Come To The Water

A portion of the hull and the rudder of the ship NIANTIC.
On permanent exhibit in the Maritime Museum is a portion of the hull and the rudder of the ship NIANTIC, which was beached at Montgomery Street during the Gold Rush and become a store and hotel. The vessel housed the boot shop of abolitionists.

NPS

Subscribe RSS Icon | What is RSS
News Release Date: January 6, 2012

Contact: John Cunnane, 415-561-7049

Teaching San Francisco Black History
A discussion for Black History Month -- African-Americans during the California Spanish Era and the Civil War
Monday, January 23, 2012, from 2-4pm in the Maritime Museum
Tuesday, January 24, 2012, from 2-4pm aboard ship Balclutha at Hyde Street Pier


SAN FRANCISCO -- The San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park hosts a two-day program Come to the Water: Teaching San Francisco Black History, a discussion for Black History Month -- African-Americans during the California Spanish era and the Civil War -- focusing on the local African-Americans who played a little-known, but significant role in the events leading up to and including the Civil War.

Day 1: The Maritime Museum (located in the Aquatic Park Bathhouse Building, at the corner of Beach and Polk Streets in San Francisco), hosts the program focusing on local blacks during the California Spanish era at 2:00 p.m. on Monday, January 23. The program is for all ages and admission is free.

Day 2: Historic sailing ship Balclutha (located at Hyde Street Pier, enter at Hyde and Jefferson streets) hosts the program focusing on local blacks during the Civil War at 2:00 p.m. on Tuesday, January 24. The program is for all ages and admission is free.

Light refreshments will be served at both programs.

Leading the discussion will be historian John William Templeton, author of Come to the Water: Sharing the Rich Black Experience in San Francisco, a new textbook designed for education and reference use, and Park Ranger Guy Washington, the National Park Service's Pacific West Region coordinator of the National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom.

At the Monday program at the Maritime Museum visitors will also get the opportunity to view the recently renovated Aquatic Park Bathhouse Building, which has several features relevant to the city's African-American heritage. A fresco over the front entrance and mosaics along the rear wall as well as

other smaller artwork throughout the building were created by the African-American sculptor Sargent Claude Johnson, when the building was erected in the late 1930s. Johnson worked for the Federal Arts Project during the Great Depression. Additionally, the first floor permanent exhibits include a portion of the hull and the rudder of the ship Niantic, which was beached at Montgomery Street during the Gold Rush and become a store and hotel. The vessel housed the boot shop of abolitionists Mifflin Gibbs and Peter Lester, where an incident contributed to the start of the movement known as the Black Exodus of 1858.

The Tuesday program aboard Balclutha will include a ranger-led chantey program focusing on African American contributions to sea music. For more stories about local African American maritime history click on https://www.nps.gov/safr/historyculture/africanamericanhistory.htm

Templeton, also author of the four volume Our Roots Run Deep: the Black Experience in California, will describe for parents, educators and students a set of 35 lesson plans designed to infuse Black History Month into daily classroom activities from February 1 through March 5, which is designated as Black American Day in California schools in recognition of the death of Crispus Attucks in the Boston Massacre in 1770. The plans were originally developed as part of the Gold Rush Abolitionists exhibition designed for the Legislative Black Caucus after the Historic State Capitol Museum staff in Sacramento discovered the original copy of the California adoption of the 13th Amendment.

In 2008, Templeton conducted research for a keynote to the California Council for the Social Studies that indicated that fewer than ten percent of California social science teachers were familiar with key facts about African-American history in California and the West. In February and March Templeton will be conducting fourteen sessions at local historic sites, including organizations dating from 1852, which played a key role in the Underground Railroad to Freedom and still continue to this day. For more information about the series see http://www.californiablackhistory.com. Later on January 23, at 6:00 p.m., Templeton will screen the documentary The King Behind King, Bridges, Chaves and Mandela at the Plumbers Hall for the San Francisco Labor Council.
 
San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park includes a fleet of historic ships, the Maritime Museum, a Visitor Center, the Aquatic Park Historic District, and a maritime library. The park offers both regular programs and special events. For more information, call 415-447-5000 or visit the park's website at https://www.nps.gov/safr.

# # #  1-5-2012                        



Last updated: March 1, 2015

Park footer

Contact Info

Mailing Address:

2 Marina Boulevard,
Building E, 2nd Floor

San Francisco, CA 94123

Phone:

415 561-7000
The public information office is open from 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. PST.

Contact Us