San Francisco Mint
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United States Mint (San Francisco) | |
File:NRIS 88000026 Mint Building - Duboce St Elevation.jpg The San Francisco Mint building, built in 1937 | |
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Location | Hermann and Buchanan Streets, San Francisco, California |
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Coordinates | Lua error in Module:Coordinates at line 489: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). |
Built | 1937 |
Architect | Gilbert Stanley Underwood |
Architectural style | Stripped Classicism |
NRHP reference No. | [[[:Template:NRHP Focus]] 88000026] |
Added to NRHP | February 18, 1988 |
The San Francisco Mint is a branch of the United States Mint. Opened in 1854 to serve the gold mines of the California Gold Rush, in twenty years its operations exceeded the capacity of the first building. It moved into a new one in 1874, now known as the Old San Francisco Mint. In 1937 Mint operations moved into a third building, the current one, completed that year.
History
Original United States Mint and Subtreasury (1854)
The San Francisco Mint began operations in 1854 at 608 Commercial Street, just west of Montgomery Street.[1] The building sat between Commercial and Clay Streets and a California Historical Landmark (number 87) plaque can be found today on Commercial. Since June 14, 1970, the building has been listed as a San Francisco Designated Landmark.
The mint was established in response to the California gold rush.[1] Within the first year of its operation, the San Francisco mint turned $4 million in gold bullion into coins.[2] Because of the scale of its increase in operations due to economic growth, a new building was soon required.
Construction of the new location approximately 1 mile away began in 1869 at Fifth Street and Mission Street. The mint operations moved to that building in 1874.
Old San Francisco Mint (1874)
The second US Mint building here, completed in 1874 for the Department of the Treasury, was designed by Alfred B. Mullett in a conservative Greek Revival style with a sober Doric order. The columns, most of the exterior and upper floors were constructed of sandstone. It was quarried at Newcastle Island, British Columbia, near the city of Nanaimo and imported for this purpose.
The building had a central pedimented portico flanked by projecting wings in an E-shape; it was built around a completely enclosed central courtyard that contained a well. These features saved it during the fires that followed the San Francisco Earthquake of 1906, when the heat melted the plate glass windows and exploded sandstone and granite blocks with which it was faced. The building is based on a concrete and granite foundation, designed to thwart tunneling into its vaults. At the time of the 1906 earthquake, the Mint held $300 million (~$Template:Format price in Template:Inflation/year), fully a third of the United States' gold reserves. Efforts by Superintendent of the Mint, Frank A. Leach, and his men preserved the building and the bullion that backed the nation's currency.[2] The mint resumed operation soon thereafter, continuing until 1937 at this site.
Now known as the Old San Francisco Mint, it was designated as a National Historic Landmark in 1961 and sold to the city of San Francisco in 2003. There are plans for adaptive reuse, including as a museum, and continued special events space.
Current building
The new Mint was opened in 1937. Beginning in 1955, circulating coinage from San Francisco was suspended for 13 years. In 1968, this facility took over most proof coinage production from the Philadelphia Mint, but continued striking a supplemental circulating coinage from 1968 through 1974.
Since 1975, the San Francisco Mint has been used almost exclusively for proof coinage, with the exception of the Susan B. Anthony dollar from 1979–81, a portion of the mintage of cents in the early 1980s, and circulation-strike America the Beautiful quarters marked with an "S" mintmark and issued only for collectors since 2012. The dollars and quarters bear a mintmark of an "S", but the cents are otherwise indistinguishable from those minted at Philadelphia (which bear no mintmarks, unlike those years' proof cents from San Francisco and circulation cents from Denver).
From 1962 to 1988, the San Francisco Mint was officially an assay office; the San Francisco Assay Office was granted mint status again on March 31, 1988 (Pub. L. 100–274).[3] The San Francisco Mint is located at 155 Hermann Street. It admits visitors only as a rare exception. On May 15, 1987, to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Mint, a limited number of people were allowed to tour the facility. This tour was advertised in the San Francisco Chronicle newspaper, with reservations required.
See also
- List of mints
- Historical United States mints
- Charlotte Mint
- Dahlonega Mint
- Denver Mint
- New Orleans Mint
- Philadelphia Mint
- List of San Francisco Designated Landmarks
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Yeoman 2014, p. 17.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2088: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
- ↑ "Timeline of the United States Mint". United States Mint. http://www.usmint.gov/historianscorner/?flash=yes&action=timeline¢ury=1900.
Bibliography
External links
File:Commons-logo.svg | Wikimedia Commons has media related to San Francisco Mint. |
- Official San Francisco Mint website
- "US Mint Buildings Across the Nation: San Francisco Mint", US Treasury Department website, 2007.
- "New San Francisco Mint" article (1936)
- "The Second US Mint at San Francisco: Part One" Article
- General Services Administration page on the Old Mint, San Francisco Archived 2016-11-18 at the Wayback Machine
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- United States Mint
- Mints of the United States
- Government buildings in San Francisco
- California Gold Rush
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- South of Market, San Francisco
- Western Addition, San Francisco
- Government buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in San Francisco
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- 1874 in California
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- 1870s architecture in the United States
- Neoclassical architecture in California
- 1937 in California
- Government buildings completed in 1937
- 1930s architecture in the United States
- Moderne architecture in California
- Stripped Classical architecture in the United States
- 1854 establishments in California