How San Francisco
Has Been Rebuilt
From Ashes of Old
More Beautiful and Prosperous City has Quickly Arisen
Is Marvel of the
World
To Restore
Devastated City Is Striking Example of American Pluck and Enterprise
Increase in
Assessment
With Commerce and
Industry Reestablished Authorities are Turning to Other Problems
By Frederic J. Haskin
Five
years ago today the newspapers of the world were issuing extras
announcing that San Francisco had been shaken to its foundations by a
great earthquake, and that a fire, uncontrolled and uncontrollable, was
completing the ruin and devastation. On that day and the one which
followed the most terrific blow which ever descended upon an American
city fell upon the great metropolis of the Pacific coast.
Today
nearly every scar left by that frightful fifty hours has been
obliterated. A new and prouder San Francisco has arisen from the ashes
of the old and greets the world as the highest example of civic
greatness to which a community can rise in times when nothing is left
to men but hope, and that hope is semi-despair. The fire destroyed
28,000 houses. 31,000 have taken their places. It demolished 514 city
blocks, leaving them strewn with such a hopeless mass of debris that
$20,000,000 had to be raised to reclaim the bare earth itself - no mean
task for a ruined, desolated city. Today each of these city blocks is
built up better and handsomer than before.
Yes, San Francisco is
a better and more beautiful city than ever. Where before the fire there
were twenty-seven buildings designated in insurance terms as class A
buildings, there were 104 in 1909, and this has been added to since
then. The same proportion holds with class B buildings. One
department store alone spent $300,000 for furnishings and interior
decorations. Everywhere the same strife for perfection has been in
evidence, and today San Francisco is a metropolis of nearly 500,000
busy people, with a business section only five years old.
Stronger Financially Than Ever.
Not
only have the physical scars of the great calamity been removed, but
the financial scars as well. Of course, thousands of families were
financially ruined by the catastrophe and will never recover from the
blow, but the community as a whole is in better financial condition
than before the calamity occurred. The assessed value of the city
before the fire amounted to $402,000,000; today these values aggregate
$433,000,000. The bank clearings before the fire were $1,800,000,000 a
year; now they amount to nearly $2,500,000,000. The savings bank
deposits in 1911 are greater than they were in 1906. All of this tells
the story of municipal victory and individual triumph, a story
unequaled in its completeness and magnificence in all the history of
urban civilization.
But the end is not in sight. With its
business and industry amply housed and its population properly
sheltered, San Francisco is now turning to other considerations. It is
building one of America's most modern opera houses. It is providing one
of the world's most splendid municipal buildings. It is preparing to
rescue itself from the domination of a privately owned water system. In
short, it is now giving its attention to the larger problems of
municipal life in a way that promises to make it exhibit No. 1 in the
big show which will great the visitor to the Panama exposition.
And
the San Francisco people are enthusiastic about that fair. When the
question was put before them, although they had spent $200,000,000 in
repairing the damages of less than five years before and still face
vast expenditures, they voted $5,000,000 to the exposition by the
largest majority ever given to any proposition. Yet with all this, San
Francisco has the smallest debt in proportion to the assessed valuation
of its property than any large city in the United States. A year or two
ago it was only 18 per cent, as compared with 39 in New York, 33 in
Pittsburg and 32 in Boston.
Seeking Municipal Water Supply.
One
of the things confronting San Francisco is the question whether the
city will be allowed to get a municipal water supply from the
Hetch-Hetchy valley. This water, coming out of the very heart of the
Sierras, is one of the finest supplies in the world. Cold and pure and
abundant, it has everything to recommend it. But there are two forces
at work against its utilization. The nature lovers of America assert
that it will ruin one of the world's most beautiful spots. Then there
is the Spring Valley Water company, which now supplies San Francisco's
water. The federal courts have fixed the value of this company's
holdings at $32,000,000 and San Francisco wants it as an auxiliary
supply at that price. But the Spring Valley people want a higher figure
and former Mayor Phelan declares they are financing the opposition to
the Hetch-Hetchy project. It is said that Mr. Roosevelt, James R.
Garfield and Gifford Pinchot all favor San Francisco's being permitted
to use the waters of the Hetch-Hetchy valley. The matter is scheduled
for determination in June, when President Taft and Secretary Fisher of
the interior department will decide the issue.
Rebuilt in Three Years.
The rate at which San Francisco has been rebuilt is the greatest
exposition of pluck and courage the world has seen in many a century.
When the city lay in ruins, with its millionaires homeless and its poor
all but starving, the world said that
in ten years San Francisco could not rally from her plight. But when
three years had passed San Francisco had a celebration
and invited
the world to look. In those three short years it had done more than the
greatest optimist thought could be accomplished in ten.
But
there was work to do - really more work than to build a brand new city
on a virgin site. Think of a pile of debris so large that it cost
$20,000,000 to get down to the ground, so large that 15,000 horses died
in its removal, brute heroes who were literally worked to death; so
large that 40,000 workmen were engaged in the task! That was what
stared the seemingly ruined San Francisco in the face when it began
cleaning off its lots while the ruins were still smoking. The people
were so quick to rally from the feeling of desolation and despair that
within six days after the fire there was signed, sealed and delivered,
a contract for a magnificent new fireproof building.
Many
incidents tinged with humor occurred during the trying days of
rebuilding. An enterprising saloon keeper decided to build a temporary
drink dispensary directly after the fire. To this end he leased a site
from an owner who thought he would never be able to rebuild. On this he
erected a shanty. Later the owner decided his finances would permit
rebuilding and sought to buy off the lease. But he was not successful.
So he proceeded to build his big building anyway, and when he was
through, the saloon building had to be carried piecemeal out of the main storeroom of the new building.
Accommodation for Handling Public
While
San Francisco was engaged in the work of rebuilding it did not fail to
provide for the stranger who might stay awhile within its gates. More
than 1,200 modern and up-to-date hotels and lodging houses have been
erected since the fire, offering 60,000 rooms to the traveling public.
These will be added to within the next four years, although San
Francisco was able to entertain 480,000 visitors at its Portola
celebration two years ago.
The city has not failed to see that
its transportation facilities should grow apace with the other
improvements, and it is the proud boast of the native that the street
car service of the Golden Gate city is unsurpassed. It intends to make
the facilities from the exposition grounds to the heart of the city
better than anything that has ever been planned in the history of
world's fairs.
One association of the Americans is particularly
delighted that San Francisco secured the exposition - the See America
First club. Knowing that thousands, and even millions, of Americans
travel abroad to see the sights of other lands, when they have not seen
the wonderful things in their own country, the See America First
people are delighted that the Panama exposition will turn the tide of
travel toward the Golden Gate, and that through the diverse route
privilege of the railroad excursion ticket to be sold by the
transcontinental railroads the majority of those who go to San
Francisco will become eligible to membership in a club made up of
people who have seen America.
The masterful manner in which San
Francisco has resurrected itself from ashes and smoldering embers
surpasses anything the world has ever seen, and its people deserve the
applause they receive. And yet its achievements are only in keeping
with the American spirit of doing the greatest deed under the Greatest
stress. Chelsea, Mass., was almost wiped off the map by its big fire.
Yet, when three years had passed the assessed value of its property had
almost regained its normal, and in two years the population grew as
much as it had grown in the entire decade between the eleventh and
twelfth censuses. Baltimore's great fire seemed to threaten industrial
paralysis, and yet Baltimore is stronger and better today than before
adversity struck her business district with such tremendous force. Even
in the islands of the sea the spirit that has made the new San
Francisco is often in evidence. Jamaica had its earthquake in January,
1907, and fire completed the damage which the earthquake did to Kingston.
In January, 1911, Kingston had arisen from the ruins, a thoroughly
modern tropical city. Galveston, Chicago, a dozen places tell the same
story of men reaching their highest notch of greatness in the face of
seemingly ruinous calamity.
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