Grant Avenue
Former name(s) | Calle de la Fundacion,[citation needed] Dupont Avenue |
---|---|
Location | San Francisco, California |
Postal code | 94108 |
Coordinates | 37°47′51″N 122°24′25″W / 37.79748°N 122.40692°W |
Construction | |
Inauguration | 1845[citation needed] |
Grant Avenue in San Francisco, California is one of the oldest streets in the city's Chinatown district. It runs in a north-south direction starting at Market Street in the heart of downtown and dead-ending past Francisco Street in the North Beach district. It resumes at North Point Street and stretches one block to The Embarcadero and the foot of Pier 39.
Grant Avenue is primarily a one-way street; automobile traffic can only travel northbound. In 2012, however, the two blocks of Grant Avenue between Sutter Street and Geary Boulevard were converted to two way traffic in order to ease southbound traffic congestion during the multi-year closure of Stockton Street, part of the construction plan for the Central Subway.
History
When California came under the control of the United States following the Mexican-American War, the street now called Grant was named Dupont Avenue, in honor of a Naval admiral from the USS Portsmouth (Portsmouth Square, located one block east, was named after that ship). In the following years, Dupont Avenue became the location for various opium dens, brothels, and Tong wars.[citation needed]
When San Francisco was rebuilt after being leveled in the 1906 earthquake, Dupont Street was upgraded and given a new name: Grant Avenue, after President Ulysses S. Grant.
Today, the intersection of Grant Avenue and Bush Street marks the southern entrance to Chinatown. Grant Avenue is still written and said in Chinese as "Dupont Gai" (都板街, Gai 街 means street), and in a play on this name there had been a restaurant on the avenue called "Dupont Thai," now Henry's Hunan Chinese restaurant.
References
This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2010) |
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