Episode 12: Unquiet Dead, San Francisco, Cemetery Removals, and the Creation of Colma


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Dec 01 2019 68 mins   3
San Francisco outlawed the burial of the dead in 1908 and removed all of the remaining burials in 1937, even today it is unique among American cities as there are only two remaining cemeteries within city limits. How did this happen? What gave San Francisco this idea? What are some of the problems that accompany cemetery removal? What were the results of this controversial move and what is the legacy of San Francisco's lost cemeteries today? www.tombwithaview.weebly.com [email protected] Instagram: tomb.with.a.view Facebook: Tomb with a View Podcast Select Bibliography: Shelton, Tamara Venit, "Unmaking Public Spaces: Urban Progress and the San Francisco Cemetery Debate, 1895-1937." California History, Vol. 85, No. 3 (2008). Brooks, Jon, "Why Are There So Many Dead People in Colma? And So Few in San Francisco?" KQED News, October 26, 2017. "Old Cemeteries in the City", Shaping San Francisco's Digital Archive @ Found SF: http://www.foundsf.org/index.php?title=Old_Cemeteries_in_the_City Proctor, William A., "Location, Regulation, and Removal of Cemeteries in the City and County of San Francisco." Department of City Planning, 1950. Toy, Michelle, " Preserved Child Found in Glass Coffin Under SF Home ID'd." KTUV, November 29, 2017. https://www.ktvu.com/news/preserved-child-found-in-glass-coffin-under-san-francisco-home-idd Garden of Innocence Project, "Miranda Eve: Child Found Under Home." https://www.gardenofinnocence.org/miranda-eve-childs-casket-found-under-home