The radical history of ’80s San Francisco, in photos
- Text by Miss Rosen
- Photography by Janet Delaney
San Francisco in the ’80s was a study in contrasts. As the shadows of gentrification began to creep over the heart of the city, just South of Market, the people of the Mission took to the streets to protest the policies coming out of the Reagan White House.
During this time, American photographer Janet Delaney was at the centre of it all, capturing the spirit of public life in parades and protests, performances and beauty pageants. In her new book, Public Matters (MACK Books), Delaney delves deep into her archive to reflect upon the incredible impact of mass gatherings organised to serve the greater good.
At the time, the Mission was a predominantly Latinx neighborhood, made up of recent immigrants from El Salvador, Nicaragua, and Honduras who were fleeing wars and conflicts that had come about as a result of U.S. involvement. “In the 1980s, San Francisco was exploding with immigrants, not just from Central America but from Russia and Asia as well,” Delaney remembers.
“What I am trying to do in this book is acknowledge and celebrate the importance and presence of people from all the world in our communities and how being on the street is made all the richer by diversity. The Mission was a mix of all these different countries and creating a new way of being. The Day of the Dead Festival not only honoured your ancestors but protesting the wars of the Reagan administration.”
In Delaney’s photographs, we return to a San Francisco that once was: a people politicised against the establishment in a fight for survival. “The thing about Reagan was that he had a velvet glove,” she says. “He had a smooth way of being. The basis in where we are now is founded in what happened under Reagan.”
“Jimmy Carter had solar panels on the White House, and then Reagan took them off. If we had been able to follow some basic future that was being laid out in the ’70s, we would be in much better condition right now. But the corporate-lead that Reagan ushered in, and solidified by joining forces with the religious right, took the country in a different direction.”
The people of San Francisco chose to respond the best way they knew how, gathering together on the streets to amplify their voices and draw attention to the cause. “San Francisco was very savvy in responding. The protest against Nicaragua was constant and persistent, and the protests for women’s rights were a regular event.”
“I still go to marches – I am still out there. There is a sense of support, of knowing you are not alone, of trying to make a big enough noise so that you will be heard outside of your immediate community. I think change happens in so many ways. It doesn’t just happen in the legislature, it happens in the hearts and minds one by one where it becomes a gathering, a stream, a river of cultural change. It is possible: I saw it with the Vietnam War.”
Public Matters is available on MACK Books.
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