More San Francisco Crime

redooctavia The following collections are of more San Francisco crime images both real and from the movies. This remarkable 1927 shot was taken during an actual bank robbery in progress at the French American Bank on Hayes at Octavia.

redohearst In February of 1974 when Patty Hearst was kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army, much of the sympathy and hope for her safety disappeared when this surveillance video of her helping to rob the Hibernia Bank at 22nd and Noriega in April of 1974 stunned the country. Of the five SLA members robbing the bank all, but Patty Hearst died in a fiery police shootout the following month in Los Angeles. Miraculously, Hearst was shopping and not a the safehouse when police raided it and killed all seven members of the SLA in the house that day. At the right is Natasha Richardson, who portrayed Hearst in the 1988 film ‘Patty’ reenacting the robbery. Sadly, Natasha Richardson died as the result of a skiing accident in 2009. Click on the link below to see the famous footage of the robbery.

redobank The bank building robbed by the Patty Hearst and company at 22nd and Noriega today, seen from the outside and inside where the robbery took place.

redodurant Theodore Durant, the “Demon in the Belfry”, was a creep who, in 1895, murdered two woman, Blanche Lamont, and Minnie Williams, on two separate occasions in the Emmanuel Baptist Church on Bartlett Street in the Mission District between 22nd and 23rd, where he worked as a supervisor, and he wasn’t, particularly tidy about his killings, mutilating the bodies. He was hanged at San Quentin in 1898. Blanche Lamont’s body was found up in the spire, and Minnie Williams was found directly below at ground level in the library. Durrant approached the church from 22nd St. to the left of the church with Blanche Lamont on April 3rd 1895, and from 23rd St to the right of the church with Minnie Williams, on April 12th 1895, and was observed by many of the neighbors on Bartlett Street. His stroll with Lamont was amicable, and pleasant, but there is evidence that Minnie Williams might have known about the fate of Blanche Lamont as they argued loudly at the door of the church, and were reproached by a passerby. Also, she was reported to have said to a friend in Alameda, “I know too much about the disappearance of Blanche.”

redoblanche Blanch Lamont (left of the stairs) with her students in Montana, where she came from two years before the murders.

redobartlett The Assessor’s Office and the Masonic History Book state that the Emmanuel Baptist Church stood here where this parking lot and the building to the left of the parking lot are. The rector’s house was where the Masonic Building is, and the main church structure was where the white building on the left is.

jaywalkingredo San Francisco crime at it’s most loathsome; ladies jaywalking at Fifth and Market Streets in the 1940’s.

redobrakes In a film overlap from the 1951 movie ‘House on Telegraph Hill’, Valentina Cortese leaves her house and heads up Montgomery Street unaware that her brakes have been tampered with by her husband, Richard Basehart.

redocrash Valentina Cortese’s car crashes at the corner of Montague and Montgomery, but she survives.

redobogie In a film overlap, Humphrey Bogart catches a cable car at Greenwich and Hyde after accidentally killing Agnes Moorehead in the 1947 movie ‘Dark Passage’. Well, it was an accident, so I guess it really doesn’t constitute a crime, but that won’t matter to the cops.

Bjorklandupdate Thrill killer, Penny Bjorkland, shot a man to death just for the fun of it in 1959 and threw the gun down a storm drain on the corner of Camellia and Castle Manor in the Excelsior District. Check out the link below that follows a terrible poem, whose author must remain anonymous, for her story.

Bjorklandgun Bjorkland reenacts the murder for police at the murder site with the gun she threw down the drain. (Bob Calhoun)

I knew I couldn’t stay away.
I had to find that drain.
I left for BART one Saturday,
and went there on a train.

A lady stopped from a near bus line
I said to her, “Good day!”
She knew of Penny “Bjorkenstein”.
She told me, “Go away!”

She asked me why I came here.
I said I had to do it!
She whispered with an evil leer,
“Shhh….. That’s where I threw it.”

http://murderpedia.org/female.B/b/bjorkland-penny.htm

World War Two and the San Francisco Giants

CityHallredo The first series of pictures are from wartime San Francisco in 1943, and during the 2014 San Francisco Giants World Series Victory Parade. The City Hall is seen here during both the historic events.

GoGiantsredo Go, Giants! Go! Well, this is the place to be if they have to. I’m not too sure how we won the war with that cap less sailor in the middle on our side, but we did! The tall building in the back was the old Empire Hotel. The grass in this area is gone now and the comparison is a little bit off today because they were walking right where the San Francisco Main Library is now.

Dudesredo Market Street at Stockton: “Hey, dudes! Go Giants!”

Telenewsredo This terrific World War Two photo was in front of the Telenews Movie Theater at 930 Market Street. The theater was located at what is now the edge of Hallidie Plaza. The 2014 Victory Parade was on Halloween, and the light rain falling didn’t dampen anyone’s enthusiasm!

CollectiveGiantsredoAnother wonderful World War Two time capsule from Life Magazine at Turk and Market Streets along movie theater row;: Out of sight behind the Esquire Theater is where the Telenews Theater in the previous photo was.

VJParaderedoThe next series of pictures are from the Victory over Japan Day parade in August of 1945, and the San Francisco Giants first ever World Series Champions Parade in November of 2010. 7th & Market on VJ Day, and for the Giants Parade November 3rd 2010. Notice the Flood Building on the left side of Market, and the old Humboldt-Bank of America Building on the right side in both scenes. The brick streetcar island on the left in the modern picture is actually nearer to the center of Market Street for easier streetcar access. (Vintage footage by C.R. Skinner)

jonesredoThe old columned Hibernia Bank Building at Jones and Market Streets was a great place to watch both the VJ Day Parade and the 2010 Giants Parade. (Vintage footage by C.R. Skinner)

Watch the following series of pictures taken at McAllister and Market Streets. The girl in pink on the right doesn’t mind when her friend gets kissed, but when a sailor puts a cap on her head, bends her over and kisses her, she throws it back at him, angrily.

Girloneuse girltwouse girlthreeusegirlfourusegirlfiveuse Giants fans watching the 2010 parade at the same spot where the young lady in pink fought so valiantly for her honor, long ago: (Vintage footage by C.R. Skinner)

 

 

Time on the “Rock”(1)

rockdockuse

The landing dock on Alcatraz Island, used when it was a penitentiary is the same landing dock used by visitor’s today. All of the buildings up by the lighthouse were gutted by fire. They still line you up and give you instructions when you get off the boats today, but they’re a little nicer, and they don’t strip search you. Notice the train at the lower right. Some prisoners were considered so dangerous, the train they arrived in was drive right on to a barge and docked on the island before the prisoners left the heavily guarded train. (Thumbnail image)