Manilatown was a Filipino American neighborhood in San Francisco (i.e., a Little Manila), which thrived from the 1920s to late 1970s. [1] The district encompassed a three block radius around Kearny and Jackson Streets, next to Chinatown. [2] The neighborhood was known for the International Hotel ("I Hotel"), a single room occupancy (SRO) hotel where many of the residents lived. [3] [4] Manilatown was also home to many businesses that catered to the Filipino American community, such as Manila Cafe, New Luneta Cafe, Bataan Lunch, Casa Playa, Sampagita Restaurant, Blanco's Bar, Lucky M. Pool Hall, and Tino's Barber Shop. [2] [1] [5] At its height, over 1000 residents lived in Manilatown, [2] and it contained a total of 30,000 transient laborers. [6] From the late 1960s-70s, the neighborhood was transformed by city initiatives that aimed to gentrify the area. By 1977, the neighborhood had been largely destroyed, [2] and it became part of Chinatown. [1]
The early generation of Manilatown residents were known as the manong generation. [1] Manong is an Ilocano term that means "elder brother." [5] They were the first generation of Filipinos to emigrate to the United States, en masse, and form local communities, beginning in the 1900s. [5] During this time, the United States was heavily involved in the Philippines, with the Philippine–American War (1899-1902) and the American colonization of the Philippines (1898-1946). Typically, manong were recruited from the Philippines to perform low-wage agricultural work in California, Hawaii, and Alaska. By the 1930s, approximately 30,000 manong worked in farms and canneries in Salinas, Watsonville, Modesto, Delano, and other parts of California. [7]
Many of these Filipino immigrants were bachelors. Due to anti-miscegenation laws and restrictions on immigration (such as Immigration Act of 1924), they often could not start families. [6] For this reason, they chose to live amongst each other and formed their own communities, such as Manilatown. Beginning in the 1920s, they formed associations, such as the Caballeros de Dimas-Alang and the Gran Oriente Filipino Masonic, as well. [7]
Many residents of Manilatown were not full-time residents of San Francisco. Rather, they were seasonal workers, who worked in farms and salmon canneries during on-season, and who would then come to San Francisco to work temporary service jobs off-season. [2] They often worked in hotels and restaurants, as cooks, waiters, bellhops, cleaners, and chauffeurs, when in San Francisco. [1] [8] The majority lived in residential hotels, such as the International Hotel, Palm Hotel, and Columbia Hotel. [2]
However, the neighborhood was also occupied by long-term residents, and some of them were business owners. For example, New Luneta Cafe, which was located on Kearny Street, served Filipino cuisine like chicken adobo, pancit, and rice. [2] The cafe was run by Maria Velasco Basconcillo and her husband. [9] New Luneta Cafe supported an underground community of gamblers, who played rummy and poker, as well. Between 1943 and 1949, Canuto Salaver, Clem Mateo and Mike Zacarias were the original co-founders and co-owners of the famed Bataan Lunch restaurant at 836 Kearny Street, and also years later the Bataan Pool Parlor at 840 Kearny Street. Bataan Lunch was originally located at 643 Kearny St., the site of Jessie’s Lunch where Clem worked as a cook. Coming together as owners, they renamed their restaurant in 1943 after the Bataan Peninsula and in remembrance of the infamous Bataan Death March which took place in April 1942. Canuto, Clem and Mike were part of a handful of Filipinos who owned and operated a business in San Francisco at that time. In 1944 Bataan Lunch moved next to the I-Hotel. In 1969, this restaurant location would become the home of the famed Mabuhay Restaurant owned by Ness Aquino. [10] Some businesses, like Lucky M. Pool Hall (managed by Manuel Muyco and his wife, Margaret) and Tino's Barber Shop (owned by Faustino "Tino" Regino), served as community centers and employment centers, and they often posted job listings on their walls. [2] [5] The neighborhood was known for its many gambling operations, but the Hall of Justice and San Francisco Police Department (located only a block away) never shut down such operations. [2]
Manilatown began to face serious threats in the 1960s, as city officials pushed for a "Manhattanization." The plan aimed to remove many low-income tenants and historic buildings, replacing them with modern skyscrapers and affluent residents. [3] [11] The leader of this movement was M. Justin Herman, the head of the San Francisco Redevelopment Agency. Herman had also led the initiative to gentrify the Fillmore district and evict many of its African-American residents in the 1960s. When speaking of the International Hotel, Herman said, "This land is too valuable to permit poor people to park on it." [1]
Beginning in 1965, a new wave of Filipino immigrants came to San Francisco. The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 removed the former quota system, which had strictly regulated the number of Asian immigrants who could come to the United States. Furthermore, in 1969, San Francisco Unified School District established a Filipino Education Center (FEC), as part of the Bilingual Education Act. [7]
Despite these developments, the community continued to face severe gentrification pressures. For this reason, in 1968, 150 elderly Filipino and Chinese tenants launched an anti-eviction and tenants rights campaign to defend the neighborhood and International Hotel. [12] Many people joined the protests, including grassroots and Asian American activists, Bay Area Gay Liberation Front, and Peoples Temple. The protesters were inspired the civil rights movement of the era. [13] Local Filipino businesses supported the protesters, but they often didn't directly participate in them, as they couldn't endure the financial hardship of closing shop and joining the picket line. However, Ness Aquino, owner of Mabuhay Gardens, a Filipino restaurant, became an active member of the United Filipino Association (UFA). [5] The activists were at odds with the corporate owners of the building (Milton Meyer & Co. and then Four Seasons Investment Corporation of Thailand), which wanted to demolish the building in order to build a parking lot. Later, the owners wanted to build a commercial high-rise on the land. [6]
From 1968–77, the residents were gradually evicted from the International Hotel. The final residents were evicted in 1977, when 400 riot police led an eviction raid on August 4 at 3:00 am. [12] However, the tenants rights activism that came out of their evictions helped rent control laws be established in San Francisco in 1979. With the last eviction of International Hotel residents, the last vestige of Manilatown was largely decimated. [2] It was also during this period that the Transamerica Pyramid was constructed (1969–72), signaling a new era in downtown San Francisco.
The International Hotel location was unoccupied for over twenty years. In 2004, a two-block corridor of Kearny Street was named "Manilatown," following a proposal from San Francisco Supervisor Aaron Peskin. The proposal was meant to remind residents of its history and commemorate the former vibrancy of the neighborhood. [13] In 2005, the former International Hotel building became a senior housing facility, and it became the home to the Manilatown Heritage Foundation, [1] which advocates for social and economic justice for Filipinos in the United States. [14] The executive director of the center, Evelyn Luluquisen, told the San Francisco Examiner, "This building is a symbol of the perseverance and commitment of the anti-eviction movements in Manilatown. The center symbolizes that the community will always have a presence here." [1] In October 2013, the center turned down an award from then-mayor Ed Lee in celebration of Filipino American History Month. Their rejection was due to concerns over evictions of low-income seniors in San Francisco, particularly Filipino American seniors. [1]
The Chinatown–International District of Seattle, Washington is the center of Seattle's Asian American community. Within the Chinatown International District are the three neighborhoods known as Seattle's Chinatown, Japantown and Little Saigon, named for the concentration of businesses owned by people of Chinese, Japanese and Vietnamese descent, respectively. The geographic area also once included Seattle's Manilatown. The name Chinatown/International District was established by City Ordinance 119297 in 1999 as a result of the three neighborhoods' work and consensus on the Seattle Chinatown International District Urban Village Strategic Plan submitted to the City Council in December 1998. Like many other areas of Seattle, the neighborhood is multiethnic, but the majority of its residents are of Chinese ethnicity. It is one of eight historic neighborhoods recognized by the City of Seattle. CID has a mix of residences and businesses and is a tourist attraction for its ethnic Asian businesses and landmarks.
Little Saigon is a name given to ethnic enclaves of expatriate Vietnamese mainly in English-speaking countries. Alternate names include Little Vietnam and Little Hanoi, depending on the enclave's political history. To avoid political undertones due to the renaming of Saigon to Ho Chi Minh City, it is occasionally called by the neutral name Vietnamtown. Saigon is the former name of the capital of the former South Vietnam, where a large number of first-generation Vietnamese immigrants arriving to the United States originate, whereas Hanoi is the current capital of Vietnam.
Washington, D.C.'s Chinatown is a small, historic area of Downtown Washington, D.C. along H and I Streets between 5th and 8th Streets, Northwest. The area was once home to thousands of Chinese immigrants, but fewer than 300 remained in 2017. The current neighborhood was the second in Washington to be called “Chinatown” since 1931. Originally, the first Chinatown was built in the Federal Triangle on the south side of Pennsylvania Avenue some time after 1851, but was moved to the H Street area when a new federal building was built there. In 1986, a Chinese gate was built over H Street at 7th Street. By 1997, prominent landmarks such as the Capital One Arena, a sports and entertainment arena, had gentrified the area. The neighborhood is served by the Gallery Place station of the Washington Metro.
A Little Manila, also known as a Manilatown or Filipinotown, is a community with a large Filipino immigrant and descendant population. Little Manilas are enclaves of Overseas Filipinos consisting of people of Filipino origin living outside of the Philippines.
Japantown (日本人街) is a common name for Japanese communities in cities and towns outside Japan. Alternatively, a Japantown may be called J-town, Little Tokyo or Nihonmachi (日本町), the first two being common names for Japantown, San Francisco, Japantown, San Jose and Little Tokyo, Los Angeles.
Single room occupancy is a form of housing that is typically aimed at residents with low or minimal incomes who rent small, furnished single rooms with a bed, chair, and sometimes a small desk. SRO units are rented out as permanent residence and/or primary residence to individuals, within a multi-tenant building where tenants share a kitchen, toilets or bathrooms. SRO units range from 7 to 13 square metres. In some instances, contemporary units may have a small refrigerator, microwave, or sink.
The International Hotel, often referred to locally as the I-Hotel, was a low-income single-room-occupancy residential hotel in San Francisco, California's Manilatown. It was home to many Asian Americans, specifically a large Filipino American population. Around 1954, the I-Hotel also famously housed in its basement Enrico Banduccci's original "hungry i" nightclub. During the late 60s, real estate corporations proposed plans to demolish the hotel, which would necessitate displacing all of the I-Hotel's elderly tenants.
Kearny Street in San Francisco, California runs north from Market Street to The Embarcadero. Toward its south end, it separates the Financial District from the Union Square and Chinatown districts. Further north, it passes over Telegraph Hill, interrupted by a gap near Coit Tower.
Portsmouth Square, formerly known as Portsmouth Plaza, and originally known as Plaza de Yerba Buena, or simply La Plaza, is a one-block plaza in Chinatown, San Francisco, California. Portsmouth Square is the first park in San Francisco predating both Washington Square (1847) and Union Square (1850). Established in the early 19th century, during the period of Mexican California, the plaza was renamed following the U.S. Conquest of California in honor of the USS Portsmouth, the American ship which captured the city. It is bounded by Kearny Street on the east, Washington Street on the north, Clay Street on the south, and Walter Lum Place on the west.
Belden Place is a narrow alley in the Financial District of San Francisco, California that serves as the hub of the city's small French American community.
The Redstone Building, also known as the Redstone Labor Temple, was constructed and operated by the San Francisco Labor Council Hall Associates. Initial planning started in 1910, with most construction work done during 1914. Its primary tenant was the San Francisco Labor Council, including 22 labor union offices as well as meeting halls. The building was a hub of union organizing and work activities and a "primary center for the city's historic labor community for over half a century."
Kearny Street Workshop (KSW) in San Francisco, California, is the oldest multidisciplinary arts nonprofit addressing Asian Pacific American issues. The organization's mission is to produce and present art that enriches and empowers Asian Pacific American communities. Notable participants include author and Asian American studies scholar Russell Leong, playwright and author Jessica Hagedorn, author Janice Mirikitani, poet and historian Al Robles, and actor and filmmaker Lane Nishikawa.
Randy Shaw is an attorney, author, and activist who lives in Berkeley, California. He is the executive director of the Tenderloin Housing Clinic, a nonprofit organization in San Francisco that he co-founded in 1980. He has also co-founded and is on the board of directors of Uptown Tenderloin, Inc., a nonprofit organization that spearheaded the creation of the national Uptown Tenderloin Historic District in 2009. Uptown Tenderloin, Inc. is also the driving force behind the Tenderloin Museum, which opened in the spring of 2015. Randy is also the editor of Beyond Chron, and has written six books on activism.
Alfred A. Robles was a Filipino American poet and community activist in San Francisco. Born in 1930, he was the second eldest in a family of ten brothers and sisters and grew up in the Fillmore district of San Francisco. A community character, he was instrumental in the political fight against the city to stop the demolition of the International Hotel on Kearny Street. He was also a prominent member of the San Francisco-based Asian American writers' collective Kearny Street Workshop.
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Violeta Marasigan, better known by her nickname "Bullet X", or more plainly "Bullet", was a Filipino-American social worker and activist best known for her key role in the International Hotel eviction protests which became an important incident in Filipino American history; as well as her resistance against and eventual imprisonment under the dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos; and for helping establish the Filipino feminist organization GABRIELA and the released-political-detainees group SELDA. She also did advocacy work focused on education for Filipino immigrant children, equal military benefits for Filipino American World War II veterans, and ending racial slurs against Filipino women on American television.
Dean E. Preston is an American attorney and member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. He founded Tenants Together, a California tenant advocacy organization. In November 2019, Preston won a special election to finish Mayor London Breed's term on the Board of Supervisors, defeating incumbent Vallie Brown to represent District 5. He was re-elected in the November 2020 election.
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The manong generation were the first generation of Filipino immigrants to arrive en masse to the United States. They formed some of the first Little Manila communities in the United States, and they played a pivotal role in the farmworker movement. The term manong comes from the Ilocano word for "elder brother," while manang means "elder sister."