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Mission
The California Historical Society inspires and empowers Californians to make the past a meaningful part of their contemporary lives.
History
In June 1871 a group of people assembled at 323 California Street, marking
the first of four attempts to begin the California Historical Society.
After the undocumented collapse of the first group, a second attempt to
revive CHS lasted from 1886-1891. In 1902 the ailing Society partnered
with the California Genealogical Society and for a brief period the collaboration
prospered. The earthquake and fire damage of 1906 induced yet another
break of the Society.
Finally in 1922 C. Templeton Crocker, grandson of Charles Crocker, permanently
resurrected the Society. Crockers financial generosity supported
CHS until the dues collected enabled the organization to hire its first
staff member in March 1923. The group held its first exhibition at the
Bohemian Club in San Francisco in 1924.
The Societys initial purpose was the publication of a quarterly
that still exists today. Many years later when Crocker donated his collection
of Californiana to CHS, the foundation of the North Baker Research Library
and the CHS Fine Arts Collection were formed. For a short time CHS shared
its headquarters with the Society of California Pioneers. However, in
1956 the Society established its own home in the Whittier Mansion, at
the corner of Jackson and Laguna, in the Pacific Heights neighborhood
of San Francisco.
In October 1993 the Society purchased 678 Mission Street, the former San
Francisco Builders Exchange and a former hardware store, in the newly
developed Yerba Buena Gardens neighborhood. The building was renovated
for seismic safety and the basement, which extends underneath the Mission
Street sidewalk, was converted into a climate-controlled storage vault
for the Societys collections.
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