Corona Heights, San Francisco Explained

Corona Heights
Leader Title:Supervisor
Leader Name:Rafael Mandelman
Leader Title1:Assemblymember
Leader Name1:[1]
Leader Title2:State senator
Leader Title3:U.S. rep.
Unit Pref:US
Area Total Sq Mi:0.220
Area Land Sq Mi:0.220
Population As Of:2008
Population Total:3500
Population Density Sq Mi:15941
Postal Code Type:ZIP Code
Postal Code:94114
Area Code Type:Area codes
Area Code:415/628
Footnotes:[2]

Corona Heights is a neighborhood in San Francisco, California, just north of Market Street and Eureka Valley. Corona Heights is often considered part of the Castro and Upper Market areas.

Location

The Corona Heights neighborhood stretches between Buena Vista Park and Eureka Valley. The streets within Corona Heights were literally cut out of the large hill that once encompassed all of Buena Vista Park and extended all the way down to Market Street.

History

In 1899, excavation began on the hill to make way for the Gray Brothers Quarry and brick factory. The quarry had removed tons of rock and produced tens of thousands of bricks, creating a blasted landscape.

George and Harry Gray (the Gray brothers) owned a total of three quarries in San Francisco. Besides The Corona Heights Quarry, One was located on Telegraph Hill, and the third at Thirtieth and Castro (now called Billy Goat Hill) located above Noe Valley.[3]

They had a bad reputation that was well deserved. Of the bricks that were produced at the factory, many of them were used in the Cable Car beds. Subsequently, it was determined that these bricks were substandard and had to be replaced. The community became enraged with the Gray brothers when adults and children were injured by falling rocks and homes were damaged by flying debris. Although the Gray brothers faced lawsuit after lawsuit, they kept quarrying.

In 1909, Carolyn Bush, their cashier and George Gray's secretary, was shot and killed by an unpaid worker who lost his temper. A few years later in 1915 George, by then a millionaire, was at the Thirtieth and Castro quarry. He was confronted by Joseph Lococo, a 26-year-old former worker whom Gray refused to pay back wages of $17.50. George was murdered by Lococo at the quarry. The quarrying and the company ended at that time.[3] [4] [5] [6]

After the quarry

Because of the quarry, streets had been cut out of the rock for transport vehicle access and from the general quarrying done to the area. This made the location prime real estate for people who began to build their homes on the streets cut into the hill.

Many of the neighborhood homes have views (due to the elevation on the hill), close proximity to underground transportation (MUNI), and are situated just a few blocks from The Castro, local restaurants, and neighborhood hangouts. At the top of the hill, where the quarry used to stand, there is now the Corona Heights Park: a large, open space with panoramic views of the city and the bay. Corona Heights Park also features a fenced-in, maintained dog park.

Attractions and characteristics

Corona Heights features prominently in Fritz Leiber's famous horror novel "Our Lady of Darkness" (1977).

External links

37.7623°N -122.4439°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Statewide Database . . March 19, 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150201113744/http://statewidedatabase.org/gis/gis2011/index_2011.html . February 1, 2015 . dead .
  2. Web site: Corona Heights neighborhood in San Francisco, California (CA), 94114 detailed profile . City-Data.com . 2013 . 28 June 2013.
  3. Web site: Peggy B. and George (Pat) Perazzo. . San Francisco - City and County and San Francisco Bay . Quarries And Beyond . 28 June 2013.
  4. News: David Perlman . Hill's slippery slopes are long-standing threat . The San Francisco Chronicle . 28 February 2007 . 28 June 2013.
  5. Web site: Corona Heights Quarry: Unfinished History . Shaping San Francisco . 2013 . 28 June 2013.
  6. News: Lococo is Charged With the Murder of George Gray . The Evening News . 13 November 1914. 28 June 2013.