|
Elizabeth Pepin,
co-author (with Lewis Watts),
Harlem
of the West:
The San Francisco Fillmore Jazz Era
________________________________________
Billie Holiday singing at the New Orleans Swing Club.
Dexter Gordon hanging out at Bop City. Dizzy Gillespie, Lionel Hampton, Charlie
Parker, John Coltrane all swinging through town for gigs. Sound like a nostalgic
snapshot from the New York jazz scene, or perhaps New Orleans? Nope. This
particular sentimental journey describes San Francisco's Fillmore District
in its heyday.
The Fillmore in the 1940's and 1950's was an eclectic,
integrated, and hopping neighborhood dotted with restaurants, pool halls,
theaters, and shops many minority-owned and boasting two dozen
active nightclubs and music joints within its one square mile. Although it
has been commemorated in songs, poems, and in Maya Angelou's I Know Why
the Caged Bird Sings, few people today know of the rich history of the
Fillmore and its musical legacy because it vanished abruptly and so thoroughly
due to redevelopment in the 1960s.
Through dozens of archival photographs and oral accounts
from the neighborhood residents and musicians who experienced it at its height,
Harlem of the West celebrates this unique and rediscovered chapter
in jazz history and the African-American experience on the West
Coast.#
In an August 16, 2006 interview, Elizabeth Pepin, who
along with co-author Lewis Watts wrote Harlem of the West, talks with
Jerry Jazz Musician contributing writer Adrienne Wartts about the Fillmore's
history as the San Francisco Bay area's jazz and cultural center.
*
A
photo essay follows the interview.
_____
All photographs published with the consent of Elizabeth Pepin
photo Steve Jackson, Jr.
John Handy, Pony Poindexter, John Coltrane and Frank Fischer at Bop City,
c. 1950's
*
"During the musical heyday of the Fillmore District in the 1940s and 1950s,
the area known as Harlem of the West was a swinging place where you could
leave your house Friday night and go from club to party to bar until the
wee hours of Monday morning. For more than two decades, music played
nonstop in more than a dozen clubs where Young Turks from the neighborhood
could mix with seasoned professionals and maybe even get a chance to jump
onstage to prove their musical mettle. Filling out the streets in the
twenty-square-block area were restaurants, pool halls, theaters, and stores,
many of them owned and run by African Americans, Japanese Americans, and
Filipino Americans. The entire neighborhood was a giant multi-cultural
party throbbing with excitement and music."
- Elizabeth Pepin
_____
Some Other Spring
, by Billie Holiday, 1939
________________________________________
AW Your book jacket describes San Francisco's
Fillmore District during the forties and fifties as "a swinging, eclectic,
and integrated neighborhood, its streets full of restaurants, pool halls,
theaters, and stores -- many minority-owned." Can you talk about the development
of African American owned businesses between the 1906 earthquake and the
advent of World War II?
EP Before the 1906 earthquake, the African
American community in San Francisco was actually growing, and there was even
a tiny middle class as African Americans were able to find employment. However,
after the quake, many of the city's labor unions got together and basically
barred anyone of color from working in the hotels, downtown offices, or within
a building trade. As a result, San Francisco's African American population
stopped growing, and many moved across the Bay to Oakland because they were
able to find work on the railroads, which were located in the East Bay. Because
of this, San Francisco's African American population was around five thousand
up until World War II, which was extremely small for a major U.S. city.
| World War II brought thousands and thousands of African Americans from
states such as Louisiana, Texas and Oklahoma to the West Coast. They were
recruited by ship building companies like Kaiser, who were contracted by
the government for war-related work. This work is the predominant reason
for the large African American community that exists in the San Francisco
Bay Area today. While the number of businesses owned by African Americans
between the earthquake and World War II was small, there was enough of a
community presence that, during the 1920's, the community got together and
built the Booker T. Washington Community Center, located on the outskirts
of the Fillmore District.
The first jazz scene in San Francisco was in the Barbary Coast area, near
what is now known as North Beach. Several of the clubs were actually owned
by African Americans -- Jelly Roll Morton being one of them. The clubs catered
to both African Americans and whites, and spawned several new dances which
became nation-wide dance crazes. The Barbary Coast and the jazz clubs were
closed down in the late teens, due to a crackdown on vice. While there were
some jazz clubs scattered around San Francisco in the 1920's, there was not
another jazz center until the birth of the Fillmore jazz scene, which began
in 1933, with the opening of Jack's Tavern; the first Black owned jazz club
in the Fillmore District. Jack's Tavern was also known as Jack's of Sutter
due to its location on Sutter Street. Soon after, the Town Club and the Club
Alabam opened, and the Fillmore Jazz Scene was born. |
San Francisco's "Barbary Coast,"Pacific Street, c.
1910
_____
The Pearls
, by Jelly Roll Morton, 1923
|
photo Red Powell/Reggie Pettus collection
Inside Jack's Tavern, 1950's
_____
Four
or Five Times , by Lionel Hampton, c. 1939
|
AW What were the Fillmore clubs like?
EP The early Fillmore clubs tended to serve
meals in the front and the stages were in the back, and all of them were
surprisingly small. The most popular at the time was Jack's of Sutter, which
was owned by an African American family. While her third husband opened the
venue, Lenna Morrell really ran the place -- unusual for that era. Jack's
mainly featured jazz music, and many of the local San Francisco musicians
got their start there. The bass player Vernon Alley was discovered by Lionel
Hampton while playing at Jack's of Sutter in 1939.
The Club Alabam' was described as more of a "down home" kind of place. It
was actually opened in 1935 by Lester Mapp, the former owner of a club called
Purcell's, which was one of the most popular clubs in the Barbary Coast.
Mapp was from Barbados who came to San Francisco as a sailor on a boat, and
then never left. He also owned some clubs in Oakland. The Town Club was one
of the smallest Fillmore clubs -- opened in 1936, and generally featured
only trios or duos due to it's size.
AW Were the owners of these jazz clubs African
Americans?
EP They didn't necessarily own the building,
but they usually owned the businesses within them, which is surprising in
itself. |
| AW Did jazz contribute to the breakdown
of racial tension in San Francisco after the war?
EP Yes, and I think it did even before the
war. This book had to rely on oral histories because, in general, very little
was written about African Americans in San Francisco. Many of the musicians
I interviewed said that African American's weren't allowed to play in the
major downtown clubs or in any of the clubs east of Van Ness Avenue until
the late fifties. Now, if you were Duke Ellington or another prominent African
American musician, you could play at the big hotel downtown, but even Duke
Ellington couldn't stay there -- he'd have to get in a cab and go back to
the Fillmore District to spend the night. Additionally, none of his African
American friends from the Fillmore could go and see him play in the downtown
hotel, so after his downtown gigs, Ellington and other musicians of his caliber
would play at the smaller clubs in the Fillmore for their own community.
As a result, the Fillmore became a hotbed for African American music. The
white musicians who were into hearing jazz would come to the Fillmore clubs,
which led to them eventually jamming with the African American musicians.
The police were not particularly happy about this form of integration, however,
and there were many raids on the Fillmore clubs during the forties and fifties.
|
photo Steve Jackson, Jr.
Duke Ellington (seated at center) in the Manor Plaza Hotel, c.
1950's
_____
A Tone Parallel To Harlem
, by the Duke Ellington Orhestra,
1952 |
photo Wesley Johnson, Jr., collection
A Japanese American wedding in the Fillmore |
AW What about the race relations between
the Asian and the African American jazz musicians and club owners? How
did jazz affect their relationship?
EP Japanese Americans made up the predominant
Asian community in the Fillmore neighborhood, although there were small Chinese
and Filipino communities. Apparently everyone got along very well. However,
most of the clubs were attended by African Americans during World War II,
mainly because the Japanese Americans were sent to internment camps, and
any businesses they owned were sold or completely shut down and the spaces
were leased out, usually to the new African Americans residents.
Following the war there was some mild tension between the returning Japanese
Americans and African Americans because of the major changes in the make-up
of Fillmore, but for the most part, everyone got along, and a few Japanese
American musicians even began playing in the Fillmore clubs.
AW Did the Fillmore District become well known
to the musicians who made their living primarily on the East Coast?
EP The Fillmore became part of the circuit
in which jazz musicians played when they came to the West Coast. There isn't
a jazz musician I can think of who didn't play in the Fillmore during that
era, and some of them even stayed for a while. However, I don't think there
was a "San Francisco" or "Fillmore" sound. Dave Brubeck played in the Fillmore
jazz clubs at times, and while his music was indicative of West Coast Jazz,
he wasn't really part of the Fillmore scene. |
photo Wesley Johnson, Jr. collection
Billie Holiday and Wesley Johnson, Sr., at the Club Flamingo, c. early
1950's
_____
Say It Isn't So
, by Billie Holiday, 1955
|
photo San Francisco Redevelopment Agency
Demolition of Fillmore, mid 1950's
*
photo San Francisco Redevelopment Agency
Redevelopment, Fillmore Street, mid-1950s
_____
Bye Bye Blackbird
, by Miles Davis, 1955
|
AW Redevelopment in the form of urban
renewal eventually destroyed the Fillmore community
EP Urban renewal was the major reason for
the community's demise, but not the only one. The Fillmore had some of the
oldest houses in San Francisco -- many of them were built in the late 1880's
and early 1890's as single-family homes. While it had always been among the
most ethnically diverse neighborhoods west of the Mississippi, it was known
primarily in the Bay area as a Jewish community until the 1920's. When the
racial covenants preventing Jews from owning property in the suburbs were
lifted in the late twenties and early thirties, they moved out of the city
but continued to own the property they vacated. I understand that a majority
of the homes in the Fillmore throughout this period and into the fifties
were owned by absent landlords. Also, because of the Depression no one had
the money to improve the housing. Then, during World War II, because the
racial covenants prevented African Americans from living in many Bay Area
neighborhoods, thousands poured into the Fillmore. The population grew from
five-thousand to almost fifty-thousand during the war years, causing these
single family homes to be divided into rooming houses, with tons of people
crowded into small places. It made the housing situation even more rundown,
although the area thrived during the war.
After World War II, the African American community suffered a great deal
because of layoffs. Many of the soldiers were coming home from the war and
returning to the jobs African Americans held in their absence. People of
color were being laid off, creating unemployment issues in the neighborhood.
While the idea of urban redevelopment was being kicked around as early as
the twenties, it didn't get very far because of the Depression, and then
the war. Once the war was over, the federal government began pushing for
it, and projects began taking place in all the major cities of the country,
San Francisco being one of them. The Fillmore was actually the second project
the San Francisco Redevelopment Agency set their sights on -- the first one
was in the Embarcadero area of downtown, which was quite successful mainly
because the area primarily consisted of old warehouses. Since there was very
little housing, all they had to do was bulldoze the warehouse area over and
build shops and housing.
The Fillmore was a different situation, because it was a huge neighborhood
in which people lived, and very little thought was given to where the people
displaced by urban renewal would move. The Redevelopment Agency claimed that
all Fillmore residents would be relocated into the new homes once they were
re-built, but this is not what happened. Instead, once these residents left,
they were pretty much gone for good. No one was about to hang around for
a couple of years while their neighborhood was being put back together --
they had to get on with their lives. Another problem was that many of the
people who lived in the Fillmore were renters, and the Redevelopment Agency
did not feel they had any rights or say in the matter since they were not
property owners. |
AW Was there a crime problem in the Fillmore
during this time?
EP There was a bit of a crime problem because
of the high unemployment during the late forties and early fifties, but I
didn't find any evidence of a huge problem which was hyped up in local
newspapers. The neighborhood became a target of newspaper articles that told
of its overcrowding, often being referred to as a slum. These articles were
ridiculous, National Enquirer-type exposes on people living in the
neighborhood. In one story, a woman and her five children were described
as "dirty, wearing ragged clothing, having runny noses, being school dropouts",
and that kind of thing. These stories reinforced the idea that the Fillmore
District needed to be "wiped away" and started over with a clean slate.
However, the people in the neighborhood didn't feel that way at all. From
their perspective, living in the Fillmore was a wonderful experience, where
people of color could own their own homes, the numbers of African American-owned
businesses and social clubs was rising, and music was everywhere.
| AW The photographs in your book fully
capture what you just described. It seemed to be a great district, one full
of life and opportunity. The redevelopment process certainly changed that.
EP Yes, it did. But it wasn't just Redevelopment;
popular music changed -- rock n' roll came along -- so the interest in jazz
began to drop. Redevelopment caused people of all colors to leave the city.
Today, it seems as if everyone wants to live in the city of San Francisco,
but during this earlier period, people wanted to escape it and move to the
suburbs. Refurbishing the city wasn't what people thought about, instead,
they wanted to just tear it all down.
The neighborhood probably would have changed regardless of redevelopment,
but I do think it removed the heart and soul from the neighborhood. The old
Victorian homes that were so unlike any others in the city were removed,
replaced by poorly built one-and-two-bedroom apartments. And, because the
process of redevelopment removed the people, the neighborhood businesses
that remained couldn't survive. About fifteen years ago, real estate agents
renamed a part of the Fillmore -- one of the only parts which was not bulldozed
by Redevelopment, -- "Lower Pacific Heights," to connect it to the more affluent
Pacific Heights neighborhood just a few blocks away. This part of the Fillmore
has become very affluent, while in other parts of the neighborhood, poorer
residents live in public assistance housing which is what Redevelopment put
up after removing all the Victorians. Its present form is a very strange
dichotomy between rich and poor. The rather sad irony is that the very thing
Redevelopment tried to fix -- run-down housing and overcrowding --
is the legacy of Redevelopment today, while the Victorian houses, which
Redevelopment tried to get rid of because they considered it poor housing,
are worth a lot of money and mainly owned by wealthy individuals.
The Agency has made many attempts to bring back the jazz clubs, but this
has not met with much success. It will be interesting to see what happens
to the neighborhood once the jazz history center, Yoshi's Jazz Club, and
several restaurants open in mid-2007. While the Redevelopment Agency can't
bring back what they tore away, it is my hope that a new, but smaller jazz
scene can once again thrive in what was once known as "Harlem of the West." |
The Fillmore, c. 1940's
*
One block from Fillmore Street in Lower Pacific Heights, 2006
_____
Bohemia After Dark
, by Cannonball Adderley, 1959 |
________________________________________
photo by Jerry Stoll
Paul Gonsalves of Duke Ellington's orchestra at Bop City, 1950's, with Flip Nunez on piano
_____
Over The Rainbow
, by Paul Gonsalves
Harlem
of the West:
The San Francisco Fillmore Jazz Era
by Elizabeth Pepin and Lewis Watts
_____
Editors Note:
An exhibit called "Harlem of the West," curated by authors Elizabeth Pepin
and Lewis Watts, has been picked up by the Smithsonian Institution and will
be traveling around the country for the next three years. Please contact
the Smithsonian Traveling Exhibits for details and museum locations.
Watch footage of Lowell
Fulson playing at The Blue Mirror in the Fillmore.
_____
About the Authors
Elizabeth Pepin is a photographer, public television producer, and former
manager at the historic Fillmore Auditorium. She lives in San Francisco.
Lewis Watts is a photographer and professor of art at the University of
California, Santa Cruz, with a long-standing interest in African-American
history in the San Francisco Bay Area.
_____
Elizabeth Pepin products at Amazon.com
_______________________________
This interview took place on August 16, 2006
*
If you enjoyed this interview, you may want to read our interview with Times Square historian Anthony Bianco, author of Ghosts of 42nd Street: A History of America's Most Infamous Block.
_______________________________
Other
Jerry Jazz Musician interviews
# Text from publisher.
Photo Essay
A collection of selected photographs and excerpts from the book:
Harlem
of the West:
The San Francisco Fillmore Jazz Era
by Elizabeth Pepin and Lewis Watts
All photographs published with the consent of Elizabeth Pepin
|
The Majestic Hall (later known as the Majestic Ballroom and the Fillmore
Auditorium)
Geary at Fillmore, 1914
*
"The earthquake and fire of April 1906 changed the course of the city
forever. With most of downtown in ruins, the closest area left relatively
untouched happened to be the Fillmore."
- Elizabeth Pepin and Lewis Watts
|
photo by David Johnson
Outside the Dog House Bar, late 1940's
*
"African Americans had been living in the Fillmore District since before
the earthquake, but their numbers were quite small. Racism in employment
and a ban on nonwhites by nearly all labor unions kept San Francisco's Black
population from growing..."
- Elizabeth Pepin and Lewis Watts
|
photo by David Johnson
Melrose Record Shop, 1226 Fillmore Street, 1947
*
"World War II dramatically changed the face of the Fillmore. By
the 1950 census, San Francisco's Black population had exploded to 42,520,
due to the many African Americans from the South who were encouraged to come
to the West Coast to work in the shipyards."
- Elizabeth Pepin and Lewis Watts
|
photo by Steve Jackson Jr.
Sammy Davis, Jr. at Bop City, c. 1950s
*
"The neighborhood was very music-oriented...You could walk down Fillmore
Street and see all kinds of clubs lined up one behind the other, and the
musicians could gig all the time. I mean, just music out of the doors,
windows, people's houses. It was just music, music, music."
- Blues singer Sugar Pie Desanto |
Louis Armstrong and wife in front of Bop City, 1950s
*
"It was a great, great time. I would say it was Harlem. And
I say that because Sammy Davis Jr., Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald, Miles
Davis, they all fell into San Francisco like the artists that I read about
that would fall into New York. It was the way many people wrote about
the renaissance in Harlem. That was what Fillmore Street was
like in those days. It had to be the closest thing to Harlem outside
of New York."
- Former San Francisco mayor Willie Brown |
photo collection of Wesley Johnson Jr.
Wesley Johnson Sr. and T-Bone Walker inside the Texas Playhouse,
1950s
*
"Music in the Fillmore was organic. In the air. It was from
the community and belonged to the community...It was exciting and even as
a child, I always wanted to know what was happening there."
- Musician Wayne Wallace |
photo by Steve Jackson Jr.
Pony Poindexter and Leo Wright at Bop City, 1950s
*
"I did not live in the Fillmore, but I was getting introduced to the
happenings there when I was in high school. The Fillmore had all these
little places, these little clubs, these eating joints or chicken houses.
All had some sort of music going. They would have their doors
and windows open and would be blaring the music out into the street."
- Musician Federico Cervantes |
photo by David Johnson
Bass player on the floor of the Primalon Ballroom, 1950s
*
"The Fillmore club scene was a mixture. You'd go in one club, maybe
the Sportsman, and they'd be doing blues and jazz. You'd go down the
street, and they'd be doing jazz. Then another place would be records.
You could just go from one end of the neighborhood to the other, and
every block had a club. If you were a musician and needed a gig, you
just went to the Fillmore. You could make a living."
- Sugar Pie Desanto |
photo by Steve Jackson Jr.
1940s patrons of the Texas Playhouse
*
"We came out full dressed. Suits and nice hats. Dressed to
kill! You didn't go to the clubs during those days looking hoochie
coochie. Hats, minks, whatever -- everybody dressed up."
- Sugar Pie Desanto |
photo by Steve Jackson Jr.
Dexter Gordon at Bop City, 1950s
*
"One night I saw Dexter Gordon leaving the New Orleans Swing Club, walking
across the street toward a bank to get into a car. I thought he was
the most handsome man in the world. And dressed! His clothes
were so tailored and beautiful. He had an incredible top coat on.
But at the same time, it wasn't a big deal. You'd see famous
people all dressed up walking around the Fillmore all the time. I saw
Duke Ellington in the Fillmore. Miles Davis in the Fillmore. Dizzy
Gillespie was in the Fillmore. You name them, they were there. It
was a big party, and you never slept. We were young and anxious! One
of the best times of my life."
- Musician Allen Smith |
photo collection of John Goddard
Sugar Pie Desanto, 1958
*
"I used to come up to the Fillmore from Los Angeles, looking for talent.
I found a lot of musicians and singers that way. It was fertile
ground."
- Musician Johnny Otis |
photo by David Johnson
In front of the Fillmore Street Cleaners, 1950s
*
"When I came back to the Fillmore, there were some other piano players
on the scene, but I wasn't impressed with them. Jimbo let me come back
whenever I wanted, but a lot of places, like the Plantation Club, had closed.
Bop City and Jack's of Sutter were the only ones left. I think
integration started it, being able to go into the clubs where you couldn't
go before, or you could play there but you couldn't go in through the front
door to sit down. A lot of the players who had been around for ten
years or more started getting into drugs. Plus, the Redevelopment Agency
started tearing down a lot of the apartments. Because of all this,
a lot of African Americans were leaving the Fillmore."
- Federico Cervantes |
photo San Francisco Redevelopment Agency
Demolition of Fillmore, mid 1950s
*
"When redevelopment began, the vibrant community I knew, my friends, my
whole world, started to change. I used to look down the street and
see nothing but Victorians. And then, at one point, you'd leave in
the morning and there would be a bulldozer parked in front of some buildings,
and by the time you came back from school, the houses weren't there anymore.
Block by block, gone. Totally leveled."
- Community activist Steve Nakajo |
photo San Francisco Redevelopment Agency
Redevelopment, Fillmore Street, mid-1950s
*
"It was very traumatic to see it all go away. We all made a living
playing music, and all we did was play our music, and then it was gone. I
don't know why you would think this, but you kind of think it's going to
go on forever."
- Musician Earl Watkins |
photo by David Johnson
Dancing at a Fillmore nightclub, late 1940s
*
"I think that the people who wanted to redevelop the Western Addition
saw the commercial value of the space. It was centrally located; the
dividing line between downtown and the Avenues in every sense of the word.
I think they saw land and they had to clear the land, and the only
way to clear the land was to use the tools of government to achieve that
goal. You look at the results and it does appear to be 'Black Removal,'
but I think the motivation was pure commercial greed. But it was
devastating to the Black community. The churches began to lose populations.
The black businesses, which had been viable, wonderful, and productive,
were totally destroyed. The entertainment world for African Americans
virtually ceased to exist in San Francisco. The great life that was
Harlem-ish for us was destroyed by the redevelopment process. It was
a blow to African Americans. A blow from which we frankly have never
really recovered."
- Willie Brown |
|