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Second Sight: Remembering Some San Francisco Neighborhoods - 2. ii. A Two-fer – Lower Haight & Hayes Valley
.
ii.
A Two-fer –
Lower Haight & Hayes Valley
As the rain falls today, I think upon
An urban neighborhood designated
Lower Haight, which is not to be confused
With the famous, Upper – Hippy Realm – Haight,
So splendid with parks and open spaces.
For no, Lower Haight is concrete sidewalks,
Houses and a few scattered businesses.
The flowerbeds are few here, and the streets
Seem to roll up at night for outsiders,
But her shopping on Divisadero
Was once quite an experience for me.
For at the corner of Page Street I’d come
When a choice holiday-mandated cut
Was needed for a special occasion.
It was here I’d come to buy the rib roast
We’d have that one Thanksgiving in Oakland,
Which, besides a twenty-four-pound turkey,
I’d cook for Keiji and Sal’s collection
Of saint and sinner guests at their Turkey
Day extravaganza of characters
Suitable for one hell of a Queer play.
And without this Page Street ‘meat market,’ we
Wouldn’t have had roast beef that holiday,
For among the very first things I’d done,
After my moving to San Francisco,
Was to borrow my friend’s Yellow Pages
And let my fingers do the walking to
Find listings for the city’s butcher shops. [i]
To my sobering grasp of just the type
Of place I’d relocated to, I found
There was not one butcher shop left in town:
The hollow, “Everything’s Frozen” words of
“See ‘Meat Markets’,” sure made my blood run chill.
And so to Page Street I’d go to buy my
Veal sweetbreads, because even the frozen
Was preferable to going without.
And speaking of culinary delights,
Further up Divisadero was where
I’d discovered a remarkable shop:
A place with antique cooking implements.
Round about the walls stood imported French
Black-iron and brass baking racks like those
All the boulangeries display their goods.
Only here, they were recruited to hold
Plates and molds – dinnerware and stemware too –
From two hundred years of San Francisco
Kitchens, dining rooms, pantries and hotels.
But my magpie eyes were drawn to the molds,
For she had tons of 19th century
Vessels of copper, tin and clay to serve
Formed desserts of ice cream, jelly and such.
More than a few of her items walked home
With me over the years from her business,
But I never bought that huge turbotière
I had my eye on for the longest time.
However, when I’d stroll home from this shop,
I never failed to stop at the nearby
Wholesale storefront opened to the public,
For here, a Palestinian family
Dealt in the bulk distribution of nuts;
Turkish dried apricots; the genuine
Golden raisins known as sultanas;
Figs of every hue – their so delicious
Whole-wheat fruit ‘Newtons’ as well – along with
Any number of other dried items.
Their bins were arranged in aisles, and you
Simply scooped the weight you wanted to buy.
In addition to these, the store kept stocked
Refrigerated cases on one wall,
For they also imported much cheese
– From France, Spain, England, Germany, and such –
And in the days before supermarkets
Got swank with the varieties they sell,
The Lower Haight already had it all!
And another store unique to this ‘hood,
Still open to this day, I’m pleased to say,
Lives on Haight Street proper, near to Duboce,
And offers costumes to rent, buy or sell.
It’s here I let the dress one Halloween
I hosted as Queen Marie-Antoinette.
And being close to Duboce Park in mind
Puts me in mind of house-shopping there once.
Our friends Bob and Jose had decided
To take the leap from renters to owners,
And wanted the four of us to move in.
Naturally, it wasn’t a bad idea,
But meant the building needed to allow
For duo family living arrangements.
One Saturday, we went to see a house
Steps from the park on Carmelita Street,
Which clever town planners had cul-de-sac’d
‘Gainst the grassy edge of the park itself.
The layout of this single-family home,
Unfortunately, proved unworkable
For two couples to make it comfortable.
We were soon to move to Noe Valley,
While our friends went to buy in Hayes Valley,
And their investment proved fortuitous.
A non-descript place when they moved there,
Hayes Valley took off as the trendiest
Neighborhood for the rich to take over.
Yet, far from complaining, I saw a switch
As if on a light bulb being turned on,
And gentrification opened new stores
Of the best Gay pop-‘n-pop description.
One couple then opened “Alabaster”,
And the gift of a stone pencil holder,
Which Jose gave me one Christmas, is still
Holding pride of place on my desk today.
An interesting shop, where its name told one
To expect calcite and Carrara things
To predominate, which they did in spades.
There were those carved marble end-table lamps,
Considered tacky when I was a kid,
For sale for hundreds of dollars apiece,
And alabaster bowls for your waxed fruit,
And little figurines to hold your rings:
All so trendy with Hayes’ newcomers.
But just around the corner from them lived
A store owned by another male couple.
Both in their twenties, one of them was French,
And their shop contained merchandise brought from
All the local Parisian flea markets
The one partner grew up with as a kid.
To say this store could provide the best type
Of rummage would be putting it mildly.
You’d never know what you’d find there, and what
Better excuse did one need to go back?
But alas, all such shops are closed there now,
And even the mega-brunch establishment
Directly across from Alabaster
At Hayes and Laguna Streets has closed down:
A victim to pandemic restrictions.
But in my mind’s eye, I can easily
People the sidewalks round it with tables,
And with the long, snaking line of hungry
Don’t-know-how-to-cook-at-homes just itching
To get in and dig into their waffles.
Yes, they’ll always be there in my memory
– Come here any Saturday or Sunday –
Seated at their cozy, two-fer tables
To enjoy their up-and-come neighborhood.
[i] “Yellow Pages” – in the days before the Internet, American Telephone and Telegraph (AT&T) – the one and only government-sanctioned provider of telephony service in the U.S. – published yearly books with every telephone number printed for the region covered. These came in two types, the “White Pages” for residential and governmental phone numbers, listed alphabetically by name, and the “Yellow Pages,” where commercial enterprises were grouped by categories. Therefore, if you wished to call and order flowers, you went to the alphabetically listed section headed “Florists.” Many businesses also elected to buy ad space close to their Yellow Pages listing.
AT&T advertised the benefits of companies investing in Yellow Pages ads with the slogan “Let Your Fingers Do the Walking,” meaning, the consumer could save time by looking in the telephone book first.
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Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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