The Loneliness of Being Black in San Francisco

Joe Money

Rising Star
Registered
The Loneliness of Being Black in San Francisco

SAN FRANCISCO — Gerald Harris was walking along Ocean Beach, the blustery coastline at the western edge of the city, when he passed Danny Glover, a star of Hollywood action movies and a San Francisco native. The men exchanged glances.

“We were the only two black people in the area,” Mr. Harris said.

San Francisco was once a national beacon of African-American culture, home to a thriving jazz scene that had so many clubs it was known as the Harlem of the West. But these days, blacks say they take notice when they see another African-American in affluent and middle-class neighborhoods.

The jazz clubs of the Fillmore neighborhood have been replaced with upscale shops. Marcus Books, a cultural anchor of the black community and one of the first bookshops in the nation to focus on African-American topics, closed in 2014. Other black landmarks that have long since disappeared are commemorated with remembrances embedded in the sidewalk like tombstones to a forgotten culture.


The decline has been steady and noticeable. One of seven residents was black in 1970. Today, it is nearly one of 20, with most of the city’s 46,000 blacks living in public housing.

“My prediction is 10 years from now, we won’t have 20,000 blacks in this city,” said the Rev. Amos C. Brown, the pastor of Third Baptist Church, a historically black church founded in 1852.

While San Francisco residents agree that the loss of black culture is palpable, there is disagreement over what to do about it. City officials say they are trying to retain the remaining black population, largely through expanding and improving public housing, and want to lure more affluent blacks to the city. They are also confronting accusations of racial profilingby the police force, which has spurred protests throughout the city.

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Postings on the side of a building on Fillmore Street in San Francisco. CreditJim Wilson/The New York Times
Yet one of the city’s most prominent African-Americans, Willie Brown, a former mayor and former speaker of the California State Assembly, said he did not believe the shift could be reversed. There is no point in trying to engineer the city’s ethnic population, he said.

“I don’t think I would put a whole lot of time and energy into doing anything,” Mr. Brown said, “except making sure there’s equal access and equal opportunity and equal resources.”

He called the current mix — with whites, Asians and Latinos making up the largest segments of the population — a “new reality.”

The reasons for the migration are in large measure economic: Skyrocketing real estate prices fueled by high-paying tech jobs have priced out middle-class residents of all ethnicities. But the exodus was also accelerated by a domino effect of black businesses and families moving away, many of them to Oakland and other cities along the East Bay.

When black communities, which were splintered into three areas in San Francisco, lost their barber shops, restaurants and clubs, they lost their centers of gravity, according to Mr. Brown. Black residents moved to places where they felt more “comfortable socially,” he said.

The tech industry, the motor of San Francisco’s economy in recent years, has accelerated the decline. The tech industry skews white and Asian. John William Templeton, a local historian and an advocate for greater black participation in the industry, said it was disappointing that blacks were not more involved in one of America’s most successful industries.

Around 1 percent of employees at tech companies in the Bay Area are black, down from 4 percent in 1998, according to Mr. Templeton.

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The actor Danny Glover in May at the premiere of the documentary “Agents of Change,” about events in the 1960s at what was then San Francisco State College that led to the creation of the nation’s first black studies program. CreditJim Wilson/The New York Times
The shift was also partly encouraged by what is now recognized as an extensive and misguided city policy of eradicating what was called “urban blight.” Thousands of homes in black neighborhoods were razed in the name of redevelopment from the 1950s to the 1970s. Theodore Miller, an aide to Mayor Edwin M. Lee, called it a “terrible undertaking that had catastrophic consequences.”

The final draft of a city-commissioned report, published in January, said redevelopment benefited prominent members of the business community whose “real motivation was the replacement of low-value ‘slums’ with high-value commercial and residential development.”

The city is by no means empty of African-Americans, especially in the business district; many blacks commute to work from other cities in the Bay Area.

Still, Mr. Harris said he often found that he was the only African-American in restaurants or at the Commonwealth Club, where he helps organize seminars on science and technology.

Frederick E. Jordan, a business leader who talks about the need for a “Marshall Plan” to woo more blacks to the city, says “there are no jobs and no contracts” for blacks.

“Our backs are against the sea; we’re almost out,” said Mr. Jordan, who owns an engineering firm and is the chairman of the San Francisco African American Chamber of Commerce.

“We have to rebuild our African-American middle class,” said Mr. Miller, the mayor’s aide. The majority of blacks who remain are disproportionally poor, with median incomes for blacks at $27,000 compared with $89,000 for whites, a disparity twice as large as the national average.

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A service at Third Baptist Church, a historically black church founded in 1852. Attendance has been steadily declining. CreditJim Wilson/The New York Times
Blacks who remain have been subject to racial profiling by the police, according to the public defender’s office, and a recent report commissioned by the city cited a host of actions by the police against blacks that appear to be discriminatory.

The report found that while African-Americans make up about 6 percent of the city’s residents, they constituted about 40 percent, 20 of 51, of the victims of officer-involved shootings from January 2010 through July 2015. In addition, the study found evidence of racial disparities in the rate of police stops and searches of African-Americans.

Those racially charged shootings, including of a black man and woman, forced the police chief, Gregory P. Suhr, to resign in May.

From the days of the gold rush, San Francisco was a place of opportunity for pioneering blacks, as it was for Jews, Italians, Irish and other ethnic groups. The city’s black population was small until around World War II, when tens of thousands of blacks migrated from the South to work in shipyards and other wartime jobs. The African-American population increased by nearly 800 percent in the 1940s and reached its peak around 1970, when 13 percent of the city was black.

San Francisco also played a role in the civil rights movement. In 1968, black students at what was then San Francisco State College (now San Francisco State University) held a prolonged strike that led to the creation of the nation’s first black studies program, a campaign chronicled in the recent documentary “Agents of Change.”

Mr. Glover, who took part in the protests as a student, said the black exodus from the city made him “sad and angry.”

The larger question, he said, is whether San Francisco is becoming an enclave for the rich.

“It’s a question about who we are and our responsibility to build our communities,” he said, “and not just based upon who has the ability to pay.”

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Barbara Gainer lives in a neighborhood that was once predominantly black but is now mostly Asian-American. She says she is regularly asked if she wants to sell her house. CreditJim Wilson/The New York Times
The frustration is keenly felt among those whose neighborhoods have lost their core. Many say they feel like strangers in their own city.

“You get the feeling that people are thinking, ‘You’re still here?’” said Barbara Gainer, a probation officer and a jazz singer. She lives in the western reaches of the city, a neighborhood that was once predominantly black but now is mostly Asian-American, a segment that now makes up 34 percent of the city’s population, up from 13 percent in 1970.

Ms. Gainer says she is regularly asked if she wants to sell her house; her mailbox fills up with solicitations. The inquiries were flattering at first because they reminded her of the value of her property, but now she feels singled out. She remembers one couple in particular who approached her four or five times about selling. She tried to dissuade them.

“I said: ‘Even if I sold you my house and you gave me this big price, why would I do that? Where would I live?’”

The reply stunned her: “You should go to Antioch. That’s where your people go.”


Antioch, a city about 50 miles northeast, has a sizable African-American population.

At Mr. Brown’s Third Baptist Church, attendance has been steadily declining; on a recent Sunday, around 150 parishioners worshiped in a sanctuary that seats 1,100. “We pray that we would never be cut flowers, that we would always have roots,” Mr. Brown told the congregation.

Mr. Brown then told the story of hearing a radio program lamenting the looming extinction of a type of butterfly.

“And yet,” he said, “we don’t have the basic compassion and common sense to realize that blacks are an endangered species in the city of San Francisco.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/21/us/black-exodus-from-san-francisco.html
 
Poor or low income Black people are leaving California in General.
fixed.

Ladera Heights/Baldwin Hills/celebs and average joes in Lakewood, valley, pasadena, sacramento, san diego haven't moved.

the low income have went inland or out of state. mainly due to their dependence on rent.
 
sad reality. such a complex issue of population, economic migration and drug/guns.crimes destruction.

A community must decide that they will support EACH other, and those that make it, have to invest back into the area with ownership.

Willie Brown was always on some fuck shit, and he sat idle while the pieces of these communities were devastated. Limited access to high paying port,-welding jobs, sub standard local schools, rampant drug infiltration, a lack of defined focus on education by the families, police brutality and folks deciding to sell out-cash out, when their kids decided sticking and fighting was not worth it.

The city will lose. A culture can't, and wont flourish without us to fuel it. Sad shit. That city will be boring as fuck with nothing but Asians and white people.

Old story (2014) below, but its indicative of what happens to our institutions that are NOT built on ownership



Country’s oldest black bookstore evicted
By Jonah Owen Lamb @jonahowenlamb
click to enlarge
  • Mike Koozmin/the S.F. Examiner
  • A visitor reads an eviction notice Thursday posted to the front of Marcus Books on Fillmore Street. The building owner posted the notice, dated Tuesday, for nonpayment of rent.
For more than half a century, Marcus Books has been a center of black San Francisco's intellectual and cultural life.

From its beginnings as a print shop, bookstore and organizing center on McAllister Street in 1960, the store -- named after the father of black nationalism, Marcus Garvey -- has held a unique place in The City's black community.

Supervisor London Breed got her copy of the "Autobiography of Malcolm X" there when she walked into the store as a teen. Champion wrestler Carlos Levexier read about the African roots of wrestling there. And myriad others learned about black culture, history and politics within the store's walls.

Now that history may have come to an end. And for many, it is just one more blow to a community quickly disappearing from a city that has done too little to welcome black residents or try to keep them from leaving.


The store was shuttered Tuesday by the Fillmore Street building owner after rent fell into arrears.

"The current property owner has changed the locks to the door of 1712 Fillmore St.," said an open letter written by the store's co-owners Karen and Greg Johnson.

"With the numerous speeches of San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee stating his commitment to righting the wrongs of the San Francisco Redevelopment Agency's slaughter of the thriving African American Fillmore District, we at Marcus Books believed the City would take some affirmative action on our behalf, since Marcus Books is the only surviving Black Business since the Redevelopment devastation," they noted in the letter, referring to the area's drastic redevelopment in the late 1960 and 1970s, which resulted in the virtual destruction of the once-thriving community.

The Johnson family and the store's supporters have long been fighting to keep the oldest black bookstore in America open. The bookstore has made numerous efforts to fight its eviction, including an application for historical landmark status and a fundraiser to buy back the Victorian building that is its home.

The Board of Supervisors even designated Marcus Books' location as a city landmark, but a fundraising effort fell $750,000 short in February.

"For me, it was almost the last evidence that African-Americans have a significant existence in San Francisco," said Breed, who represents the district. She recalls being given the book about Malcolm X in the shop as a teen because she didn't have enough money to pay for it.

"I had heard about Malcom X and I wanted to get his autobiography. I didn't have enough money for the book, but someone at the store said, 'Just pay me when you can.' And I was like, 'What, you trust me? I can't believe these folks trust me.'" Eventually, she said, she paid them back.

Marcus Books was opened as Success Book Store by Julian and Raye Richardson at Fillmore and Sutter streets, said their daughter and current owner Karen Johnson. It was a meeting place, a reading room and even a center of organizing from the outset. At one point it was the location of Malcom X School. During protests at San Francisco State University, the Richardsons paid the bail for more than 100 arrested students by putting up their home as collateral. In 1966 it was one of 400 black businesses displaced on Fillmore Street by redevelopment.

"It's devastating," said San Francisco Bayview newspaper editor Mary Ratcliff about the store's closure. "It's a sign of how little San Francisco values its black heritage. This was the most prominent example of that heritage and The City could easily have rescued it."

Amos Brown, president of the San Francisco NAACP chapter, sees the bookstore's closure as another chapter in the poor treatment of black people in California and San Francisco.

"You can't deal with this bookstore without dealing with the bigger sickness," he said. "So, you can't deal with Marcus alone without looking at the conditions, the public policy, that created the conditions for the black community to be torn asunder."

Author Ishmael Reed, who lives in Oakland, where the store has another location, told The San Francisco Examiner that Marcus Books is an irreplaceable institution not only for the books it provided, but also said its loss in The City is a reminder that the struggle for black equality is not over.

"This is a blow to some of us who depend upon Marcus for books that can't be found elsewhere," he said. "It can also be blamed on the post-race mass delusion that the oppression of blacks is an 'old fight.' ... Add to that a recession that's hit blacks harder than others as a result of discrimination from the banks, leaving little over for the purchase of cultural products."

- Kate Conger contributed to this report.
 
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3% 4% point is its low as fuck and everyother race is climbing
huh? whites are lowering. 5-7% of a population of a metro 13 million plus is noticeable. As long as you stay in Sac town, Oakland, LA, or Inland Empire, you will see black folk. The city of LA has more black folks than the entire state of Ohio. Think about that for a moment.
 
One of my best friends born and raised in Frisco. He bought a crib in Oakland now. He always talk about how black folks were pushed out of Frisco. His parents still live there. Shit I bought from Superman to Man by J.A Rogers in Marcus Books when I first went to visit out there. Sad shit black people keep losing a lot without anything to replace it.
 
huh? whites are lowering. 5-7% of a population of a metro 13 million plus is noticeable. As long as you stay in Sac town, Oakland, LA, or Inland Empire, you will see black folk. The city of LA has more black folks than the entire state of Ohio. Think about that for a moment.

You're in denial bro. Im talking about all other minority populations are growing but Black. 7% of 13 million aint really shit and the number is declining and thats not even including the huge undocumented population..California is a White, Mexicans, and Asian Mecca :dunno:
 
This is happening in many large cities."White Flight" is a round trip ticket. White people are tired of the commute and lack of amenities in the suburbs and moving back to SF,Oakland,LA,New York,etc. These articles just keep rehashing the obvious. The thing is, you can't blame other people for it. We need to stop selling our homes or buy instead of renting. Can't really blame this on the gentrifiers. The neighborhoods inbthe inner city are getting safer and cleaner while the suburbs are getting worse.
 
One of my best friends born and raised in Frisco. He bought a crib in Oakland now. He always talk about how black folks were pushed out of Frisco. His parents still live there. Shit I bought from Superman to Man by J.A Rogers in Marcus Books when I first went to visit out there. Sad shit black people keep losing a lot without anything to replace it.

Black folks are getting pushed out of Oakland too.
 
This is happening in many large cities."White Flight" is a round trip ticket. White people are tired of the commute and lack of amenities in the suburbs and moving back to SF,Oakland,LA,New York,etc. These articles just keep rehashing the obvious. The thing is, you can't blame other people for it. We need to stop selling our homes or buy instead of renting. Can't really blame this on the gentrifiers. The neighborhoods inbthe inner city are getting safer and cleaner while the suburbs are getting worse.

This....

It's happening right now in Houston's 3rd ward.

In 20 years the only thing black over there is going to be Texas Southern University Campus.

*two cents*
 
Chickens coming home to roost...niggas want to sell all that dope but don't buy any property. Niggas want to wear the flyest shit but don't want to buy any property...niggas killing each other over the "block" but don't own anything on the "block"

We can't blame anyone but ourselves
 
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This. Raleigh and Durham are perfect examples. The worst street in Raleigh (Martin St.) and the worst street in Durham (S. Main St.) been transformed. You now see white women pushing baby strollers down on the sidewalks.


Yea man, I live in the Raleigh/Durham area too
Fucking housing prices are starting to get ridiculous out here
 
California
According to the 2014 Census Bureau the state of California has the 5th largest Black population in the United States with 2,965,376 African Americans making up 8% of the state total.

California State Urban Black Population
(2010 census Black alone)
Los Angeles-Long Beach
1,230,023
San Francisco-Oakland
471,566
Sacramento
158,426
San Diego
158,213
 
California
According to the 2014 Census Bureau the state of California has the 5th largest Black population in the United States with 2,965,376 African Americans making up 8% of the state total.

California State Urban Black Population
(2010 census Black alone)
Los Angeles-Long Beach
1,230,023
San Francisco-Oakland
471,566
Sacramento
158,426
San Diego
158,213
Yeah these niggas trippen there are alot of Black people here in the cities surrounding SF. Vallejo, Richmond, Pittsburg, Antioch, hayward, san leandro, etc. People dont understand californias huge geography. Its not like the rest of the country. SF is like Manhattan now. Niggas dont really live in Manhattan other than Harlem which is being cactified.
 
This. Raleigh and Durham are perfect examples. The worst street in Raleigh (Martin St.) and the worst street in Durham (S. Main St.) been transformed. You now see white women pushing baby strollers down on the sidewalks.

On E. Martin St.?! Nawl :eek: Haywood was probably worse.
 
West Oakland is a fag hipster enclave. West Oakland is more run down than east. The lower bottoms looks like Hoods in Jersey. Niggas openly selling drugs now its fixed geared bikes and cacs with their dirty beards everywhere.
 
Yeah, I don't know if you heard you got 2 huge high rises going up and like 7 other luxury buildings planned to go up in that city and that's just the beginning. Uber is moving in, and the city is trying to lure more tech companies in with tax breaks. That city is about to become just as expensive as SF.

Black folks are getting pushed out of Oakland too.
 
This is going on In all major cities.

They doing it Charlotte. Pretty much, most of the people that live around the downtown area are not even native of Charlotte. The black areas that was around downtown have been priced out. They got new flats, studio apartments and town homes.

In Greensboro, they are expanding the city. This area can grow easily in all direction. The new belt loop they are building is giving easier access to businesses. Down area here is starting their expansion south, which is mainly black. Exapanding east is a little difficult because of North Carolina A&T State University.

Whites buying all the property downtown and slowly moving outward. There are a lot of those cookie cutter neighborhoods on the outskirts of the city that are mainly black. But property value is a joke with the way these houses are lined up and built.
 
The U.S. is methodically removing black Americans ...no one notices until its irreversible

It's already irreversible, imo. This is old money that doing the pushing. A level of wealth we can't compete with anytime soon. Plus they got the property. You should see how these white folk will waive some bread to these business and push the right out.
 
This is happening in many large cities."White Flight" is a round trip ticket. White people are tired of the commute and lack of amenities in the suburbs and moving back to SF,Oakland,LA,New York,etc. These articles just keep rehashing the obvious. The thing is, you can't blame other people for it. We need to stop selling our homes or buy instead of renting. Can't really blame this on the gentrifiers. The neighborhoods inbthe inner city are getting safer and cleaner while the suburbs are getting worse.

Stability is one of the biggest issues though. With certain type of jobs unavailable now of days, such as manufacturing, many blacks are unable to remain stable by working in a mill for 'x' amount of years.

From where I'm from, the houses and neighborhoods that are black are in poor areas. With the economy only geared towards certain industries (depending on what your city's cash flow is), Black have found themselves seeking other jobs that require specific skill sets that are foreign to us.

I'm only speak from my perspective though. NC is a state where many, if not most, black relied on manufacturing work for living. A business leaving or moving can put a huge dent in black economics around here and it sure has.
 
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