Have always loved visiting the park when we go there, it holds some of my favorite memories and yet I had never heard about how it was created! Thanks so much for sharing this fascinating history!
@LindaSolis-b9s8 ай бұрын
Oh I love Golden Gate Park, and I love San Francisco! Such a beautiful city with so many nice areas. When I was in college, a teacher of mine lived right next to the park and we used to visit often. The zoo is there too- closer to the ocean. And the gorgeous ocean beach! Thanks so much for sharing, Alex. - Linda 😀🥰
@everettfryman10248 ай бұрын
Thank you Alex, for this absolutely fantastic and loving salute to the gem of the Bay Area. As a fan of inspired horticulture, Golden Gate Park is an absolute marvel, based on its development and location. As you said; it demonstrates the potential when people work together to accomplish magnificent goals.
@5capsfilms1528 ай бұрын
So many beautiful Victorians in san francisco
@DavidSampson-pc7ht7 ай бұрын
Beautiful Elizabethans, too!
@tyleroryan8 ай бұрын
Excellent Alex! Love the new content! I love history, and the wat you narrate it.
@AlextheHistorian8 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@ryanschwartze65178 ай бұрын
Great Job Alex!
@AlextheHistorian8 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@ksmith84778 ай бұрын
Hope to visit one day!
@mike.42778 ай бұрын
Very nice video 💯 💯
@charlesoliver28388 ай бұрын
Amazing place lots of very hard work.
@waynemartin60658 ай бұрын
Well done!
@airtiki23748 ай бұрын
Wow it's beautiful. I have heard about the park but never knew how large it is, Thanks
@laurielaurie82808 ай бұрын
Very interesting. I didn't even know SF had that big park and I'm from CA. Where have I been lol😵💫
@LadyRebeccaFashions8 ай бұрын
That was fascinating! Thanks for sharing!
@jetsons1018 ай бұрын
Good morning Alex, will comment when I get home from work.....
@SkipsHappyHour8 ай бұрын
I just love these videos. Thanks Alex
@brick63478 ай бұрын
I live in a small town, so 30 minutes walk and I'm out in the countryside. I don't like big cities at all, but I have lived in a few: Warsaw, London, Budapest... and I can only imagine what a blessed relief for the people of San Francisco it is to be able to stroll down to such a lovely park in the summer and be away from the noise and the traffic. Urban parks seemed to have vanished in the age of the car and the suburb, which is a real shame. I suppose the logic is you can just drive to nature now; you don't need to bring it to the doorstep. I wholeheartedly disagree.
@miketackabery75216 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video Alex. I'm third generation San Franciscan and my knowledge of the park is colored by my family's preferred myths ( like McLaren being the REAL hero because he got manure collected from all up and down the peninsula). Very happy to know the real hero, and why. Regardless what's happened to The City the park is still one of the greatest city parks in the world (and certainly far greater than anything Olmsted built. Forgive me for that: still got the old San Francisco chauvinism).
@Ron_Rhodes8 ай бұрын
Frederick Law Olmsted won the competition to design the University of California at Berkeley, but his designs did not take into account the actual layout of the land and he didn't stick around to see it implemented. They hired the second place winner, John Galen Howard to actually build and design the landscape and many of the buildings still there today.
@katl62188 ай бұрын
Thank you!!!
@cynthiacarter5325 ай бұрын
Grew up there 1954-1975 and for a short time we lived a block south of the park. Loved the Japanese Tea Garden the most, many school field trips to the planetarium and we took our kids to the park when we would visit family. Anyone remember that big indoor pond filled with alligators in the Science building? 🐊🐊
@toddhensley8807 ай бұрын
Thank you for introducing me this park. It looks wonderful! I’d never heard of it before.
@AlextheHistorian7 ай бұрын
It's a great park, I used to love going there every time I visited the city.
@conrad46678 ай бұрын
I would never have guessed Golden Gate Park is larger than Central Park.
@Markybug-Keira-Cody8 ай бұрын
we owe a lot to the Victorians !
@fightingidiocy77246 ай бұрын
I wonder if he had to wait for the completion of 10,000 Environmental Impact studies. hehe
@EagleArrow6 ай бұрын
Seems like an era, where people were truly free to create and design with the upmost quality. An era, where everything had beauty in the detail from a fountain, to a bench to a mailbox. To draw people to gather socially, breathe fresh air, hear the birds, sit outside in sun, fresh air and observe beauty. Made people feel good. Today, too many regulations and red tape.
@King.of.Battleships8 ай бұрын
Was this park named after the Golden Gate Bridge, or was it the other way around?
@AlextheHistorian8 ай бұрын
It was neither. The bridge and the park were named after The Golden Gate Straight...which is the name of the watery channel at the entrance to the bay. (The bridge stretches the gap between north and south ends of the Straight).
@King.of.Battleships8 ай бұрын
@@AlextheHistorian was the bridge built before or after the park?
@AlextheHistorian8 ай бұрын
@King.of.Battleships the bridge was built after. Golden Gate Park opened in 1870, and was matured by 1890. The bridge opened in 1937
@aproudamerican26928 ай бұрын
Ride or Drive one mile to the Notrh, East and West of San Francisco and you're in a hundred thousands acres of beautiful countryside. Golden Gate park was a waste of money and of available housing space. If you wanted to get to the Ocean go to the seaside. If you want to go to the country ride or drive 10 minutes out of Downtown. They didn't need a park.
@AlextheHistorian8 ай бұрын
Golden Gate Park was established in 1870. It was not easy to get around back then, particularly because there were no bridges back then, and not everyone owned or could afford a horse and carriage. And parks are never a waste of money, as a nicely designed park and natural area INCREASES the property value of a surrounding suburb.
@DavidSampson-pc7ht7 ай бұрын
San Francisco is full of homeless now. Also, very over-priced and dirty.
@AlextheHistorian7 ай бұрын
It's always been that way. Even before the gold rush, the whole town was occupied by prostitutes and deviants.