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415 Bush Street - The KFRC Building

Hi radio friends. Like many here, I grew up listening to KFRC. What a magical station that was! The other day, I stopped by the former home of “The Big 610” - 415 Bush Street. Sadly, the entrance was gated and padlocked. The building has certainly seen better days.

I wish there was a small plaque or something on the building’s exterior, making note of the influential radio station that was once housed there. Yes, radio stations come and go. But, the impact that KFRC made on so many lives remains today. IMG_6263.jpeg
 
Hi radio friends. Like many here, I grew up listening to KFRC. What a magical station that was! The other day, I stopped by the former home of “The Big 610” - 415 Bush Street. Sadly, the entrance was gated and padlocked. The building has certainly seen better days.

I wish there was a small plaque or something on the building’s exterior, making note of the influential radio station that was once housed there. Yes, radio stations come and go. But, the impact that KFRC made on so many lives remains today. View attachment 9812

When I was programming KUKI in Ukiah in 1976-77, I would drive by there, think about stopping in and asking for a tour, and always chicken out---which was just plain dumb.

About three years ago, after a concert, my wife and I stopped in at Sam's Tavern, just down Bush and across the street and the bartender was doing 70s music trivia. I tried to hold back (unfair advantage) but there were times only I had the answer. After the game, he came over to chat. Turns out he'd been a jock in a past life---Kansas City, I think, and got out of the business in the mid-80s.

I completely blew his mind when I told him that he was working just steps away from the KFRC studios...in the abandoned clothing store.

In fact, he didn't believe it until I pulled up this still frame from a video done by some San Jose State students in 1978.

505126199_4185538798336865_3104266351154860265_n.jpg

For those who haven't seen it, here's the video. It's black and white and it's still marvelous:

 
I wish I had known! I've walked past there about a thousand times over the years that I worked downtown. It's down the street from the gate to Chinatown. Just south of the building on Claude Lane was a great casual French restaurant, Café Claude, where I had been many times. It closed down at the start of the pandemic. I never paid attention to the building on the corner, figuring it was just another overpriced clothing or gifts store.

Having a marker or plaque there would be wonderful.
 
I wish I had known! I've walked past there about a thousand times over the years that I worked downtown. It's down the street from the gate to Chinatown. Just south of the building on Claude Lane was a great casual French restaurant, Café Claude, where I had been many times. It closed down at the start of the pandemic. I never paid attention to the building on the corner, figuring it was just another overpriced clothing or gifts store.

They had been there since sometime in the late 1950s, and used to have very prominent signage directly facing Bush Street:

kfrc_415-bush.png.jpeg

That appears to be the back of a Ford Pinto wagon in that shot. That was a mid-year introduction, on sale in February of 1972, so that photo can't be earlier than that.

By the time I moved to Ukiah in March of 1976, the exterior remodel had been done (not my photo, found online):

175638938_2983953698505503_112243100809535808_n.jpg

In fact, I drove past it several times before I knew it was there, since Bush is a one-way street and the sign faced the direction traffic goes. It wasn't until I parked on Bush and got out of the car that I saw it.

KFRC moved to 500 Washington Street (between Sansome and Montgomery) in 1985. Maybe someone here who knows can tell us why. It's only about six blocks from one to the other.

Maybe Dr. Don said "Our address is 415 Bush---you'll pardon the expression---(SFX: crowd gasp) Street, San Francisco" once too often.

Having a marker or plaque there would be wonderful.

I'm sure that would be up to the owner of the building, but to get my $40 membership fee's worth, I'll suggest it to CHRS.
 
Now I realize that the 415 Bush location is also in the same block as our favorite hotel in San Francisco. Last time we were there, we had dinner one night across the street at Le Central. It was a slow night and they seated us at a window table. The Wilkes Bashford table, also known as the Willie Brown table!

I know this has little to do with broadcasting, but it indicates that the block is notable for several reasons.
 
I just found a post that I made in 2007 on this site linking to an historical page about a restaurant that occupied 415 Bush Street from 1908-1922. The link is now dead and I can't find anything about it.

Also...I see either a typo or a brain cramp of mine 18 years ago---KFRC moved to its current transmitter site in 1968, not 1958:


Scroll down a little further and @BossRadioDJ fills in the timeline of KFRC's various homes over the years.
 
And here's something---archive-dot-org has city directories.

The 1930 edition of the Polk's Crocker-Langley San Francisco City Directory shows Dow Jones and the Pacific Edition of the Wall Street Journal at 415 Bush.


It still appears as Dow Jones and the Pacific Edition of the Wall Street Journal in the 1957 edition---the year before KFRC moved in:


The 1930 edition is the earliest where "415 Bush" appears, so it's possible and perhaps likely that there were only three tenants between 1908 and 1985---The Old Poodle Dog, Dow Jones/Wall Street Journal and KFRC.

See what you started, @Steve Scott ?
 
Also, there are very few photos that I've ever seen from inside 415 Bush when KFRC was there.

The June 19, 1972 Bob Hamilton and Friends Radio Report shows overnight jock J.J. Johnson in the studio:

46703916_10214812695044990_2925434012082110464_n.jpg

There was an interior remodel of KFRC in between this shot and what you see in the DDR 1978 video.

Apart from mornings, KFRC went combo---ditched the engineers and switched to the jocks running their own consoles---in 1977.

Here, J.J.'s working with a copy book, a mic switch and a clock, with an engineer on the opposite side of the glass.

Apart from the very-70s cloud and rainbow paintings on the old-school acoustic tile, everything in there except for the countdown clock to the lower left of the window looks like it's probably from when KFRC moved in back in 1958---which at that time, would only have been 14 years.
 
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They had been there since sometime in the late 1950s, and used to have very prominent signage directly facing Bush Street:

View attachment 9817

That appears to be the back of a Ford Pinto wagon in that shot. That was a mid-year introduction, on sale in February of 1972, so that photo can't be earlier than that.

By the time I moved to Ukiah in March of 1976, the exterior remodel had been done (not my photo, found online):

View attachment 9818

In fact, I drove past it several times before I knew it was there, since Bush is a one-way street and the sign faced the direction traffic goes. It wasn't until I parked on Bush and got out of the car that I saw it.
How about a photo from...Monday?


emmanuel-vacant.jpg

The only currently active ground-level retail in the building is a Subway.

And here's something---archive-dot-org has city directories.

The 1930 edition of the Polk's Crocker-Langley San Francisco City Directory shows Dow Jones and the Pacific Edition of the Wall Street Journal at 415 Bush.

It still appears as Dow Jones and the Pacific Edition of the Wall Street Journal in the 1957 edition---the year before KFRC moved in:

The 1930 edition is the earliest where "415 Bush" appears, so it's possible and perhaps likely that there were only three tenants between 1908 and 1985---The Old Poodle Dog, Dow Jones/Wall Street Journal and KFRC.
I've been meaning to write up a longer history, but travel and other things have made it hard to have a sustained period to concentrate on the matter and to write up what I've found. So here's an AP-broadcast-wire-level summary.

The building was constructed for the Old Poodle Dog after the 1906 earthquake. Before the quake, the restaurant was at the corner of Grant and Bush, where the Hotel Triton is now. The Old Poodle Dog actually dated to 1849, when it set up in some tents in what's now Chinatown. Prohibition dealt a blow to the Old Poodle Dog, which was the scene of a raid in 1921. Members of the Spreckels family were having a dinner, complete with wine, on the second floor of the building. Indicative of the family's status, a local Republican official tried to hold off the SFPD from raiding the dinner, but the raid happened anyway. The restaurant closed the next year. One or two of the owners (it's a bit unclear which) returned to France, disgusted that they couldn't serve wine at a fine dining establishment.

Yet...a new version of the Old Poodle Dog opened the next year, across from the Palace Hotel, probably where the House of Shields is now. This hung on until Prohibition ended, surviving until 1986 at various locations. Its last space was at the Crocker Galleria.

Back on Bush Street, the upper floors of the building were going to be converted into a gym. That may or may not have happened, with the newspapers of the time not being that great about follow-ups. In any event, the Wall Street Journal moved into the space, making it the paper's West Coast headquarters. I don't know if that operation included printing presses and Linotypes. The paper moved out in 1957, gaining a notice from Herb Caen, who reported that the Old Poodle Dog was considering moving back into the building, which was still the property of the restaurant's then-owner. Another Caen item from 1958 reported on KFRC's impending move to 415 Bush.

There's more to the story...that Prohibition raid, in particular, became controversial...but this summary hits the highlights.

After 1985...I haven't tried to dig into those years, and my time in San Francisco started in 1999. The area has gradually became less of a French restaurant row. Claude Lane now seems empty, and has been that way for about 15 years. Le Central is still up the street on Bush, as is Cafe de la Presse.

Our hotel this time was on that block. Returning in the evening after spending more time in Berkeley and Oakland than we expected to, the street scene was generally very quiet.
 
After 1985...I haven't tried to dig into those years, and my time in San Francisco started in 1999. The area has gradually became less of a French restaurant row.
Over the past 10 or so years, San Francisco seems to have become more about Big Tech and LGBTQ+ than almost anything else (well, maybe homelessness, but does that really count? Virtually all cities across the US, big and small, have that problem in some form.)

People seem to be largely forgetting that before the Tech Invasion of 2010 (as I tend to call the beginnings of the city's current self), SF had a very interesting history beyond the major bullet points (the hippie scene over at Haight-Ashbury, the 1967 Summer of Love, the 1906 earthquake, and the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, to name a few). This KFRC story is a good example of the behind-the-scenes minutiae that time tends to forget about.

c
 
Yes, but two blocks away, at Bush and Stockton:

Interesting, though, that it wasn't Burritt that was renamed Dashiell Hammett - it was Monroe. Both are between Powell and Stockton, but Monroe extends between Bush and Pine while Burritt dead-ends south.

If I had known this thread was going to take this turn, I would have taken some photos - this area was just a couple of blocks away from our hotel and all I would have had to do was climb that hill. Oooof, the hills...I was out of practice!
 
Interesting, though, that it wasn't Burritt that was renamed Dashiell Hammett - it was Monroe. Both are between Powell and Stockton, but Monroe extends between Bush and Pine while Burritt dead-ends south.
I'm guessing whoever was in charge of the street naming thought Dashiell Hammett deserved more than a dead end street. To this day I think The Maltese Falcon is the only movie I've seen that's partly set in Burlingame.
 
I'm guessing whoever was in charge of the street naming thought Dashiell Hammett deserved more than a dead end street. To this day I think The Maltese Falcon is the only movie I've seen that's partly set in Burlingame.

Sorta. There is no 25 Ancho Street (or any Ancho Street) in Burlingame.

It's as phony as the Maltese falcon in the display case at John's Grill.

the-maltese-falcon.jpg

It's a fake, replacing one that was stolen in February of 2007:

 
I didn't remember the street name so thanks for letting me know. Old downtown Burlingame probably doesn't look that much different than it did back then, though (for anyone who isn't familiar, Burlingame has two downtowns - the old one and the newer one).
 


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