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Sat July 22, 2023

Union Wages and Housing Development: San Francisco and Waitresses and Saleswomen Living Downtown, 1910-1941

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Join us for a special presentation on the experience of women who lived in the Tenderloin's residential hotels and worked in the downtown retail and food service industries in the first half of the 20th century. Presented as part of the annual SF Labor Fest and TLM's special exhibit "Education for Action: California Labor School, 1942-1957".

Longtime SF City Guide and professor of city & regional planning Linda Day shares her ongoing research on the San Francisco waitresses and saleswomen who lived downtown in the early 20th century, an overlooked segment of the Tenderloin population who deftly navigated organized labor and the neighborhood's unique built environment to benefit greatly from union wages and affordable housing development.

San Francisco women entering the wage labor force as waitresses or saleswomen in the early decades of the twentieth century did not earn enough to live independently of family households, even though more than one-third were single, divorced or widowed. Building on Paul Groth's seminal book on life in residential hotels, "Living Downtown", Day's qualitative study links the achievement of union wages, enforcement of increasingly specific building codes, and privately developed single room occupancy hotels (SROs) and small affordable apartments to waitresses and saleswomen's ability to live in safe, comfortable downtown housing. After being leveled by the earthquake and fires of 1906, San Francisco's downtown was densely rebuilt with fire-resistant masonry buildings serving transients and workers. The Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees International Union and the Department Store Employees Union Local 1100 archives, held by the San Francisco State University Labor Archives and Research Center, are a source of information about wages and work life. Information about downtown buildings was gleaned from archival and contemporary photographs, building and unit plans, Google Earth satellite views, and inspecting the apartment/hotel district buildings, most of which are still standing.

This event will be preceded by a special walking tour that focuses on sites significant to the labor movement in the Tenderloin. Attend one or both events, but capacity for the walking tour is limited, so register ahead of time via Eventbrite.
Join us for a special presentation on the experience of women who lived in the Tenderloin's residential hotels and worked in the downtown retail and food service industries in the first half of the 20th century. Presented as part of the annual SF Labor Fest and TLM's special exhibit "Education for Action: California Labor School, 1942-1957".

Longtime SF City Guide and professor of city & regional planning Linda Day shares her ongoing research on the San Francisco waitresses and saleswomen who lived downtown in the early 20th century, an overlooked segment of the Tenderloin population who deftly navigated organized labor and the neighborhood's unique built environment to benefit greatly from union wages and affordable housing development.

San Francisco women entering the wage labor force as waitresses or saleswomen in the early decades of the twentieth century did not earn enough to live independently of family households, even though more than one-third were single, divorced or widowed. Building on Paul Groth's seminal book on life in residential hotels, "Living Downtown", Day's qualitative study links the achievement of union wages, enforcement of increasingly specific building codes, and privately developed single room occupancy hotels (SROs) and small affordable apartments to waitresses and saleswomen's ability to live in safe, comfortable downtown housing. After being leveled by the earthquake and fires of 1906, San Francisco's downtown was densely rebuilt with fire-resistant masonry buildings serving transients and workers. The Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees International Union and the Department Store Employees Union Local 1100 archives, held by the San Francisco State University Labor Archives and Research Center, are a source of information about wages and work life. Information about downtown buildings was gleaned from archival and contemporary photographs, building and unit plans, Google Earth satellite views, and inspecting the apartment/hotel district buildings, most of which are still standing.

This event will be preceded by a special walking tour that focuses on sites significant to the labor movement in the Tenderloin. Attend one or both events, but capacity for the walking tour is limited, so register ahead of time via Eventbrite.
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398 Eddy Street, San Francisco, CA 94102

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