Dolores Park — 1906 Earthquake Refugee Camp

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```mediawiki Dolores Park — 1906 Earthquake Refugee Camp was established in the immediate aftermath of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire, serving as one of the largest temporary shelter sites for displaced residents in the city. Located in what is now the Mission District, the site accommodated thousands of homeless survivors from April 1906 until the city's last refugee camps officially closed in June 1908 — a span of more than two years, not the "several months" sometimes cited in popular accounts. The park's history before, during, and after this period is more complicated than its present-day appearance suggests: the ground beneath the grass had served as a Jewish cemetery, then a refugee tent city, before finally becoming the recreational green space San Franciscans know today.

History

Pre-Earthquake History

Before the 1906 disaster, the land now occupied by Dolores Park had served as the Home of Peace Cemetery (Template:Lang-he), operated jointly by two San Francisco Jewish congregations, Sherith Israel and Emanu-El. The cemetery was established in the mid-19th century and remained in active use for decades. By the 1880s, the city's expansion southward placed increasing pressure on burial grounds in the Mission District, and in 1894 the city purchased the cemetery site with the intention of converting it to a public park. The remains interred there were relocated to the Jewish cemetery at Colma, and the grounds were cleared in preparation for park development — work that was still ongoing when the earthquake struck in April 1906.[1]

The 1906 Earthquake and the Refugee Camp

The earthquake struck at 5:12 a.m. on April 18, 1906. The initial tremor, estimated at magnitude 7.9, caused widespread structural damage across San Francisco, and the fires that followed burned for three days, destroying approximately 28,000 buildings and leaving an estimated 225,000 people — more than half the city's population — without homes.[2] City officials, the U.S. Army, and relief organizations including the American Red Cross moved quickly to establish refugee camps on open ground throughout San Francisco. Dolores Park, with its cleared and relatively level terrain, was among the first sites selected.

Within days of the earthquake, the park filled with rows of canvas tents housing survivors from the Mission District and beyond. The Army Corps of Engineers and city relief committees coordinated the distribution of food, water, and basic medical care. Contemporary photographs held by the San Francisco Public Library's History Center show the camp looking northeast across the park in 1907, the tents arranged in orderly rows against the backdrop of the surrounding hills.[3] At its peak, the Dolores Park camp housed several thousand residents, though precise figures specific to this site are difficult to isolate from the broader relief effort, which sheltered roughly 20,000 people across all camps citywide at its height.[4]

Earthquake Cottages

Tent camps were never intended as a permanent solution. Beginning in late 1906, the city began replacing canvas tents with small prefabricated wooden structures known variously as relief cottages, earthquake cottages, or earthquake shacks. Approximately 5,610 of these cottages were constructed across San Francisco's refugee camps, including at Dolores Park, at a cost of roughly $100 each. The cottages measured about 14 by 18 feet and were designed for temporary occupancy, though many residents ended up living in them for years. When the camps formally closed, the city allowed occupants to purchase their cottages for $2 and move them to private lots elsewhere in the city — a practical arrangement that scattered the structures across San Francisco's neighborhoods.[5]

Fewer than two dozen earthquake cottages are believed to survive today, and preservation efforts have had mixed results. In 2025, at least one surviving cottage was demolished in the Outer Sunset, drawing renewed attention to the fragility of this physical record of the disaster.[6] San Francisco Heritage and other preservation organizations have documented the remaining structures and advocated for their protection as tangible artifacts of the city's most significant 20th-century disaster.

From Camp to Park

The last of San Francisco's official earthquake refugee camps closed in June 1908, nearly two years after the disaster. The transition from emergency shelter to recreational open space was gradual. The land at Dolores Park had already been designated for park use before the earthquake, and once the cottages were removed and relocated, the city resumed work on landscaping and grading. The surrounding streets lined themselves with homes and small businesses through the 1910s and 1920s as the Mission District rebuilt. The park itself, named in reference to the nearby Mission Dolores, was developed and formalized over subsequent decades, with the Recreation and Parks Department taking on ongoing improvements throughout the 20th century.[7] A major renovation completed in 2012 restored the park's irrigation systems, restrooms, and pathways at a cost of approximately $20 million, funded in part by a voter-approved bond measure.[8]

Geography

Dolores Park occupies approximately 16 acres in the southeastern portion of the Mission District. It is bounded by Dolores Street to the west, Church Street to the east, 18th Street to the north, and 20th Street to the south — a layout that differs slightly from some informal descriptions. The park sits on a gentle slope rising from Dolores Street toward Church Street, with the upper eastern edge offering unobstructed views of the downtown skyline, including the Salesforce Tower and, on clear days, the Bay. The relatively open, graded terrain was one practical reason the site was chosen for refugee housing in 1906: it required minimal earthwork to accommodate rows of tents and later the prefabricated cottages.

The surrounding topography shifts sharply beyond the park's boundaries. Twin Peaks rises to the southwest, and the Mission Dolores Heights climb to the west. This bowl-like positioning means the park collects afternoon sun even when fog banks the western neighborhoods, a meteorological quirk that contributes heavily to its popularity as a gathering place. The park's location at the junction of several major transit corridors — Dolores Street, Church Street, and 18th Street — reinforced its role as a neighborhood center from the earliest days of the Mission District's development.[9]

Culture

The cultural identity of Dolores Park is inseparable from the Mission District's broader history as a center of working-class, immigrant, and later Latino community life in San Francisco. The refugee camp of 1906–1908 brought together residents from across the city's neighborhoods in conditions of shared hardship, and the social networks formed during that period contributed to the Mission's later reputation for community solidarity. In the decades that followed, the park became a regular venue for neighborhood gatherings, political organizing, and public celebration.

The Mission District took on a strongly Latino character during the mid-20th century, as Mexican and Central American families settled in the area, and Dolores Park became central to that community's public life. Festivals, political demonstrations, and informal weekend gatherings have been constants in the park's recent history. Today the park hosts events ranging from the annual Cinco de Mayo celebrations organized by local community groups to the San Francisco Mime Troupe's free summer performances, which have used the park's upper lawn as a stage since the 1970s.[10] The Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts, located a few blocks away on Mission Street, has long collaborated with the park's open space for exhibitions and public programming, reinforcing the connection between the physical park and the neighborhood's artistic community.[11]

Notable Residents

The Mission District has produced and attracted a number of figures significant to California's political and labor history. Dolores Huerta, co-founder of the United Farm Workers alongside César Chávez, grew up in the Stockton area but was closely associated with Mission District organizing networks throughout her career. She has spoken publicly about the Mission's labor activism as formative to her own political development and sense of community solidarity.[12]

César Chávez visited the Mission District frequently during the height of the farmworkers' movement in the 1960s and 1970s, drawing on the neighborhood's organizing infrastructure and its established networks of mutual aid — networks with roots going back to the earthquake relief era. César Chávez Street, which runs through the southern Mission, was renamed in his honor in 1994. The legacy of both figures is woven into the neighborhood's public spaces, murals, and institutions in ways that connect the area's present activism to its longer history of community response to hardship.[13]

Economy

The economic history of the Dolores Park area traces a path from 19th-century residential and commercial development through the disruption of 1906, the slow rebuilding of the 1910s, and the neighborhood's emergence as a working-class commercial corridor by the mid-20th century. In the immediate aftermath of the earthquake, the refugee camp functioned as a rudimentary local economy, with vendors, relief workers, and Army quartermasters supplying food and basic goods to displaced residents. As the camp wound down and permanent housing replaced the cottages, small businesses — groceries, tailor shops, bakeries, and restaurants — established themselves along 18th Street, Valencia Street, and the surrounding blocks.[14]

The neighborhood's economy shifted substantially during the technology boom of the late 1990s and again during the 2010s, when rising rents displaced longtime Mission businesses and residents. The blocks nearest Dolores Park, particularly along 18th Street between Dolores and Guerrero, became known for upscale cafes and boutiques catering to newer, higher-income residents. This transformation generated sustained community conflict. Long-term Latino residents and small business owners organized against displacement, and debates about gentrification in the Mission became a recurring subject of San Francisco political discussion through the 2010s and into the 2020s. The tension between the park's role as a shared public resource and the rapidly changing economic composition of its surrounding neighborhood is one of the more visible fault lines in contemporary Mission District life.[15]

Attractions

Dolores Park's upper lawn, along the Church Street side, offers some of the better unobstructed views of downtown San Francisco available from any public park in the city. On clear afternoons, the skyline is plainly visible, with the Transamerica Pyramid and Salesforce Tower prominent in the frame. The park's grassy slopes fill with sunbathers on warm weekends year-round, a reflection of the Mission District's relatively mild and sunny microclimate compared to the fogbound western neighborhoods.

The park's amenities include tennis courts, a children's playground, a small soccer field, a dog play area, and public restrooms updated during the 2012 renovation. The Mission Playground, at the north end of the park, has a basketball court and is a regular gathering point for neighborhood youth. Weekend mornings bring informal recreational sports, fitness groups, and families with children, while weekend afternoons draw larger and louder crowds, particularly in warmer months. Food vendors — some licensed, some not — have historically operated along the park's edges, selling everything from bacon-wrapped hot dogs to elaborate brunch plates, and have been a recurring subject of city permitting debates.[16]

Annual events at the park include the Dolores Park Summer Solstice celebration and performances by the San Francisco Mime Troupe, which has held its free July 4th performances at the park for decades. The park also regularly hosts political rallies, community memorials, and pop-up art installations tied to Mission District cultural organizations.[17]

Getting There

Dolores Park is well served by San Francisco's public transit network. The Muni Metro's J Church line runs along Church Street on the park's eastern edge, with stops at 18th and 20th Streets providing direct access. The 33 Ashbury/18th Street bus crosses the top of the park along 18th Street, while the 22 Fillmore serves the Valencia Street corridor a block to the west. The 16th Street BART station at Mission Street is about a 10-minute walk from the park's northern end; the 24th Street BART station is a comparable distance to the south.[18]

Cycling is a practical option. The Wiggle bike route, one of the city's most-used bicycle corridors, runs near the park, and the Valencia Street protected bike lane — installed in segments between 2012 and 2022 — connects the park to the SoMa and Civic Center areas to the north and the outer Mission to the south. Bay Wheels bike share stations are located at several intersections surrounding the park. Automobile parking is available on surrounding streets but fills quickly on warm weekends and during events, and the city's transit agencies actively encourage visitors to arrive without cars.[19]

Neighborhoods

Dolores Park sits at the northern edge of the Mission District proper, near its boundary with the Noe Valley