History Of Downtown San Diego

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  • Опубликовано: 9 фев 2010
  • How did downtown San Diego become what it is today? In her continuing series "San Diego's Evolving Downtown," KPBS Metro reporter Katie Orr looks at a variety of influences on the city's urban core.

Комментарии • 35

  • @lisabullock7461
    @lisabullock7461 Год назад +2

    Use to go downtown alot on the bus with my Mom, from late 50s to early 70s. It was a great place to go exciting. Neon lights were everywhere. Lots of eating places and stores. The El Cortez also had a escalator across the street. Banks were beautiful. So many service men. If we we're lucky West take a cab home.

  • @brianchisnell1548
    @brianchisnell1548 3 года назад +4

    My Grandma's house was on the corner of 1st and Fir. Big 2 story with a basement apartment. Uncle Russ, (tv kid show) used to rent a room from her. My future Dad rented a room and met my Mom there. Jets flying over the house, you could see heads in the windows. The 1960's were special there for this little kid.

    • @kurtkensson2059
      @kurtkensson2059 3 года назад +2

      "Uncle Russ" is a name I haven't heard in a *long* time...

  • @tcraft88
    @tcraft88 12 лет назад +12

    Nice video! I actually learned a few things. I lived at the El Cortez in 2006...I didn't find it THAT "luxurious" as far as a place to live, but the lobby and reception areas were pretty elegant/modern looking.

  • @theoneilovemost
    @theoneilovemost 2 года назад +1

    I remember my mother showing me an old blueprint of what they had planned for the city of San Diego in the 1960s and 70s and it had Balboa Park extending all the way to current day Waterfront Park. I personally would like to see this vision revisited and more green areas brought to the city.

  • @billymulvaney880
    @billymulvaney880 6 лет назад +2

    I stayed here in 1974 while in the Navy it was a nice place to stay

  • @Idelia412
    @Idelia412 2 года назад +1

    I remember when San Diego back in 1968 had two movie theaters at the center of downtown when a friend and I came down from the L.A. and bummed around. I believe one was the Cabrillo, not sure of the other one next to it. They were open 24 hours a day showing triple features. These were up on Broadway on the right side near the center of town. At the lower end of Broadway was the Spreckels Theater, not sure if they kept this one as I have not been downtown San Diego since the late 1970's. I was stationed in the Navy for two years at Imperial Beach and would often come up and park at a parking lot at the bottom of Broadway and walk up to the theaters. There used to be a Coffee shop just before the two theaters which I think was the Belloc, but I might have the name wrong. It was on Broadway on the right side. I have noticed that a Mall was built back in the 1980's, not sure where, but it has pretty much died and had a wierd layout. I like old building, so hopefully many will be saved in downtow San Diego.

  • @williamschoemann4209
    @williamschoemann4209 2 года назад

    There has been so much new building in downtown. Although that has brought people and prosperity, what's left of the old must be saved. I'm glad the El Cortez has been saved by condoing it. I remember in my teens shopping in San Diego Hardware. Nobody had thought about inventing a tourist Gaslamp Quarter. Thank goodness the train station is still there. It's a landmark.

  • @HoldLeadersAccountable
    @HoldLeadersAccountable 11 лет назад

    nice thanks

  • @MrRandomola
    @MrRandomola 10 лет назад +6

    I was solely responsible for revitalizing downtown back in the 1980s.

    • @Dr.Pepper001
      @Dr.Pepper001 4 года назад

      It's Shake 'n Bake and I helped.

  • @dincrutcher
    @dincrutcher 6 лет назад +3

    Talking about the 1800's when I got there in 1977 it was like the 1800's again tell the real story.
    We rented a room in that Grand Hotel for next to nothing.
    Other sailors had other stories.
    Still San diego, Ca was great place to come up in my 20's.

  • @SooziinCa
    @SooziinCa 10 лет назад +2

    My father was an appraiser for "Percy H. Goodwin Real Estate Co." in the early 60's. I have fond memories of going into the downtown office on occasional weekends. My Dad would let me type on his state of the art "electric typewriter"! We'd have lunch @ WOOLWORTH'S, do some shopping, & we'd always see a movie @ "THE FOX"!

    • @jamescrow4078
      @jamescrow4078 7 лет назад +3

      Those were the days. I recall having lunch at Woolworth's downstairs on Saturdays in Mountain View "Mayfield Mall" back in the day. Grilled cheese sandwich, and chocolate ice cream shake. Pickle on the side.

    • @sandyy.8244
      @sandyy.8244 7 лет назад +2

      +Soozi inCa I remember PHG Co.... I worked there 13 years in the 60's to 70's... the office was in a bank building on 5th & Broadway (I think) and in 1966 moved to the 12th & 13th floors in a brand new building on 5th & B St. We used to lunch at Woolworths, Kresge's, and shop at Walker Scott. Real "good old days" and lots of nice memories. I have an old scrapbook of the men & women who worked there with me.... sadly most of them are gone now but I still remember all of their names.

    • @SooziinCa
      @SooziinCa 7 лет назад

      I remember the name Pete Peckham....................& the building, the huge marble entry & the elevators!!
      Percy H. would let their employees weekend/vacation @ their cabins in the Julian area (I think it was Julian). Many lovely & rustic cabins from the 30's- 40's! It was beautiful there. We went their many x's w/Peckham & his family. A crystal clear spring ran through the property, which we kids drank directly from (no giardia &/or bad microbes back then!!). I also remember a very kind man named "Stan". In 1967-68, my Dad became self-employed & moved us to NorCal. I guess those "cabin trips" made us yearn for the country! I'd be interested to know some of the names from your scrapbook, to see if I recall any. Thanks, you made me smile!!!!

    • @sandyy.8244
      @sandyy.8244 7 лет назад +1

      +Soozi inCa I remember Pete Peckham! Very sad when his teen daughter died in a car accident :( PHG used to have company picnics in the late 60's... at Big Oak Ranch I think. Some of the people I worked with and remember well: (these people are all deceased now) John Ward, Ken Marshall, Don Irwin, Bob Hall, Jim Martin, Fred Boysen, Richard Jester, Les Soland, Loraine Doster (my supervisor at one time), Jack Conover, Rosemary Ley. The following i'm not sure if deceased; they would be VERY old now if still living: Percy "Mike" Goodwin, Chip Goodwin, Ruth Fitzherbert, Alberta Dewley, Bob Crouch, Mike Ehrenfeld. The "Stan" you mentioned, was that Stan Wincote? I left PHG in 1974, and in the late 90's found he lived in Barstow CA in a retirement home... I visited him and was nice to reconnect and talk about old times. Mr Wincote died in 2001 at age 75; I went to his funeral. There are tons more names/photos in my scrapbook, hope those I showed here are folks you may have known & remember.

    • @SooziinCa
      @SooziinCa 7 лет назад +1

      I do remember Mike & Chip Goodwin! My father, Don Ferguson, passed away in 2011. He was 87. The Goodwin's were around the same age as my Pop. They were all young men back then, with young families. It was a great time to be a kid! I didn't hear about Pete's daughter.....TRAGIC! By that time we were well established in NorCal & my folks probably lost touch w/ the Peckhams. I ask my Mom what Stan's last name was..........Stan didn't work for PHG, he worked w/ my Grandfather @ Union Pacific! My Mom does remember's Alberta.
      My husband & I visited S.D. in 2010. We stopped by my childhood homes in "Birdland" on Finch & Seagull Lane. WOW, has S.D. grown up, but where hasn't!! Our once rural town is getting closer & closer to Sacramento, as it creeps up into the foothills!. I lost touch with my cousins, after my Uncle died in the late 80's (they lived on Delight St. in El Cajon, when E.C was a small, new sub-division, still in the country!). My sister & I have been trying to local our cousins, but to no avail........ANYWAY, thanks so much! It's been fun going down memory lane! I have a great life.....but, I do tell my husband that when I die, I'm going back to the 60's, when it was far less crowded! LOL!!

  • @milesgoodman6854
    @milesgoodman6854 5 лет назад +2

    You failed to show Broadway from First to India. The Seven Seas Centers was the dominant business and had as many, if not more customers than 4th and Broadway, to 12th st. I know. I was part of that innovative development which has been hopelessly ignored by the elegant, core business such as Marstons and Lyons!

  • @rockstariii5336
    @rockstariii5336 3 года назад +1

    I don't care much for sports but I am from San Diego and I know SD NFL fans want a football team. One that wins too

  • @101AOK
    @101AOK 13 лет назад

    I was instumental in helping downtown San Diego clean up down town San Diego in the early to mid 80's. THe company I worked for bought several locations downtown and turned them over to the city. I'd like to see the city STAY in the "Gas Lamp" mode and all history with it. There are SEVERAL buildings downtown that have the old metal ceilings coverd up by drywall and drop ceilings. It would be nice to renew them. Many are right on 5th where my office was...still is but hidden!

  • @auntmayme8119
    @auntmayme8119 3 года назад

    The video is very old. I grew up there and am quite familiar with the landmarks. I remember the Grant’s renovation; truly grand. And Gaslamp in the 1970’s. And yes, the Sky Room. The El Cortez at that time was the only place you could see the planes landing at the airport.

  • @dincrutcher
    @dincrutcher 6 лет назад

    I remember when the travelator the moving sidewalk was being removed I was doing some work there and
    there still was a smart restaurant there sat an old time hollywood star one of the kings of
    monster movies, John let's call him.
    I also had a chance to ride up to the penthouse and see some of the inside of that Old grand hotel.

  • @sheragroove
    @sheragroove 2 года назад

    So many untruths....Late 1800's San Diego was like so many Tartarian port cities....Elegant,grandiose, technogically advanced, with smalls canals running into the city from the ports. Mudflood buildings everywhere ; )

  • @BigBishop1
    @BigBishop1 11 лет назад

    where was the bull pen?

  • @kirkconway
    @kirkconway 11 лет назад

    mannn you got tha right
    down there on the corner of the end of building's by the RR track's,
    it was always a nice looking place.
    at least the pickwick hotel is still there thank God for that one,,, they redid the entryway but too aall the detail stuff out of it and now it looks like a plain ol sally rand hotel that could be anything instead of the classy place it was yrs ago.
    go to the st francis hotel orchestra youll see what im talking about
    total class yrs ago.

  • @markmace2113
    @markmace2113 6 лет назад +1

    I love you Ken Kramer

  • @kissngtheshadows
    @kissngtheshadows 11 лет назад

    Benedetti & Svoboda background music.

  • @losangelesmexicanmaster5119
    @losangelesmexicanmaster5119 7 лет назад +3

    Mexican.

  • @H4I2I2EE
    @H4I2I2EE 10 месяцев назад

    Invest in something that creates jobs/reduces homelessness, not the same BS that mostly serves to make rich people richer.

  • @kirkconway
    @kirkconway 12 лет назад +6

    darn develepers are ruining downtown and surrounding areas
    building silly loolking trendy condo's and taking too much space for needless building's that dont need to be there,
    dumb looking stainless and glass condo's dont need to be there.and ripping people off on high rent.
    san diego is ruining itself
    .

    • @619AGT
      @619AGT 5 лет назад

      Kirk Conway I couldn’t agree more. How can any real estate mogul expect that just anybody will ever pay for a high rent so easily these days?