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The '''Castro District''', commonly known as '''the Castro''', is a neighborhood situated within the broader [[Eureka Valley]] area of [[San Francisco]], California. One of the first gay neighborhoods in the United States, the Castro transformed from a working-class enclave through the 1960s and 1970s into one | The '''Castro District''', commonly known as '''the Castro''', is a neighborhood situated within the broader [[Eureka Valley]] area of [[San Francisco]], California. One of the first gay neighborhoods in the United States, the Castro transformed from a working-class enclave through the 1960s and 1970s into one of the highest concentrations of LGBTQ+ residents in any American city, and it remains one of the most prominent symbols of LGBTQ+ activism and community life in the world.<ref>{{cite web |title=How San Francisco's Castro district became the capital of LGBT America |url=https://www.cnn.com/travel/castro-san-francisco-lgbt-neighborhood |work=CNN Travel |date=2025-06-01 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> It was a birthplace of the LGBTQ+ rights movement in the U.S. and was where [[Harvey Milk]], the gay-rights activist and politician, launched his political career. The Castro itself is quite a small district, occupying less than a square mile, but it draws visitors and residents in significant numbers and is widely considered one of San Francisco's most storied neighborhoods. | ||
== Name and Geography == | == Name and Geography == | ||
Castro Street was named after José Castro (1808–1860), a | Castro Street was named after José Castro (1808–1860), a California-born leader of Mexican opposition to U.S. rule in California in the 19th century and [[alcalde]] of Alta California from 1835 to 1836.<ref>{{cite web |title=Castro District History |url=https://artandarchitecture-sf.com/castro-district-history.html |work=Art and Architecture SF |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The neighborhood known as the Castro, in the district of Eureka Valley, took shape in 1887 when the Market Street Railway Company built a line linking Eureka Valley to downtown San Francisco.<ref>{{cite web |title=History of the Castro/Upper Market |url=https://castrocbd.org/history-of-the-castroupper-market/ |work=Castro Community Benefit District |date=2021-02-03 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
San Francisco's gay village is mostly concentrated in the | San Francisco's gay village is mostly concentrated in the commercial district along Castro Street from Market Street to 19th Street. It extends down Market Street toward Church Street and on both sides of the Castro neighborhood from Church Street to Eureka Street. The Castro District is bordered by the [[Mission District]] to the east, [[Noe Valley]] to the south, and [[Twin Peaks]] to the west, with [[Dolores Heights]] and [[Corona Heights]] also adjacent. Approximately 22,271 people live in the Castro District, where the median age is 43 and the average individual income is $139,132, according to American Community Survey estimates.<ref>{{cite web |title=SF Neighborhoods – The Castro District |url=https://baycityguide.com/en/castro-district/a1JU00000002DMZMA2 |work=Bay City Guide |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
== Early History == | == Early History == | ||
For generations, the only | For generations, the only people to inhabit the present-day Castro neighborhood were the [[Ohlone]] people. In 1776, the Spanish de Anza expedition established a military outpost at the present-day [[Presidio of San Francisco|Presidio]] and a mission at [[Mission Dolores]]. In its first two centuries of recorded history, the sheltered little valley now called the Castro was known at various points as Rancho San Miguel, Horner's Addition, Eureka Valley, Little Scandinavia, and Most Holy Redeemer Parish. The valley's original name, the one given to it by the Ohlone, is not recorded.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Castro: The Rise of a Gay Community |url=https://www.foundsf.org/index.php?title=The_Castro:_The_Rise_of_a_Gay_Community |work=FoundSF |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
By the 1880s, Eureka Valley | By the 1880s, Eureka Valley was a bustling working-class neighborhood, populated largely by Irish, German, and Scandinavian immigrants. During the California Gold Rush and in its aftermath, a substantial Finnish population settled in San Francisco. Finnish Club No. 1 was established in the Castro District in 1882, and two Finnish community halls were erected nearby not long after. From 1910 to 1920, the Castro was known as "Little Scandinavia" because of the large number of residents of Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, and Finnish ancestry who lived there. A Finnish bathhouse known as Finilla's, dating from this period, stood behind the Café Flore on Market Street until 1986. Scandinavian-style half-timber construction can still be seen in some buildings along Market Street between Castro and Church Streets.<ref>{{cite web |title=History of the Castro/Upper Market |url=https://castrocbd.org/history-of-the-castroupper-market/ |work=Castro Community Benefit District |date=2021-02-03 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
From the 1930s through the 1960s, Eureka Valley was also | From the 1930s through the 1960s, Eureka Valley was also a working-class Irish-American enclave. The Irish were a powerful presence in the city at every level of politics, from precinct worker on up, and the neighborhood was home to many laborers, firefighters, police officers, and other city workers. The district produced a number of San Francisco's Irish-American police chiefs.<ref>{{cite web |title=Castro History |url=https://www.kqed.org/w/hood/castro/castroHistory.html |work=KQED |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
== Transformation into an LGBTQ+ Neighborhood == | == Transformation into an LGBTQ+ Neighborhood == | ||
San Francisco's | San Francisco's gay and lesbian population grew steadily beginning with World War II, when military personnel from the Pacific theater were dishonorably discharged in the Bay Area for their sexual orientation. Many homosexual veterans remembered San Francisco as a tolerant, open-minded city and returned after the war. Thousands who had been discharged were released in San Francisco and chose to stay, and after the war they were joined by thousands more who had discovered new identities during their years of service. Rather than returning to hometowns where they'd face stigma, they built lives in the city instead.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Castro: The Rise of a Gay Community |url=https://www.foundsf.org/index.php?title=The_Castro:_The_Rise_of_a_Gay_Community |work=FoundSF |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
The 1960s saw large numbers of families | The 1960s saw large numbers of families leaving the Castro for the suburbs in what became known as "white flight," opening up significant real estate inventory and attracting a new wave of buyers. Propelled by that suburban migration, white-collar gay men and gay couples with disposable income were drawn to the Victorian houses of Eureka Valley. In the late 1960s and into the 1970s, this influx gave the blue-collar neighborhood around Castro and 18th Streets a new social identity.<ref>{{cite web |title=Castro – SF Gay History |url=https://www.sfgayhistory.com/neighborhoods/castro/ |work=SF Gay History |date=2014-08-17 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
The Castro's | The Castro's rise as a gay mecca accelerated after the [[Summer of Love]] in the neighboring [[Haight-Ashbury]] district in 1967. Gay men and lesbians formed political groups, churches, and synagogues. They started newspapers, film festivals, theater groups, marching bands, and softball leagues. They registered to vote and organized with a focus and discipline that reshaped city politics. | ||
Milk | == Harvey Milk and Political Organizing == | ||
No figure is more central to the Castro's identity than [[Harvey Milk]]. After moving to the neighborhood in 1972 and opening a camera shop on Castro Street, Milk became a community anchor and a vocal political organizer. He founded the Castro Village Association, one of the first predominantly LGBTQ-owned business organizations in the country, and ran for public office three times before succeeding.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Castro |url=https://www.encyclopedia.com/media/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/castro |work=Encyclopedia.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> In 1977, he was elected to San Francisco's Board of Supervisors, making him the first openly gay man elected to public office in California. His election followed a change in the city's electoral system from at-large voting to district-based elections, which gave neighborhoods like the Castro direct representation for the first time. | |||
The political momentum was cut short. On November 27, 1978, Dan White, a conservative ex-police officer who had recently resigned his seat on the Board of Supervisors, entered City Hall through a basement window and shot and killed Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk. White's conviction on a lesser charge of voluntary manslaughter, rather than first-degree murder, outraged the city. On May 21, 1979, thousands of people flooded Civic Center Plaza in protest, in what became known as the [[White Night Riot]]. It was one of the largest civil disturbances in San Francisco history.<ref>{{cite web |title=Castro History |url=https://www.kqed.org/w/hood/castro/castroHistory.html |work=KQED |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
== | Harvey Milk Plaza, at the intersection of Castro and Market Streets, is named in his honor and serves as a gathering place for the community. A national monument bearing his name was designated in 2016.<ref>{{cite web |title=Neighborhood Spotlight: The Castro |url=https://www.california.com/neighborhood-spotlight-the-castro/ |work=California.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
== The AIDS Crisis == | |||
The AIDS epidemic of the 1980s and 1990s struck the Castro with devastating force. The neighborhood lost hundreds of residents, and at the epidemic's peak, it was not uncommon for memorial notices to fill the windows of local shops. The crisis reshaped community life entirely. Earlier political factions evolved into mutual-aid networks. New social services were created: hospices for the dying, HIV and AIDS education programs, support centers for elderly LGBTQ+ residents and queer youth, and the [[NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt]], a communal memorial begun in San Francisco in 1987 by Castro resident Cleve Jones to honor those lost to the disease.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Castro: The Rise of a Gay Community |url=https://www.foundsf.org/index.php?title=The_Castro:_The_Rise_of_a_Gay_Community |work=FoundSF |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
The Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, a queer activist and charity group founded in the Castro in 1979, organized one of the world's first AIDS-related fundraisers, a dog show on Castro Street, with local resident and disco star Sylvester serving as one of the judges. Compassion shaped the neighborhood as much as politics did. The Castro became a national model for community-based responses to a public health emergency at a time when the federal government was largely silent on the crisis. | |||
In 2019, San Francisco Board of Supervisors member Rafael Mandelman authored an ordinance to create the Castro LGBTQ Cultural District. The ordinance passed unanimously, formally recognizing the neighborhood's role in LGBTQ+ history and community life.<ref>{{cite web |title=Castro / Noe Valley |url=https://www.sftravel.com/neighborhoods/castro-noe-valley |work=San Francisco Travel |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
== Landmarks and Cultural Institutions == | |||
=== Castro Theatre === | |||
One of the most prominent features of the neighborhood is the [[Castro Theatre]], a movie palace built in 1922 and one of San Francisco's most celebrated historic cinemas. It was the first movie palace designed by prominent architect Timothy Pflueger, whose later work would include the Paramount Theatre in Oakland and the 450 Sutter medical building in San Francisco. Janet Gaynor, who worked as an early usherette at the Castro Theatre, went on to win the first Academy Award for Best Actress in 1929. The theater's distinctive neon blade sign above the entrance has become one of the most recognized images in the city. For decades, the house Wurlitzer organ played show tunes before every evening screening, and audience sing-alongs, from ''The Wizard of Oz'' to ''Frozen'', became beloved traditions.<ref>{{cite web |title=Castro District History |url=https://artandarchitecture-sf.com/castro-district-history.html |work=Art and Architecture SF |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
== | The theater's recent history wasn't smooth. A dispute over its future between the building's owners and concert promoter Another Planet Entertainment, which took over programming in 2022, prompted years of community concern about the venue's preservation and character. After a period of closure for rehabilitation work, the Castro Theatre reopened in February 2026. The reopening was marked by a residency by musician Sam Smith, whose performances were among the first major events in the restored space.<ref>{{cite web |title=The second act! SF's Castro Theatre reopens its doors after rehabilitation |url=https://localnewsmatters.org/2026/02/05/sf-castro-theatre-reopening-friday-after-rehabilitation/ |work=Local News Matters |date=2026-02-05 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Sam Smith residency marks reopening of San Francisco's Castro Theatre |url=https://www.ktvu.com/news/sam-smith-residency-marks-reopening-san-franciscos-castro-theatre |work=KTVU |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
=== GLBT Historical Society Museum === | |||
A major cultural destination in the neighborhood is the [[GLBT Historical Society Museum]], which opened for previews on December 10, 2010, at 4127 18th Street. The grand opening took place on January 13, 2011. It is the first stand-alone LGBTQ+ history museum in the United States, with collections spanning community photography, political ephemera, and personal archives from figures central to San Francisco's queer history.<ref>{{cite web |title=Castro – SF Gay History |url=https://www.sfgayhistory.com/neighborhoods/castro/ |work=SF Gay History |date=2014-08-17 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
=== Rainbow Honor Walk === | |||
The | The [[Rainbow Honor Walk]], an LGBTQ+ Walk of Fame, was installed in August 2014 with an inaugural set of twenty bronze sidewalk plaques representing LGBTQ+ figures from history. The walk was planned to coincide with the Castro's commercial district and eventually expand to include 500 plaques. Honorees span the arts, politics, science, and activism, and the walk serves as both a civic monument and a living educational resource along the neighborhood's streets.<ref>{{cite web |title=Neighborhood Spotlight: The Castro |url=https://www.california.com/neighborhood-spotlight-the-castro/ |work=California.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
=== Twin Peaks Tavern === | |||
== | When the historic [[Twin Peaks Tavern]] at Market and Castro Streets was built with floor-to-ceiling plate-glass windows, it sent a clear signal: Castro residents were not going to hide. The tavern is recognized as one of the first gay bars in the country to have full-plate-glass windows visible from the street, a deliberate gesture of openness at a time when most gay establishments deliberately obscured their interiors from public view. That architectural choice made it a landmark, and the tavern remains in operation today.<ref>{{cite web |title=History of the Castro/Upper Market |url=https://castrocbd.org/history-of-the-castroupper-market/ |work=Castro Community Benefit District |date=2021-02-03 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
=== 18th and Castro === | |||
The intersection of 18th Street and Castro Street has served as the neighborhood's social and political center for decades. Marches, vigils, protests, and celebrations have taken place there continuously since the 1970s. It's where the community gathered after Milk's assassination, during the AIDS crisis, and after each successive political victory and defeat in the long arc of LGBTQ+ civil rights. Harvey Milk Plaza, just steps away at Market and Castro, anch | |||
Latest revision as of 03:12, 20 May 2026
The Castro District, commonly known as the Castro, is a neighborhood situated within the broader Eureka Valley area of San Francisco, California. One of the first gay neighborhoods in the United States, the Castro transformed from a working-class enclave through the 1960s and 1970s into one of the highest concentrations of LGBTQ+ residents in any American city, and it remains one of the most prominent symbols of LGBTQ+ activism and community life in the world.[1] It was a birthplace of the LGBTQ+ rights movement in the U.S. and was where Harvey Milk, the gay-rights activist and politician, launched his political career. The Castro itself is quite a small district, occupying less than a square mile, but it draws visitors and residents in significant numbers and is widely considered one of San Francisco's most storied neighborhoods.
Name and Geography
Castro Street was named after José Castro (1808–1860), a California-born leader of Mexican opposition to U.S. rule in California in the 19th century and alcalde of Alta California from 1835 to 1836.[2] The neighborhood known as the Castro, in the district of Eureka Valley, took shape in 1887 when the Market Street Railway Company built a line linking Eureka Valley to downtown San Francisco.[3]
San Francisco's gay village is mostly concentrated in the commercial district along Castro Street from Market Street to 19th Street. It extends down Market Street toward Church Street and on both sides of the Castro neighborhood from Church Street to Eureka Street. The Castro District is bordered by the Mission District to the east, Noe Valley to the south, and Twin Peaks to the west, with Dolores Heights and Corona Heights also adjacent. Approximately 22,271 people live in the Castro District, where the median age is 43 and the average individual income is $139,132, according to American Community Survey estimates.[4]
Early History
For generations, the only people to inhabit the present-day Castro neighborhood were the Ohlone people. In 1776, the Spanish de Anza expedition established a military outpost at the present-day Presidio and a mission at Mission Dolores. In its first two centuries of recorded history, the sheltered little valley now called the Castro was known at various points as Rancho San Miguel, Horner's Addition, Eureka Valley, Little Scandinavia, and Most Holy Redeemer Parish. The valley's original name, the one given to it by the Ohlone, is not recorded.[5]
By the 1880s, Eureka Valley was a bustling working-class neighborhood, populated largely by Irish, German, and Scandinavian immigrants. During the California Gold Rush and in its aftermath, a substantial Finnish population settled in San Francisco. Finnish Club No. 1 was established in the Castro District in 1882, and two Finnish community halls were erected nearby not long after. From 1910 to 1920, the Castro was known as "Little Scandinavia" because of the large number of residents of Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, and Finnish ancestry who lived there. A Finnish bathhouse known as Finilla's, dating from this period, stood behind the Café Flore on Market Street until 1986. Scandinavian-style half-timber construction can still be seen in some buildings along Market Street between Castro and Church Streets.[6]
From the 1930s through the 1960s, Eureka Valley was also a working-class Irish-American enclave. The Irish were a powerful presence in the city at every level of politics, from precinct worker on up, and the neighborhood was home to many laborers, firefighters, police officers, and other city workers. The district produced a number of San Francisco's Irish-American police chiefs.[7]
Transformation into an LGBTQ+ Neighborhood
San Francisco's gay and lesbian population grew steadily beginning with World War II, when military personnel from the Pacific theater were dishonorably discharged in the Bay Area for their sexual orientation. Many homosexual veterans remembered San Francisco as a tolerant, open-minded city and returned after the war. Thousands who had been discharged were released in San Francisco and chose to stay, and after the war they were joined by thousands more who had discovered new identities during their years of service. Rather than returning to hometowns where they'd face stigma, they built lives in the city instead.[8]
The 1960s saw large numbers of families leaving the Castro for the suburbs in what became known as "white flight," opening up significant real estate inventory and attracting a new wave of buyers. Propelled by that suburban migration, white-collar gay men and gay couples with disposable income were drawn to the Victorian houses of Eureka Valley. In the late 1960s and into the 1970s, this influx gave the blue-collar neighborhood around Castro and 18th Streets a new social identity.[9]
The Castro's rise as a gay mecca accelerated after the Summer of Love in the neighboring Haight-Ashbury district in 1967. Gay men and lesbians formed political groups, churches, and synagogues. They started newspapers, film festivals, theater groups, marching bands, and softball leagues. They registered to vote and organized with a focus and discipline that reshaped city politics.
Harvey Milk and Political Organizing
No figure is more central to the Castro's identity than Harvey Milk. After moving to the neighborhood in 1972 and opening a camera shop on Castro Street, Milk became a community anchor and a vocal political organizer. He founded the Castro Village Association, one of the first predominantly LGBTQ-owned business organizations in the country, and ran for public office three times before succeeding.[10] In 1977, he was elected to San Francisco's Board of Supervisors, making him the first openly gay man elected to public office in California. His election followed a change in the city's electoral system from at-large voting to district-based elections, which gave neighborhoods like the Castro direct representation for the first time.
The political momentum was cut short. On November 27, 1978, Dan White, a conservative ex-police officer who had recently resigned his seat on the Board of Supervisors, entered City Hall through a basement window and shot and killed Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk. White's conviction on a lesser charge of voluntary manslaughter, rather than first-degree murder, outraged the city. On May 21, 1979, thousands of people flooded Civic Center Plaza in protest, in what became known as the White Night Riot. It was one of the largest civil disturbances in San Francisco history.[11]
Harvey Milk Plaza, at the intersection of Castro and Market Streets, is named in his honor and serves as a gathering place for the community. A national monument bearing his name was designated in 2016.[12]
The AIDS Crisis
The AIDS epidemic of the 1980s and 1990s struck the Castro with devastating force. The neighborhood lost hundreds of residents, and at the epidemic's peak, it was not uncommon for memorial notices to fill the windows of local shops. The crisis reshaped community life entirely. Earlier political factions evolved into mutual-aid networks. New social services were created: hospices for the dying, HIV and AIDS education programs, support centers for elderly LGBTQ+ residents and queer youth, and the NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt, a communal memorial begun in San Francisco in 1987 by Castro resident Cleve Jones to honor those lost to the disease.[13]
The Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, a queer activist and charity group founded in the Castro in 1979, organized one of the world's first AIDS-related fundraisers, a dog show on Castro Street, with local resident and disco star Sylvester serving as one of the judges. Compassion shaped the neighborhood as much as politics did. The Castro became a national model for community-based responses to a public health emergency at a time when the federal government was largely silent on the crisis.
In 2019, San Francisco Board of Supervisors member Rafael Mandelman authored an ordinance to create the Castro LGBTQ Cultural District. The ordinance passed unanimously, formally recognizing the neighborhood's role in LGBTQ+ history and community life.[14]
Landmarks and Cultural Institutions
Castro Theatre
One of the most prominent features of the neighborhood is the Castro Theatre, a movie palace built in 1922 and one of San Francisco's most celebrated historic cinemas. It was the first movie palace designed by prominent architect Timothy Pflueger, whose later work would include the Paramount Theatre in Oakland and the 450 Sutter medical building in San Francisco. Janet Gaynor, who worked as an early usherette at the Castro Theatre, went on to win the first Academy Award for Best Actress in 1929. The theater's distinctive neon blade sign above the entrance has become one of the most recognized images in the city. For decades, the house Wurlitzer organ played show tunes before every evening screening, and audience sing-alongs, from The Wizard of Oz to Frozen, became beloved traditions.[15]
The theater's recent history wasn't smooth. A dispute over its future between the building's owners and concert promoter Another Planet Entertainment, which took over programming in 2022, prompted years of community concern about the venue's preservation and character. After a period of closure for rehabilitation work, the Castro Theatre reopened in February 2026. The reopening was marked by a residency by musician Sam Smith, whose performances were among the first major events in the restored space.[16][17]
GLBT Historical Society Museum
A major cultural destination in the neighborhood is the GLBT Historical Society Museum, which opened for previews on December 10, 2010, at 4127 18th Street. The grand opening took place on January 13, 2011. It is the first stand-alone LGBTQ+ history museum in the United States, with collections spanning community photography, political ephemera, and personal archives from figures central to San Francisco's queer history.[18]
Rainbow Honor Walk
The Rainbow Honor Walk, an LGBTQ+ Walk of Fame, was installed in August 2014 with an inaugural set of twenty bronze sidewalk plaques representing LGBTQ+ figures from history. The walk was planned to coincide with the Castro's commercial district and eventually expand to include 500 plaques. Honorees span the arts, politics, science, and activism, and the walk serves as both a civic monument and a living educational resource along the neighborhood's streets.[19]
Twin Peaks Tavern
When the historic Twin Peaks Tavern at Market and Castro Streets was built with floor-to-ceiling plate-glass windows, it sent a clear signal: Castro residents were not going to hide. The tavern is recognized as one of the first gay bars in the country to have full-plate-glass windows visible from the street, a deliberate gesture of openness at a time when most gay establishments deliberately obscured their interiors from public view. That architectural choice made it a landmark, and the tavern remains in operation today.[20]
18th and Castro
The intersection of 18th Street and Castro Street has served as the neighborhood's social and political center for decades. Marches, vigils, protests, and celebrations have taken place there continuously since the 1970s. It's where the community gathered after Milk's assassination, during the AIDS crisis, and after each successive political victory and defeat in the long arc of LGBTQ+ civil rights. Harvey Milk Plaza, just steps away at Market and Castro, anch
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