial + no derivative

213 visits


SF Maritime National Historical Hicks engine (1450)

SF Maritime National Historical Hicks engine (1450)
Though seemingly not particularly interesting as a picture, the story here is a valuable for describing the changes in the city. This is a Hicks engine that, per the park literature, was the most popular source of power for local fishing boats. The Bay area once led the nation in the production of such engines; this particular engine was built sometime around 1925. Most interesting for the pictures of this trip, Hicks Works was on Howard street, a part of the South of Market area where all of the older warehouses and factory spaces are being torn down and replaced with expensive high-rise apartments. Hicks Works was probably in a location similar to this: www.ipernity.com/doc/donbrr/35350681

Comments
 slgwv
slgwv club
As surreal as those SF-based manufacturers of mining equipment, whose labels you see over and over again on the old equipment in the museums and ghost towns! Once a major manufacturing center for such things, now completely vanished--times have changed.
9 years ago.
Don Barrett (aka DBs… club has replied to slgwv club
It gives a very different sense of SF to think of it as once having been a town full of small and medium-sized manufacturers, something that recent residents would have no knowledge of. When I was there from '83 to '96, you could still see some small manufacturing scattered around South of Market (SOMA) until the early 90's. It was then that SOMA started being converted to condos and it hasn't stopped. The timing may be related to containerization and all of the port traffic moving to Oakland.
9 years ago.

Sign-in to write a comment.