Mount Davidson, San Francisco, California

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The cross atop Mt. Davidson
The cross atop Mt. Davidson

Mount Davidson is the highest natural point in San Francisco, California, with an elevation of 925 feet (282 meters)[1] It is located near the geographical center of the city, south of Twin Peaks and Portola Drive and to the west of Diamond Heights and Glen Park. It dominates the southeastern view from most of major artery Portola Blvd.

Mt. Davidson's most notable feature, aside from its height, is the 103-foot (31.4 meter) concrete cross situated at the peak of the hill. It is the site of a yearly prayer service, performed on Easter, when the cross is illuminated.

Mount Davidson Park tops the hill, located between Myra Way to the east, Dalewood Way to the southwest and Juanita Way to the north. Public transportation to the park is provided by the 36 Teresita Muni line, which stops at the Dalewood Way & Myra Way entrance to the park.

The neighborhoods around Mount Davidson Park may also be called Mount Davidson, although they are also known as Miraloma Park, to the east, Westwood Highlands to the southwest, and Sherwood Forest, to the southwest. City College of San Francisco and Archbishop Riordan High School are located just south of the peak.

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[edit] History

Adolph Sutro purchased the land in 1881. Under his ownership, what was then called "Blue Mountain" was renamed "Mount Davidson," for George Davidson, a charter member of the Sierra Club. In 1911, Sutro's heirs sold this land, along with much of the land immediately north and south of Mt Davidson, to his appraiser, A. S. Baldwin. Baldwin begins plans for development of Forest Hills, St. Francis Wood, Westwood Park, Balboa Terrace, and Monterey Heights.

[edit] The cross

The cross at sunset
The cross at sunset

The first temporary cross was 40 feet (12 meter) high, and erected in 1923 for a service led by Dean J. Wilmer Gresham of Grace Cathedral. A second 87-foot (26.5 m) high cross was built in 1924 and burned down in 1925. In 1929 a 75-foot (23 m) high wood and stucco cross with lighting was built. This same year 20 acres (81,000 square meter) at the top of Mt. Davidson was purchased by the city of San Francisco for use as a park with funds donated by the Mt. Davidson Conservation Committee. The third cross was burnt down by arsonists in 1931. In 1933 Mayor Angelo Rossi, former Mayor "Sunny Jim" James Rolph, the Easter Sunrise Service Committee, and the Native Sons and Daughters of the Golden West pledged to construct a permanent cross to commemorate the early California pioneers. The 103-foot (31.4 m) high concrete and steel cross was completed the next year with President Franklin D. Roosevelt lighting the cross via telegraph on March 25, 1934 — one week before Easter. Sunrise services are held at the cross every Easter and were broadcast nation-wide by CBS from 1940s through the 1970s.

The cross itself has been the subject of much debate among the residents of San Francisco as they have tried to weigh its obvious religious status against its position as a historic landmark. In 1991 the American Civil Liberties Union, American Jewish Congress, and Americans United for Separation of Church and State sued the city over its ownership of the cross. After a long legal battle and loss at the California Supreme Court, the City auctioned 0.38 acres (1,538 square meter) of land, including the cross, to the highest bidder in 1997. The cross was sold to the Council of Armenian-American Organizations of Northern California, and has since served as a memorial of the 1915 Armenian genocide.

On September 23, 2007, the 160-pound bronze plaque at the base of the cross, which commemorated the genocide, was discovered missing. Because the event coincided with the Armenian Independence Day celebrations, police have not ruled out the possibility of a hate crime.[2]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Mount Davidson Feature Detail Report (HTML). Geographic Names Information System. USGS (January 19, 1981). Retrieved on 2006-09-03.
  2. ^ Bronze Plaque Stolen From Mt. Davidson Cross In SF. NBC11.com, September 28, 2007. Retrieved January 7, 2008.

[edit] External links

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